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Tag Archives: Home Sales

Research Firm Says U.S. Housing Has Never Been This Undervalued

The continuing depreciation of residential property values at the end of last year has made housing look more undervalued relative to income than ever before, according to analysts at the research firm Capital Economics. Based on industry home price data, the company says in the fourth quarter, housing was 15-21 percent undervalued as measured against individuals' disposable income. That gap has widened from just three months earlier, and the analysts say more forced sales of foreclosed properties will push prices even lower.

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Fed Beige Book Paints Housing as Strain on Economic Recovery

The Federal Reserve released a new rendition of its popular Beige Book this week. Reports from all 12 Fed districts indicated that overall economic activity continues to expand, but all said housing activity remains a key risk - a point reiterated by Fed Chairman Bernanke in his semiannual report to Congress this week when he explained to lawmakers that the housing market remains weak, with the overhang of foreclosed houses still weighing heavily on prices and potential homebuyers concerned about further declines in home values.

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NAR’s Pending Home Sales Index Drops 2.8%

Industry data released Monday showed that the number of homebuyers who signed contracts in January for the purchase of previously owned homes declined from both the previous month and year-ago levels. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) says its January index of pending home sales is down 2.8 percent from the December reading, which was revised downward from a previously reported gain to reflect the start of a two-month decline in pending sales. NAR's January reading is 1.5 percent below the pending sales measurement recorded 12 months earlier.

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RE/MAX: Home Sales Continue to Rise, Prices Remain Stressed

For the first time in six months, home sales in the 54 U.S. markets surveyed by RE/MAX are greater than one year ago, the company said in its newly released January housing report. RE/MAX says the year-over-year sales difference has improved for three consecutive months now with several cities experiencing double digit growth to lead the trend. Home prices, however, were 4.6 percent lower than in January 2010.

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Existing Home Sales Still On The Rise

Existing home sales rose again in January, for the third consecutive month, with the annual rate of 5.36 million marking the first time in seven months that sales activity was higher than a year earlier. Home sales are now 5.3 percent above the 5.09 million level in January 2010. Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the improvement is good but could be better. The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $158,800 in January, down 3.7 percent from January 2010.

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Discrepancies in Home Sales Data Illustrate Market Volatility

They say ""it's all in the numbers,"" but what if the numbers don't match up, in fact don't even come close? The real estate data and analytics firm CoreLogic has released a market report in which the company claims 2010 home sales estimates from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) are overstated by 15 to 20 percent, or about 1.5 million homes. NAR says it's Corelogic's numbers that are off. Both parties agree that the issue lies in the methodology, compounded by the volatility and turbulence of today's market.

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Report: Distressed Homes Accounted for Nearly Half of January Sales

The percentage of distressed properties in home purchase transactions climbed to its highest level in nearly a year last month, according to an industry report released Tuesday. The distressed property index tracked as part of the report indicates that the share of sales transactions involving distressed homes climbed to 49.6 percent in January. Comments from real estate agents collected as part of the survey confirms the growing share of distressed properties, particularly in hard-hit markets.

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Home Prices Hit Record Low in December: Report

Despite an increase in new and existing home sales, home prices in 2010 slumped to their lowest point in December, according to a recent report by mortgage technology company FNC. The FNC Residential Price Index (RPI) attributes the decline in part to increased sales of foreclosed properties, and higher distressed-property discounts. According to the index, home prices declined for the seventh straight month in December, ending the year with the biggest one-month drop of 2010.

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Mortgage Demand Falls for Second Straight Week

Consumer demand for home mortgages declined last week, according to industry data released Wednesday. It marks the second consecutive week that the number of home loan applications has dropped, as long-term mortgage rates came in above the 5 percent threshold yet again. The Mortgage Bankers Association said its measurement of application volume slipped 9.5 percent for the week ending February 11. The trade group's gauge has hit its lowest point in more than two years.

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California’s Million-Dollar Home Sales Gain Traction

Despite a decline in California home sales last year, the number of homes sold in the Golden State for $1 million or more in 2010 rose for the first time since 2005, according to a study from San Diego-based DataQuick Information Systems. Million-dollar sales peaked in 2005 at 54,773 and then declined each year through 2009. In 2010, 22,529 homes sold for $1 million or more in California, a 21 percent increase from 18,621 in 2009. The most expensive confirmed purchase last year was a Bel Air residence for $50 million.

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