Home / Tag Archives: Home Prices (page 122)

Tag Archives: Home Prices

New Home Sales Fall in February For Second Straight Month

New homes sales fell 1.6 percent in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 313,000, the second straight monthly decline, the Commerce Department and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Friday. Sales for January were revised downward from 321,000 to 318,000.

Read More »

Radar Logic: 2011 Home Bargains May Continue This Year

Last year was a good year for home bargain-hunters, according to the latest data from Radar Logic. The firm's January report revealed a 5.42 percent decline in prices from January 2011 to January 2012 and a simultaneous 7.7 percent increase in transactions. The 5.42 percent price decline over the year brought Radar Logic's composite to its lowest rate since July 2002. Radar Logic predicts prices will remain flat this year and next before increasing ""at an accelerating pace"" in 2014 and 2015.

Read More »

For GSE-Backed Mortgages, No Month-Over-Month Change in Prices

While prices are expected to drop for the year 2012, house prices were left unchanged from December to January, according to the FHFA’s monthly House Price Index. Over a 12-month span ending in January 2012, prices fell 0.8 percent. While the drop is not dramatic, the U.S. Index shows prices are 19.2 percent below the April 2007 peak and roughly the same as the February 2004 index level. The FHFA monthly index is based on purchase prices of homes backing mortgages sold to or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Read More »

Survey Suggests More Homeowners Are Open to Strategic Default

An alarming number of homeowners see strategic default as a viable option should their home continue to depreciate. Almost half - 47 percent - of homeowners participating in an online poll from Housing Predictor say they will walk away from their mortgage if falling home values persist. The number of borrowers open to strategic default has risen sharply since the company last surveyed public opinion on the issue. In October 2010, 36 percent of homeowners polled said they would throw in the towel should housing prices continue to drop.

Read More »

Existing-Home Sales Dip in February as Prices Rise, Inventories Increase

Existing-home sales fell in February from an upwardly revised January sales pace, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Wednesday. February sales - completed transactions - were down 0.9 percent from January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.59 million. January's total was revised up to 4.63 million from 4.57 million. The February 2012 sales pace was up 8.8 percent from February 2011. The median price of an existing home in February was $156,600, up 0.1 percent from the previous month and up 0.3 percent from February 2011. The month-over-month price increase was the first since last June.

Read More »

Capital Economics Expects Recovery to Continue Even with Higher Rates

Even with recent reports of rising mortgage rates and falling home prices, Capital Economics stated it still expects the housing recovery to be under way. The research firm cites two reasons in a report on why mortgage rates won't threaten recovery: rates can only rise so far when tighter monetary policy is still years away, and homes will still be affordable even if mortgage rates were to rise back to normal levels. Capital Economics notes that over the last six months, total home sales have increased by 13 percent.

Read More »

Sales in California Up in February, Median Prices Down

Home sales in California showed signs of improvement for February compared to the previous month of January and year before in February 2011, according to data from the California Association of Realtors (C.A.R.). For February, sales were up 2.1 percent from January's revised 517,120 and up 5.5 percent from the revised 500,480 sales pace recorded a year ago. While the state followed the national trend of declining home prices, C.A.R. reported other signs are pointing towards stabilization.

Read More »

Fed Study: Overpriced Foreclosures Hiking REO Carrying Costs

Appraisers, lenders, and investors appear to be routinely overestimating the values of homes prior to foreclosure, especially in the weakest housing markets, according to two economists with the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. Their report suggests that more accurate pricing could speed the clearing of REO inventories, save lenders money by reducing the carrying costs associated with bank-owned homes, and bring greater stability to housing markets across the country.

Read More »

Zillow report: Median Rent Prices on the Rise as Home Values Drop

While homes prices continue to be on the decline, rent prices are actually on the rise and showed a 3 percent increase from January 2011 to January 2012, as opposed to home values, which dropped 4.6 percent during that same period, according to the January Zillow Real Estate Market Reports. Zillow data also showed year-over-year gains for 69.2 percent of metropolitan areas covered by the index while only 7.3 percent of metros saw increases in home values. Based on the Zillow Rent Index, the states with the greatest increases in median rent over a year were New Jersey (+16.5), New York (+13.7), Kansas (+10.2), Indiana (+10), and Michigan (+10.0).

Read More »

Report: Investors Buying Foreclosures on West Coast

For West coast states, the foreclosure wave is reported to be dying down as third parties, who are typically investors, snatch up foreclosed homes, according to the February 2012 Foreclosure RadarReport. While third party sales were down month-over-month, as a percentage of all sales, third parties purchased 37.6 percent of foreclosures. Compared to the year before, foreclosure sales to third parties increased 84.62 percent in Oregon, 61.33 percent in Nevada, 39.72 percent in California, 23.31 percent in Arizona, and 7.35 percent for Washington.

Read More »