National Association of Realtors posts

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Market Close: Housing Drives Market Down (AAPL)

The National Association of Realtors reported that sales of existing homes fell 2.2% in May. A federal judge gave oil drillers in the Gulf a temporary stay of the Administration's six month moratorium on drilling in deep water. Oil stocks did not react to the legal news. It may be that the amount of crude that the big oil companies get from the Gulf is just too small.

The housing data hammered the market however, and trumped any other news that came across the tape.

The numbers:

Dow 10,293.52 -148.89 (-1.43%)
S&P 500 1,095.31 -17.89 (-1.61%)
Nasdaq 2,261.80 -27.29 (-1.19%)

Continue reading Market Close: Housing Drives Market Down (AAPL)

Under the Radar: NAR Economist Sees Healthy Rise in Existing Home Sales in 2010

Almost lost among the in-line 1% December rise in pending homes sales, as compiled by the National Association of Realtors, was an observation by NAR Chief Economist Lawence Yun.

Yun said he expects existing home sales to rise to 5.6 million in 2010, up 8.5% from 5.16 million in 2009, aided by the the extended home buyer tax credit. Yun also sees 2.4 million households taking advantage of the home buyer credit in 2010.

Continue reading Under the Radar: NAR Economist Sees Healthy Rise in Existing Home Sales in 2010

Housing Market Slides, but Some Silver Lining Visible

Home prices fell yet again in November, losing 0.2% month-over-month (on a not seasonally adjusted basis), following a 0.1% drop in October. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller's home price index reported only five out of 20 metro areas with gains, and from November 2008 to November 2009, home prices are off 5.3%. Need a benchmark? It's late 2003: Six years of appreciation have been obliterated by the financial crisis.

The slide worries analysts who wonder if the housing recovery is strong enough to keep moving forward. A stall on the housing side, of course, could push through the rest of the economy, ultimately putting the squeeze on consumer spending (further) and impeding overall growth.

Continue reading Housing Market Slides, but Some Silver Lining Visible

Closing Bell: Stock bulls and dollar death (DDRX,GMCR, PEET, SBUX, EBAY, CI, TECD)

Today started out strong and stayed positive all day, even if some commented that the highs were not held. The weak dollar helped commodities and helped stocks. A 10.1% October sales rise by the National Association of Realtors by those trying to get the home buyer tax credit didn't hurt either. Ditto for a reiteration that the recession is over.

Here were today's unofficial closing bell levels:

Dow 10,450.04 +131.88 (1.28%)
S&P 500 1,106.13 +14.75 (1.35%)
Nasdaq 2,175.96 +29.92 (1.39%)

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Continue reading Closing Bell: Stock bulls and dollar death (DDRX,GMCR, PEET, SBUX, EBAY, CI, TECD)

Home values could creep up next year

If you're worried about the value of your home, 2010 could bring a little bit of good news. The National Association of Realtors reported Friday that home prices could edge 4% higher next year. In 2009, home prices declined by 13%. The association's chief economist, Lawrence Yun, says, "Going into 2010, I anticipate that prices will also begin stabilizing or begin to modestly improve." He continues, "I don't think the fear factor will be at play in 2010."

First-time buyers taking advantage of a range of incentives -- including an $8,000 tax credit -- accounted for 47% of transactions this year, up from 41% in 2008. With the credit extended to April 30, 2010, there's hope that first-timers will continue to breathe some life into the real estate market. According to Yun, approximately 2 million people gobbled up the tax advantage.

Continue reading Home values could creep up next year

Home resales up 9.4% in September, prices fall

Existing homes are starting to move again. Last month, home resales hit their highest level in more than two years, thrashing expectations. The 9.4% increase in home resales -- which entails a seasonally adjusted rate of 5.57 million -- is attributed largely to the deadline for the first-time home buyer tax credit.

According to the National Association of Realtors, the annualized, seasonally adjusted rate is up from the 5.1 million in August and far ahead of the 5.35 million expected for September (based on economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters).

