|
Special Offer
Subscribe to the print Journal today and receive 8 weeks FREE! Click Here!
Advertiser Links
Featured Advertiser
RBS and WSJ.com present
"Make it Happen"
find out how RBS and WSJ.com can help you "Make it Happen".
REAL ESTATE
From the RealEstateJournal Archives

Median U.S. Home Prices Fall
For First Time Since 1995

Sales of previously owned homes in the U.S. fell less than expected in August, as prices fell compared with a year earlier, the National Association of Realtors said Monday.

The median home price was $225,000 in August, compared with a revised $230,000 in July. Last month marked the first year-to-year median price decline since April 1995, and it was the second-biggest in the survey's 38-year history.

Home resales fell to a 6.30 million annual rate, a 0.5% decrease from July's unrevised 6.33 million annual pace. Inventories of unsold homes rose to 3.92 million, a 7.5-month supply at the August sales pace, the most since April 1993

Discuss

Join a reader discussion on the U.S. housing market.

The weakness in existing home sales followed a report last week that construction of new homes and apartments plunged by 6% in August, pushing building activity to the lowest level since early 2003.

The housing sector, which had enjoyed five boom years of record sales, has been slowing sharply this year under the impact of rising mortgage rates and a slowing economy.

NAR chief economist David Lereah said an anticipated decline in prices compared with a year earlier has begun and is likely to continue until the end of the year, helping to support sales. "With sales stabilizing, we should go back to positive price growth early next year," Mr. Lereah said.

The August resales level was above Wall Street expectations of a 6.20 million sales rate for previously owned homes. The average 30-year mortgage rate was 6.52% in August, down from 6.76% in July, according to Freddie Mac.

Existing home sales were mixed regionally. Sales rose 0.7% in the Midwest and 1.9% in the Norhtheast. They were down 2.3% in the West and 0.8% in the South.

Email your comments to rjeditor@dowjones.com.


Real Estate Investing Information - Real Estate News - Real Estate Market News - Real Estate Market - Real Estate Investing

WSJ Digital Network:
Subscribe   Take a Tour   Contact Us   Help   Email Setup   Customer Service: Online | Print
DowJones