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Columns

Builders, give those hammers a long rest

Bleak headlines say the home building industry has sunk into its worst trough in a decade.

By James Thorner, Times Satff Writer
Published August 26, 2007


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Bleak headlines say the home building industry has sunk into its worst trough in a decade.

With sympathies to laid-off construction workers and model home sales staff, three cheers for the trough. It's good news for Tampa Bay area homeowners.

No, I'm not gargling Johnny Walker Black Label. With media obsessed with daily dips in the stock prices of home builders, it's easy to lose sight of the big picture.

In our region the big picture depicts a glut the size of Goliath. In July, of 41,000 homes for sale in Pinellas, Pasco and Hillsborough counties, about 2,400 sold. With so many homes competing for so few buyers, a house sells for about 10 to 20 percent less than it would have 18 months ago.

How to restore supply and demand to their proper balance? Forget about demand for the moment. It's tepid for many reasons: high property taxes and insurance, tighter lending rules, fewer investors to soak up the surplus.

That leaves supply. Aside from sellers yanking their home listings to await better days, the market needs builders to give it a rest.

They gorged heartily during our buy-'em-as-fast-as-they-build-'em cycle. In a free market, you're allowed to profit. But these days the fewer hammer blows on building sites, the sooner home prices will stabilize.

Even the Florida Association of Realtors admitted as much at an annual convention that ends today in Orlando. Economist Ted Jones said Florida builders, on pace to pull about 100,000 construction permits this year, are needlessly feeding an already bloated beast.

For related reasons you need not weep when you hear of condo developers crushed when banks cut off credit. Do the math: Fewer new condos on the market boosts the value of your existing condo.

Market corrections are rarely pretty. It's painful to watch so many mortgage loan officers hit the unemployment doles as home foreclosure attorneys swell payrolls by the hundreds.

But only an industry that's hard and lean will reach fighting trim for the next housing boom that in Florida is as inevitable as sunshine.

Got a tip? Want to comment? James Thorner's new online housing blog, UnReal Estate, can be found at blogs.tampabay.com/realestate starting Monday. Thorner can be reached at thorner@sptimes.com. mce_href="mailto:thorner@sptimes.com">thorner@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3313.

[Last modified August 24, 2007, 20:20:29]


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Comments on this article
by Britt 09/04/07 09:58 AM
I don't understand why people can't realize that real estate is a CYCLE. Booms and Busts are a part of this industry. The past one was just longer & more ridiculous than some of the others in the past. So remember THERE WILL ALWAYS BE ANOTHER BOOM!
by Wayne 08/27/07 11:58 PM
We need to have the housing market "righted". The building boom has caused more issues in Tampa Bay than a glut.
by RJ 08/27/07 09:16 PM
Positive spin on an imploding situation. We're not even a third through the psycho period mortgage resets. Mucho pain ahead.
by Maria 08/27/07 03:40 PM
Perhaps our next construction boom should be Hurricane shelters that can withstand a level 4. Its just a thought.
by Brent 08/26/07 01:59 PM
Nice to see them on the streets from the years they thought they owned the world. Now I can pick and choose my House.
by Curt 08/26/07 12:22 PM
The only problem with the downturn of the building industry is that the tradesmen mecessary to help maintain our homes will be more difficult to find as the skilled labor relocates to other regions with more employement opportunities who will be left
by Murf 08/26/07 08:46 AM
After decades of devastating the Florida landscape, it would not break my heart to see all these greedy developers go out of business.
by Joshu Jones 08/26/07 08:19 AM
I don't see the next housing boom as inevitable. I sincerely hope that the lessons learned from this disaster they caused will force the developers and their minions to look elsewhere next time. We don't need more new houses or residents in Florida.
by Sal 08/26/07 06:08 AM
True words "next housing boom that in Florida is as inevitable as sunshine". Hold on to your property and/or buy at the bottom.
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