Continue reading Home resales up 9.4% in September, prices fall

Pricey Manhattan homes are moving again

A year ago, Manhattan homeowners lived within the firm grasp of the worst recession in 70 years. A skyrocketing real estate market seemed ready to come back to Earth, as carnage in the financial services industry – which spread to just about every other business – decimated incomes and net worths throughout the city.

From the second quarter to the third, this year, the sale of co-ops and apartments spiked between 46% and 69% according to several reports from the real estate business. Sales are still lower than last year, but the recovery has been nothing short of amazing (to the chagrin of those of us who had dreams of one day moving up from the rental class).

Prudential Douglas Elliman reported a price increase of almost 2% from the second quarter, though the median was down 8% to 18% from last year – to the $760,000 to $850,000 range. Jonathan Miller, president and CEO of Miller Samuel Inc., a real estate appraisal and consulting firm, calls this good news, but cautions that it doesn't mean we're at the bottom.

Continue reading Pricey Manhattan homes are moving again

Closing bell: home sales don't help (AONE, BAC, WFC, GE, CHTP, JPM)

The market seems to want to go up each day as it has relentlessly almost every trading session since April. But yesterday, it had a tiny setback after the FOMC announcement. Today the culprit was housing. The National Association of Realtors said existing home sales declined 2.7% in August. Every economist worth his salt said the number would rise.

Good news on the unemployment front did give the market an early boost this morning. Within an hour, though, bad news on the housing sales front wiped out the gains and moved the major indices into negative territory, where they have remained.

Here were today's unofficial closing numbers:

Dow 9,706.99 -41.56 (-0.43%)
S&P 500 1,050.78 -10.09 (-0.95%)
Nasdaq 2,107.61 -23.81 (-1.12%)

Continue reading Closing bell: home sales don't help (AONE, BAC, WFC, GE, CHTP, JPM)

Existing home sales rise in February

According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), sales of pre-owned homes increased 5.1% in February -- bringing the seasonally adjusted annual rate to 4.72 million units in February. The NAR attributed the growth to "deep price discounts." The percentage gain was the largest since July 2003, but sales are still down 4.6% during the past 52 weeks.

A survey by MarketWatch showed expectations for a decline to 4.45 million from January's 4.49 million rate. In the past year, the median sales price for homes fell 15.5% to $165,400 -- logging the second largest year-over-year price drop ever. The largest year-over-year price drop logged was January's drop of 17.5%. The inventory of unsold homes increased 5.2% to 3.80 million, which is a 9.7-month supply at February's sales pace. More often than not, inventories increase 5% in February -- but such data is not adjusted for seasonality.

Continue reading Existing home sales rise in February

Home prices continue to drop, but is it really a bad thing?

Home prices drop in fourth quarterWe all know that the real estate market is in trouble, and another sign of just how bad things are came out today as the National Association of Realtors announced another steep drop in home prices during the fourth quarter.

The NAR started keeping comprehensive data on home sales back in 1979, and in that time period there has not been another quarter that saw home prices drop as much as they did in the fourth quarter of last year. So just how much did values drop? A massive 12.4%.

Continue reading Home prices continue to drop, but is it really a bad thing?

Good time to buy a house? Yes, if you plan to live there for five years

The U.S. housing sector has just experienced its worst year, from price and inventory standpoints, in more than two decades. Moreover, 2008 followed a poor housing sales year in 2007.

Various real estate stakeholders are filling the airwaves with ads that pitch, 'Now is a good time to consider buying a home,' 'Housing affordability is improving' and 'On average, a residential home appreciates in value over 10 years.'

But sans the promotional hype and real estate sales stakeholder-based ads, is now a good time to buy a house in the United States?

Continue reading Good time to buy a house? Yes, if you plan to live there for five years

Existing home sales rise, but median price falls

Just call the December 2008 existing home sales data an upside / downside report: On the upside, sales rose 6.5% to a seasonally-adjusted annualized rate of 4.74 million units, the National Association of Realtors announced Monday. On the downside, the median sales priced plunged a record 15.3% compared to a year ago to $175,400.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected December 2008 existing home sales to total a 4.4-million-unit annualized rate.

