davidfcooper: (Default)

Yahoo Finance: Which Cities Face Biggest Housing Risks?

The second column should decline after 2014 when health insurance reform kicks in.

The third column combines those on fixed incomes (pensions/other retirement income and unemployment insurance payments) with those with no income.

The fourth column, "Housing-Stress Indicator," combines the other three.

To be sure, a high level of income can make crossing the 30% threshold of housing costs-to-income less risky for a borrower. New York, for example, is in the top 10 for the housing-stress indicator among the 49 most populous cities, but the percentage of people without health insurance and unemployment are both below the national averages in the region. The New York area has one of the highest median incomes in the nation, allowing residents to apportion more to housing while maintaining wiggle room to deal with other expenses.

Below is a chart of the 49 most populous U.S. metro areas with their stress readings and components, sorted by the cities with the highest housing-stress indicator to the least.

 

Metro Area Spending >30% of Income on Housing Without Health Insurance Population Not Working Housing-Stress Indicator
United States, average 37.5% 15.1% 33.1% 85.7
Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL 57.7% 25.6% 33.3% 116.6
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA 54.3% 20.5% 39.5% 114.3
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA 54.3% 21.5% 33.5% 109.3
San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA 53.9% 17.0% 36.4% 107.3
Las Vegas-Paradise, NV 49.6% 22.3% 32.2% 104.1
Orlando-Kissimmee, FL 47.6% 21.2% 32.6% 101.4
Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL 46.6% 18.5% 34.4% 99.5
Sacramento–Arden-Arcade–Roseville, CA 48.4% 12.6% 35.4% 96.4
San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA 50.5% 12.3% 31.6% 94.4
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA 48.8% 12.9% 32.2% 93.9
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ 41.3% 17.9% 33.5% 92.7
San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA 50.2% 11.9% 30.6% 92.7
Detroit-Warren-Livonia, MI 39.0% 12.9% 39.1% 91
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, LA 38.0% 18.8% 33.7% 90.5
Jacksonville, FL 40.0% 16.8% 33.3% 90.1
Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WI 42.9% 14.4% 31.9% 89.2
Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC 42.1% 11.7% 34.6% 88.4
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA 36.5% 19.2% 32.4% 88.1
Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX 32.2% 24.6% 31.1% 87.9
Memphis, TN-MS-AR 35.9% 16.3% 35.4% 87.6
Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-WA 40.9% 14.8% 31.3% 87
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX 32.0% 24.0% 29.6% 85.6
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA 43.0% 12.1% 29.9% 85
San Antonio, TX 30.1% 20.0% 34.4% 84.5
Providence-New Bedford-Fall River, RI-MA 42.9% 9.0% 29.9% 81.8
Austin-Round Rock, TX 31.6% 20.5% 27.7% 79.8
Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH 35.2% 11.5% 32.7% 79.4
Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD 37.4% 10.0% 31.7% 79.1
Richmond, VA 34.1% 12.8% 31.5% 78.4
Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO 35.0% 15.3% 27.3% 77.6
Birmingham-Hoover, AL 31.0% 12.3% 34.2% 77.5
Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord, NC-SC 31.7% 15.7% 30.1% 77.5
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV 38.3% 11.0% 27.2% 76.5
Baltimore-Towson, MD 36.8% 10.1% 29.4% 76.3
Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN 32.4% 13.3% 30.5% 76.2
Oklahoma City, OK 26.4% 17.9% 30.6% 74.9
Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI 35.3% 9.9% 28.6% 73.8
Columbus, OH 30.6% 12.7% 30.1% 73.4
Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH 40.2% 4.7% 27.6% 72.5
Indianapolis-Carmel, IN 28.2% 13.6% 29.9% 71.7
Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, CT 35.5% 7.6% 28.4% 71.5
Louisville-Jefferson County, KY-IN 27.5% 12.4% 31.6% 71.5
Cincinnati-Middletown, OH-KY-IN 28.1% 11.8% 30.9% 70.8
St. Louis, MO-IL 29.7% 10.5% 30.4% 70.6
Rochester, NY 29.4% 7.9% 31.9% 69.2
Kansas City, MO-KS 27.6% 13.2% 27.8% 68.6
Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI 34.7% 9.1% 24.7% 68.5
Pittsburgh, PA 28.1% 8.6% 31.0% 67.7
Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY 27.8% 7.9% 31.2% 66.9

___ 

 

Posted via email from davidfcooper's posterous

davidfcooper: (Default)
US banking system is doomed (thank you [livejournal.com profile] novapsyche for the link).

