Tag Archives: san diego home prices

San Diego – Home Prices in County Up Slightly

San Diego County home prices ticked up in September after dipping slightly in August, but the number of transactions declined for the third straight month, DataQuick reported Wednesday.

The median price in the county last month was $422,000, up from $415,000 in August and $417,500 in July. Over the past 12 months, the county’s median price has risen 20.6 percent.

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The number of sales, however, dropped 17.5 percent from August to September. Last month, 3,383 homes were sold in San Diego County, the first time since April there were fewer than 4,000 transactions. Still, sales were up 5.3 percent from September 2012.

The numbers show the market is leveling off, said John Walsh, president of DataQuick, a real estate tracking firm.

“We’ve seen a fairly normal downshifting in the housing market this fall,” he said in a statement. “Couple that with the rise in inventory, higher mortgage rates and the ongoing, gradual drop in purchases by investors and cash buyers, and it’s no wonder prices have leveled off in recent months.”

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San Diego – Local Home Prices Leveling Off

Home prices in San Diego County began to flatten out this summer, but their jump over the past 12 months is the largest in any yearlong period since March 2005, the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed Tuesday.

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Home prices in the county rose 20.4 percent from July 2012 to July 2013, trailing just three other cities included in Case-Shiller’s 20-city index. San Diego beat the national average of 12.4 percent.

But from June to July, prices grew 2 percent, which is a decline from the 2.8 percent they rose from May to June, according to the index, which lags two months.

David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones, said an increase in interest rates in May could be a reason for housing demand to decline. All 20 cities on the index saw monthly increases, but 15 of those gains were smaller from the month before.

“More cities are experiencing slow gains each month than the previous month, suggesting that the rate of increase may have peaked,” he said in a statement. Blitzer noted that the Federal Reserve’s announcement last week that it would not begin to taper its stimulus program that keeps long-term interest rates low could provide a temporary boost to the housing market.

The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 4.5 percent, as of July 11, Freddie Mac reports. That’s up from 3.3 percent the week of May 2.

But rates are still low by historic standards, and therefore are keeping demand artificially high, said Michael Lea, a real estate professor at San Diego State University. The supply of housing is constrained because a lot of people are still underwater on their home mortgages, he said.

“If you had a normal amount of supply on the market with the given demand, you would not be seeing such hefty price increases,” Lea said.

Lea said the peak buying season ends this time of year, so he expects the market has reached its limit for the current period.

Across the country, the biggest jump in the Case-Shiller index came in Las Vegas, which saw its index increase 27.5 percent from July to July. San Francisco came in second with a 24.8 percent increase, while Los Angeles came in third, one spot ahead of San Diego, at a 20.8 percent year-to-year jump.

The index works by comparing repeat-sales prices of single-family homes.

DataQuick, another home-price monitor, reported that the median price in August was $415,000, down from $417,500 in July. But it’s still up 20.2 percent from year-ago levels.

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