Real Estate News

Missoula’s Market: Worse Than You Think


By Robert Struckman, 6-17-08

 
 

If you’re thinking the housing bubble in Missoula, and Montana, will somehow remain full of air, think again. The situation is probably worse than you think. Median home prices, as recorded by real estate organizations, have been relatively stable, but some indicators suggest a downturn could be just around the corner.

Why? Because homes have been sitting on the market for months and months, while sellers have begun to slowly lower their asking prices. A rash of foreclosures may force prices down, which will greatly increase the downward pressure on all home prices. Foreclosures have remained relatively low, but the state has 4,581 subprime mortgage loans, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. County-by-county data was recently removed from the Fed’s site, so it’s hard to know exactly how many of those risky loans were in Missoula. It is clear, though, that hundreds of homes in each of Montana’s top markets could face foreclosure in the coming months.

The New York Fed’s numbers only take owner-occupied homes into account. These numbers do not include builder- or investor-owned homes. See the New York Fed’s study here.

One major difference between Montana and the states that have been worst hit by the housing crisis is that Montana banks and financial institutions did not invest much in mortgage-backed securities, said Annie Goodwin of the Montana Division of Banking and Financial Institutions. That means that the bubble hasn’t hammered banks, as it has damaged big national and international financial institutions.

Still, dropping home values could hurt Montana’s economy by making it harder for small businesses to get startup cash (many small business owners use their homes as collateral for their first business loans, so a rising real estate market acts like a wide-spread cash injection into the economy, and a falling market has the opposite effect).

On the other hand, Montana’s economic climate remains relatively good, with low unemployment and continued signs of economic strength such as strong commercial construction. And that’s probably the best news about the state’s real estate market: that there may still be significant demand for housing, just at slightly lower prices than the median in the state’s hotter markets. Once prices become affordable to local buyers - and people regain confidence in homes-as-investment-vehicles - the numbers of home sales, and prices, will again edge upward.



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