According to the report, housing markets with the biggest booms in 2004 and 2005 are
generally expected to be the slowest to return to normal levels of activity and those that showed more restraint will be the
first to show growth & mdash; with notable exceptions concentrated in the industrial Midwest. In addition to the state-by-state
analysis, the report examines data for seven major Census regions and divisions. Highlights include:
The
South Atlantic Division: This part of the country had widely varied housing experiences, with areas like Georgia
as well as Asheville, Charlotte, Durham, Greensboro, Raleigh and Winston-Salem metro areas in North Carolina all experienced
only modest declines in 2006, leaving the areas near or above pre-boom levels of production. In contrast, many markets in
Florida experienced some of the highest levels of overheating with markets like Orlando seeing housing starts spike to 150
percent of normal.  ;
West South Central Division: Dominated by Texas, which accounts for
roughly 75 percent of its housing starts, the West South Central division had the strongest growth during the boom and has
maintained the highest level of production through the correction. The division also includes the New Orleans metro area which
has seen its pace of housing starts emerge from its 2005 collapse to rival pre-Katrina levels.
East South
Central Division: The East South Central division& mdash; comprised of Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee&
mdash; was the only area other than the West South Central division to have housing production levels at the end of 2006 above
pre-boom levels.
Mountain Division: The Phoenix metro area rose to 149 percent of pre-boom demand
in 2005 before dropping to 79 percent by the end of 2006, making it one of the most volatile markets in the nation. Las Vegas
performed similarly with prices rising rapidly, primarily due to investor demand. NAHB forecasts that due to the steep corrections,
these areas will grow moderately this year and next as they cope with the prices, production and investor excesses that swamped
them.
Pacific Division: The boom in California, which accounts for 70 percent of the starts in
the division, had something to do with investors but more to do with demand for affordable housing in the state. The report
notes that major markets such as Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco are expected to experience strong gains
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