Saturday, October 10, 2009

Denver Home Sales Decline

Metrolist: Denver home sales decline in September, but so do unsold homes


Metro Denver home resales were down in September from the same month of 2008 and from August of this year, but buyers continued to chip away at housing inventory, according to a Metrolist Inc. report Wednesday.

Resales are sales of homes that have been sold at least once before, and don’t include newly built homes, and are also called existing home sales.

Average sold price for all existing homes, including single-family homes and condominiums, jumped 4.88 percent to $251,112 year over year, and were basically flat from this August.

First-time buyers, attracted largely by the federal government’s $8,000 first-time homebuyer tax credit, continued to dominate the market last month, according to Gary Bauer, Littleton-based independent residential real estate broker and Metrolist analyst. Purchasers qualify as first-time buyers, if they haven’t owned a home for the previous three years.

The tax credit expires Nov. 30, but real estate trade groups such as the National Association of Realtors and National Association of Home Builders are lobbying the U.S. Congress to extend the credit another year.

So-called “move-up” buyers — those one step up from first-time buyers — were also active last month, as sales of homes priced at $150,000 to $200,000 rose as well.

Total September home sales decreased 9.8 percent to 3,846 from the same month of 2008. Sales dipped 1.05 percent from August of this year.

September is the end of the country’s principal homebuying season, which starts in late spring and coincides with children being out of school to make moving easier. “The next months will experience seasonal downturn,” Bauer said in a statement.

To the good, unsold homes on the market for sale also dropped last month — 17.1 percent to 19,834, from 23,923 the September of last year. Inventory dropped 1.9 percent last month from 20,225 in August of this year.

Other key home-sale statistics for metro Denver last month:

• Single-family home sales alone dropped 10.84 percent to 3,001 from September 2008, and 2.12 percent from August. Average sold price increased 5.5 percent to $274,433 year over year, and was basically flat compared to the previous month.

Median sold price rose 4.09 percent to $225,000 from September 2008, and was flat compared to August. Median is the middle price between lowest and highest, and is considered a truer measure of price by some real estate experts because it’s not skewed by price extremes.

• Condo sales decreased 6.01 percent last month to 845 year over year, but were flat compared to this August. Average selling price increased 3.91 percent to $168,288 year over year, and was flat compared to August.

Median selling price went up 3.65 percent to $145,000 year over year, and was also flat compared to the previous month.

Year-to-date home sale data for September from Metrolist includes:

• Total home sales decreased 15.63 percent to 31,554 from September 2008, and average selling price was down 5.41 percent to $242,010.

• Single-family home sales dropped 15.77 percent to 24,983, with average sold price down 4.97 percent to $263,518. Median sold price decreased 2.85 percent to $218,500 year over year.

• Condo sales decreased 15.09 percent to 6,571 year over year, and average selling price was down 7.67 percent to $160,235. Median sold price dipped 2.86 percent to $136,000.

Based in Greenwood Village, Metrolist is metro Denver’s Multiple Listing Service (MLS) providing home-sale data to residential real estate brokers and agents.


pmoore@bizjournals.com | 303-803-9232

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