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Low prices and rates can't slow fall in home sales

Tue Aug 24, 2010 10:05 AM EDT
us-news, business, politics, us, sales, home-sales
Alan Zibel, AP Real Estate Writer
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 4 photos
<p>A home is seen for sale in Springfield, Ill., Monday, Aug. 23, 2010. Tuesday's report from the National Association of Realtors about sales of previously occupied homes is expected to show sales plunged in July. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)</p>

A home is seen for sale in Springfield, Ill., Monday, Aug. 23, 2010. Tuesday's report from the National Association of Realtors about sales of previously occupied homes is expected to show sales plunged in July. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

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WASHINGTON — Home prices in many parts of the country scream bargain, and mortgage rates haven't been this low for decades. So why are houses across the nation sitting on the market for so long?

Sales of previously occupied homes in the United States fell 27 percent in July, the weakest showing in 15 years, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. It was the largest monthly drop in the four decades that records have been kept.

Potential buyers are hesitating because they think home prices still have further to fall. Potential sellers — those with the stomach to put their homes on the market at all, anyway — are reluctant to lower their prices.

"It really is a self-fulfilling prophecy," said Aaron Zapata, a real estate agent in Brea, Calif. "If all buyers perceive that home prices are coming down, then they will stop making offers — and home prices will come down."

While the standoff plays out, home sales are plummeting.

Sharp declines were recorded in each of the four regions the group tracks. Yet the pain is being felt unevenly from state to state and city to city. Some markets are rebounding even as others languish.

Sellers in sluggish markets like Las Vegas and Chicago can expect to wait an average of more than five months to sell their homes, according to real estate brokerage ZipRealty Inc. It's even worse in Palm Beach, Fla., where it takes nearly six months, longest in the nation.

In healthier markets such as San Francisco and Denver, the average wait is only about two months. Sellers in Washington appear to have the nation's best major market; they are waiting only about a month and a half.

Beyond geography, the sales numbers vary depending on the price of the home.

The biggest drops in sales are among homes in the low and middle price ranges. For example, 47 percent fewer homes in the Midwest priced between $100,000 and $250,000 sold in July, compared with July last year. By contrast, sales of million-dollar-plus homes in that region actually rose slightly year over year.

This spring, government tax credits helped drive sales, especially among first-time buyers of less expensive homes. But those tax credits have expired now, and many people rushed to lock in sales before they did.

Since then, the number of homes lingering on the market has swelled to nearly 4 million in July. At the current pace of sales, it would take about a year and two weeks to sell all those homes and get them off the market. A healthy level is six months.

Laurie Salaman has been trying to sell her home in New York for a year so she can move to the suburbs. She's had no offers, even after cutting her listing price on the three-bedroom Bronx home from $475,000 to $449,900.

She notes that she has upgraded the kitchen and bathrooms, refinished the basement and put in new decks and patios. Her goal is to take about $100,000 from the sale and put it toward the purchase of the new house. She said she won't lower the price again.

"That's my bottom price," Salaman said. "If I don't get that price, then I will hold off until the market gets a little better."

Not every seller is so firm. Scott Prestopino has cut his listing price on a five-bedroom home in Carmel, N.Y., to $550,000, from $675,000 in December. He had one offer in April, but the buyer backed out.

Prestopino and his family want to move back to Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., where they had lived for 15 years. They've looked at homes on the market there, but that's all they can do.

"I can't carry two houses," he said.

The housing market is also being hampered by the weakening economic recovery. Unemployment remains stuck at 9.5 percent, and many potential buyers worry that they might not have a job to pay the mortgage.

Prices have also fallen because foreclosures are running about 10 times higher than before the housing bust. Though the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage has fallen to 4.42 percent, many people can't qualify because banks have tightened lending standards.

The drop in July sales compared with June was worst in the Midwest, at 35 percent. Sales sank 30 percent in the Northeast, 25 percent in the West and 23 percent in the South.

Nationally, the median sale price was $182,600, up 0.7 percent from a year ago, but down 0.2 percent from June.

More broadly, the plunge in home sales is magnifying fears that a worsening real estate market could cause consumers to pull back on spending. The overall economy would suffer.

"The housing market is undermining the already faltering wider economic recovery," said Paul Dales, U.S. economist with Capital Economics. "With the increasingly inevitable double-dip in prices yet to come, things could yet get a lot worse."

