| September 14, 2006 |
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The new game in the new home business is called, "What's Your Incentive?" That's typically the first thing buyers ask today when they walk into a new home sales office where builders are using lures instead of price reductions to move an over supply of homes. In July the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) said new single-family home sales dipped 4.3 percent in one month, 14.2 percent compared to the first seven months of 2005 and a whopping 21.6 percent from the record levels set in July 2005. "Builders have been offering sales incentives and slowing their production as demand cools and inventories rise, and our surveys suggest that the downward correction in sales from last year's record pace still is underway," said NAHB president David Pressly, a home builder from Statesville, N.C. David Seiders, chief economist for NAHB says 75 percent of the nation's builders and developers are offering incentives, as Pressly blamed the downturn on high prices and investors and speculators abandoning the market. Higher interest rates are also a factor. Housing's current plight and its role as an economic cornerstone was evident the week ending September 8, when stocks fell for at least two consecutive days after Beazer Homes USA, Hovnanian Enterprises and KB Home warned of growing cancellations and spikes in the supply. That same week, a mortgage rate breather with six consecutive weeks of rate declines appeared over as Bankrate.Com first and then Fannie Mae reported rates were up albeit slightly. This round of new home incentives include the usual mundane kitchen and appliance upgrades and prepaid closing costs, but more and more builders are using unusual come-ons to lure buyers. Most incentives are showing up in the coastal and high-priced markets where the biggest booms are giving way to the largest busts. "For the condo buyers, we're seeing everything from the first year's mortgage payment and first year's HOA dues paid to discounts off of prices to upgraded appliances, cabinetry, and woodwork," Jack McCabe, president of McCabe Research and Consulting, a real estate consulting firm in Deerfield, FL told Hanley Woods' Multifamily Executive publication. Here's a look at some of the come ons.
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