Overseas Property News Property News Overseas Property Forum Forums Overseas Property Blog Blogs Terms & Conditions Take Down Policy Privacy Policy
About Us Authors Contact Us
Property in Australia Australia Property in Bulgaria Bulgaria Property in Brazil Brazil Caribbean Property Caribbean Property in Cyprus Cyprus Property in Dubai Dubai Property in Egypt Egypt Property in France France
Property in Germany Germany Property in Morocco Morocco Property in Portugal Portugal Property in Spain Spain Property in Turkey Turkey UK Property UK US Property US Property in the UAE UAE

Some locations in US see property market well on road to recovery

E-mail Print PDF

Real estate figures in the US are presenting a confusing picture for buyers and sellers as some indicate that previous gains have been wiped out while others report a general rise in prices.

It is a sign that some areas will recover faster than others and demand is still fluctuating depending on location. At least the figures give an indication of where prices are still going down.

According to the latest figures from the Federal Housing Finance Agency US home prices fell 0.3% on a seasonally adjusted basis from July to August, erasing the 0.3% gain between June and July.

Its monthly housing price index also shows that for the 12 months ending in August prices fell 3.6% and the index is 10.7% below its April 2007 peak.

Regionally, Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington states experienced a 1.2% increase in seasonally adjusted prices from July to August, the greatest of the nine divisions. Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia saw a 1.6% decrease in prices during the same period, the biggest loss in the country.

The greatest increase was in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Montana, Utah and Wyoming where prices were up 7.8% on a seasonally adjusted basis. While Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas saw a 0.4% increase year on year, the only division to have an annual increase in prices.

The latest residential property index from Radar Logic shows that home prices and home sales in 25 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) increased 1% and 1.9%, respectively, from July to August.

The average price change from July to August for the past 10 years is 0.1%, but the first-time homebuyer tax credit, which nears expiration, is adding demand in the market, Radar Logic said.

The report predicts that pending sales and mortgage applications for purchase suggest that growth could continue for the next few months. 'But given the expected seasonal decline in activity in the fall, that strength could take the form of a modest price gain or a milder-than-average price decline through the winter,' said Radar Logic president and CEO Michael Feder. He is confident that recovery is underway and that concerns about a glut of foreclosure properties coming onto the market and forcing prices down is exaggerated. 'The threat of pending foreclosures to the housing market is, in our view, overstated and we believe there is strong evidence that housing supply and demand are returning to more normal levels,' Feder added.

 


Last Updated ( Tuesday, 27 October 2009 12:44 )  

US Property News

 

Financial experts predict slow start to US property recovery

Those expecting the US real estate market to recover in 2010 may be in for a long wait with the lat...

 

Foreign property investors committed to the US but London emerges as top spot, survey shows

Foreign investors in real estate are committed to the US as their preferred property investment opp...

 

Bargain prices set to tempt international buyers back to Florida property market, it is claimed

International buyers are expected to flood into Florida this year as bargain prices as low as $47 a...

 

US real estate market saw record foreclosure highs in 2009, report shows

The US property market saw record numbers of foreclosures last year with more than half concentrate...

 

Property sales contracts in US plummet after nine months of consecutive increases, new figures show

Pending home sales in the US have fallen but sharply but analysts are not worried as overall confid...