Trends At a Glance Jul 2010 Previous Month Year-over Year
Median Price $900,000 $815,000 (+10.4%) $705,000 (+27.7%)
Average Price $900,000 $851,667 (+5.7%) $695,000 (+29.5%)
No. of Sales 1 (-66.7%) (-75.0%)
Pending Properties 5 (+400.0%) (+25.0%)
Active 30 27 (+11.1%) 28 (+7.1%)
Sale vs. List Price 90.2% 94.2% (-4.3%) 97.3% (-7.3%)
Days on Market 294 88 (+235.5%) 97 (+203.9%)

Prices and Sales
Days of Inventory
Sales Year-to-Date
Sale Price/List Price Ratio
Market Barometer

Market Overview

Home Sales Slip Slightly

Sales of single-family, re-sale homes dipped 2% in July with the expiration of the Federal tax credit. Year-over-year, home sales were off 17.4%. Year-to-date, home sales are down 9.2%.

Condo sales, on the other hand, were up 28.5% over last July. Year-to-date, condo sales are up 5.2%.

The high-end market has been helped by increasing access to jumbo and super-jumbo loans. Historically, and until July 2007, the spread or difference between conforming mortgage rates and jumbo rates moved within a narrow range of about 0.20%. At the trough of the market, the spread was 1.9%. Now, the spread is down to 0.5%, and the secondary market for jumbo loans is awakening.

The median price for homes was off 0.7% from June, and it was down 4.9% year-over-year. The average price was off 1.1% from June and down 0.3% compared to last July.

The sales price to list price ratio for homes rose 0.6 of a point to 98.1%.

The median and average prices for condos were down 24.5% and 5.5% respectively year-over-year.

Pending home sales were down from June, but were still higher than the year before. Pending home sales were up 16.2%, while pending condo sales rose 67.3%.

Inventory for homes was up 7.5% year-over-year. This is the second month in a row inventory has been higher than the year before.

Speaking of inventory, Leslie Appleton-Young, chief economist for the California Association of REALTORS® (C.A.R.), said, at a recent Silicon Valley Association of REALTORS®  (SILVAR) meeting in Palo Alto last month, in five to ten years California will experience a housing shortage.

She said household growth for the state is expected to be 200,000 a year. The CBIA reports only 13,000 permits pulled in the first six months of the year.

Remember, the real estate market is a matter of neighborhoods and houses. No two are the same. For complete information on a particular neighborhood or property, call me.



 
 



These statistics are generated using information from the MLSListings Inc. MLS, but have not been verified and are not guaranteed. MLSListings Inc. disclaims any responsibility for the accuracy and reliability of these statistics. This information should not be relied upon for real estate transaction decisions.

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