Daunting Employment Numbers for US in Real Estate Report 01/13/09 Portland, OR & Vancouver, WA

Featuring news for homebuyers, homeowners, realtors and the general real estate market.

It was not like we were not warned. They were expected. Yet, the reality of the numbers were quite sobering. The employment statistics for December and 2008 were horrific to say the least. Over 2.5 million jobs were lost in 2008 and the loss in December alone was over 500,000. The job losses caused the unemployment rate to shoot up to 7.2%. Here is an interesting perspective. We lost more jobs in the past year than in any year since the end of World War II.
Daunting numbers indeed. But the interesting thing is that the markets barely blinked when they were released. The Dow shed almost 150 points, rates were down slightly and oil prices also fell, but moderately. How could the markets react so moderately in the face of such important news? Could it be that the bad news has been priced into the markets already? If this is the case, then rates, oil and the stock market are as low as they are going to go for the near term. Certainly the movements downward were significant during the latter half of 2008. For example, oil prices moved from $140 per barrel mid-year to $40 by the end of the year. That is quite a swing. It would not be surprising to see a period of consolidation where the markets bounce around before the next movement is signaled. The market may be waiting for any glimmer of hope that the worst is behind us and it may be until then that we witness any further fireworks.

| Daily Value | Monthly Value | |
| Jan 8 | December | |
| 6-month Treasury Security | 0.28% | 0.26% |
| 1-year Treasury Security | 0.44% | 0.49% |
| 3-year Treasury Security | 1.16% | 1.07% |
| 5-year Treasury Security | 1.60% | 1.52% |
| 10-year Treasury Security | 2.47% | 2.42% |
| 12-month LIBOR–WSJ | 2.406% (Dec) | |
| 12-month MTA | 1.823% (Dec) | |
| 11th District Cost of Funds | 3.155% (Nov) | |
| Prime Rate | 3.25% (Dec) |

The pace of teardowns has slowed and preservationists are applauding the trend. About 75,000 homes a year were torn down across the country at the peak of the market. The National Trust has expanded its list of endangered neighborhoods to include 500 neighborhoods in 40 states. The demolitions have triggered bitter battles between preservationists and suburbanites seeking new homes in mature, urban neighborhoods. But with new housing starts at a 26-year low, teardowns are experiencing a lull. For instance, in Westport, Conn., teardown permits were down 33 percent in 2008 compared to the previous year. "The idea that you’re going to make a lot of money tearing down an old house to build a new one, that’s gone," says Morris Davis, a real estate economist at the University of Wisconsin in Madison who has advised the Federal Reserve on the teardown trend. "We’re advising communities to take advantage of this slowdown and use it as a cooling-off period," says Adrian Fine, a regional director for the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington. "It gives them a little more time to have a less heated and less controversial discussion to protect a specific neighborhood and balance that with the need for growth and development." Source: The Christian Science Monitor
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