Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Home Sales in Broward County Up 46% from a Year Ago

Bargains drive up home sales in Broward County
With foreclosure glut, more price drops likely

By Paul Owers | South Florida Sun-Sentinel
November 25, 2008

Find Broward County Homes: http://www.InvestFloridaRealty.com/search.htm

Even as job losses mount and mortgage lending remains tight, South Floridians still are buying homes.

Bargain hunters continue to respond to plunging prices, with October sales of existing homes in Broward County rising 46 percent, to 625 from 428 a year ago, the Florida Association of Realtors said Monday. The median price plummeted 29 percent, to $252,500 from $354,000 last October.

Sales have shot up since July, but that doesn't mean the region's nearly 3-year-old housing slump is ending, analysts say.

The October figures reflect home sales contracts signed during the summer, before the financial free-fall on Wall Street. Prices are expected to keep dropping as long as the foreclosure problem persists.

"We would be lucky if the market bottoms out in South Florida in 2009," Miami-based housing consultant Lewis Goodkin said.

Broward's condominium sector followed a similar trend last month. Condo sales increased 30 percent while the median price fell 28 percent, to $115,200.

Distressed properties are popular targets among people trying to buy now.

Roger Palermo, a building maintenance supervisor for the city of Pompano Beach, said he looked at almost 50 houses. Many needed new roofs and other major repairs. And most were foreclosures or short sales, in which lenders take less than what's owed on the mortgages and forgive the remaining debt.

Overwhelmed with properties, some banks said they wouldn't consider Palermo's offers for three months or longer. One lender came back with a counteroffer higher than the asking price.

Earlier this month, Palermo and his fiancee finally bought a two-bedroom house in Boca Raton after the previous owner's death. They paid $225,000, $34,000 less than the asking price.

"At least 75 percent of the homes for sale are either foreclosures or short sales and need a lot of work," said Palermo, 48. "But it's hard because you can't even get answers from the banks."

In Palm Beach County, October sales increased 37 percent, and the median price dropped 24 percent to $264,600.

Statewide, sales increased 15 percent last month, while the median price fell 24 percent, to $169,700, the Realtors' group said.

Nationally, sales fell 3.1 percent in October to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.98 million units. The median sales price fell 11.3 percent from a year ago to $183,000. That was the largest year-over-year drop on records since 1968 and the lowest median sales price since March 2004. The median is the level at which half sold for more, half for less.

In South Florida, the recent sales momentum is helping reduce the number of properties on the market.

Broward County had a little more than 28,000 homes and condos for sale at the end of October, down 5 percent from a year ago, according to the Miami-based Keyes Co.

But demand still is lagging. It takes longer to sell a house in South Florida, an average of 172 days, than anywhere else in the nation, according to an October housing report from California real estate firms Altos Research and Real IQ.

"The inventory news is starting to get a little better, but the question is, how much more pressure are we going to get from new foreclosures that come on the market?" said Mike Larson, a housing analyst with Weiss Research in Jupiter.

Regardless, real estate agents here are enjoying the renewed interest among buyers, many of whom are coming from the Northeast.

"We're hoping for a really cold winter up north," joked Pamela Orr, an agent with Balistreri Realty in Lighthouse Point. "If it's priced right, people are buying."

Find Broward County Homes: http://www.InvestFloridaRealty.com/search.htm

Courtesy: Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel http://www.sun-sentinel.com/business/realestate/sfl-flzhousingbr1125sbnov25,0,6508022.story

Palm Beach County sales up 37% from a year ago

Home Prices Fall, Triggering Sales

By JEFF OSTROWSKI, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Monday, November 24, 2008

Find Palm Beach Homes: http://www.InvestFloridaRealty.com/search.htm

The region's housing picture remained gloomy in October, a month when prices continued to plunge even as sales volumes recovered.

The median price for a Palm Beach County home fell to $264,600, the Florida Association of Realtors said Monday.

That's down 24 percent from a year ago, off 9 percent from September and the first time since February 2004 that Palm Beach County's median home price slipped below $270,000.

Bargain hunters took the bait. Realtors sold 618 houses in October, up 37 percent from a year ago and up 18 percent from September.

"There's buyers out there who are buying, but the mind-set is they want a deal," said Bob Graeve, an agent at Illustrated Properties Real Estate in Palm Beach Gardens. Graeve, for instance, recently advertised a foreclosed home and got three dozen calls.

Even so, the number of October home sales didn't exactly soar - they simply returned to October 2006 levels.

Nationally, of the homes that did find buyers in October, nearly half were the result of a sale after a foreclosure.

That trend helped send home values down at the fastest annual rate since the Realtors association began keeping records in 1968. The nationwide median price of a home was $183,300 last month, down 11.3 percent from October 2007.

