According to Bloomberg.com home prices this country fell another 6.8 percent  across the country last month. As many experts have predicted, the ongoing  rise in foreclosures and increasing unemployment rates are stalling  the recovery of the U.S. real estate industry.
Measured monthly, the average price fell  0.1 percent from March, the Federal Housing Finance Agency in Washington  said today. The number was projected to drop 0.4 percent in April, according  to the median forecast of 15 economists in a Bloomberg survey.
 
The housing slump has reduced the median  price of an existing home 26 percent from the July 2006 peak, pushing  affordability to near record levels. Prospective buyers are now being  constrained by rising mortgage rates, the highest unemployment since  1983 and concern the housing rebound will be anemic.
 
While U.S. builders increased housing  starts by 17 percent in May to an annual rate of 532,000, a May 26 report  from S&P/Case-Shiller showed home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan  areas fell 18.7 percent in March from the same month last year.
 
On a related note, another recent Bloomberg  article also reported that home  price recovery may be undermined by appraisals. 
 
Flawed appraisals are derailing real  estate sales and depressing values across the U.S., the National Association  of Realtors said yesterday as it reported that existing home prices  declined again.
“It’s pointing to thousands of delayed  or canceled transactions,” Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the Chicago-  based Realtors group, said in an interview. “We’ve had a massive  inundation from members saying this is a big problem.”
 
Appraisal rules that went into effect  on May 1 require lenders that sell loans to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac  to set up a firewall between appraisers and loan officers to prevent  improper influence. The rules are the result of an agreement between  the mortgage buyers and New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, who  said an investigation found appraisers inflated values under pressure  from lenders.
