Lending is steady or slower and residential real estate generally remains weak with signs of improvement, according to the Federal Reserve's Beige Book. Residential real estate lending is decreasing in New York, Richmond, and St. Louis, according to the Fed. Dallas' outstanding mortgage volumes are steady but low, while Kansas City's rise in mortgages is slowing. Refinancing activity is dropping dramatically in Richmond, decreasing in New York and Cleveland, and maintaining its pace in Dallas. Credit quality is varying by district with commercial real estate concerns leading to tighter credit in some areas as generally credit standards continue to tighten or remain stable. The only district where residential real estate sales are failing to improve is St. Louis, where they instead are seeing a steep drop. The Fed said the low end of the market, particularly entry-level sales, continues to do relatively well, with some districts attributing this to the first-time homebuyer tax credit. The Boston and New York districts said condominium sales are still far below 2008 levels. Home prices continue to decline in most cases although some districts see possible signs of stabilization. Three districts said foreclosure sales are putting downward pressure on prices. Residential construction appears to remain slow, with three districts noting that financing is difficult, according to the report. Respondents said commercial real estate sales volume is low, or even "non-existent" in some districts, citing a combination of tight credit and weak demand. Tight credit also was cited as a factor in limited or declining commercial construction in most districts, exceptions being health and institutional construction in the St. Louis district, public sector construction in the Chicago district and World Trade Center reconstruction in Manhattan.
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