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Associated Press - updated 3:53 p.m. ET, Mon., Feb. 25, 2008
WASHINGTON - Sales of existing homes fell for
the sixth straight month in January, dropping to the slowest sales pace on
record. Median home prices were also down and many analysts predicted further
price declines in the months ahead given high levels of unsold homes.
The National Association of Realtors said Monday that sales of single-family
homes and condominiums dropped by 0.4 percent last month to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 4.89 million units. That was the slowest sales pace,
going back to 1999, and was seen as evidence that the steepest slump in housing
in a quarter-century has yet to hit bottom.
The median price of a home sold in January slid to $201,100, a drop of 4.6
percent from a year ago. Particularly alarming, analysts said, was the fact that
the inventory of unsold homes jumped to a 10.3 months’ supply, meaning it would
take that long to sell the 4.19 million homes on the market at the January sales
pace.

That was up from 9.7 months in December and just below a two-decade high of
10.5 months hit in October. During the peak of the housing boom in 2005, the
supply of homes relative to sales stood at 4.5 months.
“With sales weak and inventories at extraordinarily high levels, prices are
likely to fall a lot more,” said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic
Advisors. “Eventually, sellers will end their denial and realize that if they
want to unload their homes, they will have to cut prices even more.”
Analysts said one of the problems was a rising tide of mortgage foreclosures,
which is pushing even more unsold homes back on the already glutted market.
Sales of existing homes fell by 12.7 percent in 2007, the biggest decline in 25
years, and are down 20 percent from their all-time high set in 2005, the final
year of a five-year housing boom which saw sales and prices soar to record
levels. Over the past two years, housing has been in a steep downturn that has
been made worse by a severe credit crunch as financial institutions have
tightened their lending standards in reaction to their multibillion-dollar
losses on mortgages that have gone into default.
“With prices expected to continue dropping and banks leery to make loans, few
prospective homeowners feel now is the time to buy,” said Michael Gregory, an
economist at BMO Capital Markets.
Some analysts saw it as an encouraging sign
that sales of single-family homes actually posted a modest increase but the
overall number was dragged down by a continued sharp decline in sales of
condominiums.
Patrick Newport, an economist at Global Insight, said that condo prices rose
more sharply than single-family home prices from 2000 to 2006 but have fallen
less in the current downturn. He said until condo prices drop more, buyers are
likely to remain leery.
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the further bad news on existing home sales
should be a wake-up call to Congress and the administration that more needs to
be done to help the distressed housing market.
“The housing crisis has mushroomed in part due to Washington’s inaction,” he
said. “Declining home values cut to the very heart of families’ sense of
financial security and our economy’s overall health.”
Sales were weak in all parts of the country in January except the Midwest, where
sales posted an increase of 3.4 percent. Sales dropped by 3.6 percent in the
Northeast, 2.1 percent in the West and 0.5 percent in the South.
Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors, said he believed the housing
market may be on the verge of bottoming out with a rebound expected to start
toward the end of this year. He said he expected demand to be bolstered in
coming months by the housing sections of the $168 billion economic stimulus bill
passed earlier this month. Those provisions raise the caps on the size of loans
that can be backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing
Administration, an increase that is expected to provide help in high-cost areas
of the country such as California.
But other economists said they still did not see a significant turnaround in
housing until late this year or possibly early 2009.
Congress to look
at plans to help homeowners
For some, this may be a good time to refinance
“Expect sales and prices to keep falling,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S.
economist for High Frequency Economics. “There is no end in sight for the
housing disaster.”
The severe slide in housing has depressed overall economic growth and raised
concerns the economy could slip into a full-blown recession. The National
Association for Busines Economics said Monday that 45 percent of the members of
its forecasting panel believe the economy will experience a recession before the
end of this year and even those not looking for a downturn believe growth will
slow down significantly.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.