June 2010
By Sara Sutachan, senior research analyst & Robert Kleinhenz, deputy chief economist
Existing single-family home sales in California registered a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 552,800 in May, increasing 14.1 percent month-to-month from revised April sales of 484,640 homes. The April-to-May sales increase was the biggest monthly gain since July 2008, and was due in part to buyers who took advantage of both the federal and California state tax credits. Homebuyers had to open escrow by April 30 to qualify for the federal credit, but had to close after May 1 to qualify for the state credit. Contracts surged in April and dropped off in May as a result, and closings were delayed from April to May. Closed escrows in April fell below 500,000 for the first time in over a year, but May sales hit their highest level in five months.
California’s home sales trajectory diverged from the national trend almost two years ago. Sales in both California and the US bottomed out in late 2007, but statewide sales rebounded to pre-peak levels by late 2008 and sustained those sales levels since then. This explains the slight 1.2 percent year-to-year gain in California sales for May.
By contrast, US sales have shown little upward momentum after hitting bottom in December 2007, with the exception of a bounce to 5.7 million sales of existing single-family homes in late 2009 as the November deadline for the 2009 federal first-time buyer tax credit loomed. National sales rose earlier this year from 4.6 million homes in February to 5.06 million in April—the highest level since November 2009—then fell 1.6 percent to 4.98 million homes in May. Even so, the US sales figure in May was 17.5 percent higher than a year earlier.
Steep price declines in much of the state pushed sales to pre-peak levels by late 2008, well ahead of the national market. This was especially true in those parts of California with very high levels of distressed sales. For example, monthly sales in the Riverside/San Bernardino and High Desert regions rose to record high levels during late 2008 and the first part of 2009 as large numbers of distressed sales were pushed through the market. Sales during those months actually exceeded the levels achieved during the peak years for the California housing market in the middle of the last decade. Shifting forward to 2010, sales in these parts of the state remain strong, but have pulled back significantly compared to a year earlier, with sales in the Riverside/San Bernardino region down 25.1 percent from May of last year and sales in the High Desert declining by 33.8 percent over the same period.
All in all, the effects of federal and state tax credits diminishing in the months ahead, sales in California during the second half of the year will be somewhat weaker than in the first half, and annual sales are projected to decline 4.7 percent from a 2009 annual sales figure of 527,500 to annual sales of 521,000 this year. Lean inventories will maintain stable or upward momentum in the median price, as the 2010 median price is expected to grow by 9.1 percent year-over-year to a median price of $300,000.
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