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Existing Home Sales Show Surprising
Gain
Daily Real
Estate News | January 27, 2009 Existing-home sales rose
unexpectedly while inventory declined, led by a surge of sales
in the West, according to the National Association of
Realtors®.
Existing-home sales
– including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops –
jumped 6.5 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual
rate of 4.74 million units in December. The
number compares to a downwardly revised pace of 4.45 million
units in November, but 3.5 percent below the 4.91 million-unit
pace in December 2007.
For all of 2008,
there were about 4.9 million existing-home sales -- 13.1
percent below the 5.65 million transactions recorded in 2007.
This is the lowest volume since 1997 when there were 4,371,000
sales.
Lawrence Yun, NAR
chief economist, said home prices continue to fall
significantly.
“It appears some
buyers are taking advantage of much lower home prices,” he
said. “The higher monthly sales gain and falling inventory are
steps in the right direction, but the market is still far from
normal balanced conditions. Buyers will continue to have an
edge over sellers for the foreseeable
future.”
Total housing
inventory at the end of December fell 11.7 percent to 3.68
million existing homes available for sale, which represents a
9.3-month supply at the current sales pace, down from a
11.2-month supply in November.
Yun said the market
is underperforming and hurting the broader
economy.
“We’ve added 25
million people to our population over the past decade and
housing affordability conditions are the best we’ve seen since
1973, but household formation is much lower than expected,” he
said. “Consequently, there is a pent-up demand which could be
unleashed with the right stimulus, including a non-repayable
home buyer tax credit. The Obama administration and Congress
need to move fast to stimulate a spring sales upturn which will
help to stabilize home prices and set the foundation for a
sustainable economic recovery.”
Housing
Stats
National median
existing-home price: (for all housing types) was $175,400 in
December, which is 15.3 percent below December 2007 when the
median was $207,000. There remains a significant downward
distortion in the current median from a large number of
distress sales at discounted prices, currently 45 percent of
transactions; the median is where half of the homes sold for
more and half sold for less. For all of 2008, the median price
was $198,600, down 9.3 percent from $219,000 in
2007.
Single-family
home sales:
rose 7 percent to
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.26 million in
December from a level of 3.98 million in November, but
are 1.4 percent below a 4.32 million-unit pace in
December 2007. For all of 2008, single-family sales fell
11.9 percent to 4,349,000.
Median existing
single-family home price:
dropped to $174,700 in December, down 14.8 percent from a
year ago. For all of 2008, the single-family median was
$197,100, which is 9.5 percent below 2007.
Existing
condominium and co-op
sales: increased 2.1
percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 480,000
units in December from 470,000 in November, but are 18.4
percent below the 588,000-unit level a year ago. For all
of 2008, condo sales dropped 21.0 percent to 563,000
units.
Median existing
condo price: slipped to $181,400 in December, down
18.3 percent from December 2007. For all of 2008, the median
condo price was $210,000, which is 7.2 percent below
2007.
Existing-Home
Sales By Region
- Northeast:
slipped 1.4
percent to an annual pace of 720,000 in December, and
are 14.3 percent below December 2007. The median
price in the Northeast was $235,000, which is 7.8
percent lower than a year
ago.
- Midwest:
increased 4.0 percent in December to a level of 1.04
million but are 10.3 percent below a year ago. The median
price in the Midwest was $140,800, down 11.4 percent from
December 2007.
- South
: rose 7.4 percent to an annual pace
of 1.74 million in December, but are 11.2 percent lower
than December 2007. The median price in the South was
$158,600, which is down 8 percent from a year
ago.
- West: jumped 13.6 percent
to an annual rate of 1.25 million in December and are 31.6
percent higher than a year ago. The median price in the
West was $213,100, down 31.5 percent from December
2007.
A Good Time
to Buy
NAR President
Charles McMillan said it’s an excellent time for first-time
home buyers with good jobs.
“The typical buyer
plans to stay in their home for 10 years, which is the correct
approach in today’s market,” he said. “With historically low
mortgage interest rates, flexible sellers, a large inventory,
and homes that are selling for less than replacement
construction costs in much of the country, buyers who’ve been
on the fence should take a closer look at today’s
market.”
McMillan added that
first-time buyers may want to consider an FHA loan, which
offers downpayments of 3.5 percent on a safe 30-year fixed-rate
mortgage.
According to
Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a
30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage fell to 5.29 percent
in December from 6.09 percent in November; the rate was 6.10
percent in December 2007. Last week, Freddie Mac reported the
30-year rate was 5.12 percent.
Source:
NAR
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Jay B. Mathison /
Licensed Illinois Realtor / Nationwide Realty Group,
Inc.
900 Ogden Ave, Suite
205, Downers Grove, IL 60515 / Office # 630-636-9525 / Fax #
630-608-4365
© Copyright by
Nationwide Realty Group, Inc. 2008. All Rights
Reserved.
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