2015-08-27

IRVINE, CA—(Marketwired – August 27, 2015) – RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com), the nation's leading source for comprehensive housing data, today released its July 2015 U.S. Home Sales Report, which shows sales of properties in–foreclosure and cash sales were down from a year ago to multi–year lows while year–to–date U.S. home sales in 2015 are at an eight–year high, and the U.S. median home price in July was at an 82–month high.

The sale of properties sold while in the foreclosure process (not including bank–owned properties) accounted for 6.4 percent of all single family and condo sales in July, down from 6.6 percent of all sales in June and down from 8.0 percent in July 2014 to the lowest monthly share since January 2000 — the earliest that data is available.

All–cash buyers accounted for 22.6 percent of all single family home and condo sales in July, down from 23.7 percent of all sales in the previous month and down from 26.5 percent of all sales in July 2014 to the lowest percentage of cash sales in a month since July 2008 — a 7–year low, and down from the most recent peak of 39 percent in February 2013 (highest going back as far as RealtyTrac has national data, January 2000).

A total of 1,344,129 single family homes and condos sold in the first six months of 2015, according to public record sales deeds collected by RealtyTrac, the highest number of sales in the first half of any year since 2007.

The U.S. median home sales price in July was $189,500, up 2 percent from the previous month and up 2 percent from a year ago to the highest level since September 2008.

“While the stock market may be on a roller coaster as of late, the housing market is still on solid ground, with the eight–year low in cash sales combined with the eight–year high in overall sales volume in the first half of the year evidence that housing is successfully transitioning from an investor–driven recovery to one that is drawing in traditional buyers as a good foundation for sustainable growth going forward,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. “That's not to say there are no cracks in the foundation of this recovery, the top three of which are housing affordability — or lack thereof in some high–flying markets — along with overdependence on capricious cash buyers — both foreign and domestic — in some markets, and the persistent overhang of underwater homeowners who continue to represent heightened default risk given any future economic shockwaves.”

10 local markets reach new home price peaks in July
Out of 161 markets analyzed for home sales prices (excluding non–disclosure states), 10 metros (6 percent) reached new home price peaks in July, and 20 percent of the 161 metro areas analyzed have hit new home price peaks in 2014 or 2015.

10 markets with new home price peaks in July 2015

MSA

July 2015 Median Sales Price

Denver–Aurora, CO

$295,000

San Jose–Sunnyvale–Santa Clara, CA

$822,000

Columbus, OH

$155,000

Nashville–Davidson—Murfreesboro—Franklin, TN

$179,900

Raleigh–Cary, NC

$208,500

Omaha–Council Bluffs, NE–IA

$168,000

Colorado Springs, CO

$215,000

Madison, WI

$220,000

Boulder, CO

$389,450

Burlington–South Burlington, VT

$253,500

“We are beginning to sense increasing inventory. Homeowners may be thinking that now is the right time to sell. There are some very real issues regarding the oil and gas industry, the threat of the Federal Reserve raising rates, a nationally less than robust economy, and negative vibes from foreign economies,” said Gene Vaughn, owner/broker at RE/MAX Alliance, covering the Northern Colorado market. “Construction of new homes is in a higher gear to better meet demand and we may very well see a modest cooling in the fourth quarter of this year.”

“During the heat of the summer in July, the Ohio housing markets displayed further signs of balance and recovery. With listing inventories on the rise, month–over–month, in the Ohio metros of Columbus, Dayton, and Cincinnati; consumers are experiencing greater choices and renewed demand,” said Michael Mahon, president at HER Realtors, covering the Cincinnati, Dayton and Columbus markets in Ohio. “While overall sales unit volume dropped slightly in July, month over month, throughout many Ohio metros; the reflection of increased average sales prices lifted closed sales dollars volume throughout much of Ohio.”

65 percent of U.S. markets at 8–year high for home sales midway through 2015
Out of 190 markets analyzed for home sales volume, 124 (65 percent) reached an eight–year high in home sales through the first half of the year, and 26 markets (14 percent) were at a 10–year high for home sales in the first half of 2015. Four markets reached an all–time high for sales volume in the first half of the year since 2000, the earliest data available in the report: The Villages, Florida; Lincoln, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, and Denver.

10 major markets with eight–year highs in home sales in first half of 2015

Metro Area

Jan–Jun 2008 Home Sales

Jan–Jun 2015 Home Sales

Los Angeles–Long Beach–Santa Ana, CA

22,528

46,590

Phoenix–Mesa–Scottsdale, AZ

18,662

45,555

Chicago–Naperville–Joliet, IL–IN–WI

31,554

43,099

Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX

26,013

34,392

Houston–Sugar Land–Baytown, TX

21,736

26,643

Denver–Aurora, CO

13,849

26,175

Detroit–Warren–Livonia, MI

12,507

25,785

Seattle–Tacoma–Bellevue, WA

16,150

25,516

Tampa–St. Petersburg–Clearwater, FL

13,108

25,432

Riverside–San Bernardino–Ontario, CA

9,110

25,216

“All indicators continue to point to a normalizing market. A downtick in all cash and distress sales coupled with 100 percent of sales at estimated value and increasing median prices bodes well for continued strength through the fall,” said Mark Hughes, chief operating officer with First Team Real Estate, covering the Southern California market. “We have seen growth in inventory which should tamp down this run of price growth; we need consistency to support the gains and to help maintain confidence moving forward.”

