Last October, the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure ITRID)
was implemented. Consequently, November 2015 turned out to be California’s
worst home sales performance in terms of number of homes sold for the month
since 2007. But then California posted
tremendous gains for December.
This article from
Housing Wire, shows that we went out of 2015 with a BANG!
According to a
new report from the California Association of Realtors, existing, single-family
home sales jumped 9.6% in the month of December, as many sales that were pushed
out of November thanks to TRID-related delays closed in December.
And according to
Ziggy Zicarelli, the president of the California Association of Realtors,
December’s jump in home sales in December wasn’t just large, it was
historically large.
Overall, CAR’s
report showed that existing, single-family home sales totaled 405,530 in
December on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate, up 9.6% from November and up
10.7% from December 2014.
The
month-over-month increase in sales was the largest since January 2011, and the
year-to-year increase was the largest since July 2015, CAR’s report showed.
Additionally,
CAR’s report showed that December’s sales of condos and townhomes were up 25.1%
from November and were 10.2% higher than a year ago at the same time.
While there were
more sales closed in December, the median price of an existing, single-family
detached California home also rose by a historic margin.
According to
CAR’s report, the median price increased 2.6% in December to $489,310 from
$477,060 in November.
December’s median
price was 8% above than the revised $453,270 recorded in December 2014.
The year-to-year
price gain was the largest since August 2014, CAR said.
And thanks to the
increase in closed sales in the month of December, the number of active
listings also dropped from both the previous month and year.
According to
CAR’s report, active listings at the statewide level dropped 11.7% from
November and 7.9% from December 2014.
At the regional
level, total active listings continued to decline from the previous year in
Southern California, Central Valley, and the San Francisco Bay Area, dropping
9.6%, 7.6%, and 5.2%, respectively, CAR’s report showed.
“In line with our
forecast, California’s housing market experienced strong sales and price growth
throughout last year, with the median price increasing 6.2% for the year as a
whole to reach $474,420 in 2015,” said CAR Vice President and Chief Economist
Leslie Appleton-Young. “Looking forward, we expect the foundation for the
housing market to remain strong throughout the year, with moderate increases in
home sales and prices, but headwinds of tight housing supply and low affordability
will remain a challenge.”
-Kris
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