My Real Estate Blog

October 4th, 2010 6:27 AM

The latest figures are in, and it seems that while August was still a tough time for many across the nation, existing home sales were on the rise.  The latest National Association of Realtors report show that existing home sales were up 7.6% during the month.

The housing market is trying to recover on its own power without the home buyer tax credit. Despite very attractive affordability conditions, a housing market recovery will likely be slow and gradual because of lingering economic uncertainty.

That economic uncertainty is surely being felt by consumers, who according to the Conference Board, reported a drop in confidence in September. It is now at its lowest level since February. The cause? The ailing labor market and continued negative trends in housing.

People understand the good affordability conditions with stable home prices in most areas, but they’re concerned about the economy and speculation on Wall Street.  We need to stick with the facts about the long-term value of homeownership and avoid unrealistic assessments. Tight credit and slow short sales are ongoing problems – expediting short sales will help the market to recover more quickly.

While the national median existing-home price for all housing types was $178,600 in August, up 0.8% from a year ago, sales of distressed homes rose to 34%, up from July, and were 3% over August of 2009.

These factors are affecting the way first-time buyers are buying. The National Association of Home Builders shows that there is a growing segment of first-timers looking for smaller and less expensive new homes. And at 8.4 millions buyers, first-timers are a large market segment.

Builders are increasingly gearing their homes to the needs of first-time buyers, and we expect the trend to continue in the period ahead as the economy begins generating more jobs and more people in their 20's form households. ... New homes are a better match for the needs of the population in general. Compared to what is typically available in the existing housing stock, they are more energy-efficient, easier to maintain and have designs better suited to today's lifestyles.


Posted by Jim McCowan on October 4th, 2010 6:27 AMPost a Comment (0)

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