Wednesday 15 January 2014

DataQuick: Bay Area Home Sales Drop to Six-Year Low in December

This decline in sales - due to fewer distressed sales - is an important theme. This is a step towards a more normal housing market, NOT a sign that the housing recovery is faltering.



From DataQuick: Bay Area Home Sales Drop to Six-Year Low; Prices Still Up Sharply Yr/Yr

Last month’s Bay Area home sales were the slowest for a December in six years, the result of a constrained supply of homes for sale. ...



A total of 6,714 new and resale houses and condos sold in the nine-county Bay Area last month. That was the lowest for any December since 2007, when 5,065 homes sold. Last month’s sales were up 0.8 percent from 6,659 in November, and down 12.7 percent from 7,688 in December 2012, according to San Diego-based DataQuick.



Sales almost always increase from November to December, usually around 8 percent. Last month’s sales were 21.3 percent below the December average of 8,529 since 1988, when when DataQuick’s statistics begin. ...



Foreclosure resales – homes that had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months – accounted for 4.5 percent of resales in December, up from 3.7 percent the month before, and down from 12.1 percent a year ago. Foreclosure resales peaked at 52.0 percent in February 2009. The monthly average for foreclosure resales over the past 17 years is 10 percent.



Short sales – transactions where the sale price fell short of what was owed on the property – made up an estimated 10.5 percent of Bay Area resales last month. That was up from an estimated 9.5 percent in November and down from 23.6 percent a year earlier.



Last month absentee buyers – mostly investors – purchased 23.0 percent of all Bay Area homes. That was up from November’s revised 20.6 percent and down from 26.0 percent in December 2012. Absentee buyers paid a median $439,000 last month, up 35.1 percent from $325,000 a year earlier.

Even though overall sales declined, conventional sales were up about 15% year-over-year. Also, as prices increase, more inventory should come on the market.



from Calculated Risk http://ift.tt/1aoX1nI

via YQ Matrix

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