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Housing Market

These 5 Charts Prove the Housing Recovery is for Real - and Just Beginning

By , Money Morning

The housing market has rebounded in a big way, with home prices increasing the most since the housing bubble burst in 2006.

Prices aren't the only indicator pointed toward recovery.

Housing barometers including sales, permits and housing starts have surged well beyond their recession troughs and back into healthy territory - and bullish analysts say there's plenty more room for growth after years of decreased activity.

The housing market activity has been driven by pent-up demand, improved consumer confidence, low interest rates and still affordable prices. And the industry's comeback comes at a time when supply is tight. The inventory of homes available is at near-historic lows, and foreclosures have declined.

Looking ahead to the rest of 2013, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) has doubled its forecast for U.S. housing price gains in 2013 to 7% and expects a more than 14% increase through 2015.

And Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) - in a recent report titled "Someone Say House Party?" - said home values will climb 8% this year, up from its previous estimate of 4.7%.

Well-known industry analyst Ivy Zelman, CEO of Zelman & Associates, shares the bullish outlook.

"I think we're in nirvana for housing," Zelman, who correctly called both the housing market's peak in 2005 and the bottom in 2012, told CNBC. "I'm probably the most bullish I've ever been fundamentally, and I'm dating myself - been around for over 20 years, so I've seen a lot of ups and downs."

These five charts provide more evidence the housing industry is on its way back.

The U.S. Housing Recovery in 5 Charts

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