___

Elphinstone reported from New York.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (9)
paxildog

Ah, this explains why there are almost no existing homes for sale in a five mile radius of my house. This explains why the few that did come up for sale in June and July sold within three to five days with multiple offers. Here in North County San Diego, we are in an isolated spot of the country with rising home costs compared to the rest of the world irght.

News reports like this are trying to kill the home pricing in the rest of the country. Maybe if we shot the reporters making hypothetical statements like Alan, we would see different news coverage and home sales will rise. It's his own self fullfilling prophecy.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Tue Aug 24, 2010 12:23 PM EDT
checkerbattery

News reports like this are trying to kill the home pricing in the rest of the country.

Maybe you should take that up with NAR. It's their report.

    Reply#2 - Tue Aug 24, 2010 3:37 PM EDT
    paxildog

    Worthless. They are bent on showing only the worst and none of the best. The entire report is junk.

    From their own crap pile:http://www.realtor.org/research/research/ehsdata

    July Existing-Home Sales Fall as Expected but Prices Rise

    WASHINGTON (August 24, 2010) – Existing-home sales were sharply lower in July following expiration of the home buyer tax credit but home prices continued to gain, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

    Which way do you want to push it, they have your numbers, want it great, they can do it, want it bad, they can do it. Ask ANY realtor that is independent.

    • 1 vote
    #2.1 - Tue Aug 24, 2010 3:46 PM EDT
    Reply
    Global777

    The banks were screwing us, with their fees, rates and charges.

    The banks got in trouble and were "going broke."

    The banks went to the democratic Congress and asked them to force the same Taxpayers, that the banks had been screwing, to loan them Billions of dollars.

    The banks were broke and didn't know if or when they would be able to repay the Taxpayer loan.

    The banks lied and told the democratic Congress that they needed the money to loosen up the credit markets.

    The democratic Congress believed the banks.

    The democratic Congress, aided by Queen Pelosi's 11th hour, behind closed doors, shenanigans forced the Taxpayers to loan the banks the money.

    The banks got their windfall and immediately considered it Their money.

    The banks continued to find ways to screw the Taxpayers, with their fees, rates and charges.

    The banks aren't loaning the money they got from US, via the democratic Congress, back to US!

    And we think of Organized Crime as being part of the underworld...

    ...

    If I went to a bank and wanted a loan, with no guarantee that I could repay, told the bank that I needed the loan because I "was broke", they would laugh at me. But this was the same scenario that Pelosi, Reid, BO and the rest of the democratic Senators faced when they decided, on our behalf, that the banks were a good risk.

    ...

    Will somebody Please take the checkbook away from the kids!

    • 3 votes
    Reply#3 - Tue Aug 24, 2010 4:05 PM EDT
    bluearcher

    I pleadingly recommend everyone visit this link: Argentina's Economic Collapse

    The parallels regarding national debt, interest rates, private vs public debt, govt. control, etc...

    • 1 vote
    Reply#4 - Tue Aug 24, 2010 4:44 PM EDT
    Midterm2010

    Housing will continue to slide. No job, no loan . No loan, no home. I will not start buying again until all the crooks and liars in Washington, are fired. Once they are out of the way, i'm all in. I think March 2013 is a good time to nibble.

      Reply#5 - Wed Aug 25, 2010 12:08 AM EDT
      thebigbluecat

      Yes, our new President is unable to make improvements to the economy no matter what he does. All of his stimulus plans have proven useless. Is anyone surprised? Not me.

      Our children, and the way things are going, our grandchildren will be paying for this long after we are not here. And our President is giving our money to other countries as people starve and struggle here. This is disgraceful.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#6 - Wed Aug 25, 2010 10:23 AM EDT
      legalanalyst

      You know that History is OUR Today's and tomorrows and guess what, I could care less about what my great grandchildren inherit because if we do not fix the problems of our Today and tom morrow there will not even be an inheritance of any kind which is the same thing WE Are trying to work with, NOTHING. God blesses eternal life on those that worship and spread the word, so rejoice in whatever we can accomplish, with what we were left to work with, and they will do the same. period.

        #6.1 - Thu Aug 26, 2010 10:45 AM EDT
        Reply
        Tim-537415

        The only thing stimulated was unemployment checks and more bloated government.

        • 2 votes
        Reply#7 - Wed Aug 25, 2010 12:49 PM EDT
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