Sell freezes over: Fewest homes moving since 1995
Wednesday, August 23, 2006 (Boston Herald)
Bay State house sales plunged a stunning 27 percent in July, the biggest drop in 11 years, new figures show, and experts see few signs of a turnaround any time soon.
“It’s a pretty dramatic decline,” said Tim Warren of market tracker The Warren Group, which reported yesterday that just 5,070 Massachusetts houses changed hands last month.
That’s the market’s worst July sales volume since 1995.
“We’re not pressing the panic button yet, but we are watching the trend lines very closely,” Warren said.
Prices are also dropping. Warren reported that median house-sale prices fell at a 6.1 percent annualized rate in July to reach $339,000. That’s 6.8 percent below last summer’s peak of $364,000.
Lots of would-be home sellers are finding no takers.
Erika Cummings hasn’t gotten a single offer on her West Roxbury home despite cutting her asking price three times since listing the place in May.
“It’s really weird,” said Cummings, who just four years ago had buyers outbidding each other for the last home she sold.
AntiSpin: "Really weird"? How about "sadly predictable." For those of you just joining us on iTulip.com, as explained way back in January 2004, when housing bubbles end, they end with a collapse in transactions, by seizing up. Then they head into a predictable series of step declines as we detailed way back in January 2005. That gave our readers plenty of time to prepare, just as we prepared them for the end of the stock market bubble in March 2000. So much for the "I told you so." This is all old news here.
Seven Step Housing Price Regression Starting 2005
The causes of the repetition of The Bubble Cycle are no mystery, either. As long time readers of this site know, the forces that drive them move from one asset class to the next, and an industry grows up around it to produce asset based profits that substitute for profits from real production. Bill Gross calls it the Finance-Based Economy.
The asset that will be the object of the Next Asset Bubble is becoming increasingly obvious.
Wednesday, August 23, 2006 (Boston Herald)
Bay State house sales plunged a stunning 27 percent in July, the biggest drop in 11 years, new figures show, and experts see few signs of a turnaround any time soon.
“It’s a pretty dramatic decline,” said Tim Warren of market tracker The Warren Group, which reported yesterday that just 5,070 Massachusetts houses changed hands last month.
That’s the market’s worst July sales volume since 1995.
“We’re not pressing the panic button yet, but we are watching the trend lines very closely,” Warren said.
Prices are also dropping. Warren reported that median house-sale prices fell at a 6.1 percent annualized rate in July to reach $339,000. That’s 6.8 percent below last summer’s peak of $364,000.
Lots of would-be home sellers are finding no takers.
Erika Cummings hasn’t gotten a single offer on her West Roxbury home despite cutting her asking price three times since listing the place in May.
“It’s really weird,” said Cummings, who just four years ago had buyers outbidding each other for the last home she sold.
AntiSpin: "Really weird"? How about "sadly predictable." For those of you just joining us on iTulip.com, as explained way back in January 2004, when housing bubbles end, they end with a collapse in transactions, by seizing up. Then they head into a predictable series of step declines as we detailed way back in January 2005. That gave our readers plenty of time to prepare, just as we prepared them for the end of the stock market bubble in March 2000. So much for the "I told you so." This is all old news here.
Seven Step Housing Price Regression Starting 2005
The causes of the repetition of The Bubble Cycle are no mystery, either. As long time readers of this site know, the forces that drive them move from one asset class to the next, and an industry grows up around it to produce asset based profits that substitute for profits from real production. Bill Gross calls it the Finance-Based Economy.
The asset that will be the object of the Next Asset Bubble is becoming increasingly obvious.
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