I subscribe to the Wall Street Journal, but if it were my sole source of info, I would have an especially dim view of the economy’s prospects. Thankfully, I have an email inbox that attracts more balanced insights about the economy and the housing market, without any apparent political agenda.

        As economist Ingo Winzer writes today in his “National Economic Outlook,” the Journal’s headline and article a few days ago, Grim Job Report Sinks Markets, “suggests an economy in retreat…but the May job numbers look like more of the same moderate growth we’ve been getting in recent months.” Winzer, who is president of Local Market Monitor, which

Big-ticket items and small luxuries indicate consumer optimism.

forecasts price trends in more than 300 markets, points to job growth of 1.4% year over year, consistent with growth rates of previous months, as well as a 2% increase in overall manufacturing jobs, with an 8% increase in auto industry employment. With jobs growing fastest in businesses such as furniture stores, restaurants and bars, Winzer concludes that “consumers are buying big-ticket items and are treating themselves to small luxuries, important signs of optimism.”

        Winzer also forecasts that the housing market will continue to grow because “consumers are again willing to borrow money” and that, although home prices are down fractionally over the last 12 months, they rose in one-third of the 315 markets that Local Market Monitor covers. The economist predicts that consumers “will accelerate their buying during the next year and finally produce a real estate recovery.”

        Winzer is not alone in his optimistic outlook.  A report by The Demand Institute, which was recently formed by The Conference Board and A.G. Nielsen, the respected research firm, indicates that, “Home valuations will start to climb again while adjacent consumer industries will capture significant new growth opportunities in 2012 and beyond as the U.S. housing market finally turns the corner.” Further, The Demand Institute predicted that, “average home prices will increase by up to 1 percent in the second half of 2012. By 2014, home prices will increase by as much as 2.5 percent. From 2015 to 2017, the study projects annual increases between 3 and 4 percent…and the strongest markets could capture average gains of 5 percent or more in the coming years.” 

        On this latter point, we will add our own prediction that the most popular markets favored by baby boomers looking for high quality golf communties –- coastal towns like Charleston and Savannah, college towns like Chapel Hill and Charlottesville, mountain areas like Asheville and upstate areas of South Carolina –- will be among the strongest housing markets and may see increases of greater than 5%. For a sampling of current properties and homes for sale in these and other popular markets in the southern U.S., please check out GolfHomesListed.com.

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Please note: Local Market Monitor offers our readers a special reduced price for its local market housing price forecasts. For more information, click here.

        In our May issue of Home On The Course, our free monthly newsletter, attorney Michelle Tanzer, who has worked with scores of golf community developers, wrote about the importance of understanding the covenants and other documents that relate to a development in which you are considering a purchase.  In recent days, two legal judgments provide real life examples of the consequences of reading the fine print -– or not.

        According to one of our favorite sites, GolfDisputeResolution.com, courts in New Jersey and Texas dealt with similar issues of golf course owners’ responsibilities to the residents of adjacent real estate.  In the New Jersey case, the owner of the Ramblewood Golf Club in Mount Laurel thought the Township erred when, in 2006, it passed an ordinance compelling that the 50-year-old golf course be “preserved as a commercial golf course or similar open space activity.”  In 1961, an ordinance granted permission to build the golf course if it was never to be subdivided for home building; however, a “final plat” was never submitted by the developer, and today’s owners suggested, therefore, that no prohibition was in place.  The court did not buy it and rejected the course owner’s suit.

        In Texas, the circumstances were only slightly different but the judgment the opposite.  A jury there found that no legal promise had been made by owners of the Atascocita Country Club, who closed the club two years ago after they failed to find a buyer for it.  Some residents of adjacent properties brought suit, seeking to force the owners to continue operating the club’s golf course on the basis that requirements to operate the property as a golf course were “implied.”  The jury disagreed by a vote of 10 to 2.

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        The next issue of Home On The Course, our free monthly newsletter, will be out in a matter of days.  You can sign up by clicking the box at the top of this column.  Our June edition will make the case that this is a good time to pull the trigger for those contemplating the building of a new home in a golf community.  Entertaining the construction of a house is not for the faint of heart, but the current environment could make it more financially feasible, if not easier.  Sign up today to ensure you receive the June edition when we publish it within the next week.  And, by the way, if you find yourself dreaming about actually building a home on a golf course, we have some nice properties listed for sale at GolfHomesListed.  More properties and homes are being added frequently, so check back often.