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A ray of light for housing?

U.S. home sales show unexpected rise as sellers cut prices, but many experts are still cautious

March 25, 2008|By Jamie Smith Hopkins , SUN REPORTER

And though sales rose almost 3 percent from January, they are still down nearly 24 percent from a year earlier.

Baltimore and the five surrounding counties saw an even steeper falloff in sales from a year earlier, down 33 percent. Prices are higher here than in the nation as a whole - a median of $262,500 compared with $195,900 - and haven't been dropping as fast.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, suspects that some local buyers "are just waiting it out to see how much prices decline" while others are holding off because they can't afford to buy.

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"A price drop would help that picture," Yun said.

Baltimore-area prices were still rising when the national numbers began to fall months ago, according to data from Metropolitan Regional Information Systems Inc., which tracks area sales through the multiple listing service. But median prices in the area have now fallen for four months straight, which might explain the bigger-than-normal pickup in sales from January to February.

Nationally, Yun said, some areas seeing big price decreases - such as Sacramento, Calif., and Fort Myers, Fla. - are also seeing better sales activity.

"It is bringing people back into the marketplace," he said.

Peter J. Forbes, a Baltimore real estate investor who rehabs houses to sell, is seeing that dynamic here.

"You drop the price, you get the sale," he said.

It's a painful change for homeowners. Nationally, median prices last month were down to mid-2004 levels, which means people who bought after that are in danger of owing more on their mortgages than their house is worth. Moody's Economy.com says that 6.5 million U.S. homeowners - about one out of eight with mortgages - had zero or negative equity in their properties at the end of 2007.

It's not just that prices have dropped. Loose lending standards during the housing boom allowed borrowers to put little or no money down because everyone kept banking that values would keep going up. Lenders also OK'd loans that people really couldn't afford.

As homeowners began defaulting in alarming numbers, mortgage companies tightened their standards and Wall Street investors pulled out, cutting off a major source of money for new loans. That's made it harder - and more expensive - for anyone but a borrower with great credit and a sizable down payment to get a loan now, Zandi said.

The good news for buyers is that mortgage rates, which began rising at the end of January as problems with financial institutions mounted, appear to be falling. The average rate for a 30-year fixed loan has fallen under 6 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association survey, and Jay Brinkmann, the group's vice president for research and economics, expects it to show another drop tomorrow. The Federal Reserve's new lending provisions for banks, announced a week ago, are already helping, he said.

Temporarily increased borrowing limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans as well as FHA-insured mortgages should also help the housing market in the near term, economists say.

"The liquidity hasn't really flowed into the housing market yet," Yun said. "I think the second half of the year should be better."

jamie.smith.hopkins@baltsun.com

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