California home prices rise in September; sales fall:
A continued shortage of available homes for sale lowered California home sales in September, while the median price reached the highest level in more than four years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) reported this week.
Making sense of the story
- “Sales in the inland and coastal markets
continue to move in different directions. Low inventory – especially
in distressed areas – is dampening sales activity,” said C.A.R. President
LeFrancis Arnold. “In many of these areas, there is a one- to two-month
supply of REO homes on the market. "The Inland Empire and the Central
Valley have experienced double-digit sales declines compared with last
year. Meanwhile, sales were higher in San Diego and most Bay Area
counties, where the economies appear to be growing faster than the rest of
the state.”
- Sales in September were down 5.2 percent
compared with August and down 1.2 percent from September 2011.
- The statewide median price of an existing,
single-family detached home inched up 0.3 percent from August’s $343,820
median price to $345,000 in September.
- California’s housing inventory eased slightly
in September, with the Unsold Inventory Index for existing, single-family
detached homes edging up to 3.7 months, up from a revised 3.2 months in
August and 5.3 months in September 2011. The index indicates the
number of months needed to sell the supply of homes on the market at the
current sales rate. A six- to seven-month supply is considered
normal.
- Homes sold faster in September, with the
median number of days it took to sell a single-family home falling to 39.3
days in September 2012 from 41.1 days in August and down from a revised
54.2 days for the same period a year ago.
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