
Housing Prices
Could Skid Another 33%
08/04/2008 - Housing
prices will fall more than 30 percent before the market
recovers and banks will continue their reluctance to lend
until the credit crisis clears up, Oppenheimer analyst
Meredith Whitney said on CNBC.
In a wide-ranging
interview, Whitney said the housing deterioration will be
worse than even the doom-and-gloom predictions that already
have circulated regarding the market.
"There's one obvious
area where the bad news isn't all out yet, and that's with
home prices ... Home prices are going to fall much more than
people expect," she said.
"I think it's going
to be well worse than 33 percent, and here's why: If you look
at the futures market, it's indicating a range right around
between 2002-2003 levels, when home ownership rates were
actually higher, but fewer people can qualify for a mortgage
because you've got to put 20 percent down, and that's a lot of
money for people," she continued. "Furthermore, then you've
got to find a bank to lend to you, because, Countrywide's not
lending to you."
While a number of
factors have generated the troubles for real estate, the
industry is getting no help from banks, who have largely used
Federal Reserve liquidity-raising efforts not to lend money
but rather to bolster their damaged balance sheets.
The Fed went on a
nine-month rate-cutting spree beginning in September 2007
aimed at easing monetary practices, but banks have not
responded and in fact have cut lending dramatically. Whitney
said banks originated $900 billion loans last year, but just
$100 billion so far in 2008.