Posts Tagged ‘home prices’

Should You Wait to Sell??

Thursday, July 12th, 2012

There have been more and more reports showing that the housing market is beginning to recover. This has caused angst among some homeowners who are considering whether or not to sell their house in the next several months. With the market showing signs of life, the question becomes should they wait to sell because prices may be about to increase.

The data proves that sales are increasing nicely. However, there is no consensus on home prices yet. At the National Association of Real Estate Editors conference in Denver at the end of June, Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) said:

“This time next year, there could be a 10% price appreciation. I would not be surprised to see that.”

During the same week, Morgan Stanley came out with a housing report that stated where they believed housing values were headed over the next eighteen months:

“We estimate a drop of 5-10% more.”

Which direction are prices headed? As we previously stated, there are opinions on both ends of the argument.  

However, if we look at the Home Expectation Survey, which asks a distinguished panel of over 100 economists, investment strategists, and housing market experts to give their 5-year expectations for future home prices in the United States, we see the average cumulative appreciation expected by the end of next year (2013) is only .9%. Check our local market statistics to see home price appreciation in your area.

Should you sell now or wait? Does it make sense to delay your move for 18 months in order to get less than a 1% increase in your selling price? Only you can answer that question.

Home Prices Strong in our Markets

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Home prices in our markets continue to be resilient when compared to the rest of the country, ranking in the top 16% in the nation.

Nationally home prices have fallen 18.56% in the last five years, but all of our markets’ home prices are up: 8.06% in Dubuque; 5.23% in the Quad Cities; 2.39% in Cedar Rapids; and 2.27% in Iowa City. This compares to other cities: Chicago, IL down 21.93%; Fresno, CA down 47.22% and the Daytona Beach, FL area down 48.67%

According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, of the 306 MSA’s (Metropolitan Statistical Areas) ranked by home price appreciation, all of our markets in eastern Iowa ranked in the top 16% in the nation – Dubuque at 2nd, the Quad Cities at 12th; Iowa City at 40th; and Cedar Rapids at 50th.

Analysts report that 3rd quarter home values were relatively stable and those markets that have shown sharp declines appear to be on the upswing. Our local markets continue to provide a much more stable environment for purchasing homes and investing in real estate.

A family-owned company since 1862, Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS annually sells nearly 3,800 homes in eastern Iowa, western Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin and is the largest privately-owned real estate company in Iowa. Caroline Ruhl is the President and owner of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, and is the fourth generation of the Ruhl family to lead the residential brokerage and home services company.  Headquartered in Davenport, Iowa, the company has 280 sales associates and 50 employees based in sales offices located in Bettendorf, Burlington, Cedar Rapids, Clinton, Coralville, Davenport, DeWitt, Dubuque, Maquoketa, and Muscatine, in Iowa, and in Moline, Illinois. In addition to residential sales, Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS offers services in relocation, new home sales, farm and land sales, senior services, real estate investment, mortgage services through 1862 Mortgage and insurance services through the Nelson Brothers Agency.  For more information on Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, visit their website at www.RuhlHomes.com.

Was it Worth Waiting?

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

 

 

 

 

This article was originally published in the Keeping Current Matters newsletter.  For more statistics and current prices of owning a home please visit RuhlHomes.com.

Where Are Housing Prices Headed?

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) has been reporting great news recently. Last week’s Existing Home Sales Report and this week’s Pending Sales Report both showed consecutive months of increases in the number of homes sold. Finally, buyers are jumping off the fence and taking advantage of one of the most opportune times to purchase a home in America’s real estate history. With an increase in demand, price appreciation can’t be far behind, can it?

Actually, the answer is NO! Prices are not determined by demand alone but in the relationship of demand to available supply. The inventory of homes for sale is still too high and about to surge higher. Along with the news of increased demand yesterday, RealtyTrac released their 2010 Year-End Metropolitan Foreclosure Market Report. The report showed that distressed properties across the country are on the rise:

… foreclosure levels remained five to 10  times higher than historic norms in most hard-hit markets, where deep  fault lines of risk remain and could potentially trigger more waves of  foreclosure activity in 2011 and beyond.

The report also explained that the foreclosure epidemic is spreading to more and more of our communities:

… foreclosures became more  widespread in 2010 as high unemployment drove activity up in 72 percent of the  nation’s metro areas — many of which were relatively insulated from the initial  foreclosure tsunami.

What does this mean for prices?

Here are a few quotes from this week.

Washington Post:

The closely watched S&P/Case-Shiller report shows that housing prices, compared year-over-year, have declined nationally for six consecutive months. The downward path suggests that housing prices could, by spring, hit their lowest level since April 2009, said David Blitzer, the index committee’s chairman.

New York Times:

A new slide in housing prices has begun in earnest, with averages in major cities across the country falling to their lowest point in many years.

CNN Money:

Barclay’s Bank analyst Theresa Chen doesn’t expect a reversal in housing market trends any time soon, since there is no end in sight to the foreclosure crisis.

“We expect softness to persist,” she said, “as home prices continue to face headwinds from the large pipeline of foreclosures entering the market.”

Housing Wire:

“… we believe that home prices will continue to weaken on a month-over-month basis until spring, and a year-over-year basis through the end of 2011,” the Radar Logic said.

Bottom Line

Prices will continue to soften in the first half of 2011 in most regions of the country. This information should be taken into consideration if you plan on selling your house in the next twelve months.

Keep checking RuhlHomes.com for the most up to date information on the real estate market!

Originally Published By: KCM Blog


Copyright © 2013 Ruhl & Ruhl REALTORS. All rights reserved. Disclaimer: All content on this blog is my own opinion and should not be treated as fact or relied upon when purchasing or selling real estate.