From the National Association of Realtors:
Existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and
co-ops – were down 2.0 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate (1) of 4.93
million units in March from a level of 5.03 million in February, and remain 19.3
percent below the 6.11 million-unit pace in March 2007. A rise in condo sales in
March was offset by a drop in single-family sales. Regionally, sales rose in the
Northeast and West but fell in the Midwest and South.
and:
The national median existing-home price (2) for all housing types was $200,700
in March, down 7.7 percent from a year ago when the median was $217,400. Because
the slowdown in sales from a year ago is greater in high-cost areas, there is a
downward pull to the national median with relatively higher sales activity in
low-cost markets.
and, more relevantly:
In the South, existing-home sales fell 3.5 percent to an annual rate of 1.92
million in March and are 20.0 percent below March 2007. The median price in the
South was $167,200, down 7.1 percent from a year ago.
Blamed by the NAR for the decline in home sales are restrictive lending practices which have prevented many potential purchasers from being able to buy a home. While lending practices and guidelines such as insisting upon relevant down payments, documentation of income, and higher minimum credit scores required for loan qualification may seem restrictive compared to the wild-west rules of the past few years, to many they represent a return to a more rational lending environment seen before the days of MBSs, CDOs, tranches and hedge funds. Regardless, the truth of the statement is evident, and it is the mortgage lenders, the loan programs they offer, and the limited number of buyers who can obtain financing which continue to drive sales numbers down.
The first question to any potential purchaser is whether they can get a mortgage.
Total housing inventory rose 1.0 percent at the end of March percent to 4.06
million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 9.9-month supply
at the current sales pace, up from a 9.6-month supply in February.
This is not a good thing. Again, this shows that we can probably expect continuing price depreciation for the foreseeable future. As homebuilders, existing home owners, bank REO departments, and other real estate investors fight for that limited pool of qualified buyers, they will compete on the only level they can: price.
As prices decline, lending practices become even more restrictive. As we’ve seen here in Atlanta, most of the lenders and mortgage insurance companies have declared the city a declining market – and the size of the loans they are willing to extend get chopped 5% off the top, meaning that a potential buyer has to bring that much more to the table to close.
It’s a vicious circle, and unfortunately, one that is likely to continue.
Photo: peal of laughter, originally uploaded by camillesau.