The Treasure Coast showed similarly plummeting prices, but with a rebound in sales volume.

The median price of an existing single-family home in Martin and St. Lucie counties was $134,600, down 33 percent from a year ago, while sales jumped to 383 in October, up 76 percent from a year ago.

Housing analyst Brad Hunter of Metrostudy expects Palm Beach County prices to fall another 10 percent to 15 percent, and he sees the housing market weakening, in spite of the sales volume bounce.

"It's good news if you're a Realtor," Hunter says of the uptick in sales. "More transactions fuels that business. But it's bad news for the home builders, because what it means is that there's more pressure on them in terms of how much price discounting they have to do to sell homes."

It can be bad, too, for sellers who are facing intense price competition among banks selling foreclosed properties and by short sales, in which the bank agrees to accept a price that is less than the balance owed on the property and forgive the difference.

Frank Ortiz first placed his 2,600-square-foot, fully remodeled home on the Miami market in September 2007, then took it off the market seven months later because of a lack of buyer interest.

He listed it for sale again this summer for $389,000, and despite lowering the price $10,000 and holding several open houses over the past few months, he's yet to get a nibble.

"I haven't even gotten a call with interest in the house," Ortiz said. "It's not like a dilapidated house or anything. It's a remodeled house."

His agent, Pam Mayers of Esslinger-Wooten-Maxwell Realtors in Miami, says, "It's easy pickings for anybody buying a house right now. For sellers it's horrible. People are like vultures, flying around and picking whatever's left."

Eric Sain, president of the Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches, is urging his clients not to sell now.

"I'm telling my clients that if you can rent it and hold on, that's great," Sain said. "Most economists I've heard are looking for another 10 to 15 percent decline in prices before we hit bottom."

The housing market's meltdown has sent the entire economy into a tailspin.

On Monday, the Florida Home Builders Association said that as banks tighten their lending practices, they're pushing even solvent builders to "the brink of financial disaster."

"Not only are banks making additional capital calls, they are calling in loans not in default, eliminating lines of credit, and in many cases, altogether doing away with construction financing," Florida Home Builders Association President Jay Carlson said. "The current method banks are using to recapitalize is exacerbating Florida's economic problems."

Meanwhile, the National Association of Realtors is calling on Congress to approve $100 billion in incentives for home buyers as the housing market continues to crater.

Nationally, existing-home sales fell 3.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.98 million units in October, 1.6 percent below the 5.06 million-unit pace in October 2007, NAR said.

Find Palm Beach Homes: http://www.InvestFloridaRealty.com/search.htm

Courtesy: Palm Beach Post http://www.palmbeachpost.com/business/content/business/epaper/2008/11/24/1124homesales.html

Lee County's Ft. Myers; Existing Home Sales Pace Up 44%

Lee County's existing home sales pace looks promising
BY DICK HOGAN • NOVEMBER 25, 2008

Find Lee County Homes: http://www.AqualandRealty.com

Lee County's existing-home market experienced a slight dip in sales and prices in October - and that may be good news.

That's because the pace of homes being sold continues to be quick while prices slowly fall.

The price of an existing single-family home in the county sold with the help of a Realtor dropped 2 percent to $139,500 in October while the number of homes sold fell 3 percent to 720, according to statistics released Monday by the Florida Association of Realtors.

Experts aren't saying the real estate market is healthy, but compared to the wild gyrations of the stock market, real estate now seems relatively stable.

Compared to a year ago, sales are strong, said Brett Ellis, a real estate agent with RE/MAX Realty Group in Fort Myers. There were 405 houses sold in October 2007, 44 percent fewer than October 2008.

High sales are good because once the 15,000 houses listed for sale and the 30,000 foreclosure properties backed up in the court system are sold, the laws of supply and demand kick in, he said.

Although October's sales were slightly off September's pace, Ellis said, that could be because those sales were based on deals that went on through August and September - two of the slowest months of the year.

In a separate report issued Monday by the National Association of Realtors, sales nationally of existing homes fell 3.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.98 million homes in October, from a downwardly revised pace of 5.14 million in September. Sales had been expected to fall to a rate of 5.05 million, according to economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

The national median sales price plunged 11.3 percent from a year ago to $183,000. That was the largest year-over-year drop on record going back to 1968, and the lowest median sales price since March 2004.

Lee County's median price is the lowest since February 2003, when it was $135,900.

That's more good news for the market, Ellis said.

Sales are staying strong because "our prices are where they ought to be" after a long slide following the collapse of the market, he said. The median price reached its all-time high of $322,300 in December 2005.

Still, for people trying to sell a house, competition is heavy from foreclosures and short sales.

