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      | January 2006 | A Publication of ELLIOTT® 
      & Company Appraisers    |  
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      | HOUSING 
		PRICES PREDICTED TO LEVEL OFF IN 2006,BUT NOT CRASH
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           Nariman Behravesh, chief economist of Global Insight, has issued his 
			"Top 10 Economic Predictions for 2006." One of these predictions is 
			about the price of housing. 
          "House prices will level off without crashing," Behravesh wrote for 
			Global Insight’s Web site. "So far, the British and Australian 
			housing markets have cooled down without crashing. The same fate 
			probably awaits the U.S. economy in 2006." 
          While the average rate of appreciation in home values has been at 
			about 9% the past couple of years, Behravesh predicted collective 
			home values would only rise by 3.5% this year and 1.9% in 2007. 
          "Thus, the housing bubbles are likely to deflate without bursting," he 
			concluded. 
          Another prediction was about Federal Reserve rates. 
          "The Fed will keep tightening through the spring," Behravesh 
			forecasted. "Global Insight predicts that the Fed will raise rates 
			at least three more times between December and March, before taking 
			a breather. This will leave the funds rate at 4.75%." 
          Outgoing Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan did indeed raise the 
			rate a quarter of a point in December 2005, meaning if Behravesh’s 
			prediction will prove itself to be accurate, there will be two more 
			increases by the end of March.
 "Solid growth will last at least for another year," Behravesh 
			stated. "Global Insight expects both the U.S. and global economies 
			to grow at about 3.5% this year, compared with 3.7% and 3.4%, 
			respectively, in 2005. In the case of the United States, an expected 
			slowdown in consumer spending and housing will be offset by strength 
			in capital spending and exports, helped by a fiscal boost from 
			hurricane-related construction."
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          $300K BUYS DIFFERENT 
			TYPES OF HOUSES IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF U.S.
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		  You can buy a really nice house in this 
		country for $300,000. Just make sure you are careful about where in the 
		United States you spend the $300,000 for a house. 
 For example, this amount of money can net someone a beautiful, spacious 
		home in, say, Wichita, Kansas. But try to put up 300 grand for a place 
		to live in Manhattan and your pad would not be so grand. According to a 
		recent study conducted by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine, one can 
		by a 3,550-square-foot, four bedroom, two-bath house on a waterfront for 
		$289,900 in Wichita. That same amount of money wouldn’t be enough for a 
		520-square-foot studio apartment with roof-deck access in San Francisco, 
		where the price tag for such a unit was $299,000, according to the 
		study. This study determined that $260,000 would be needed for a 
		425-square-foot, ground floor studio on the Upper East Side of 
		Manhattan.
 
 In another large city, not that far from the Big Apple, housing is much 
		more affordable. The Kiplinger study indicated that 2,372-square-foot, 
		four-bedroom, one-bath split-level can be had in Philadelphia for 
		$299,000. On the other hand, housing is quite expensive in Boston, where 
		$274,000 is needed to purchase a 770-square-foot, two-bedroom, one-bath 
		condo.
 
 Other areas that provide quite a bang for the buck in the housing market 
		include Nashville, where a 3,620-square-foot, four-bedroom, 2˝ bath 
		colonial house with a finished basement was on the market for $289,000; 
		Dallas, where a 3,465-square-foot, four-bedroom, 3˝-bath house with a 
		media and game room was selling for $299,921 and Charlotte, N.C., where 
		$299,000 would land someone a 2,912-square-foot, five-bedroom, 
		three-bath, house with a two-story foyer.
 
 In Phoenix, $295,000 buys a brand new 1,800-square-foot four-bedroom, 
		three-bath house, while $300,000 is needed in Seattle to purchase a 
		958-square-foot, one-bedroom, one-bath, waterfront condo.
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				STUDY FINDS HOUSING 
				EXTREMELY OVERVALUED IN 38% OF COUNTRY
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                |  While we at ELLIOTT® & Company 
				Appraisers tend to believe the prediction in the first article 
				about a soft landing, rather than a crash, for housing prices, 
				we do realize that some parts of the country may see a sharper 
				price correction than most. 
 A study, conducted jointly by Global Insight and National City 
				Corp., determined that, in the third quarter of 2005, housing 
				prices in 65 out of 299 U.S. markets were "extremely overvalued 
				and face a high risk of future price correction." These 65 
				markets accounted for about 38% of the population in the United 
				States.
 
