ME

ME
Sweat Lodge, Accokeek MD

Monday, March 21, 2011

Housing prices reach a 9 year low!

This Reuters story tells the tale.

Ace 

 

Home sales tumble, prices near 9-year low

A "Price Reduced" sign is displayed on a home for sale in northern Virginia suburb of Vienna Reuters – A "Price Reduced" sign is displayed on a home for sale in northern Virginia suburb of Vienna,
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Sales of previously owned U.S. homes plunged in February and prices hit their lowest level in nearly nine years, implying a housing market recovery was still a long way off.
The National Association of Realtors said on Monday sales fell 9.6 percent month over month to an annual rate of 4.88 million units, snapping three straight months of gains. The percentage decline was the largest since July.
The weak sales were the latest evidence of the malaise in the housing sector and confirmed it would remain outside the strengthening and broadening economic recovery.
"The housing market is still very depressed and a major drag on the economy, especially household net worth," said Chris Christopher, a senior economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts.
Economists had expected a decline of only 4 percent to a 5.15 million-unit pace. The actual drop was greater than even the most pessimistic forecast in a Reuters survey of 53 economists.
Analysts said harsh winter weather in January could have curbed February sales. Existing home sales are measured when contracts are closed and last month's sales decline was telegraphed by a drop in January's pending contracts.
The Realtors' group also said tight credit conditions and home appraisals that fell short of agreed-upon selling prices weighed on sales.
U.S. financial markets largely ignored the data. U.S. stocks rose sharply, partly on news of a bid by AT&T for Deutsche Telekom AG's T-Mobile USA and growing hopes Japan would get its nuclear crisis under control.
Prices for U.S. government debt fell after the Treasury said it would begin selling $142 billion in mortgage-backed securities it had acquired to help tame the financial crisis. The dollar rose against the yen on intervention fears.
PLUNGING PRICES A WORRY
Though economists cautiously hope an improving labor market will lift home sales in the months ahead, plunging house prices could throw a spanner in the works.
NAR said the median home price dropped 5.2 percent in February from a year earlier to $156,100, the lowest since April 2002, in a sign of the relentless downward pressure on prices from a market flooded with foreclosure sales.
"If the price declines persist, even with the job market recovery, that could hamper recovery in the housing market," the trade group's chief economist, Lawrence Yun, said.
A glut of homes on the market and a flood of foreclosures are holding back a recovery in the housing sector, whose collapse helped to tip the U.S. economy into its worst recession since the 1930s.
Data last week showed a plunge in housing starts and the government on Wednesday is expected report a marginal rise in new single family homes in February. Home resales make up more than 90 percent of national sales and economists said they would continue to weigh on new home sales and building.
Foreclosures and short sales, which typically occur below market value, accounted for 39 percent of transactions in February, the highest since April 2009, up from 37 percent the prior month, the trade group said. All-cash purchases made up a record 33 percent of transactions in February.
According to the Realtors' group, new home prices have been running 45 percent higher than existing home prices, a premium that is historically about 15 percent, indicating previously owned homes are selling well below the cost of construction.
At February's sales pace, the supply of existing homes represented an 8.6 months' supply, up from 7.5 in January. A supply of between six and seven months is generally considered ideal, with higher readings pointing to lower house prices.
"Inventory is still high, about a third higher than it was pre-recession. We are not going to see any bounce back in new home sales until the inventory of existing home sales gets worked down," said Steve Blitz, a senior economist at ITG Investment Research in New York.
"We don't even know what the inventory is. We see a visible supply but then there is a shadow supply that comes on and off the market depending on the time of the year. It's still a morbid market on national level."
Sales last month fell across the board, with multifamily dwellings declining 10 percent and single-family home units dropping 9.6 percent. Compared with February last year, overall sales were down 2.8 percent.
While sales plunged in all regions last month, economists said the pattern was likely to become less uniform in the months ahead, with regions where the labor market is fairly strong showing more life than others.
(Editing by Neil Stempleman)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

7 Billion People on the Planet

Check it out:  The National Geographic has created an interactive website to commemorate the fact that there will soon be 7 billion on the planet earth: There's lots of information on their demographics:

It contains an excellent Chinese-looking face (because the majority of people are Chinese) made up of 7,000 tiny human figures, each representing a million people, to represent the whole population..