"I don't know, man, everybody wants to buy houses," said contractor Mike Kelly, who's trying to sell his house on Devonwood Court in south Lee County for $270,000. "I'm going to cut the price a little bit and then wait. I'm hoping that January through March, in season, maybe they'll get more buyers."

But, he said, it's a tough environment to be selling a house. "Business is really slow, and I don't want to have to eat into my savings."

Kelly's company, Southwest Florida Custom Electronics, installs burglar alarm, camera and sound systems, but demand is soft, he said.

Around the nation, sales were down in October compared to September. But sales were up 40.5 percent in the West compared with October last year, without adjusting for seasonal factors. Buyers in places such as Las Vegas and Orange County, Calif., snapped up distressed properties at bargain prices.

Nationwide, the Realtors group estimates that sales of distressed properties made up 45 percent of all property sales in October.

Having money in the stock market has been a wilder ride than real estate in recent weeks: The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank from 9,625 on Nov. 4 to 7,552 on Nov. 20.

- The Associated Press also contributed to this report.
Courtesy Fort Myers News-Press: http://www.news-press.com/article/20081125/RE/811250378/1014/business

Monday, November 24, 2008

Florida’s Existing Home, Condo Sales Rise in October 2008

Florida’s existing home, condo sales rise in October 2008

ORLANDO, Fla. – Nov. 24, 2008 – For the second month in a row, Florida’s existing home sales rose in October, with Florida Realtors® reporting a 15 percent increase in activity in the year-to-year comparison; last month’s sales of existing condos statewide increased 5 percent in the year-to-year comparison, according to the latest housing data released by the Florida Association of Realtors (FAR).

A total of 10,443 existing homes sold statewide last month, up 15 percent over the 9,118 homes sold in October 2007, according to FAR. Florida Realtors also reported higher statewide existing home and existing condo sales in September compared to the year-ago levels.

Thirteen of Florida’s metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) reported increased existing-home sales in October; seven MSAs also showed gains in condo sales, marking the fourth consecutive month that a number of markets have noted higher sales activity.

Florida’s median sales price for existing homes last month was $169,700; a year ago, it was $222,200 for a 24 percent decrease. The median is the midpoint; half the homes sold for more, half for less.

The national median sales price for existing single-family homes in September 2008 was $190,600, down 8.6 percent from a year earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). In California, the statewide median resales price was $316,480 in September; in Massachusetts, it was $295,000; in Maryland, it was $271,520; and in New York, it was $215,000.

Market conditions continue to range widely, according to the latest housing outlook from NAR. “A pattern of sharply higher sales in areas with large price declines is well established,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. “Affordability conditions have consistently been a major factor in driving sales. Historically during recessions, buyers have responded to incentives and it’s important for government to keep that in the forefront of housing stimulus decisions.”

In Florida’s year-to-year comparison for condos, 2,956 units sold statewide compared to 2,805 sold in October 2007 for a 5 percent increase. The statewide existing condo median sales price last month was $147,600; in October 2007 it was $192,300 for a 23 percent decrease. In the latest data available at press time, NAR reported the national median existing condo price was $199,400 in September 2008.

Last month, interest rates for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.20 percent, down from the average rate of 6.38 percent in October 2007, according to Freddie Mac. FAR’s sales figures reflect closings, which typically occur 30 to 90 days after sales contracts are written.

Among the state’s large to medium-size markets, the Miami MSA reported a total of 453 homes sold in October compared to 367 homes a year ago for a 23 percent increase. The existing home median sales price was $246,800; a year ago, it was $354,800 for a 30 percent decrease. In the year-to-year comparison for the existing condo market, a total of 439 units sold in the MSA last month, up 1 percent compared to 436 condos sold the previous October. The market’s existing condo median price was $197,400; a year ago, it was $268,300 for a 26 percent decrease.

Courtesy: FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS © 2008 http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/n1-112408.cfm

Friday, November 21, 2008

Housing Affordability Rises to Highest Level in Four Years

Housing affordability rises to highest level in four years

WASHINGTON – Nov. 19, 2008 – With home prices decreasing and interest rates holding at historically low levels, the number of potential homebuyers nationwide who can afford to buy new and existing homes has reached the highest level in more than four years, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI).

According to the third-quarter HOI readings, 56.1 percent of all new and existing homes sold were affordable to families earning the national median income of $61,500 – far more than the 40.4 percent of families who could afford homes at the peak of the housing boom.

“If there is a silver lining to this crisis, it would be that some housing markets have become more affordable with a larger inventory to choose from,” said NAHB Chairman Sandy Dunn. “But this is undeniably a crisis and Congress needs to act on housing stimulus to get the market moving again.”

The two most affordable major housing markets in the country during the third quarter of the year were Indianapolis, Ind., and Youngstown, Ohio, according to the HOI. In both Indianapolis and Youngstown, 91.0 percent of homes sold in the third quarter were affordable to families earning the areas’ median household incomes of $65,100 and $52,000, respectively.

