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Prices are expected to keep falling through the middle of next year, as fewer people purchase homes and millions of foreclosed homes come on to the market. This year is on pace to finish as the worst for home sales in more than a decade. High unemployment and tight credit have kept people from buying. And that's despite some of the lowest mortgage rates in decades, which have recently begun to spike. Many people are holding off on purchases because they fear the market has not hit bottom, analysts say. Buyers aren't just skittish in the hardest-hit cities, such as Las Vegas or Phoenix. Home prices in Atlanta have fallen 6 percent in the last four months. That's the worst decline among the 20 cities in that time, and it erases gains made in the spring, when the government offered home-buying tax credits.
Home prices in Dallas, Portland, Ore., Charlotte, N.C., Tampa, Fla., and Denver have fallen for four straight months. Neither the dip in confidence, nor the drop in housing prices, caused economists to back down from their more optimistic outlook for 2011. Stronger spending by consumers will help the economy grow faster in 2011. Some experts predict growth will clock in at around 4 percent, which would mark the fastest pace in 11 years and an improvement from the 2.8 percent pace projected for this year. For economists, what's most important is what consumers do, rather than how they feel. "People are saying they are still worried," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors. But those same consumers "have hit the malls pretty hard."
[Associated
Press;
AP Economics Writer Jeannine Aversa contributed to this report from Washington.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.
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