The housing market is still on the rise and continues to improve
according to the findings by the NAHB/First American Leading Markets
Index (LMI). The LMI was developed to record and monitor the recovery
of select markets throughout the United States due to the Recession.
There are three components (average permit, price and employment levels)
that are scored in more than 360 metro areas over a 12 month period.
The scores for these
components are then divided by each of their annual averages over the
last period of normal growth. The three component averages are then
averaged together giving the overall score for each market. For
single-family permits and new home prices, 2000-2003 is used as the last
normal period, and for employment, 2007 is used for the last normal
period.
What all of this means in a nutshell is that major metro cities
throughout the United States are being monitored for an increase or
decrease in real estate activity following the Recession. The
percentages are calculated each month by the National Association of
Home Builders and distributed amongst the public and real estate markets
so that investors have an idea of how the real estate recovery is
progressing nationwide.
Baton Rouge, Louisiana is one of the top recovering cities on the list of major metros on the LMI and is doing 47 percent
better than the last findings recorded for the normal market level.
Southeast Louisiana shows an 85 to 92 percent recovery to the normal
market level. In fact, 75 markets out of the 360 metro areas beat their
last normal levels of economic and housing activity during the second
quarter this year which showed a year-over-year net gain of 13 markets
(66% of markets have shown an improvement year over year). This
quarter’s LMI shows that more than half the markets nationwide have
reached a 90% or above their normal market level. We are almost back to
100% of normal economic and housing activity that we had before the
recession.
“The markets are gradually improving and economic and job growth
continue to strengthen, which bodes well for housing for the remainder
of the year,” said NAHB Chairman Tom Woods.
Out of the three components of the LMI, housing prices have shown the
strongest recovery with 345 markets at the same or above their last
normal level. Behind that is the economic level where 64 markets are at
their normal market level or have exceeded their normal market level.
Housing permit level is lagging behind with only 26 markets at normal or
above normal market level.
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