There's been a lot of housing news in the news today since the National Association of Realtors® released quarterly sales figures for homes in 149 metro areas. And with an average drop in the median sale price of 7.7%, and 100 of those metro areas reporting a drop in the median sale price, first quarter this year vs last, the news is understandably downbeat.
But before we get on to the NAR report and the national media's slant on it, I'd like to get this out of the way.
The median sale price in the Tucson Foothills is down just .23% for the 1st quarter of 08 vs 1st quarter of 07. That's not a typo.
.23%. Less than 1/4 of 1% drop in the median sale price in the Tucson Foothills.
That's good news if you're selling your home in the Tucson Foothills, and it's good news if you're buying a home too. Because it indicates that this market has been more resilient to the price swings that are wreaking havoc in those other 100 markets that the National Association of Realtors® cites in their report. The NAR report indicates that the median sale price is down 7.7% nationally, and down 8.8% in the Tucson metro area.
And I'm sure that's true, but of course they don't break out the figures for the Tucson Foothills, so I thought I would, before anyone jumps to conclusions and assumes (it's easy to do with all those headlines coming at you) that prices in the Foothills are also way down. They're not. A .23% drop, from $540,000 in 07, to $538,750 in 08.
From the national media,
The Wall Street Journal -
Losing Cities, and Some Winners, in Q1 Housing Price Data The National Association of Realtors‘ quarterly numbers on home prices in metro areas were out this morning, and they don’t paint a pretty national picture. The Associated Press noted that the price declines in 67% of the areas surveyed in January-March was the largest percentage of declines since the survey started in 1979.
Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville area in California was down 29%, Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario was second, with cities such as Lansing, Mich.; Grand Rapids, Mich.; Sarasota-Bradenton-Venice, Calif.; Miami and San Diego among those filling out the bottom 10
CNN.com- Home prices continue sharp descent
Single-family home prices dropped 7.7% in the first quarter in the largest year-over-year decline since the National Association of Realtors began reporting prices in 1982.
This one from BusinessWeek is my favorite though.
They use the bleak housing news as a springboard to take a (deserved) swing at National Association of Realtors®.
From BusinessWeek Online- NAR puts a good face on some really ugly housing data It must be be getting tough for the National Association of Realtors to put a positive spin on the real estate market when prices in most of the more than 150 metro areas that it monitors are down and, in many cases, way, way down.
But the group and its optimistic chief economist Lawrence Yun appear to be up for the challenge, judging from the May 13 first-quarter single-family home press release with the title: “Mixed Home Price Performance Continues in Metro Areas, One-Third Show Gains.”
Oh well, apparently the NAR is determined to continue singing their own song, while marginalizing themselves and their members. nevertheless, all real estate is local.
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