Home sales holding
Another record seems certain, observers
say
By Neal Gendler, Staff Writer
Published: November 14, 2003 in the Star
Tribune
Edition: METRO
Section: BUSINESS
Page#: 1D
Autumn appears to have brought normal cooling to the Twin
Cities-area real-estate market, giving Realtors no reason
not to chill the champagne for another record year.
For the first 10 months, 48,360 sales have
closed, and the presidents of the four metro-area Realtor
associations releasing the data Wednesday said there are 4,761
sales awaiting closing, all but guaranteeing that last year's
record of 51,212 will be eclipsed.
Activity tapered off as usual late in the
year, but the median sale price bounced up to $204,900 - the
second-highest this year - from $200,500 in September and
7.84 percent ahead of $190,000 in October 2002.
Last month, 5,405 sales closed, up 13.46
percent from October 2002.
``Sales pending,'' purchase agreements signed
for sales not yet closed, were down by only 20 from September.
``This year will be consistent with other
years - a strong finish,'' said Bob Clark, president of the
St. Paul Area Association of Realtors. In his view, strong
includes a normal decline in November and December.
``Winters have been so good, there isn't
a `downtime' any more,'' said Todd Grill, president of the
Minneapolis Area Association of Realtors. Grill, an agent
with Re/Max Results in Plymouth, said the number of homes
for sale and a strengthening economy mean that ``if interest
rates stay stable, we'll . . . have a great year'' in 2004.
The value of all sales closed last month
passed $1.3 billion, up 21.23 percent from October 2002. For
the first 10 months, closed sales were worth $11.5 billion,
a 20.87 percent increase from the 2002 period. Home value
appreciation isn't so joyous for first-time buyers; typical
entry-level prices for single-family homes are around $175,000
to $250,000.
But low interest rates are a ``huge, huge
factor,'' said Clark, an agent with Lynskey Companies in Stillwater.
He said low rates have enabled many people to buy first homes
or move to larger ones. So have low down payment programs
and ``the streamlining of the mortgage process, making things
a lot easier for people to enter ownership.''
In addition, ``people can find out what
they qualify [to buy] without calling someone and giving their
name,'' which many don't like doing, said Mike Heinzerling,
president of the Southern Twin Cities Association of Realtors.
Also ``I'm seeing a lot of people asking sellers to pay closing
costs.''
The apparent economic upswing also is helping.
After being in the doldrums, suddenly ``my relocation business
is as strong as it's ever been,'' said John Lockner, St. Paul
association president-elect. ``Companies are putting employee
moves back into their budgets.''
Heinzerling, an Edina Realty agent in Farmington,
said people also are moving locally, taking advantage of the
low interest rates to do so.
Clark said he's noticed two rising trends:
investors buying homes for rental because they bring better
returns than stocks and bonds, and retirees selling homes
to buy two townhouses or condominiums - one in Minnesota,
another in a snow-free climate.
Lockner, an agent with Re/Max Results in
Woodbury, said the St. Paul area has three new senior-housing
townhouse developments totaling nearly 400 units. He's taken
five buyers to see them, and ``all had been in their houses
30 to 60 years.''
Aging works another way, too. Jerry Koch,
North Metro Realtors Association president, said that at WHY
USA Anthony Realty in Coon Rapids, ``I'm dealing with quite
a few estates this year - more than any other year.''
At October's end, 26,608 homes were listed
for sale, a 22.3 percent increase from October 2002 and 38.5
percent ahead of the month's average over the past five years.
In Grill's opinion, the inventory of homes
for sale still hasn't made the entire area into a ``buyer's
market.'' Most areas of the country have a six-month supply
of houses for sale, while the Twin Cities market has only
a three- to seven-month supply.
The National Association of Realtors (NAR)
reported Wednesday that nationally, existing-home sales activity
in the third quarter was the highest on record. Forty-eight
states and the District of Columbia posted increases from
a year ago, the first time in 20 years that all states reporting
registered sales increases.
Neal Gendler is at ngendler@startribune.com.
"©
Copyright Star Tribune. Republished with permission of
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or redistribution is permitted without the written consent
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Twin Cities housing pulse
While the Twin Cities real estate market
continued its seasonal slowdown in October, median sale prices
rose to $204,900, up 2.2 percent from September and 7.8 percent
from October 2002. Both new listings processed and closed
sales declined in October from September, but are running
9.9 percent and 13.5 percent ahead of last October, respectively.