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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index

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To: David Jones who wrote (3581)7/25/2002 7:48:20 PM
From: Elroy JetsonRead Replies (2) of 306849
 
Doesn't the collapse wipe-out ...just about every body when you get right down to it?

That's exactly what's at stake. Real estate prices increased for the first couple of years after 1929 but finally fell about 70%. The effects on the economy were limited though as only 36% of families owned their own homes. In addition, most were mortgage-free as the longest mortgages were only five year.

Today home-ownership is 75% rather than 36%, and home equity is collectively less than 55%. What was an incidental problem in 1932, is today a problem that will make Fannie Mae famous for hundreds of years to come.
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