Housing market moves on
State avoids home sales woes seen nationally
State avoids home sales woes seen nationally
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By Richard Mize
Published: November 24, 2007
It's steady as she goes for Oklahoma City-area housing, which — so far — seems to have weathered the national tempest in the homes and mortgage markets.
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Inventory on the rise
The month-to-month change, however, showed a slight hint of the larger-than-recent inventory:
The median home price, considered the best gauge of moves in prices in general because half of sales were higher and half were lower, slipped from $130,000 in September to $129,900 in October — a decrease of 0.1 percent.
Not statistically significant, said Caldwell, an Edmond Realtor and co-owner of Dominion Group, which owns RE/MAX First in Edmond and RE/MAX Associates in Oklahoma City.
The average price, however, increased 3.5 percent, from $151,801 in September to $157,169 in October, which indicates more strength on the higher end than the lower.
The cost of borrowing money to buy a house dropped in October.
The average interest rate paid on a traditional, 30-year mortgage extended last month in the metro area was 6.05 percent, according to the Realtors. That was 2.7 percent less than the month before and 4.6 percent less than in October 2006.
Selling time is reduced
Houses sold slightly faster in October than in September — in 79 days on average, down from 81 days in September, but up from 70 days in October 2006.
Caldwell said she sees little to worry about. The slowdown just seems drastic compared to the boom, she said.
"We've been in a seller's market for five years,” she said.
An inventory of 15,000 homes for sale, homes languishing on the market for almost 400 days, interest rates at 14 percent, all dark memories of the mid-1980s housing crash that accompanied the oil bust, "When we were really worried, those were the numbers,” Caldwell said.
For their part, metro-area home builders kept cooling their heels.
Through October, Oklahoma City, Edmond, Midwest City, Moore and Norman collectively issued 4,826 single-family building permits, down 13.3 percent from the first 10 months of last year, according to the Central Oklahoma Home Builders Association.
Only Moore issued more permits — 5.3 percent.
Year-to-date changes in the other cities were all negative, but varied widely: Oklahoma City down 8 percent; Midwest City down 30 percent; Edmond down 20 percent; Norman down 40 percent — but those drops are from near-record highs last year.
"I think what we're seeing is just a return to what history would reflect as a ‘normal' market, which will still have its slight ups and downs,” said Jeff Click, vice president and secretary-treasurer of the Central Oklahoma Home Builders Association. "We've spent so many consecutive years seeing nothing but an increase in numbers, and we knew that wouldn't last forever.
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