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Home prices continue sharp descent

By
Services for Real Estate Pros with Harlan and Associates, LLC

From CNN:

Single-family home prices dropped 7.7% in the first quarter in the largest year-over-year decline since the National Association of Realtors began reporting prices in 1982.

The median sales price fell to $196,300, down 4.8% compared with the last three months of 2007.

Lawrence Yun, the chief economist of NAR, attributed much of the record decline to liquidity problems dragging down high-priced markets.

and:

Hurting home prices were big rises in foreclosure rates over the past 12 months, which threaten to get even worse. Delinquencies more than doubled over that time and more than 155,000 lost their homes in bank repossessions during the first three months of the year.

All that foreclosure activity added to the glut of homes on the market. The total inventory has risen to an average of 10 months worth of unsold homes. In addition, a record number - 2.9 million - of vacant homes are up for sale, according to the Census Bureau.

The big inventory has led to aggressive price slashing and increased incentives by builders looking to sell homes. They've also cut way back on housing starts, which are at a 17-year low.

With the latest readings on home prices from the National Association of Realtors showing the largest year-to-year drop since the group began reporting prices, it is becoming clearer that the housing market is under increasing pressures.

As the group maintains: all real estate is local; but unfortunately, more and more local markets are facing increased downward pressure on prices: according to the NAR, 77 metropolitan statistical areas showed price declines in the last quarter of 2007. In the first quarter of 2008, that number increased 10 an even 100.

In the south, the median existing single-family home price was $164,200 in the first quarter, down 7.5 percent from a year earlier.

Blamed by the NAR for the most-recent record low were, once again, rising foreclosures and decreased availability of mortgage loans. As the number of foreclosures are expected to increase, and banks continue to curtail lending, there is every indication that home prices will continue to slide.

For current home sellers looking for a bottom, this is yet another sign that the troubles in the housing market will continue for some time to come. But for purchasers looking for their dream home, there is no better time to buy: there are more properties than ever available for sale at prices well below what they were going for only last year.

 

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Greg Hampton
Re/Max Around The Mountains - Blue Ridge, GA
North Georgia Mountain Property,Blue Rid

I would say those numbers are pertty close to on the mark in my area,thanks for the post.

May 13, 2008 06:36 AM
Stephen A. Harlan
Harlan and Associates, LLC - Sandy Springs, GA
Esq.

With prices continuing to fall, we're seeing more and more sellers looking at short sales; as a closing attorney who works with short sales, I've easily closed ten times as many this past year as Ihave the previous five combined. Unfortunately a lot of sellers and real estate agents aren't familiar with them or the process, and it takes some amount of work to get them done - but if things keep declining as they are (and there are precious few indications that they won't), it doesn't take much to see how the numbers of short sales are likely to increase and become a significant segment of the overall real estate market.

May 13, 2008 06:53 AM