| WASHINGTON
– Existing-home sales bounced back strongly in
September with first-time buyers driving much of the
activity, marking five gains in the past six months,
according to the National Association of Realtors®.
Existing-home sales – including single-family,
townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – jumped 9.4
percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 5.57
million units in September from a level of 5.09 million
in August, and are 9.2 percent higher than the 5.10
million-unit pace in September 2008. Sales activity
is at the highest level in over two years, since it
hit 5.73 million in July 2007.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said favorable conditions
matched with a tax credit are boosting home sales. “Much
of the momentum is from people responding to the first-time
buyer tax credit, which is freeing many sellers to make
a trade and buy another home,” he said. “We
are hopeful the tax credit will be extended and possibly
expanded to more buyers, at least through the middle
of next year, because the rising sales momentum needs
to continue for a few additional quarters until we reach
a point of a self-sustaining recovery.”
Even with the improvement, Yun said the market is underperforming.
“Despite spectacular gains in the stock market,
principally from the financial sector recovery, most
of the 75 million home owning families have more wealth
tied to their homes. Home values could soon turn consistently
positive and help the broad base of middle-class families,
but we are not there yet,” he said.
“We’re getting early indications of price
stabilization, but we need a steady supply of qualified
buyers to meaningfully bring inventories down and return
us to a period of normal, steady price growth and to
fully remove consumer fears, which would then revive
the broader economy. Without a firm foundation for middle-class
wealth recovery, the post-recession economic growth
likely will be one of the weakest in U.S. history.”
Early information from a large annual consumer study
to be released November 13, the 2009 National Association
of Realtors® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers,
shows that first-time home buyers accounted for more
than 45 percent of home sales during the past year.
A separate practitioner survey shows that distressed
homes accounted for 29 percent of transactions in September.
NAR President Charles McMillan, a broker with Coldwell
Banker Residential Brokerage in Dallas-Fort Worth, said
affordability conditions remain historically high. “Potential
first-time buyers can take heart in that affordability
conditions this year are the highest on record dating
back to 1970, but with the first-time buyer tax credit
scheduled to expire at the end of next month, people
could hold back from entering the market,” he
said.
“Our read is that housing overshot on the downside
because homes are selling for less than replacement
construction costs in much of the country, and the home
price-to-income ratio has fallen below the historical
average,” McMillan said.
Total housing inventory at the end of September fell
7.5 percent to 3.63 million existing homes available
for sale, which represents an 7.8-month supply2 at the
current sales pace, down from an 9.3-month supply in
August. Unsold inventory totals are 15.0 percent below
a year ago.
“The current housing supply is the lowest we’ve
seen in two and a half years,” Yun said. “If
we could continue to absorb inventory at this pace,
home prices would return to normal, modest appreciation
patterns next year.
According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment
rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage
fell to 5.06 percent in September from 5.19 percent
in August; the rate was 6.04 percent in September 2008.
The national median existing-home price3 for all housing
types was $174,900 in September, which is 8.5 percent
lower than September 2008. Distressed properties continue
to downwardly distort the median price because they
generally sell at a discount relative to traditional
homes in the same area.
Single-family home sales rose 9.4 percent to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 4.89 million in September from
a pace of 4.47 million in August, and are 7.7 percent
above the 4.54 million-unit level in September 2008.
The median existing single-family home price was $174,900
in September, which is 8.1 percent below a year ago.
Existing condominium and co-op sales jumped 9.7 percent
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 680,000 units
in September from 620,000 in August, and are 21.2 percent
above the 561,000-unit pace a year ago. The median existing
condo price4 was $175,100 in September, down 11.7 percent
from September 2008.
Regionally, existing-home sales in the Northeast increased
4.4 percent to an annual level of 950,000 in September,
and are 11.8 percent higher than September 2008. The
median price in the Northeast was $234,700, down 7.0
percent from a year ago.
Existing-home sales in the Midwest jumped 9.6 percent
in September to a pace of 1.25 million and are 7.8 percent
above a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was
$147,600, which is 1.0 percent below September 2008.
In the South, existing-home sales rose 9.0 percent
to an annual level of 2.06 million in September and
are 10.8 percent higher than September 2008. The median
price in the South was $153,500, down 7.6 percent from
a year ago.
Existing-home sales in the West surged 13.0 percent
to an annual rate of 1.30 million in September and are
5.7 percent above a year ago. The median price in the
West was $219,000, which is 15.0 percent below September
2008.
The National Association of Realtors®, “The
Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest
trade association, representing 1.2 million members
involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial
real estate industries.
Source: National Association
of Realtors®, October 23, 2009
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