See allLatest Trade Alerts

Brokerage Partners

6 Worst Housing Markets Coming in 2012

Tickers in this article: LMT EGP
BOSTON (MainStreet) -- The U.S. housing market doesn't seem poised to have much of a happy new year in 2012 -- but some markets seem likely to do a lot worse than others.

"The worst housing markets are unfortunately a real mess," says Mike Colpitts of HousingPredictor.com, which recently released its annual Worst 25 Markets projections for 2012.

A handful of particularly hard-hit housing markets, led by Las Vegas, might double a projected drop 3.9% nationwide.

While Colpitts expects home prices to drop 3.9% nationwide on average this year, he foresees declines of more than twice that size in a handful of particularly hard-hit markets.

Colpitts says these markets are still suffering from the housing boom's "overbuilding, mortgage fraud, Wall Street and congressional corruption and new mortgage products developed and sold to anyone who could sign their names."

"The cockeyed optimist in me believes things will eventually get better, though it'll take a whole lot of years," he says.

Here's a look at the five cities atop HousingPredictor.com's worst-markets study. All projections refer to estimated 2012 losses in the average price of each city's houses, condos and townhouses:

Fifth-worst market: Bethesda, Md.
Projected 2012 decline: 7.5%
Home to the famous Bethesda Naval Hospital and other U.S. government institutions, Bethesda is one of the wealthiest suburbs of Washington, D.C. It also hosts Lockheed Martin(LMT) and several other large corporations.

But Colpitts says Bethesda also had "one of the country's most overpriced housing markets during the boom, and home values still have along way to fall before reaching anything close to the bottom."

He says Bethesda's home sales have recently slowed "despite the oversupply of foreclosures at discount prices. Low mortgage interest rates don't seem to be enough to push enough buyers off the fence."

The expert expects average prices there to drop another 7.5%, to about 194,000, during 2012.