“With market inventory remaining extremely tight, the fact that sellers are holding out for full price offers is clearly not a surprise. In fact, there are several sub–markets where sales prices exceed list prices,” said Matthew Gardner, chief economist at Windermere Real Estate, covering the Seattle market. “I still expect to see healthy growth in sales prices across the board through the balance of the year. Inventory constraints persist which, in concert with persistently low interest rates and above average job growth, is acting as a catalyst for buyers to continue to feel comfortable with the market and the high price levels which are being sought.”

Cash share of sales up in New York City and 56 other markets
Metros with the highest share of cash sales in July were all in Florida — Sebastian, Florida (54.6 percent), Homosassa Springs, Florida (53.3 percent), Sebring, Florida (52.6 percent), Naples, Florida (50.2 percent), Port St. Lucie, Florida (49.1 percent), Punta Gorda, Florida (48.7 percent), The Villages, Florida (48.4 percent), Miami, Florida (47.6 percent) and Sarasota, Florida (47 percent).

“South Florida continues to see the market improve on all fronts — non–distressed sales are up 10 percent in median sales price over last year,” said Mike Pappas, CEO and president of the Keyes Company covering the South Florida market. “We continue to see a decline in inventory in homes under $300,000 but above that price point we are beginning to see inventory rise. We have finally moved into a real market with real buyers and real sellers.”

Other major metros with a high percentage of cash sales in July included New York, New York (43.2 percent), Orlando (37.6 percent) and Tampa (35.3 percent), Las Vegas (32.6 percent), Rochester, New York (32.6 percent), and Detroit (31.9 percent).

In 57 of the 200 markets analyzed for cash sales (29 percent), the share of cash sales increased from a year ago, counter to the national trend. Those markets included New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Denver and San Jose.

Metros with highest share of in–foreclosure sales
Metros with highest share of in–foreclosure properties in July were Salisbury, North Carolina (23.6 percent), Rockford, Illinois (17.1 percent), Morehead City, North Carolina (16.3 percent), Baltimore, Maryland (16.1 percent), Toledo, Ohio (15.2 percent) and Chicago, Illinois (14.7 percent).

Other major metros with a high percentage of in–foreclosure properties in July included Tampa, Florida (12.7 percent), Las Vegas, Nevada (12.3 percent), Milwaukee, Wisconsin (11.7 percent), Virginia Beach, Virginia (11.4 percent) and Cincinnati, Ohio (11.3 percent).

In 61 of the 172 markets analyzed for in–foreclosure sales (35 percent), the share of in–foreclosure sales increased from a year ago, counter to the national trend. Those markets included Chicago, Atlanta, Boston, Baltimore and Pittsburgh.

Report methodology
The RealtyTrac U.S. Home Sales Report provides percentages of distressed sales and all sales that are sold to cash buyers by state and metropolitan statistical area. Data is also available at the county and zip code level upon request. The data is derived from recorded sales deeds, foreclosure filings and loan data. Statistics for previous months are revised when each new report is issued as more deed data becomes available.

Definitions
All–cash purchases: sales where no loan is recorded at the time of sale and where RealtyTrac has coverage of loan data.

Properties in–foreclosure: a sale of a property that occurs while the property is actively in some stage of foreclosure (NOD, LIS, NTS or NFS). This includes only sales to third–party buyers or investors not involved in the foreclosure process. It does not include property transfers from the owner in default to the foreclosing bank or lender.

About RealtyTrac
RealtyTrac is a leading provider of comprehensive U.S. housing and property data, including nationwide parcel–level records for more than 130 million U.S. properties. Detailed data attributes include property characteristics, tax assessor data, sales and mortgage deed records, distressed data, including default, foreclosure and auctions status, and Automated Valuation Models (AVMs). Sourced from RealtyTrac subsidiary Homefacts.com, the company's proprietary national neighborhood–level database includes more than 50 key local and neighborhood level dynamics for residential properties, providing unrivaled pre–diligence capabilities and a parcel risk database for portfolio analysis. RealtyTrac's data is widely viewed as the industry standard and, as such, is relied upon by real estate professionals and service providers, marketers and financial institutions, as well as the Federal Reserve, U.S. Treasury Department, HUD, state housing and banking departments, investment funds and tens of millions of consumers.

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