| A good mix of (westchester county ny) economic news |
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| Written by Webmaster | |
| Saturday, 12 May 2007 | |
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NAR's Pending Home Sales Index for July was released today, showing signed contracts on homes for sale down 16.0 percent from July 2005. Accompanied by another report today of a slowdown in home construction and last week's existing home sales report for July, the Pending Sales Index provides further evidence that our record-breaking housing market is beginning to calm down. ...The index shows existing-home sales should continue to ease after a stronger-than-expected decline in July, but are likely to flatten in the months ahead," said NAR Chief Economist David Lereah. June Fletcher reports on slowing home sales for million dollar homes. A report done by the National Association of Home Builders for the Wall Street Journal shows "the report looked at sales of new and existing single-family homes costing between $750,000 and $1.25 million in the nation's top metro areas. In 2005's fourth quarter, 65 metro markets had 100 or more sales in that price range. A year later, that figure had dropped by more than half, to 32. And appreciation was generally lackluster. Nearly half of those 32 markets saw prices in this "starter luxury" market flatten or decline during the fourth quarter over the same period a year earlier, in some areas by as much as 7.2%." Million dollar homes aren't so rare and special anymore. The market has also shifted to need from speculation, according to Tom Lawler, a housing economist. Slower sales forecast for 2006 Home sales will probably be lower than originally projected this year, according to a new forecast from NAR, as the market works its way through increasing inventory and high prices. Existing home sales are projected to fall 7.6% to 6.54 million in 2006, which would still make it the third-highest year on record after 2004 and 2005. Home prices are expected to rise 2.8% nationally. "This year sales are slowing, homes are plentiful and sellers are negotiating. Under these conditions, well probably see prices dip temporarily below year-ago levels as the market works through a build up in housing inventory, explained NAR Chief Economist David Lereah. Home loans build up your credit score when you make regular payments. Real Estate Agents - Getting More Sales from the Internet Some estimates say that more than 60% of people looking to buy or sell real estate go to the internet first when they begin their search for real estate information. And as agents and brokers become more net-savvy, and more and more people get online, that number will only increase.
About the AuthorRick Hendershot creates Lead Producer Websites for real estate agents Link Popularity - text links to get traffic Real Estate Investing Made Easy |
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| Last Updated ( Saturday, 12 May 2007 ) |
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