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December is generally a slow selling season for homes nationwide, because of the winter holiday season, and the final month of 2009 was no exception for metro Denver.
Sales of existing homes, or those that have sold at least once before, in the Denver area were down 8.5 percent to 2,959 from December 2008, according to
Metrolist Inc. data. That data includes single-family homes as well as condominiums.
Existing-home sales are also called resales.
Metrolist is metro Denver’s
Multiple Listing Service (MLS), which provides sales data to area real estate brokers. Brokers released December sales data on Thursday.
But the average sold price for existing homes in December went up 13.6 percent to $255,877 year over year. Selling price was up 7 percent from November 2009.
“I saw no surprises with resales in December because of seasonality, even with the extension of the first-time homebuyer tax credit,” said independent residential real estate broker Gary Bauer of Littleton. “The only homes with any activity were transactions that had to be made because of relocations, new jobs, etc.”
The U.S. Congress extended the federal government’s $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers in November, and added a $6,000 credit for existing homeowners interested in buying a different home.
For all of 2009, metro Denver’s existing-home market, including single-family homes and condos, had a total of 42,070 sales, down 12 percent from 47,837 in 2008.
“As far as 2009 goes, I was very happy the Denver market did as well as it did, compared to other large metroplexes,” Bauer said. “We had 42,070 closed sales and $10.2 billion in closed dollar volume. I expect 2010 to start a little slow, but we still have the first-time time and existing homeowner tax credits.”
Average sold price last year dipped 3 percent to $242,413 from $249,897 in ’08.
Single-family homes selling in the moderate, $200,000-$299,999 price range had the most sales last year, with 28.5 percent of total sales, followed by the $300,000-$499,999 range, with 19.8 percent of sales. Homes sold for $500,000 and more had smallest percentage of sales, at 7.7 percent.
Condos priced in the lowest range — $0-$109,000 — had the most sales, at 35.5 percent of total sales. Condos costing $500,000 and more had the lowest sales, at 1.9 percent.
Other specifics in the metro area’s resale housing market for December include:
• Sales of single-family homes decreased 9.9 percent to 2,328 from the same month of 2008, and were down 15.4 percent from November ’09.
• Average sold price for single-family homes was $281,756, up 17 percent from the same month of ’08 and up 6.12 percent from November.
• Median sold price for such homes was $221,000, up 12.8 percent year over year and up 1.4 percent from November.
Median is the middle price between highest and lowest. It’s considered a truer measure of price by some real estate experts because it’s not skewed by price extremes.
• Condo sales decreased 2.8 percent to 631 year over year, and were down 25.6 percent from November.
• Average condo selling price was $160,399, down 1.5 percent year over year, but up 5.24 percent from November.
• Median condo sold price was $131,000, up 4.8 percent from December 2008, but down 3.6 percent from November.
Looking at Denver-home resales from 2005-09, total Denver-area sales, including single-family homes and condos, were down 21 percent — from 53,106 in ’05. Average sold price for existing homes in that five-year period dropped 13.8 percent — from $281,332 in ’05.
pmoore@bizjournals.com
Based on the MLS Statistic for November, 2009 it looks like the Denver Housing Market is doing better. New home sales are even up. And while there are significant variances in the individual areas, November, 2009 combined MLS Residential statistics show an increase of the Number of Closed Sales (up 16.8%) and a reduction in New Listings (down 7.8%) compared to November of 2008. The Combined MLS Residential Absorption Rate is at 5.4 months (down 31%) and there is an increase in the Average Sold Price (Up 9.5% from $242,557 to $265,498).
Feel free to contact me if you have any questions.
Metro Denver had the third-largest gain in home values among cities nationwide in 2009 through November, with a $10.7 billion increase, according to Zillow Real Estate Market Reports.
Only Boston ($23.3 billion) and Providence, R.I. ($12.4 billion) had greater gains in home value.
U.S. home values as a whole dropped $489 billion in this year’s first 11 months, which was significantly less than the $3.6 trillion drop in home value sustained in 2008, the Zillow report said.
Forty-eight of the 154 markets Zillow tracks showed gains in home values through last month.
The report was produced by Seattle-based Zillow Inc., a provider of housing information related to sales, values, foreclosures and mortgages.
Zillow uses its own proprietary formula to calculate home values.
“Home values stabilized significantly during the second half of 2009, with total dollar value of U.S. homes increasing since June,” Stan Humphries, Zillow’s chief economist, said in a statement. “Most housing markets across the country had a good summer, spurred largely by the government’s tax credits for [first-time] homebuyers combined with very low mortgage rates.”
