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Econobrowser suggests that housing prices could drop 50% from their peak. While it was initially skeptical about such a huge drop which was suggested by a commenter, its re-examination of this based on recent developments, and what the economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal state led it to conclude that such a summit plummet was plausible.

Sunday, I posted on the possibility that it could take 10 years for housing prices to recover based on an interview with the Warren Group and comparing the current housing tumble to the one in the 1990s. Combining this with the Econobrowser’s pessimistic scenario recommends that we could be in the longest and deepest housing price decline in American history.

I do not comprehend the details of the analysis presented here but if my reading of the post is correct, it concludes that the Case-Shiller index of housing prices, one which seems to have more credibility than the one produced by the government’s OFHEO (Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight) House Price Index (HPI), is that prices could fall 50%. Econobrower notes “that only a slightly more pessimistic than average forecast implies a 50% decline in house prices as measured by Case-Shiller, relative to peak.”

So if you purchased a house for $300,000 in 2006, it could be worth $150,000 when the housing market hits bottom and take until 2016 to recover to its original price. How about that for an ownership society?

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter.

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