Special offer

Economics: An Update

By
Real Estate Agent with CORNERSTONE GROUP REALTORS 65056

This information come to me from my friend and experienced loan officer, Kelly Burn-Lee of Home Services Lending, a division of Wells Fargo Mortgage.  Kelly and I worked together when I was at Semonin.  She is knowledgeable and experienced. This information is comes from here weekly e-newsletter and you can reach her at kelly.bryne@wellsfargo.com.

The laws of economics really do hold. Sales of existing homes rose to a 5.03 million annual rate in February, an unexpected 2.9% increase from January's revised 4.89 million annual rate, according to the National Association of Realtors last Monday. The news flew over the heads of the putative experts, who were calling for a drop to 4.85 million.

So why do the laws of economics hold? Increased sales are being spurred by lower prices. The median existing home price was $195,900 in February, down 8.2% from $213,500 in February 2007. Some of the same experts lamented the drop in price, but shouldn't have. Falling prices improve affordability and encourage people to make purchases, which is exactly what's beginning to occur.

The same holds true on the new-home front, where the median price decreased 2.7% to $244,000 and sales dropped 1.8% to a 590,000 annual rate, which, though a decrease, still beat the consensus estimate by 15,000 units. Just as important, the number of new homes for sale at the end of February dropped to 471,000, the fewest since July 2005, indicating builders are making headway in clearing the inventory glut. (Lower prices also motivate suppliers - builders in this case - to cut production.)

Lower prices have also stimulated mortgage activity. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that its four-week moving average for the seasonally adjusted market index is up 11.3%, with the purchase index up 3.1% and the refinance index up 18.3%, thanks to recent Federal Reserve actions that have shored up the mortgage market by allowing the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage to remain below 6% and the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage to hang around 5.5%:

 If you're not sure if you are ready to buy or sell, call me today.  I will walk you through the process and the costs and give you a real world idea of your ability to move forward with your dreams.  What you read in the news is a national snapshot and may not correctly characterize your market.  Talk to a local professional.

Posted by