Bellevue Real Estate, Mortgage, and Economy 5/17/10
Posted on 17 May 2010
Here is the Bellevue Real Estate Report for May 17, 2010
Last Tuesday the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported the Q1 median price for existing homes was up in 91 out of 152 metro areas compared to a year ago, showing the housing market is starting to stabilize. This was a nice gain over Q4 of last year when prices were up in only about 40% of the cities tracked. Even more encouraging, the percentage price increases in 29 cities were in double-digits.
The NAR also reported that existing home sales of single-family homes and condos were UP 11.4% in Q1 compared to a year ago. Sales increased in 44 states and Washington, D.C., with over 70% reporting double-digit percentage gains.
Long-term forecasts were also revised slightly downward by the NAR, but the numbers are still good. They see existing home sales UP 4.3% this year and UP 5.1% for 2011, with the median resale home price UP 2.5% for 2010 and UP 3.7% in 2011. New single-family home sales are forecast to rise 6.9% in 2010 and a whopping 42.0% next year. Median new home prices will be up 3.3% this year and 4.7% the next.
ANOTHER EUROPEAN TRIP… Europe’s fiscal shenanigans were in the news again and they took the markets on a trip north, then turned them sharply south to end the week. The gains came after Sunday’s announcement of a major Euro-zone rescue package. But as the week wore on, concerns over whether individual countries would put the necessary austerity measures in place sent stocks down, though the market indexes ended the week with strong gains. For the week, the Dow ended UP 2.3%, to 10620.16; the S&P 500 was UP 2.2%, to 1135.68; and the Nasdaq was UP.6%, to 2346.85
If you could take your mind off Europe, there were plenty of reasons to feel positive about the U.S. economic situation. Wednesday, the March trade deficit came in as expected, up $1.0 billion to $40.4 billion, thanks to the strength of our recovery pushing imports up faster than exports. Best of all, the report showed our total volume of international trade was up 3.1% for the month and up 24% since it hit bottom a year ago April.
On the jobs front, the four-week moving average inched down for both initial and continuing unemployment claims. Then Friday came the news retail sales were UP 0.4% for April and UP 0.9% including upward revisions to February/March. For the last six months, retail sales are up at a 10.7% annual rate, 10.3% excluding autos, showing the consumer is certainly alive and well. Finally, industrial production was UP 0.8% for April, as manufacturing continues to boom, up at a 9.5% annual rate since its low last June.
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