Real Estate Talk

Friday, February 17, 2006

News you can use

An article from the Wall St. Journal I found interesting:


Housing-Price Growth Still Hot,But Pace Has Cooled Some
By Jeff Bater and Steve Kerch From The Wall Street Journal Online
Prices for previously owned U.S. homes appreciated late last year, but the double-digit growth was a bit cooler than it had been, an industry group says.
The national median existing single-family home price was $213,000 October through December, up 13.6% from $187,500 a year earlier, the National Association of Realtors, or NAR, said Wednesday. The median is the midpoint; that is, half of the homes sold for more than the median price and half sold for less.
In the third quarter of 2005, the annual rate of home-price appreciation was 14.7%.
The association's report, covering 145 metropolitan areas, shows a record 72 areas had double-digit annual increases in the median price of existing single-family home prices. Only six areas posted price declines. (See metropolitan-area data -- Adobe Acrobat required.)
The biggest single-family price increase in the nation was in the Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale area of Arizona, where the fourth quarter price of $268,400 rose 48.9% from a year earlier. Next was Cape Coral-Fort Meyers, Fla., at $293,100, up 48% from the fourth quarter of 2004. Orlando, Fla., with a fourth-quarter median price of $261,800, was up 42% in the last year.

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