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U.S. home-builder confidence dips
The U.S. National Association of Home Builders
/Wells Fargo builder confidence index dropped to 17 this month from 22 in May. The drop represents the largest decrease in confidence since November, 2006. Any figure under 50 indicates that respondents view conditions as poor.
The decline in confidence comes as job losses and financial woes continue to dog many prospective buyers. The mortgage delinquency rate has risen over the past year, to nearly 10 per cent of all outstanding home loans. While the crisis began with defaults by subprime borrowers, it is now prime borrowers who are struggling to keep up. Prime borrowers made up 36.7 per cent of loan foreclosures in the first quarter, up from 28.9 per cent last year.
Tax credit ends
Rates of mortgage applications tumbled by 27 per cent in May following the expiration on April 30 of a federally funded tax break of up to $8,000 (U.S.) for the purchase of a new home. The tax credit
was extended to April 30 in November 2009 by the Obama administration with the aim of bolstering the housing market.
"The home-buyer tax credit did its job in stoking spring sales and we expected a temporary pullback in the builders` outlook after the credit expired at the end of April," NAHB chairman Bob Jones said in a press release. "However, the reduction in consumer activity may have been more dramatic than some builders had anticipated, which resulted in their lower confidence levels."
Read full article here
The U.S. National Association of Home Builders

The decline in confidence comes as job losses and financial woes continue to dog many prospective buyers. The mortgage delinquency rate has risen over the past year, to nearly 10 per cent of all outstanding home loans. While the crisis began with defaults by subprime borrowers, it is now prime borrowers who are struggling to keep up. Prime borrowers made up 36.7 per cent of loan foreclosures in the first quarter, up from 28.9 per cent last year.
Tax credit ends
Rates of mortgage applications tumbled by 27 per cent in May following the expiration on April 30 of a federally funded tax break of up to $8,000 (U.S.) for the purchase of a new home. The tax credit

"The home-buyer tax credit did its job in stoking spring sales and we expected a temporary pullback in the builders` outlook after the credit expired at the end of April," NAHB chairman Bob Jones said in a press release. "However, the reduction in consumer activity may have been more dramatic than some builders had anticipated, which resulted in their lower confidence levels."
Read full article here