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2011/03/age-of-man/face-interactive

Monday, March 7, 2011

Answering the "Climate Skeptics"

Skeptical Science is a fine website that addresses all of the major "climate skeptics," using real science, from "It's the Sun" to "CO2 Lags Temperature."  It offers analysis in virtually any language, from English to Icelandic to Hebrew.

http://www.skepticalscience.com/

It offers in formation at any level of detail, from Basic to Advanced.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

ACEEE’S GREENEST CAR RATINGS ARE NOT JUST FOR NUTS: REAL CARS FOR REAL LIFESTYLES

As an environmentalist, I cherish the Potomac and Chesapeake Bay and all their little tributaries.  Ann and I try to reuse and recycle things around the house.  We plant native trees and bushes, to replace the exotic invasive jungle that covered our tiny Arlington homestead when we moved in 10 years ago.   We composted grandma.
So the annual greenest car ratings of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) are my kind of thing. If you’re in the market, I urge you to check it. http://www.greenercars.org/

I phoned Therese Langer, ACEEE Transportation Director, when the annual ratings came out last week.  She told me, “Each year, since 1998, we have rated the ‘greenest’ vehicles sold in the US (using a combination of tailpipe pollution, fuel consumption, and the greenhouse gases that cause global warming).”

The 13 “greenest” vehicles (listed below) include a wide range of cars from domestic and foreign makers, including Ford and Chevy: a natural gas vehicle, an all-electric, several high-mileage conventional gasoline vehicle, and a hybrid. Further down the list is the first “extended-range electric vehicle,” the Chevrolet Volt.  http://www.greenercars.org/highlights_greenest.htm
They also rate the “meanest” (those whose outrageous fuel consumption or emissions put them beyond the pale of polite society). You know, your Bugattis and Bentleys, and hyper-extravagant sport utility vehicles, whose drivers are obviously trying to compensate for deep feelings of inferiority.
“But wait!” I opined.  “Some of the top-rated cars only a nut would drive.  Those two-seater Smart Fortwos from Mercedes, which gets 41 mpg on the highway, but is surely too tiny for safety out there.  I’m also dubious about the natural gas fueled Honda Civic  at the top of the list, since natural gas has lower energy content than gasoline and most people don’t have fueling stations for it in their homes.”   

Langer said she agreed that they were not that realistic. “For that reason, ACEEE also identifies a selection of the most efficient gasoline-powered models in each vehicle class (from full size pickups to ultra-compacts). We call it Greener Choices 2011.  We thought it would be more useful for most people.” A selection of gasoline vehicles that score well can be found at  http://www.greenercars.org/highlights.htm
 
Also available at the site is The Best Vehicles by Class (from two seaters to heavy SUVs), which is quite exhaustive.

As for today’s politically-correct electric vehicles (such as the Leaf and Volt), Langer warned, their performance can be deceptive. “Vehicles running on electricity emit nothing from the tailpipe, but their ‘upstream’ emissions [the emissions of the power plants that generate the power] can be substantial, depending on where they’re charged. As U.S. power generation becomes cleaner, these vehicles’ scores will rise.” [For now most of America gets its power from coal, natural gas, or other fossil fuel. Those plants generate much pollution. That will take years to change, so your electric car will continue to spew that phantom pollution until the nation’s entire power system is replaced with cleaner stuff.]

Table 1.  Greenest Cars (Source: http://www.greenercars.org/highlights_greenest.htm  ACEEE Website)
Make and Model:

Honda Civic GX
 Specs:

1.8 liter 4 cylinder, automatic transmission [fueled with natural gas]  
Nissan Leaf  
Electric (Li-ion bat.)  
Smart Fortwo Cabriolet / Smart Fortwo Coupe  
1.0 liter, 3 cylinder, manual 
Toyota Prius  
1.8 liter 4 cylinder, auto [constant velocity transmission]  
Honda Civic Hybrid  
1.3 liter 4 cylinder auto  
Honda Insight  
1.3 liter 4 cylinder, auto [constant velocity transmission]
Ford Fiesta SFE  
1.6 liter 4 cylinder, auto  
Chevrolet Cruze Eco  
1.4 liter 4 cylinder, manual  
Hyundai Elantra  
1.8 liter 4 cylinder, manual  
Mini Cooper  
1.6 liter 4 cylinder, manual   
Toyota Yaris  
1.5 liter 4 cylinder, manual  
Mazda 2  
1.5 liter 4 cylinder, manual  
Chevrolet Volt  
1.0 liter 4 cylinder, auto, with auxiliary electric drive (Li-ion batt.)