Further, for all of 2008, median prices declined 9.3% to their lowest level since 2004. Also in 2008, existing home sales totaled 4.91 million units, a 13.1% drop from 5.65 million units sold in 2007. The 4.91 million 2008 total is also the lowest since 4.37 million units were sold in 1997.

One unqualified bright spot: home inventories, which declined 11.7% to 3.68 million units, or about a 9.3-month supply at current sales rates, down from an 11.2-month supply in November 2008.

Housing Sector / Economic Analysis: The recession -- and the financial crisis, for that matter -- began in housing; perhaps the recovery will begin there, as well. Prices continue to decline, but the decrease in existing home inventories is a positive: if inventories continue to decline in the coming months, that could signal better days ahead in construction. Inventories of both existing and new homes must decline further before home builders can consider increasing construction. Stay tuned.

Median U.S. existing home price plunges 13% to $181,300 in past year

One holiday wish by investors -- and business executives -- should be for a U.S. economic recovery, starting with the housing sector.

That's because the housing sector showed few signs of renewal in November, as the median sales price of existing homes plummeted 13.2% to $181,300 on a year-over-year basis, the National Association of Realtors announced Tuesday. In November 2007, the median price was $208,800.

By region, the median existing home price in November dropped 0.1% in the Northeast to $257,700, decreased 25.5% in the West to $242,500, dropped 10.6% in the South to $154,500, and declined 11.2% in the Midwest to $142,200.

Meanwhile, sales of existing homes sank 8.6% in November to a 4.49-million-unit annualized rate. Sales have declined 10.6% on a year-over-year basis.

Equally distressing, the number of existing homes on the market in November rose to an 11.2-month supply at the current sales rate, up from a 10.3-month supply in October. A typical healthy market has a three to five month supply.

Home prices are 'not delightful'

Economist Peter Dawson said the weather outside is frightful, and home prices are not delightful.

Continue reading Median U.S. existing home price plunges 13% to $181,300 in past year

Are U.S. homes undervalued?

Are U.S. homes undervalued? A new survey suggests they are, but don't confuse that fact with 'a good time to buy a home.'

U.S. home prices fell at a 6.9% annual pace in Q3, and are down 6.5% from their 2007 peak, with prices falling in 241 of 330 metropolitan markets, a survey by IHS Global Insight shows, marketwatch.com reported. Further, compared to their long-term fundamental values, U.S. homes are now 3.8% undervalued.

Undervalued homes? Yes, but...

Undervalued, yes. But does undervalued mean U.S. home prices are not likely to fall further? BloggingStocks asked economist Peter Dawson for an assessment.

"Home prices most certainly can fall further, and will continue to do so in most markets over the next year," Dawson said. "Potential home buyers have to keep in mind that just because a home in, say, Miami was $725,000 last year and is priced at $600,000 this year, and is 'undervalued,' that doesn't mean it can't fall to $500,000 or less by next year. And the price trend in most markets remains down. Home buyers need to keep sight of that."

Continue reading Are U.S. homes undervalued?

Record U.S median home price drop to $183,300 probably is not the bottom

The the most-pressing question after the National Association of Realtors announced a 3.1% October sales decline in existing homes: has the housing market bottomed?

Unfortunately, for home sellers and the nation, the answer is no, so says economist Peter Dawson.

Sales fell to 4.98 million units, on an annualized basis, the NAR said. Even more troubling, the median home price plunged 11.3% to $183,300 in October, from $206,700 in October 2007.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected existing home sales to decline to a five-million-unit annualized rate in October.

Further, it was the largest year-over-year median home price drop since the NAR started keeping records in 1968. Meanwhile, inventories rose to a 10.2-month supply in October at current sales rates, up from a 10-month supply in September, the NAR said.

Continue reading Record U.S median home price drop to $183,300 probably is not the bottom

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Last updated: February 12, 2012: 04:00 PM

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