Twin Cities home sales set
record median price: $207,500
Neal Gendler, Star Tribune
Published September 19, 2003 REAL19 in the Star
Tribune
August's $207,500 median home-sale price
set another record for the Twin Cities area, leaping $5,500
from the previous record set in July.
The median -- the point where half the sales
are for more, half for less -- was up 9.21 percent from August
2002, according to Regional Multiple Listing Service data
released Thursday by the four metro-area Realtor associations.
Bob Clark, president of the St. Paul Area
Association of Realtors, cautioned that the new median price
"looks really big for one month," but it's not wise
to draw conclusions based on just four weeks.
"It could fall off next month,"
he said. "Our prediction for this year was single-digit
increases in prices." For the first eight months, the
median price is up 7 percent from the 2002 period, he said.
The median may be boosted by more buyers
getting sellers to pay closing costs and adding the amount
to the sale price, said Shirlee Heitz, president of the North
Metro Realtors Association.
Adding the closing costs to the sale price is possible as
long as the house will appraise high enough to cover the total.
Clark and Mike Heinzerling, president of
the Southern Twin Cities Association of Realtors, also have
observed this phenomenon. "Loan officers working with
buyers are being more creative and suggesting buyers conserve
their cash," sometimes to make bigger down payments and
avoid private mortgage insurance, Clark said.
Business was strong last month, with closed
sales up 24.47 percent from August 2002. Those transactions
could have begun in late June or early August, but most were
from purchase agreements signed in July, Heinzerling said.
Sales pending -- purchase agreements signed
for transactions not yet closed -- totaled 6,653 in July,
the peak for the year; normally, pendings peak in April.
The presidents attributed the July spike
to rising interest rates spurring undecided buyers into action.
Until rates started rising, "buyers had no sense of urgency,"
Heitz said.
July also "is the last opportunity
to write a purchase agreement so they can be in a new home
before school starts," said Jerry Koch, president-elect
of the North Metro Realtors Association.
"Late summer is typically a busy time,"
Clark said. "But this August and September, I have seen
increased activity on all my listings -- more calls, more
showings and more inquiries."
Koch said he senses an increase in demand.
"I've had two multiple offers in the last two weeks,"
the first in quite a while. Both were for homes -- one in
Andover and the other in Coon Rapids -- selling for about
$180,000.
Market indicators were up from August 2002.
The 7,714 new listings processed were 5.7 percent ahead; 6,266
closed sales compared with 5,034; $1.55 billion in closed
sales were up 31.6 percent from $1.178 billion; 5,713 pending
sales were up 13.4 percent from 5,036, and 25,254 listings
on the market at month's end were 22.5 percent ahead of August
2002's 20,611.
The five-year average of end-of-August listings
is 18,565.
Industry experts said they saw no sign of
economic fears among buyers. Home sales seem unaffected by
an apparent start of an economic recovery that hasn't stopped
big layoffs.
Heinzerling said his area has seen a big
market demand for townhouses. "They're staying in the
town home for two or three years so they don't have to pay
capital-gains tax [on sale profits] and taking their equity
and moving to single-family homes or bigger town homes,"
he said. Two-bedroom townhouses that sold two years ago for
$130,000 now are bringing $160,000 to $165,000.
Still, Realtors say most entry-level buyers
aren't priced out of the market. Many buyers are two-earner
households, Heinzerling said, and he just sold two houses
to single men.
"People are buying based on good financial
decisions," Clark said. "Their debt-to-income ratios
actually have gone down." Homes still look like a better
investment than stocks or bonds, he said. "Maybe the
rental market is soft, but [rent] hasn't come down enough
to deter people from going into home ownership."
Neal Gendler is at ngendler@startribune.com.
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