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Culture > Australian > Re: Home prices...
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Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February

by "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 12, 2008 at 02:46 PM

<retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message 
news:jfme241j4fl2ibag2otju78jj8sqhjqjis@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>They are matching year over year sales of the same month a year ago.
>
> That is encouraging. Can you link to the article?
>

Here's the article ...

<quote>
While most of the nation appears mired in the middle of a severe housing 
slump, the southwest corner of Riverside County may be showing signs of 
recovery.

In April, the number of houses sold was higher than the year before for
the 
fourth straight month, leaping 73 percent last month from a year ago.

And, for the first time since the housing market took a dive, house sales
in 
the Temecula-Murrieta region were higher than sales in 2006, near the peak

of the housing boom.

To be sure, not all housing data in Southwest Riverside point to recovery.

Some prominent housing analysts think the region's housing recession is
far 
from over, chiefly because foreclosures have doubled from a year ago, and
an 
oversupply of homes for sale threatens to further depress prices.

Yet sellers have already been sla****ng prices, setting the stage for the 
recent surge in buying.

The median home price ---- in which half the homes sell for more and half 
for less ---- in the region sank to $265,000 in April, a mammoth 36
percent 
off the $415,000 median in 2007 and 40 percent below the $439,900 level of

2006, according to an analysis by The Californian and North County Times
of 
data from the Multi-Regional Multiple Listing Service.

Escalating home sales, widely considered an indicator of an incipient 
housing market recovery, have encouraged some analysts to predict that
price 
declines will soon cease in the region.

Meanwhile, North San Diego County's housing market is not showing similar 
signs of recovery. Its median price has fallen about 25 percent from its 
peak to $490,000, but house sales for the last 28 months have been lower 
than the same month the year before, according to a monthly real estate 
association re****t.

Southwest Riverside's data had enough strong points for at least one real 
estate agent to warn clients that the region's housing market will soon
see 
prices rise.

"For example, I have a couple in their late 40s. They have never owned a 
home and have always rented," said Barbara Baker, a real estate agent in 
Murrieta. "And I told them, 'If you don't do it (buy a home) now, you'll 
always be a renter.'"

Baker said she thinks the low point in prices is near because she 
consistently sees multiple offers on houses for sale, driving the sales 
price above the asking price.

However, plenty of other data point away from an immediate recovery.

The region's housing market is still bloated with large inventory; it
would 
take about eight months to sell off all homes on the market at the sales 
pace seen in April.

Many housing analysts think an inventory higher than a six-month supply
puts 
downward pressure on prices.

And foreclosures keep rising: Notices of default, the first step in the 
foreclosure process, in Southwest Riverside doubled from a year ago to
3,700 
during the first quarter, according to ForeclosureRadar, a tracking
service.

A booming increase in the number of notices of default suggests more 
bank-owned homes over the next six months, which tend to depress prices, 
analysts said.

"There's no bottom in sight," said Christopher Thornberg, an economist
with 
Beacon Economics. "There's nothing more pernicious to prices than supply, 
and what you have building up right now is a massive amount of
foreclosures. 
And nobody is more motivated to sell than banks."

Thornberg said he thought home prices in the Inland Empire could fall as 
much as 55 percent from the peak, which would mean an additional 20
percent 
drop in Southwest Riverside, sending the median to $200,000.

Thornberg's argument is underpinned by income levels that suggest many 
homeowners cannot afford the typical mortgage payment.

If affordability is used as the sole predictor of home prices, then 
Southwest Riverside County appears to be closer to ending its price
decline 
while San Diego County, and North County particularly, could continue to
see 
steep price drops.

In 1996, San Diego County's housing market began to recover from a
recession 
after the typical mortgage payment (using the median home price with the 
average interest rate) fell to 20 percent below one-third of the median 
household income, according to data from DataQuick Information Systems and

the U.S. Census.

That means the typical mortgage cost about $1,200 a month while the
typical 
household earned about $4,500 a month in inflation-adjusted dollars.

The typical mortgage payment in Southwest Riverside County is now 15
percent 
below one-third of the county's median income, considered by many housing 
advocates as the recommended ****tion of income that should be spent on 
housing costs.

In contrast, the typical mortgage payment in North County is about 40 
percent higher than the one-third level, based on the median household 
income in the county.

For George Farraye, it was Southwest Riverside County's falling prices
that 
spurred him to buy. He bought a home in Murrieta earlier this month at a
43 
percent discount off its previous sales price.

"This housing market is unbelievable," he said. "There are some real
dumps, 
and there are some real great buys. And I think we got a great buy ---- we

got it for less than $100 a square foot, and we're in a gated community."

Though foreclosures and inventory were still high in Southwest Riverside, 
some analysts look to the number of sales as a harbinger of price.

April house sales rocketed from 2007, leaping 72.5 percent from 346 to 597

sales of houses last month.

However, home sales were well below a peak for the month of April of 786 
homes sold in 2004.

Most of the houses selling were on the lower end: 75 percent of the 597 
homes sold last month went for $350,000 or less. Just 24 percent of the
346 
homes sold in the same month a year earlier were under $350,000.

Gene Wunderlich, a real estate broker in Wildomar, said he is not quite 
ready to predict a bounce in prices. But even if prices tick down, he
said, 
a rise in interest rates could wipe out any savings in sales price.

"It's not so much if you don't jump in now you'll be priced out. But you 
have to weigh the op****tunity costs," he said. "Say you wait another year 
and prices do go down another 10 percent and interest rates go up ... your

monthly payments could be higher than they would be now."

Average interest rates nationally were at a historically low 5.9 percent a

week ago, according to the latest survey by the Mortgage Bankers 
Association.

If the region's median home price fell an additional 10 percent, yet 
interest rates were to rise a single percentage point, the combination
would 
yield a similar mortgage payment to today's typical bill. The scenario
would 
put interest rates at 7 percent, the highest level since March 2002, 
according to the bankers association.

Contact staff writer Zach Fox at (760) 740-5412 or zfox@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
 




 21 Posts in Topic:
Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
indiaBPOking <indiabpo  2008-05-10 14:59:46 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
Stray Dog <straydog200  2008-05-10 16:07:33 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTEC  2008-05-10 17:31:51 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
"Jeff Strickland&quo  2008-05-11 01:21:15 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
The Trucker <mikcob@[E  2008-05-10 21:25:45 
Stressed Out in India's Tech Capital
"End the Occupation   2008-05-10 23:50:00 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
Stray Dog <straydog200  2008-05-11 07:26:56 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTEC  2008-05-11 08:36:31 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
The Trucker <mikcob@[E  2008-05-11 08:50:36 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
Stray Dog <straydog200  2008-05-11 07:27:49 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
The Trucker <mikcob@[E  2008-05-11 08:00:56 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
Stray Dog <straydog200  2008-05-11 07:32:34 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
The Trucker <mikcob@[E  2008-05-11 08:00:16 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTEC  2008-05-11 08:26:17 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
"Jeff Strickland&quo  2008-05-11 16:00:03 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTEC  2008-05-11 12:44:11 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
"Jeff Strickland&quo  2008-05-11 20:13:20 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTEC  2008-05-11 14:13:26 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
"Jeff Strickland&quo  2008-05-12 14:46:11 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
retrogrouch@[EMAIL PROTEC  2008-05-12 08:32:57 
Re: Home prices falling faster - down 17% in February
Stray Dog <straydog200  2008-05-11 18:47:41 

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tan13V112 Fri Jul 25 8:59:50 CDT 2008.