As spring buying season starts, prices likely to keep rising
The supply of homes for sale is still unusually tight as the spring
buying season opens, turning up the heat on already- rising prices.
The number of homes listed for sale on real estate website Zillow was
down almost 17% in late February vs. a year earlier. In some California
markets, it was down more than 40%.
The supply crunch is likely
to last all year, says IHS Global Insight economist Patrick Newport.
“We’re still not building enough homes.”
The U. S. is creating
about 1.1 million new households a year, but housing starts in January
came in at an 890,000 annual rate, the government says.
As
prices rise, though, more owners will be motivated to sell, easing
supply shortages, economists say. The tight inventory is a big driver of
rising
prices.
Home prices were up 7.3% in the fourth quarter from a
year before, Standard & Poor’s Case- Shiller data show. That was
much faster than most economists expected for 2012.
Nationwide,
the supply of homes for sale — based on the pace of sales — fell in
January to 4.2 months, the National Association of Realtors says. That’s
an almost eight- year low. A six- month to seven- month supply is
considered balanced between buyers and sellers.
The availability of the most expensive homes in the markets Zillow tracks has tightened more than those at lower price levels.
Homes for sale in what Zillow defines as the top price tier in each
market fell by almost 21% in February vs. a year earlier. The inventory
of homes in the middle tier dropped 17%; those in the bottom tier fell
9%.
Five California cities
in Zillow’s survey are among those seeing the biggest inventory drops,
from a 48% decline in Sacramento to a 36% falloff in Riverside. Other
cities are also seeing significantly fewer listings. New York is down
almost 19%; Dallas/ Fort Worth, nearly 21%; and Orlando is off 27%.
Only five of 99 metros showed an increase in listings, led by El Paso,
up 19%, and Albuquerque, up 8%. Little Rock, Fort Myers, Fla., and
Youngstown, Ohio, also saw increases.
Written by Julie Schmit USA TODAY
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
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