National Association of Realtors economists can never pass a dung heap without sticking a flower in it.  NAR Senior Economist Lawrence Yun did it again yesterday.  After a rare bit of no-shill honesty in which Groundhog Yun popped up, looked at the storm clouds and predicted trouble the rest of the year, he could not resist copping his ingrained Pollyanna attitude about 2008.     

    Yun announced that the NAR had lowered its forecast for 2007 home sales one percent from its prediction just a month ago.  In other words, they found about 70,000 more homes that won't sell in 2007.  But before we could shout "Hallelujah" at the its-about-time honesty of it all, Yun added that next year's total sales of homes would be up slightly above the NAR's guesstimate of last month.
    We wonder what these guys are drinking, or trying to get the rest of us to drink.  Everything we read says that folks at the low end and the high (jumbo mortgage) end of the lending scale will have continuing problems securing home loans.  And if I can't sell my house, I am not going to buy yours.  The volatility in the equity markets has everyone nervous, but those nervous investors aren't about to seek safe haven in a Miami condo or million-dollar Scottsdale hacienda.  Despite a still pretty-solid U.S. economy, most predictions by economists not working for the NAR tilt toward the pessimistic for 2008.  Paul Kasriel, chief economist with Chicago's Northern Trust, went so far as to say, "No one is buying into their [the NAR's] Kool Aid; that's why prices are falling."  Kasriel and most economists without shame advise sitting on the sidelines (unless you absolutely, positively have to sell your house).  
    On the other hand, if you have lots of cash and plan to relocate in the next few years anyway, new home builders are giving away pools, televisions, closing costs and just about every other amenity you can think of to move their inventory of homes.  Name your price, and you just might get it.  If enough of us do that, we could help turn Lawrence Yun from shill to prophet.

    According to an AP report covered at the USA Today web site and by our friends at GolfVacationInsider, Tiger Woods is likely to design his first course in the U.S. for The Cliffs Communities, the mega-development organization that stretches from Asheville, NC, and all along the western and southwestern edge of South Carolina. The Cliffs already provides a grand buffet of name designer courses by Nicklaus, Player, Fazio, and Tom Jackson.  Player recently announced he, his family and his company would take up residence at The Cliffs Mountain, where he is designing the golf course.
    Woods said that he would be in Traveler's Rest, SC, on Tuesday.  Reportedly, the course will be built in the Asheville area, not far from The Cliffs at Walnut Grove where Nicklaus has designed one of his two courses for the developers.  Woods made his comments yesterday at Southern Hills in Tulsa, OK, where he is tuning up for the PGA Championship, which starts tomorrow.  Finally, we have something in common with Tiger; we have been to Traveler's Rest, to visit the Cliffs Valley and the nearby high and mighty Cliffs at Glassy community (it plays at an elevation of nearly 4,000 feet).  We enjoyed the unusual and entertaining Tom Jackson layout.
     Tiger's only other design gig so far is in the Middle East, in Dubai.  We wish there were a futures options exchange on golf course initiation fees.  The comprehensive membership in The Cliffs courses currently runs north of $100,000.  With Tiger's design fees likely well into seven figures, expect an uptick in both membership fees and home site costs at the already pricey Cliffs.

 

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The Tom Jackson layout at The Cliffs at Glassy is never boring.