Friday, July 17, 2009
Whether the nascent recovery gathers strength or sputters in the months ahead will depend on the broader economy, the job market and foreclosure levels, economists say.
The median price paid for an existing, single-family home across the nine-county region was $360,000 in June, down 29.4 percent from a year earlier but up nearly 7 percent from May, according to San Diego research firm MDA Data Quick. A total of 6,518 existing, single-family homes traded hands last month, up 27.8 percent from a year ago.
Data Quick attributed the improving numbers to the increasing availability of mortgages and a growing perception among buyers that prices have bottomed out. Realtors have been noticing the same trends.
"We don't expect people to go out and flip a house today and make a lot of money," said Rick Turley, president of the regional division of Coldwell Banker. "But buyer confidence seems like it's on the rise, people feel good about long-term investment in San Francisco Bay Area real estate."
San Francisco prices held up the best among the Bay Area's counties in June, falling just 8.4 percent from a year ago, according to DataQuick. Solano County fared the worst with a 34.5 percent drop but also experienced the largest spike in sales, up 71.9 percent.
Transactions across the region have now increased on a year-over-year basis for the past 10 months. Just above 37 percent of the resold homes had been foreclosed upon in the last 12 months, well off the peak of 52 percent in February.
The data indicate that low interest rates and prices are spurring buyer demand, which in turn is keeping inventory in check, two critical components of a recovery, said Esmael Adibi, director of the Anderson Center for Economic Research at Chapman University in Orange. "That is the very important, positive development and I believe it's going to continue,"
Still, Adibi and others stressed that the month-over-month price increases themselves don't necessarily indicate values are stabilizing. Instead, the trend could largely reflect a change in the mix of homes trading hands. DataQuick noted that the percentage of properties that sold for more than $417,000, the traditional "jumbo mortgage" threshold, rose to 28.8 last month, its highest level in nearly a year.
When a greater portion of the properties selling are in the high end, it can pull up the median even if prices are actually declining. The median means that half of the homes traded for more than that amount and half for less.
Article source: http://www.sfgate.com





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