Quantcast Economists: Boston Real Estate Prices To Drop 1.7%, Next Year
Search by tag or site Login to my blogStart my own blog















TheMoneyBlogs
Home
About
Create your own blog
Contact us
Vote for this blog!

The Boston Real Estate Blog

I am an independent real estate broker, focused on the residential real estate market in downtown Boston.

Economists: Boston Real Estate Prices To Drop 1.7%, Next Year

Posted on 12/26/2006 02:01 AM | Link | Post Comment

Moody's Economy.com and Fiserv Lending Solutions have estimated where real estate prices will be, a year from now.

The Boston-Quincy real estate market, an ill-defined area (it's a Census Bureau thing) is estimated to drop 1.7%, next year. In 2008, prices should increase a nominal 0.2%.

(I can live with that!)

This puts the area 78th out of the top 100 real estate markets in the United States.

Shockingly, many areas of the country will see higher prices both next year and the year after; the McAllen-Mission area of Texas will see a 8.5% increase on prices in 2007 and another 9.8% increase in 2008, according to Moody's!

Of course, just as important, if not more important, is the volume of sales over the next several years ... but I haven't seen any estimates of that.

Source: Best and worst real estate markets - Fortune magazine, quoting Economy.com

More posts about: 
Stock Quote or
Examples
Morpheus Trading - Mon Jul 21, 2008 08:33AM
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them if [read more]
Morpheus Trading - Mon Jul 21, 2008 08:31AM
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them i [read more]
Millionaire Now! by Larry Nusbaum - Tue Jul 22, 2008 09:23AM
Hedge funds have made billions this year shorting the banks, [read more]

PREMIER SPONSORED LINKS

Most Visited Blogs | Most Popular Blogs | Most Recent Blogs | Contact Us | Terms and conditions | Privacy Policy

The columns, articles, message board posts and any other features provided on TheMoneyBlogs.com are provided for personal finance, education and investment information and are not to be construed as investment advice. Under no circumstances does the information in this content represent a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security. The views and opinions expressed in an article or column are the author's own and not necessarily those of TheMoneyBlogs.com and there is no implied endorsement by TheMoneyBlogs.com of any advice or trading strategy. The analysts and employees or affiliates of TheMoneyBlogs.com may hold positions in the stocks or industries discussed here. Your use of this and all information contained on TheMoneyBlogs.com is governed by the Terms and Conditions of Use. Please click the link to view those terms. Follow this link to read our Editorial Policy.

Copyright © 2008 The Connors Group, Inc.