And Home Prices Drop By Record Amount
According to the National Association of Realtors, whose records go back to 1979, the median U.S. price for an existing single-family home dropped a record 15.6% to $174,100 in the second quarter of this year.
But Home Sales Increased
Meanwhile, sales of new homes increased by 11% for new homes and 3.6% for existing homes, which suggests that it’s a buyer’s market, and that buyers are taking advantage of the falling prices.
The total dollar reduction was $27.8 billion, and the states that were hardest hit were Nevada (15%) and Florida (13%) and a quarter of would-be sellers lowered prices by around 10%.
Which States Reduced Had The Most Reductions?
Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Illinois had the highest share of homes with price reductions of around 33%.
Then came,
Oregon 29%, followed by,
Washington
New Jersey
Minnesota
New Hampshire
Maryland.
Which Cities Were Worst Hit?
Jacksonville, Florida 38%
Portland, Oregon 35%
Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Boston and Seattle 34%
Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Chicago 33%
Detroit; 16%
Las Vegas 15%
Miami 13%
New York City and Phoenix 12%
San Francisco and Los Angeles 10%
* Undeveloped land and foreclosed properties were excluded from the above estimates.
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