Leave a comment » 8,000 Buyer Credit is Helping Kick-Start Home SalesHas the Housing Market Bottomed for Some?Has the Housing Market Bottomed? The housing market has possibly bottomed in many market areas of the country and we may see a good 2009 after all. The National Association of Realtors said Monday that sales of existing homes grew 5.1 percent to an annual rate of 4.72 million last month, from 4.49 million units in January. It was the largest sales jump since July 2003. Buyers are getting everything thrown at them including the kitchen sink to purchase homes and now they are coming out of their safe havens and doing so. Between the 8,000 no-pay back tax credit, foreclosures, short sales, builder incentives and deep discounts by both builders and homeowners, what are buyers waiting on? Not to mention historically low, low interest rates. The Federal Reserve last week moved to reduce already low rates by printing $1.2 trillion and pumping it into the economy through the purchases of mortgage-backed securities and Treasury debt.
Regional Breakdown Here's how existing-home sales fared across the country: Midwest: increased 1 percent in February to a pace of 1.04 million but 14 percent lower than a year ago. Median price: $131,000, which is 7.8 percent below February 2008. South: rose 6.1 percent to an annual pace of 1.74 million in February but 11.2 percent below February 2008. Median price: $146,700, down 10 percent from a year ago. West: increased 2.6 percent to an annual rate of 1.2 million in February and remain 30.4 percent higher than a year ago. Median price: $204,600, which is 30.3 percent below February 2008. Source: The National Association of REALTORS http://www.charlotterealestateforeclosures.com/004B6D
Posted on March 25, 2009 05:07:27 by sandra.allen - View Profile
Posted in buyers info, sellers info
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