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A report out Wednesday from the National Association of Realtors is expected to show the sales of previously owned homes nudged up in January. Economists are predicting that buyers snapped up foreclosed and other properties at bargain prices, which pushed up sales. If that happens, it could be a sign that home sales are inching toward a long-awaited bottom. Still, home prices are expected to keep falling this year. That has whittled away Americans' single-biggest asset and figured prominently in consumers' decisions to cut back spending, which has sorely hurt the economy. Bernanke says the economy is likely to keep shrinking in the first six months of this year after posting its worst slide in a quarter-century at the end of 2008. However, the Fed chief is hopeful the recession will end this year, but there were significant risks to that forecast. Any economic turnaround will hinge on the success of the Fed and the Obama administration in getting credit and financial markets to operate more normally again. The behavior of consumers also plays a key role whether a recovery will take hold in 2010, as Bernanke hopes. Consumer confidence, though, went into a free fall in February, sinking to new lows, according to a report out Tuesday. Vanishing jobs and nest eggs factored into the drop. "I'm faithful there's a light at the end of the tunnel, but I feel like we're not seeing the light yet," said Dan Walpole, 28, an elementary school teacher in Rochester, N.Y.
[Associated
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