Tuesday 23 July 2013

US house prices rise 7.3% in year


U.S. house prices rose 7.3 percent in the year through May as buyers competed for a small supply of listings, according to to the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
Prices increased 0.7 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from April, the FHFA said in a report today from Washington. The average economist estimate was for a 0.8 percent gain, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Real estate values are climbing as improving employment helps draw buyers into the market for a tight inventory of homes. A separate report today from Zillow showed U.S. home values rose 2.4 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months. It was the biggest gain for a second quarter since 2004, the Seattle-based property-research company said.
“The U.S. housing market as a whole is currently not experiencing a bubble, but in many places it sure must feel like one,” Zillow Senior Economist Svenja Gudell said in a statement. “Homeowners are feeling a sense of whiplash after years of depreciation.”
The limited supply and higher mortgage rates may be restraining purchases. Sales of previously owned homes unexpectedly slipped 1.2 percent in June to 5.08 million annualized rate, the National Association of Realtors reported yesterday. The number of properties on the market last was month was the fewest for any June since 2001.

Market ‘Excitement’

The average rate for a 30-year fixed loan was 4.37 percent last week, up from a near-record low of 3.35 percent in May, according to Freddie Mac.
“Our inventory is incredibly low right now,” Margaret Kelly, chief executive officer of Re/Max LLC, a Denver-based network of real estate agencies, said on Bloomberg Television’s “Market Makers” with Sara Eisen and Deirdre Bolton. “When you have low inventory, high demand, prices rise, you’ve got a lot of excitement in the market. I think once we see inventory rise a bit, you’re going to see some of those things calm down. It’ll be more of a normal market.”

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