National Housing Market refers to trends in supply, demand and pricing of residential property in the US. Local housing sales data, new home construction statistics and population demographics are aggregated and analyzed for all major US markets and used to determine the relative state of performance of the national housing market. The housing market is an important economic indicator which can impact numerous major industries including homebuilding, building materials, construction, mortgage, retailing and consumer goods.
Gerson Lehrman Group Council Members are available to discuss National Housing Market via phone consultations, live meetings, surveys, and other custom GLG products and services.
Find, engage, and manageSM experts today through the GLG platform
GLG Council Members are leading experts including academics, scientists, and industry specialists
PresidentThe Sullivan Group Real Estate Advisors
Study groups are populations of experts knowledgeable on specific sub-topics within a broader industry
| Study Group Name | No. Members |
|---|---|
| Production Homebuilding Experts | 1727 |
Interactive roundtables, private visits, and small scale seminars are types of GLG Live Meetings
August 30, 2007 | New York
GLGi: National Housing MarketMarch 15, 2007 | New York
GLGi: National Housing MarketAugust 3, 2007 | New York
GLGi: Regional Housing Market RoundupJanuary 10, 2008 | New York
GLGi: National Housing Market OverviewNews analyses are expert commentaries on current events, written by Council Members who are available for follow up consultations
September 7, 2007
David Keller, Former Chief Financial Officer, Technical Olympic USA Inc.
credit flu may delay housing recovery | ww.wsjournal.com
Consolidation will occur in the industry The strongest companies will survive the downturn five years from now there will be significant changes to the industry
Message to Fed: Housing is Falling Much Faster than Reported
May 11, 2007
Home sales: Worst drop in 18 years | money.cnn.com
Housing is Falling Much Faster than Reported
July 30, 2007
No Housing Turnaround for Two Years? | www.businessweek.com
Favorite First-to-Turn-Around Markets Favorite Long-Term Markets Favorite Market After Housing Bottoms Favorite Fairly Priced, Highly Competitive Markets