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Median used home price in county tops $400,000
By Linda Rawls
07/26/2005
Housing prices in Palm Beach County continued their explosive
surge in June, with the median price of an existing home soaring
above $400,000 for the first time, the Florida Association of Realtors
reported Monday.
Fueled by low mortgage rates, ferocious demand and limited supply,
the median price reached $406,800, a 30 percent increase over June
2004, when the median was $312,000.
"It's an unprecedented, all-out seller's market," said
Thomas Flood, HomeBanc's regional senior vice president for South
Florida. "It's nuts. I've never seen anything like this — ever."
In five years, the median price of an existing home in Palm Beach
County has risen more than a quarter of a million dollars, Realtors'
association records show. In June 2000, the median was $145,300.
A 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 8.29 percent at the time,
mortgage giant Freddie Mac's archives show. Last month, 30-year
fixed-rate mortgages averaged 5.58 percent, down from 5.72 percent
in May and 6.29 percent in June 2004.
Mortgage rates are expected to rise to 6.1 percent by the end
of the year and to 6.5 percent in 2006, the National Association
of Realtors says. Rates would have to spike more than that to dampen
buyers' enthusiasm for owning a piece of paradise, experts agreed
Monday.
"If the market gets above 8 percent, that would have a real
dampening effect," said Chappy Adams, broker/owner of Illustrated
Properties, the county's largest independent real estate agency. "But
even if we had a 10 percent home-appreciation rate going forward,
that would still be amazing."
Palm Beach County ranked third in the nation in home-price gain
for the first quarter of this year, posting a 36 percent jump over
the same period a year ago, according to the National Association
of Realtors.
Such increases aren't sustainable in the long run, said David
Scott, executive director of the Dr. Phillips Institute for the
Study of American Business Activity and professor of finance at
the University of Central Florida.
If you want to know how long single-family home prices in Palm
Beach County can continue their dizzying rise, just look to California,
a real estate finance expert said Monday. California's statewide
resale home price in June was $522,590.
"You have to look at other parts of the country that are
similar to our economy and demographics," said Jim Sahnger
of Palm Beach Financial Network. "That, to me, is California,
and we still have a long way to go before we approach where they
are. I don't see that any burst in (mortgage) rates will stop what
we see now in Palm Beach County."
In part, that's because hidden behind Palm Beach County's home-sales
reports is an issue that Flood of HomeBanc calls "the wealth
factor."
"With sales prices of $400,000, the first-time home buyer
no longer fits into the picture," Flood said. "We're
going to be leaning on a heavy-duty second-home marketplace going
forward — primarily Europeans and Northeasterners.
"Europeans are eating up South Florida right down the coastline.
The Euro is still good against the dollar. And the South Americans
have been investing heavily in Wellington for a long time. Northeastern
money is still comfortable with South Florida prices, and they'd
rather have their dollars in real estate than the stock market."
Add to that mix the aging Baby Boomers buying retirement homes
in Palm Beach County, and "the demand is amazing," Flood
said.
In addition to historically low interest rates, Palm Beach County's
soaring home prices are driven by a market that doesn't have enough
homes for sale to meet the unceasing demand, analysts said. As
a result, existing home sales declined in June for the 11th consecutive
month, to 1,551 from 1,824 in June 2004, the Realtors' report said.
In the Treasure Coast, existing home prices continued their steady
retreat from affordability, rising to a median of $260,700 in June,
up 38 percent from June 2004, when the median was $189,200.
In May, the median price of existing homes in Martin and St. Lucie
counties surpassed $250,000 for the first time.
Sales in the Treasure Coast remained flat, with buyers closing
on 768 homes in June, compared with 770 in the same month a year
ago.
Statewide, the median price rose to $223,000 in June, up 28 percent
from the same month a year ago. But sales slumped 3 percent, to
25,455 from 26,112 in June 2004.
Nationwide, existing home sales in June smashed all records, rising
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 7.3 million, the National
Association of Realtors said. That's up 4 percent over last year,
when June sales posted a rate of 7 million.
The median price of a home nationwide rose to $219,000, up 15
percent from June 2004's median of $191,100.
Earlier this month, the National Association of Realtors revised
its 2005 forecast upward, predicting that existing home sales would
set another record this year with a rate of 6.97 million. That
would break 2004's record-setting pace of 6.78 million.
"The most notable problem in the housing market is the shortage
of homes available for sale, as well as some shortages of building
materials," said David Lereah, the national association's
chief economist. "These challenges are continuing to put pressure
on home prices."
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