 Taken into account on this study were "price-to-income ratios, 
				household population density, mortgage interest rates, relative 
				income levels and characteristics unique to the history of each 
				metro area."
 
 Each of the 299 markets were given a "model-estimated home 
				price" by the study, which was compared to each market’s "actual 
				home price." Only the markets where the actual home price 
				exceeded the model-estimated home price by 30% or more were 
				rated as "extremely overvalued."
 
 Topping the list of extremely overvalued markets in the report, 
				issued in December, was Naples, FL, where the actual home price 
				exceeded the study’s model-estimated home price by a whopping 
				84%. Four other markets, Merced (76.7%), Salinas (74.8%) and 
				Stockton (72%), CA and Port St. Lucie, FL (72.2%) topped 70% in 
				the study.
 
 Seven additional markets, Madera (69.9%), Santa Barbara (69.7%), 
				Modesto (66.9%), Napa (65.5%), Riverside (64.8) and Sacramento 
				(61.5%) and Medford, OR (64.1%) were above 60%. Between 50% and 
				60% were Atlantic City, NJ (58.6%), Chico (58.5%), Fresno (58%), 
				Redding (56.3%), Santa Rosa (56.1%), Oxnard (54.8%), Los Angeles 
				(54.2%), Vallejo (52.6%), San Luis Obispo (52.5%) and 
				Bakersfield (51.1%), CA, West Palm Beach (56.9%), Sarasota 
				(55.6%), Miami (55.3%), Vero Beach (54.3%), Fort Lauderdale 
				(52.8%) and Cape Coral (51.9%), FL and Bend, OR (56%).
 
 The markets listed in the study at between 40% and 50% 
				overvalued included Palm Bay (48.7%), Panama City (45.8%), 
				Deltona (44.2%) and Fort Walton Beach (43.2%), FL, Barnstable 
				Town, MA (48%), Oakland (47.4%), San Diego (45.8%), Visalia 
				(44.9%), San Jose (44.3%), Santa Cruz (43.7%) and Santa Ana 
				(43.6%), CA, Ocean City, NJ (46.7%), Prescott, AZ (46.4%), 
				Bellingham, WA (43.2%) and Nassau-Suffolk, NY (42.7%).
 
 The remaining markets the study considers overvalued are 
				Poughkeepsie (39.2%) and Kingston (38.1%), NY, Reno (38.4%) and 
				Las Vegas (38.2%), NV, Washington, DC (37.2%), Bethesda, MD 
				(35.7%), Providence, RI (34.9%), San Francisco, CA (34.9%), St. 
				George, UT (34.9%), Ocala (34.8%), Tampa (33.7%), Pensacola 
				(33.2%), Orlando (32.7%) and Jacksonville (30.5%), FL, Phoenix, 
				AZ (34.8%), Portland (34.7%) and Eugene (33.8%), OR, Grand 
				Junction, CO (31.4%), Honolulu, HI (31.3%), Edison, NJ (31.3%) 
				and Duluth, MN (30.8%).
 
 The study considered nearby parts of Virginia, Maryland and West 
				Virginia in the Washington market. It also included parts of 
				Massachusetts in the Providence market, parts of Washington in 
				the Portland market and parts of Wisconsin to be in the Duluth 
				market.
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                QUOTES OF WIT & 
                WISDOM |  
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                    "Plans are merely good 
					intentions unless they immediately degenerate into hard 
					work." --Peter Drucker
                    "One’s first step in wisdom is to question everything, and 
					one’s last is to come to terms with everything." 
					--Georg 
					Christoff Lichtenberg
 "Bureaucrats write memoranda both because they appear to be 
					busy when they are writing and because the memos, once 
					written, immediately become proof that they were busy." 
					--Charles Peters
 
 "The only winner of the War of 1812 was Tchaikovsky."  
					--Solomon Short
 
 "Truly great madness cannot be achieved without significant 
					intelligence."  --Henrik Tikkanen
 
 "A countryman between two lawyers is like a fish between two 
					cats."  --Benjamin Franklin
 
 "People will accept your ideas much more readily if you tell 
					them Benjamin Franklin said it first."
 --David Comins
 
 "As scarce as truth is, the supply has always been in excess 
					of the demand."  --Josh Billings
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