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February Existing Home Sales


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2012 Mar 21, 7:22am   4,098 views  6 comments

by tatupu70   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Median price is up from a year ago. Gasp! Best Feb. in 5 years. January sales numbers revised up.

Is the market still tanking?? How is this possible?

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/home-sales-dip-but-best-february-in-five-years-2012-03-21

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1   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 21, 7:27am  

tatupu70 says

Is the market still tanking?? How is this possible?

" National Association of Realtors said "

You should know better than that.

2   freak80   2012 Mar 21, 7:45am  

Asset prices are at the mercy of the Fed's monetary policy.

More QE and lower interest rates -> higher asset prices
No QE and higher interest rates -> lower asset prices

I can't predict the Fed. Can you?

3   tatupu70   2012 Mar 21, 7:47am  

thomas.wong1986 says

tatupu70 says

Is the market still tanking?? How is this possible?

" National Association of Realtors said "

You should know better than that.

We're comparing last year to this year. NAR collected both sets of data.

Try again Thomas. You can do better than that.

4   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 21, 8:19am  

wthrfrk80 says

Asset prices are at the mercy of the Fed's monetary policy.
More QE and lower interest rates -> higher asset prices
No QE and higher interest rates -> lower asset prices
I can't predict the Fed. Can you?

Yes, based on past few years now.. lower interest rates have not translated to higher assets prices. It didnt translate to higher prices back in 1989 to mid 90s when Greenspan lowered rates either.

And your pesonal residential home dont qualify as "assets". That was one really big and dreadful assumption during the bubble years. And many owners didnt use it as an asset but raided the equity to get deeper into debt.

5   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 21, 8:22am  

tatupu70 says

We're comparing last year to this year. NAR collected both sets of data.
Try again Thomas. You can do better than that.

Not even the FED since Greenspan left uses NAR data. The typical newsmedia for the past decades cannot be trusted to provide unbiased independant accurate info regarding RE news. CBS Marketwatch (SF Based) is the typical example since they utterly ignored and infact justified higher prices during the bubble years. Why would anyone trust MW today ?

http://dqnews.com/Articles/2012/News/California/RRCA120315.aspx

California February Home Sales

March 15, 2012

An estimated 29,630 new and resale houses and condos were sold across California last month. That was up 5.4 percent from 28,111 in January, and up 8.5 percent from 27,320 in February 2011.

A slight increase in sales from January to February is normal for the season. Last month's sales were the strongest for a February since 31,228 homes were sold in 2007. On a year-over-year basis, sales have increased the past seven months. Statewide sales for the month of February have varied from a low of 20,513 in 2008 to a high of 48,409 in 2004, while the average is 32,017. DataQuick's statistics go back to 1988.

The median price paid for a California home last month was $239,000, up 1.3 percent from $236,000 in January, and down 2.0 percent from $244,000 for February a year ago. The median has decreased on a year-over-year basis for the last 17 months. The median’s low point for the current cycle was $221,000 in April 2009, while its peak was $484,000 in early 2007.

Distressed property sales – the combination of foreclosure resales and “short sales” – continued to make up more than half of California’s resale market.

Of the existing homes sold last month, 34.3 percent were properties that had been foreclosed on during the past year. That was unchanged from January and down from 40.1 percent in February a year ago. The high point for the current cycle was in February 2009 at 58.5 percent.

Short sales – transactions where the sale price fell short of what was owed on the property – made up an estimated 20.9 percent of the resale market last month. That was down from 21.2 percent the month before and up from 18.7 percent a year earlier. Two years ago short sales made up an estimated 17.5 percent of the resale market.

The typical mortgage payment that home buyers committed themselves to paying last month was $901. That was up slightly from January's $893, which was the lowest since $882 in February 1999. Adjusted for inflation, last month's typical payment was 59.8 percent below the 1989 peak of the prior real estate cycle, and 67.4 percent below the 2006 peak of the current cycle.

DataQuick monitors real estate activity nationwide and provides information to consumers, educational institutions, public agencies, lending institutions, title companies and industry analysts.

Indicators of market distress continue to move in different directions. Foreclosure activity is high, but well below peak levels. Financing with multiple mortgages is low, down payment sizes are stable, and cash and non-owner occupied buying remain at or near record levels, DataQuick reported.

6   FunTime   2012 Mar 21, 8:26am  

I find it interesting to read old articles on the same subject. Maybe you will too. If you go back throug hthis source looking for good news the last couple of years, you definitely don't find much. The financial markets are generally covered with very little reason, trying to tie finanical movements to one headline and then, the next day, another.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/new-home-sales-surge-27-to-411000-pace-2010-04-23-10100

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