Realty Check
#DIANAOLICK ON TWITTER
- Robo-Deal Is All About Lowering Mortgage Principal
- As Mortgage Refinancings Surge, Banks Struggle
- Forty States Sign On to Foreclosure ‘Robo’ Settlement
- Running Robo-Settlement Numbers
- Own vs. Rent Riles Government Housing Policy
- Obama's Mortgage Refi Plan to Go Through FHA
- Housing Demand Defies Fundamentals
- US Treasury Forcing Mortgage Principal Forgiveness
- Robo-Reality: Final Foreclosures Fall as Pipeline Swells
- New Financial Crimes Unit Could Throw Wrench in ‘Robo’ Settlement
MOST SHARED
- LinkedIn Outperforms on Earnings, Revenue
- How to Date a Wall Street Man
- Activision Beats on Earnings, Raises Dividend
- Zynga and Hasbro Announce Toy-Making Partnership
- Steelers' Antonio Brown Spends Super Bowl Week with Twitter Fan Turned BFF
- Commodities Tomorrow: Geopolitical Risk Continues
- Nuance Doesn’t Live Up to Hype
- Commentary: USPS Stuck in the Past
- Warren Buffett: Stocks Will Outperform Gold and Bonds .. and They're Safer 'By Far'
- Don’t Use ECB as Last Resort: Economist
- LinkedIn Earnings Bode Well for Hiring and Social Media
- Top Five Mistakes to Avoid in Online Dating
- Victor Cruz ‘Understands’ Gisele's Super Bowl Frustrations
- Tamminen: The United States of India
- Unusual Volume: Taleo Jumps After Oracle's $1.9 Billion Offer
- Warren Buffett: Stocks Will Outperform Gold and Bonds .. and They're Safer 'By Far'
- So Now You Can’t Give Microsoft Away?
- Robo-Deal Is All About Lowering Mortgage Principal
- Groupon Needs More Disclosure: Analyst
- Stocks Looking Past Europe for a New Driver
- Markets Finally Get Greek Deal —So Where's the Rally?
- Warren Buffett: Stocks Will Outperform Gold and Bonds
- 'Mortgage Deal from Hell' Hurts Sound Borrowers: Bove
- Zynga and Hasbro Announce Toy-Making Partnership
- Activision Beats on Earnings, Raises Dividend
- Westminster’s Most Successful Dog Breeds
- LinkedIn Outperforms on Earnings, Revenue
- Fidelity: 401(k) Balances Little Changed Over 2011
RSS FEED
Existing Homes: What's Really Selling
CNBC Real Estate Reporter
![]() |
AP |
U.S. Existing Home Sales Yr/Yr |
| $0 - $100,000 | Up 38.8% |
| 100,000 - $250,000 | Up 8.7% |
| $250,000 - $500,000 | Down 6.2% |
| $500,000 - $750,000 | Down 8.9% |
| $750,000 - $1,000,000 | Down 10.6% |
| $1,000,000 - $2,000,000 | Down 23.3% |
| $2,000,000 + | Down 32.4% |
Source: National Association of Realtors
|
A full one third of all sales in July were of foreclosed properties, and as more foreclosures hit the market, you can only expect more downward pressure on prices. I spoke with Spencer Rascoff of Zillow.com today, who claims, "this is not a real recovery." Higher sales on one end of the market do not a full recovery make. Until foreclosures peak and prices bottom, we can't say housing is on its way back up. That's not to say that increased sales aren't good. Just think of where we'd be if sales were still falling on the low end, and nobody was eating up all those distressed properties?
This pricing scenario seems like a no-brainer argument for extending the first time homebuyer tax credit. Now anyone who reads my blog regularly knows I am not a big fan of government bailouts in the housing market. But if something's working, which this credit clearly is (30 percent of buyers in July were first timers), then we should give it a little more time. Foreclosures are only increasing, as we saw from yesterday's Mortgage Bankers Association report, and that will mean more inventory at the low end. Let's keep it moving.