Last One Left, Please Turn Out the Lights

Considering the recent huge increases in fuel and food prices, and the ripple effects on the price of everything else, it is surprising that the Federal Reserve has yet to raise interest rates (which would strengthen the falling dollar). Inflation benefits debtors; the USA is a debtor nation and the financial services industry is a debtor sector, which may explain the Fed's slowness to act. When interest rates finally do rise it may be just the push that results in the financial sector's complete collapse, and that could set the current recession into a downward spiral that will turn into an economic depression. For anyone wishing to place a bet against the financial sector the ETF (electronically traded fund) ticker symbol is SKF (UltraShort Financials ProShares).

Up to now NYC's home prices have barely felt the downturn experienced elsewhere, and in Manhattan prices have actually risen buoyed by foreign buyers taking advantage of the weak dollar. But when the financial sector collapses the effect on NYC's real estate market will be ugly for sellers and home owner's and provide an entry point for first time buyers who had been previously priced out and manage to remain employed. Maybe it would be wise for Shoshana and I to sell our apartment, rent, and wait for prices to fall, but we have to live somewhere, and we like our apartment, neighborhood and community, so we'll stay put and ride it out.
davidfcooper: (Default)
US banking system is doomed (thank you [livejournal.com profile] novapsyche for the link).

Last One Left, Please Turn Out the Lights

Considering the recent huge increases in fuel and food prices, and the ripple effects on the price of everything else, it is surprising that the Federal Reserve has yet to raise interest rates (which would strengthen the falling dollar). Inflation benefits debtors; the USA is a debtor nation and the financial services industry is a debtor sector, which may explain the Fed's slowness to act. When interest rates finally do rise it may be just the push that results in the financial sector's complete collapse, and that could set the current recession into a downward spiral that will turn into an economic depression. For anyone wishing to place a bet against the financial sector the ETF (electronically traded fund) ticker symbol is SKF (UltraShort Financials ProShares).

Up to now NYC's home prices have barely felt the downturn experienced elsewhere, and in Manhattan prices have actually risen buoyed by foreign buyers taking advantage of the weak dollar. But when the financial sector collapses the effect on NYC's real estate market will be ugly for sellers and home owner's and provide an entry point for first time buyers who had been previously priced out and manage to remain employed. Maybe it would be wise for Shoshana and I to sell our apartment, rent, and wait for prices to fall, but we have to live somewhere, and we like our apartment, neighborhood and community, so we'll stay put and ride it out.
davidfcooper: (Default)


http://groups.google.com/group/poetrycalendar/browse_thread/thread/7e141df876fde875?hl=en

Emily Brown

266 12th Street #10, Brooklyn NY 11215

718-832-2310 * emilyholi...@gmail.com

11/12/07

I've just received an eviction notice dated 11/09/07 which gives me 6 days
to vacate the premises. This creates an emergency situation for me because
I've been out of work for quite a while, although I've been very actively
looking for work for many months. I'm in the middle of a divorce; my husband
and I have been separated for over a year. Read more... )

davidfcooper: (Default)


http://groups.google.com/group/poetrycalendar/browse_thread/thread/7e141df876fde875?hl=en

Emily Brown

266 12th Street #10, Brooklyn NY 11215

718-832-2310 * emilyholi...@gmail.com

11/12/07

I've just received an eviction notice dated 11/09/07 which gives me 6 days
to vacate the premises. This creates an emergency situation for me because
I've been out of work for quite a while, although I've been very actively
looking for work for many months. I'm in the middle of a divorce; my husband
and I have been separated for over a year. Read more... )

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