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Re: MARKETEDGE post# 92661

Monday, 01/26/2009 10:00:07 AM

Monday, January 26, 2009 10:00:07 AM

Post# of 704570
US Dec Existing Home Sales Up 6.5% To 4.74 Mln RateLast update: 1/26/2009 9:59:21 AM
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Dec Existing Home Sales Dec Nov ! Consensus: !
Total Sales: 4.74M 4.45Mr ! 4.40M !
% Change: +6.5% -9.4%r ! Actual: !
Months Supply: 9.3 11.2 ! 4.74M !
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By Jeff Bater
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--Existing-home sales rose in December as buyers took advantage of discounted prices in distressed housing markets. Home resales rose to a 4.74 million annual rate, a 6.5% increase from November's revised 4.45 million annual pace, the National Association of Realtors said Monday. November originally was seen down by 8.6% to 4.49 million. NAR economist Lawrence Yun said sales in distressed markets were very high amid foreclosures; of all sales in December, about 45% were distress sales at discounted prices. The median home price was $175,400 in December, down 15.3% from $207,000 in December 2007. The median price in November this year was $180,300. The 15.3% drop was the largest on record, the NAR said. "It appears some buyers are taking advantage of much lower home prices," Yun said, adding the market is far from balanced as buyers hold an edge over sellers. The December resales level of 4.74 million reported Monday by NAR was above Wall Street expectations of a 4.40 million sales rate for previously owned homes. For all of 2008, sales totaled 4.91 million, down 13.1% from 5.65 million in 2007. The average 30-year mortgage rate was 5.29% in December, down from 6.09% in November, according to Freddie Mac (FRE). While a drop in mortgage rates is an incentive for demand, the housing industry is floundering as big challenges lurk. The labor market, for one thing, is shrinking - 2.6 million jobs were lost last year. People are afraid to make major purchases, like homes. Also, home prices are falling, discouraging buying by those waiting for a better deal. And mortgage financing is harder to secure than during housing's boom years. U.S. sales of new homes dropped in November by 2.9% to 407,000, the latest government data showed. Year over year, sales were down 35%. High inventories of unsold homes virtually guarantee lower prices and sales down the road. Data on December will be released this week. Monday's data on the existing-home market showed inventories fell 11.7% at the end of December to 3.68 million available for sale, which represented a 9.3-month supply at the current sales pace. There was a 11.2-month supply at the end of November. Regionally, sales rose 4.0% in the Midwest, 7.4% in the South, and 13.6% in the West. Sales fell 1.4% in the Northeast.

-By Jeff Bater, Dow Jones Newswires; 202 862 9249; jeff.bater@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones NewswiresJanuary 26, 2009 09:59 ET (14:59 GMT)


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