Also near the top of the list for affordable major metropolitan areas were Grand Rapids-Wyoming, Mich.; Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, Mich.; and Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn, Mich., in that order.

One smaller metro market (fewer than 500,000 people) outranked all others in terms of housing affordability during the third quarter of 2008 – Springfield, Ohio, where 92.9 percent of all homes sold in the period were affordable to families earning that area’s median household income of $54,500.

New York-White Plains-Wayne, N.Y.-N.J., was the nation’s least affordable major housing market for the second consecutive quarter. In the New York market, 10.6 percent of the new and existing homes sold during the third quarter were affordable to those earning the area’s median family income of $63,000.

Other major metro areas at the bottom of the housing affordability chart included San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, Calif.; Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y.; Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, Calif.; and Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, Fla., in that order.

Among smaller metro areas, the other markets at the bottom of the affordability chart were San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, Calif.; Santa Cruz-Watsonville, Calif.; Napa, Calif.; and Bend, Ore., respectively.

Courtesy FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® © 2008: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/n1-111908.cfm

Florida’s Existing Home, Condo Sales Increase in September 2008

Florida’s existing home, condo sales increase in September 2008

ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 24, 2008 – For the first time in almost three years, Florida’s existing home sales rose in September, noting a 24 percent increase in activity in the year-to-year comparison; last month’s sales of existing condos statewide increased 11 percent in the year-to-year comparison, according to the latest housing data released by the Florida Association of Realtors® (FAR).

A total of 10,817 existing homes sold statewide last month, up 24 percent over the 8,725 homes sold in September 2007, according to FAR. The last time Florida Realtors reported higher statewide existing single-family home sales was for year-end 2005, FAR records found. In July of this year, six more homes sold statewide than in July 2007, but that increase was statistically insignificant.

Fourteen of Florida’s metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) reported increased sales of existing homes in September; nine MSAs also showed gains in condo sales, marking the third month in a row that a number of markets have noted higher sales activity.

“The September sales report from the Florida Association of Realtors shows a 24 percent increase in the sales of existing homes in the state; this represents the sixth month in a row that the sales figure has exceeded its 12-month moving average (average of the previous 12 months),” says Dr. Sean Snaith, economist and director of the University of Central Florida Institute for Economic Competitiveness. “This is a clear sign that the significant price declines that have occurred across the state are leading to a more rapid absorption of the housing inventory.”

Snaith noted that September 2007 was a volatile time for the housing industry. “The large percentage increase of sales this September versus September 2007 is inflated by the sharp decline in sales that took place in September 2007,” he explained. “That was the month following the initial wave of global fallout precipitated by the subprime mortgage meltdown that roiled markets in August 2007.”

Florida’s median sales price for existing homes last month was $175,100; a year ago, it was $224,700 for a 22 percent decrease. But, looking back to September 2003, the statewide median sales price for single-family homes was $158,800 – an increase of 10.3 percent over the five-year-period, according to FAR records. The median is the midpoint; half the homes sold for more, half for less.

The national median sales price for existing single-family homes in August 2008 was $201,900, down 9.7 percent from a year earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors® (NAR). In California, the statewide median resales price was $350,140 in August; in Massachusetts, it was $325,000; in Maryland, it was $295,283; and in New York, it was $225,000.

The latest housing outlook from NAR points out the importance of available credit to the mortgage market. “Home sales will be constrained without a freer flow of credit into the mortgage market,” says NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. “The faster that happens, the sooner we’ll see a broad stabilization in home prices that in turn will help the economy recover.”

In Florida’s year-to-year comparison for condos, 2,878 units sold statewide compared to 2,595 sold in September 2007 for an 11 percent increase. The statewide existing condo median sales price last month was $153,800; in September 2007 it was $197,000 for a 22 percent decrease. In the latest data available at press time, NAR reported the national median existing condo price was $212,600 in August 2008.

Last month, interest rates for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.04 percent, down from the average rate of 6.38 percent in September 2007, according to Freddie Mac. FAR’s sales figures reflect closings, which typically occur 30 to 90 days after sales contracts are written.

Among the state’s large to medium-size markets, the Daytona Beach MSA reported a total of 536 homes sold in September compared to 478 homes a year ago for a 12 percent increase. The existing home median sales price was $160,000; a year ago, it was $193,200 for a 17 percent decrease. In the year-to-year comparison for the existing condo market, a total of 74 units sold in the MSA last month, up 1 percent compared to 73 condos sold the previous September. The market’s existing condo median price was $237,500; a year ago, it was $277,100 for a 14 percent decrease.

Courtesy FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS © 2008:http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/n1-102408.cfm