America’s 10 Best Undervalued Places to Live
While the national housing bust has devastated property values, it has also created some outstanding bargain opportunities for would-be home buyers—if you know where to look. During the first half of the decade, easy credit and speculative fervor sent home prices in certain states—Florida, California, Nevada—scorching to phenomenal heights. But nearly three years into a real estate crash that’s dragged home prices down 32 percent from their 2006 peaks, some of these once wildly overpriced markets present today’s real estate shoppers with perhaps their best shot at long-term value. “What we have seen is that those markets that became significantly overvalued [during the housing boom] are right now very undervalued,” says Jeannine Cataldi, senior economist and manager of IHS Global Insight’s Regional Real Estate Service.
To pinpoint the nation’s most undervalued housing markets, we turned to IHS Global Insight’s first-quarter 2009 House Prices in America report, which uses household income, population density, and other data to compare a market’s actual value with where it should be on a statistical basis. We then used employment, quality-of-life, and other research to determine America’s best undervalued places to live.
Naples, Fla. More than two years of price declines have turned some of Florida’s most overpriced communities into buying opportunities, says Jack McCabe of Florida-based McCabe Research & Consulting. “There are definitely opportunities in the marketplace now that make sense,” he says. The upscale retirement community of Naples is one such market, McCabe says. With plenty of golf, beaches, and fishing, Naples is an enchanting, sun-drenched spot along Florida’s southwest coastline. And after home prices plummeted by nearly 50 percent from the first quarter of 2006 to the first quarter of 2009, the housing market is looking increasingly tempting. IHS Global Insight considers the median home price in Naples—$200,000—to be 33 percent undervalued.
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