Future home values will be affected by mortgage rates that are expected to “creep back up” in the first quarter of 2010, as well as a foreclosure rate that continues to be high. “Both these factors will challenge the recent stabilization of home prices,” Humphries said.
Denver-area home values increased $10.7 billion to a total of $215.7 billion this year through November, according to Zillow. Values dropped $20.2 billion in 2008.
Los Angeles had the biggest decrease in home value through November, with a $60.8 billion drop to $1.7 trillion in total home value.
Other markets seeing major losses in home value included:
• Chicago — Down $49.6 billion to $688.8 billion total.
• New York City — Down $49 billion to $2.7 trillion.
• Miami-Fort Lauderdale — Down $45.9 billion to $403.5 billion.
• Phoenix — Down $45.1 billion to $241.1 billion.
Home value dropped so much in those markets partly because of the high number of homes in those metro areas, the report said.
pmoore@bizjournals.com
About the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit
The Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009 has extended the tax credit of up to $8,000 for qualified first-time home buyers purchasing a principal residence. The tax credit now applies to sales occurring on or after January 1, 2009 and on or before April 30, 2010. However, in cases where a binding sales contract is signed by April 30, 2010, a home purchase completed by June 30, 2010 will qualify.
For sales occurring after November 6, 2009, the Act establishes income limits of $125,000 for single taxpayers and $225,000 for married couples filing joint returns.
The income limits for sales occurring on or after January 1, 2009 and on or before November 6, 2009, are $75,000 for single taxpayers and $150,000 for married taxpayers filing joint returns.
The following questions and answers provide basic information about the tax credit. If you have more specific questions, we strongly encourage you to consult a qualified tax advisor or legal professional about your unique situation.
Rates for 30-year fixed home mortgages in Colorado slid to a new recent low of 4.65 percent as of Tuesday, Zillow Mortgage Marketplace reports.
Rates are down a bit from last week's average of 4.66 percent, Zillow said.
As recently as mid-summer, Colorado rates were well over 5 percent.
Nationwide, the average rate was 4.66 percent on 30-year fixed loans.
Zillow says its figures on mortgage rates are based on borrower credit scores over 680 and a down payment of 20 percent or more.
Nationally, both mortgage applications and new home construction are on the decline, according to reports Wednesday.
The Mortgage Bankers Association announced that its index of applications fell 2 percent for the week ended Nov. 13 as purchase applications tumbled to a 12-year low.
Now that President Barack Obama has signed an extension of the homebuyer’s tax credit through next April, some analysts think mortgage activity will pick up.
Home builders are more cautious. The Commerce Department announced Wednesday that new home starts plunged nearly 11 percent last month to an annual rate of 529,000. That is the lowest level since April and came despite predictions for a gain in starts.
The Commerce Department said that building permits, a sign of future construction activity, also declined.
Compiled by Mark Harden | Tucker Echols of the Washington Business Journal contributed.
Expected to contribute approximately $22 billion to the economy, Congress overwhelmingly passed a bipartisan measure this past week extending the $8,000 home buyer tax credit to April 30, 2010.
The legislation, which is part of a larger bill that also extends unemployment benefits, was signed into law by President Obama today.
More people are now eligible to take advantage of the law, which includes a $6,500 tax credit for buyers who are current home owners and have lived in their home for five of the past eight years.
Income limits for eligible home buyers were also expanded to $125,000 for single buyers and $225,000 for couples, up from $75,000 for individuals and $150,000 for couples. Qualifying home prices are capped at $800,000.
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Sources: NAR and The Associated Press, Julie Hirschfeld Davis (11/06/2009)
Sincerely,
Foreclosure filings in the Denver metro area fell nearly 1.6 percent in the third quarter from the same period a year ago, according to data from RealtyTrac Inc.
The Denver-Aurora area had the 47th-highest foreclosure-filing rate among 203 large U.S. urban areas in the first quarter of the year, according to figures released late Tuesday by RealtyTrac, an Irvine, Calif.-based marketer of foreclosure properties, in its “Metropolitan Foreclosure Market Report.”
A total of 9,235 properties in the area were in some stage of the foreclosure process in the July-through-September period, or one per every 113 households, RealtyTrac said. That was up 5.48 percent from the previous quarter, but down nearly 1.6 percent from the third quarter of 2008.
Cities in California, Florida and Nevada accounted for the 10 highest foreclosure rates in the third quarter among metro areas with a population of 200,000 or more. But five of those Top 10 metro areas reported decreasing foreclosure activity from the third quarter of 2008, while many other metro areas with Top 50 foreclosure rates reported sharp increases in foreclosure activity.
