Drive along Interstate 80, just outside the city of Sacramento, Calif., and scores of gated and planned communities await. Only they're not what developers envisioned. Sidewalks are empty; homes are unoccupied.
Blame the heady days of the real estate boom. Easy-to-acquire mortgages, plenty of open land and generous zoning provided new homes to scores of buyers. Between 2000 and 2005, Sacramento-area builders doubled production.
But as prices dropped and demand dried up, builders cut back. This year, there are expected to be 6,140 new constructions in the Sacramento metro area. That's down from 20,370 in 2005, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). Median prices are now $212,000, down from $375,000 in 2005. For many residents, this is old news. Sacramento home builders and buyers engaged in the same behavior leading up to, and following, the Savings & Loan crisis. That's when construction doubled and then quartered once prices fell. Indeed, it's a market prone to booms and busts, which not a good sign for long-term investment.
In Depth: America's Best Long-Term Housing Bets
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Tuesday, December 16, 2008
America's Best Long-Term Real Estate Bets
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Viktor Taushanov
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