US real gross domestic product (GDP) slid at an annual rate of 6.1% in Q109 as unemployment rose, slashing the output of goods and services. Downsizing and job loss either contributing to or resulting from the GDP contraction may also heap pressure on now-unemployed homeowners. The quarter’s contraction comes after GDP shrank 6.3% in Q408, the US Department of Commerce said Wednesday in its advance estimates. Residential fixed investment helped drive the decline, although a decrease in imports — which negatively affect GDP — slightly offset the total losses. A downturn in federal government spending helped steer the rate of decline down slightly from last quarter, the Commerce Department said. Real personal consumption expenditures rose 2.2% in the quarter, after falling 4.3% in Q408. Surveyed economists expected a 4.6% decline in GDP during the quarter, the Wall Street Journal reported. The actual decline indicates worse-than-expected economic conditions impacted the quarter’s labor and production. Jobless claims jumped in mid-April, for example, as first-time applications for state unemployment benefits in the week ending April 18 rose by 27,000 to a seasonally-adjusted 640,000, the US Labor Department said. In California, a state posting one of the top five largest mid-April increases in unemployment claims, has seen an effect on homeowners’ ability to maintain payments. Notices of default filed on California homes jumped 80% from the prior-year period in the first quarter, real estate information provider DataQuick Information Systems said in late April. Write to Diana Golobay at diana.golobay@housingwire.com.
Diana Golobay was a reporter with HousingWire through mid-2010, providing wide-ranging coverage of the U.S. financial crisis. She has since moved onto other roles as a writer and editor.see full bio
Most Popular Articles
Latest Articles
From resilience to antifragility: Rethinking cybersecurity for real estate and mortgage professionals
In information security, we’ve long spoken about resilience. The goal has been to withstand an attack, recover quickly, and return to business as usual. But in today’s environment—where attackers adapt and evolve daily—resilience is no longer enough. We must go further. We must embrace antifragility.
-
From local to global: RE/MAX’s Chris Lim on the next era of real estate relationships
-
Stop marketing like it’s 2008: You’re invisible
-
RE/MAX accelerates real estate innovation with AI and technology
-
Retirement plans for small-business owners have visible generational gaps
-
VA loans rise as housing market shifts toward buyers
Diana Golobay was a reporter with HousingWire through mid-2010, providing wide-ranging coverage of the U.S. financial crisis. She has since moved onto other roles as a writer and editor.see full bio