“Rising unemployment and a new variety of mortgage resets continued to gradually shift the nation’s foreclosure epicenters in the third quarter away from the hot spots of the last two years and toward some metro areas that had avoided the brunt of the first foreclosure wave,” RealtyTrac CEO James Saccacio said in a statement. “While toxic subprime mortgages drove much of that first wave of foreclosures, high unemployment and exotic Alt-A Option ARMs are spreading the foreclosure flood to more metro areas in 2009.”
Among the top 50 metro foreclosure rates, the three biggest year-over-year increases were in Boise City-Nampa, Idaho, and Provo-Orem and Salt Lake City in Utah. In several states, the largest increases were posted in cities not previously a focal point for foreclosure activity.
Boulder, for example, experienced a 34 percent increase in foreclosures compared with the previous quarter, and a nearly 46 percent increase compared with the same quarter a year ago, according to RealtyTrac’s data. Boulder had 551 properties with foreclosure filings in the first quarter, or one in 224 households, and ranked 98th out of 203 cities, RealtyTrac said.
Colorado Springs ranked 56th on RealtyTrac’s list, and Fort Collins-Loveland ranked 52nd.
Greeley, at No. 33, was the highest-ranking Colorado city on the Q3 list, with 1,234 properties in foreclosure, or one for every 75 households.
Las Vegas-Paradise, Nev., topped the national list with one out of every 20 properties in foreclosure, followed by Merced, Calif. (1 in 27); Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla. (1 in 27); Stockton, Calif. (1 in 28); Modesto, Calif. (1 in 30); and Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif. (1 in 30).
RealtyTrac listed 203 metro areas with populations of 200,000 or more.
RealtyTrac’s metro-areas report parallels its much publicized state-by-state foreclosure rankings. The company’s Q3 ranking for Colorado showed the state had the ninth-highest foreclosure rate in the nation.
Colorado officials for years have disputed the state’s high position on RealtyTrac’s lists, particularly after Colorado’s foreclosure rate was described as the worst in the nation for most of 2006.
State officials have argued that the way Colorado’s public trustees report foreclosure data leads private entities like RealtyTrac to overcount foreclosures here. RealtyTrac has said its methodology is fair. But RealtyTrac officials won’t reveal many details of how it counts foreclosures, saying that it’s proprietary information.
State lawmakers last session passed a bill that would standardize the way Colorado reports foreclosure numbers. The state Division of Housing now reports monthly foreclosure data for selected areas within the state, as well as statewide quarterly foreclosure data.
On Oct. 8, state officials reported a 71.9 percent surge in Colorado urban-area foreclosure filings in September — to 3,480 filings, from 2,024 in September 2008. The big increase was partly due to a change in laws that temporarily reduced new filings last year, state officials said.
The report covered the seven counties of the Denver metro area, plus El Paso, Larimer, Mesa, Pueblo and Weld counties.
RealtyTrac’s numbers may differ from the state’s in part because the state numbers reflected only September, not the entire quarter, said Ryan McMaken, a spokesman for the Colorado Division of Housing, on Tuesday.
State-reported data also distinguishes filings from completed foreclosures, while RealtyTrac counts foreclosures at all stages of the process.
(Mark Harden contributed to this story)
Home prices in the Denver area rose in August for the sixth straight month, and prices are now nearly where they were a year ago, according to Standard & Poor’s closely watched S&P/Case-Shiller Home Prices Index.
Home prices in Denver rose 1.0 percent in August from the previous month, according to the index report, released Tuesday. That follows a 1.5 percent rise in July, a 2.5 percent month-over-month rise in June, a 1.3 percent increase in May and a 1.5 percent rise in April.
Denver home prices were down 1.9 percent in August compared with the same month in 2008.
Denver’s year-over-year decline in August was the second-smallest of any of the 20 U.S. cities tracked by the Case-Shiller Index, bested only by Dallas (a 1.2 percent decline from August 2008). All 20 cities declined to some extent. The steepest declines were in Las Vegas (down 29.9 percent year-over-year), Phoenix (down 25.1 percent) and Detroit (down 22.6 percent).
“Broadly speaking, the rate of annual decline in home price values continues to improve” David Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor’s, said in a statement Tuesday.
“While many of the markets remain down versus this time last year, the relative rate of decline has shown some real improvement,” Blitzer said. “California, in particular, has seen some real positive prints in recent months. We see this general trend whether you look at the as-reported data or the seasonally adjusted figures.
“Once again, however, we do want to remind people of the upcoming expiration of the Federal First-Time Buyer’s Tax Credit in November and anticipated higher unemployment rates through year-end. Both may have a dampening effect on home prices.”
The index is compiled by comparing matched-price pairs for thousands of single-family homes in each market. Standard & Poor’s and Fiserv Inc. publishes it.
Displaying blog entries 31-40 of 88