For
immediate release
Business editors/real estate writers
Uptick in Bay Area home sales and median price
La
Jolla, CA ----The median price paid for a Bay Area home jumped in May as more
expensive homes started to sell again. The overall number of homes sold
increased for the ninth month in a row, a real estate information service
reported.
The
median price paid for a home in the nine-county region rose to $341,500, up 12.3
percent from $304,000 in April, but down 33.9 percent from $517,000 in May 2008,
according to MDA DataQuick of San Diego.
The
median’s rise over April marked the second consecutive month-to-month increase.
Although last month’s median was 17.8 percent higher than the current cycle’s
low of $290,000 in March this year, it was still 48.6 percent below the peak
$665,000 median reached in June and July of 2007.
Last month’s $37,500 jump from April was due to a small but noticeable increase
in sales of homes financed with home loans for more than $417,000, commonly
called “jumbo” mortgages. They accounted for 25.5 percent of the Bay Area’s home
sales last month, the highest since 25.8 percent last October. Two years ago it
was more than 60 percent. The presence of those high-end sales in the statistics
pulled the May median up.
Sales of $800,000-plus existing single-family houses rose to 13.2 percent of all
house resales last month, up from 9.8 percent in April and the highest since
they were 14.8 percent of sales last October. Sales of sub-$400,000 existing
houses dropped to 57.5 percent of May sales, down from 62.2 percent in April and
the lowest since 56.5 percent in November.
“We
expected this to happen months ago, but better late than never. Some people are
going to take this as a sign that the market has bottomed out. Maybe – or maybe
not. We won’t know for at least half a year,” said John Walsh, MDA DataQuick
president.
“The market has been working its way through the craziness of the
‘loans-gone-wild’ activity of 2005 to 2007. We know a lot about how that is
playing out. What we don’t know is how the distress from the recession will
ultimately play out in the housing market. The elements are different,” he
said.
A
total of 7,447 new and resale houses and condos sold in the nine-county Bay Area
last month. That was up 4.3 percent from 7,139 in April and up 19.8 percent from
6,216 in May 2008.
The
May 2008 sales were the lowest in DataQuick’s statistics, which go back to 1988.
May sales have averaged 9,881 and peaked in May 2004 at 13,567
sales.
San
Diego-based MDA DataQuick is a division of MDA Lending Solutions, a subsidiary
of Vancouver-based MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates. MDA DataQuick monitors
real estate activity nationwide and provides information to consumers,
educational institutions, public agencies, lending institutions, title companies
and industry analysts. Because of late data availability, sales counts were
estimated in Alameda and San Mateo counties.
Last month 42.1 percent of all homes resold in the Bay Area had been foreclosed
on in the prior 12 months, down from 46.4 percent in April and the lowest since
the figure was 41.6 percent last September. A year ago the percentage was 27.7
percent, while the peak was 52.0 percent this February. By county, foreclosure
resales ranged last month from 7.7 percent of all resales in San Francisco to
65.1 percent in Solano.
The
use of government-insured FHA loans – a common choice among first-time buyers –
represented a 24.5 percent of all Bay Area purchase loans in May, down slightly
from a record of 26.0 percent in April but up from 7.3 percent a year
ago.
The
typical monthly mortgage payment that Bay Area buyers committed themselves to
paying was $1,443 last month, up from $1,281 the previous month, and down from
$2,458 a year ago. Adjusted for inflation, current payments are 44.6 percent
below typical payments in the spring of 1989, the peak of the prior real estate
cycle. They are 59.0 percent below the current cycle's peak in July
2007.
Indicators of market distress continue to move in different directions.
Foreclosure activity is off its recent peak but remains high by historical
standards, while financing with adjustable-rate mortgages is at an all-time low,
as is financing with multiple mortgages. Down payment sizes and flipping rates
are stable, and non-owner occupied buying activity is above-average in some
markets, MDA DataQuick reported.
(chart)
All
homes May-08
May-09 %Chng
May-08 May-09 %Chng
Alameda
1,186 1,477 24.5%
$475,000 $330,000 -30.5%
Contra
Costa 1,206
1,694 40.5% $390,500
$234,500 -39.9%
Marin
226 220 -2.7%
$899,000 $620,000 -31.0%
Napa
105 121 15.2%
$475,000 $370,000 -22.1%
Santa
Clara 1,467
1,688 15.1% $620,500
$445,000 -28.3%
San
Francisco
593 498 -16.0%
$790,000 $634,000 -19.7%
San
Mateo
511 516 1.0%
$708,000 $550,000 -22.3%
Solano
465 706 51.8%
$300,000 $189,500 -36.8%
Sonoma
457 527 15.3%
$415,000 $302,000 -27.2%
Bay
Area 6,216
7,447 19.8% $517,000
$341,500 -33.9%
Source: MDA DataQuick,
DQNews.com
-30-
Media calls: Andrew LePage
(916)456-7157