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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Existing home sales in Alabama slipped
1.8 percent in June to 4,345 units, according to figures released
by the Alabama Real Estate Research
and Education Center at The University of Alabama.
But according to the center’s director, Dr. Leonard Zumpano,
“This decline does not come as a surprise after May’s
record setting 4,424 homes sold. In fact, June’s figure for
number of homes sold is the second highest on record behind May’s.”
Zumpano said the average selling price of a house fell 4.8 percent
to $122,442. Supply rose to 6.17 months in June from 6.15 months
in May.
Year-to-date, home sales in Alabama are still up 16.3 percent over
the same time last year, according to the center. Only three areas
have recorded fewer homes sold when compared year-to-date with June
of 2002; those areas are Gadsden, Lee County, and Marshall County.
The statewide average selling price is up 3.1 percent; which is
about half of 1 percent appreciation per month.
Jimmie Ann Campbell, 2003 president of the 10,000 member Alabama
Association of REALTORS® said, “ The June 2003 numbers
confirm what families all across the state are telling us, it’s
a great time to buy a home in Alabama. Interest rates, housing selections,
locations and, most of all, housing affordability, right now make
it time to buy.”
Despite the slip in the total number of homes sold across the state,
there are eight new records to report. Baldwin County, Cullman County,
and Lee County all set records for the highest number of homes sold
in one month, as did Mobile and Montgomery. Dothan, Huntsville and
Montgomery set records for the highest recorded average selling
price.
The number of existing homes at the national level sold slipped
0.3 percent to 8.53 million units on an annualized, seasonally adjusted
basis, according to the National Association of REALTORS®. Median
selling price is up to $176,500, an increase of 7.7 percent compared
with June of 2002. Supply increased slightly to 5.1 months in June
from 4.8 months in May.
Residential construction spending increased at the national level
as well, inching up 0.7 percent to $322.1 billion in May on a seasonally
adjusted annual basis, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The
Consumer Price Index, the most popular gauge of inflation, increased
0.1 percent in June to 183.7 as tracked by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods, generally considered
a leading indicator for inflation, rose 0.5 percent in June to 142.6.
According to these metrics, the deflation that many economists feared
has not shown itself.
The U.S. employment situation worsened for the fifth straight month
in June, shedding a total of 30,000 non-farm, payroll jobs. The
latest decline pushed the nation’s unemployment rate up to
6.4 percent, the highest level in nine years. Economic growth on
the order of 3 percent per year is needed to bring jobs back into
the economy, which the National Association of Realtors is forecasting
to happen in the third quarter of this year. On a more positive
note, the state unemployment rate remained unchanged at 5.7 percent,
according to the Alabama Department of Industrial Relations.
At the state level, the fall in home sales and prices, taken with
the slight increase in supply, suggest some softness in this sector,
but one month’s numbers do not constitute a trend, Zumpano
said. According to data released July 23 by the Mortgage Bankers
Association of America, the national average for a 30-year, fixed
rate mortgage increased to 5.72 percent from 5.33 percent one week
earlier, with average points increasing to 1.53 from 1.47.
Historically low mortgage rates have kept housing affordable in
an otherwise uncertain economic environment. They have also worked
to offset sharply rising home prices that a number of locations
in the U.S. have recently experienced. A national average mortgage
rate of 5.72 percent for a 30-year mortgage is still very low by
historical standards, but the increase may have a negative impact
on the housing sector in the next few months, especially if rates
and home prices continue to rise, according to Zumpano.
“Fortunately for Alabama, though housing prices have been
increasing, the rate of increase has been very moderate and in line
with the increase in household income,” he said. “Therefore,
housing affordability remains high in most locations within the
state. While a slowdown may be in the offing some time in the future,
the NAR is predicting yet another record setting year for home sales
in 2003.”
The University of Alabama Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration, founded in
1919, is home to the Alabama
Real Estate Research and Education Center. The Center works
with the Alabama Association of REALTORS, the Alabama Real Estate
Commission and the research division of the National Association
of REALTORS to compile a state housing affordability index each
quarter.
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