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More Signs Of A Housing Bottom

  by In The Money | August 12, 2009, 12:48 pm
 
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The National Association of Realtors (NAR) released its quarterly metropolitan home sales report this morning, and I found some bullish undertones in it.

While most people are focusing on the continued large year/year price drops, I have not heard anyone focusing on the fact that most cities showed sequential (qtr/qtr) price gains for the first time in roughly 2 years!

For the country as a whole, median sales prices rose +4% in Q2 vs. Q1 of this year. The median home price in the U.S. rose to $174,100 (which is still -15.6% below year-ago levels). Here are some of the largest quarterly increases for some notable cities:
  • San Francisco (+18%), Boston (+16%), Washington D.C. (+14%), Dallas (+11%), and Chicago (+10%).
  • Additionally, some of the cities that have been most cited for outsized speculation in recent years have also shown renewed stabilization: San Diego (+5%), Los Angeles (+3%), New York (+2%), Phoenix (+1%) and Miami (+1%).

We know that one datapoint does not make a trend, but I also know that these quarterly sales prices have been dropping every quarter since mid-2007. So this bounce is notable, and from here we'll just have to see if the trend is sustainable.

Hopefully home prices have now fallen sufficiently from their prior highs, up to 50% in many cities, that buyers feel better about stepping up. The low mortgage rates and first-time buyer tax credits should continue to bolster demand as well.

Here is a look at some of the year/year price declines in some of those notable cities I mentioned:

  • Boston: -8.3%
  • Chicago: -20.7%
  • Dallas: -0.2%
  • Los Angeles: -25.7%
  • New York: -16.3%
  • Phoenix: -36.1%
  • San Diego: -20.2%
  • San Francisco: -33.8%
  • Washington D.C.: -14.0%

Two other notable cities that are still seeing declines are Ft. Myers (-52.8%) and Las Vegas (-39.7%).

Overall, home prices have fallen by record amounts in nearly all cities. For the first time in roughly two years, we are seeing a sequential uptick in home prices. With the home affordability index near multi-decade highs, the odds are increasing that this single datapoint of rising home prices could further cement the notion that housing has bottomed, and that would have positive implications for home prices, consumer confidence, personal spending, as well as the overall economy and stock market.



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InTheMoneyStocks.Com is a research and consulting company focused on mathematical proprietary techniques along with a key understanding of price, pattern and time. Through understanding geometry and other technical analysis methods, InTheMoneyStocks.Com prides itself on avoiding Wall Street hype while calling major and minor moves in the DOW, NASDAQ and S&P, commodities, currencies and stocks.

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Comments
  August 13, 2009, 7:39 am, going4bigtime

THE BIGGER QUESTION IN MY VIEW IS WHEN WILL THE NEXT BUBBLE BE?

 
  August 13, 2009, 7:26 am, piezoe

Count me in as one of those home buyers!

 
  August 13, 2009, 7:18 am, Hapday

Agreed. If you can afford it, there has never been a better time.

 
  August 13, 2009, 7:17 am, TradeEStar

its impossible to call a bottom but i think we are very close to it. at least within 5-10%... right now is the best time ever to buy a home.

 
   
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Random Market Definition

Bill Of Credit
The written request of an individual to his or her depository institution asking it to deliver money to the bearer of the request, with the money drawn from the individuals deposit account, or advanced on the individuals credit.

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