Later this morning, the
Case Shiller Index
gets released. In the meanwhile, let’s take a closer look at the
breakdown of home sales by price. It is rather instructive as to the
state of both the housing and credit markets:
This is a relatively new NAR data series, started several months
ago. There’s no readily available history I was able to locate
(anyone?). They don’t provide a data series I could see, so I had to
cull the numbers from the Economists’ Commentary on their website. (No specific methodology details are given).
Regardless, what I was able to pull together (with the help of a
friend) was shocking. In September 2009, single family home sale prices
look like this:
21% less than $100k
49% $100K to $250k
22% $250 to $500K
5.6% $500k to $750K
1.3% $750k to $1m
1.3% $1M and up
Less than 10% of the homes sold in the US were > $500k. We know
the high end has collapsed, but we are not disucssing multi-million
dollar homes, mind you, but over $500k as a mere 8.2% of sales. I was
surprised. (I wish we had data going back decades, which we could then
normalize for inflation).
In September, 70% of transacted homes were priced under $250,000.
Check out the year-over-year growth rates — also astonishing:
Homes under $100k are up 22.5%
$100-$250 +6%
$250-$500 -5.2%
$500k-$750 +4.0%
$750-$1m -2.6%
$1M up -1.2%
In the West, home sales under $100k are up 116% in the past year. And total US SF is up 6.4% y-o-y.
Amazing stuff . . .
Source:
Existing Home Sales in September
Lawrence Yun, Chief Economist
NAR, October 23, 2009
http://www.realtor.org/research/economists_outlook/commentaries/ehs1009
Originally published at
The Big Picture and reproduced here with the author's permission.
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