Downbeat news from JPMorgan: Florida homes could nearly halve in value
No way to sugar coat this.
In a presentation to investors in late September, JPMorgan Chase & Co., hot off of announcing its purchase of Washington Mutual Bank, predicted Florida home prices would fall another 16 percent.
It could get even worse. In the event of what it called a "deeper recession," the bank projected Florida prices falling another 21 percent. A "severe recession" could bring prices crashing a further 36 percent.
JPMorgan assumes Florida prices have fallen 28 percent, which corresponds to what most home price indices say. So the bank is betting on a peak-to-trough decline of 44 percent in Florida (the 28 percent drop we've already experienced + another 16 percent).
How rotten is this news? Consider this: JPMorgan predicts further home price drops of 10 percent in California and 8 percent nationally. So our decline could be twice as bad as the nation's and 60 percent worse than California's.
Worse than California.
I promised I wouldn't sugar coat the news, but I fibbed. Northern Florida is experiencing the worst home price plunges these days, so the depreciation could disproportionately affect communities like Ocala, Gainesville, Pensacola and Tallahassee.
Feel better? Probably not.
(Thanks to SoldierRenter for the JPMorgan tip)
Most Recent Blog Posts
About the blog
Housing market news is the focus of the (Un)Real Estate blog. It offers an inside look at the Florida housing market and real estate news, with a focus on Tampa Bay. Its goal? Simple: To help you keep a roof over your head without losing your shirt.
Advertisement
Follow us on Facebook
Comment Policy
| Please be sure your comments are appropriate before submitting them. Inappropriate comments include content that: |
| Is libelous |
| Is abusive, harassing, or threatening |
| Is obscene, vulgar, or profane |
| Is racially, ethnically or religiously offensive |
| Is illegal or encourages criminal acts |
| Is known to be inaccurate or contains a false attribution |
| Infringes copyrights, trademarks, publicity or any other rights of others |
| Impersonates anyone (actual or fictitious) |
| Solicits funds, goods or services, or advertises |
| The St. Petersburg Times does not edit posts but reserves the right to delete comments that violate our policy. |