WASHINGTON: U.S. sales of previously occupied homes rose solidly in October, helped by improvement in the job market and record-low mortgage rates.
Meanwhile, the local and statewide housing market also showed strong signs of recovery last month.
Summit County home sales jumped 20.8 percent and the median sale price rose 15.6 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Akron Area Board of Realtors.
Summit home sales last month totaled 522, up from 432 in October last year.
The median sale price was $115,750, up from $100,150 in October last year.
Statewide, sales were up 23.1 percent in October compared with September, the Ohio Association of Realtors said in a report Monday. It was the 16th consecutive monthly sales gain at the state level. The average sale price statewide for the January through October period is up 4.8 percent, to $135,435.
Nationally, sales rose 2.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.79 million. That’s up from 4.69 million in September, which was revised lower, according to the National Association of Realtors.
The national sales pace is roughly 11 percent higher than a year ago. But it remains below the more than 5.5 million that economists consider consistent with a healthy market.
As the economy slowly recovers, more people have started looking to buy homes. Prices are steadily climbing, while mortgage rates have been low all year. At the same time, rents are rising, making the purchase of a single-family home or condominium more attractive.
“Altogether, the report is encouraging,” said Michael Gapen, an economist at Barclays Capital.
“Our view is that housing is in a recovery phase,” he added, though it will be restrained by limited credit and modest job gains.
A separate report Monday showed confidence among home builders rose this month to its highest level in 6½ years. The increase was driven by strong demand for newly built homes and growing optimism about conditions next year.
The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index increased to 46, up from 41 in October.
Readings below 50 suggest negative sentiment about the housing market. The index last reached that level in April 2006. Still, the index has been trending higher since October 2011, when it stood at 17.
The Realtors’ group said Superstorm Sandy delayed some sales of previously occupied homes in the Northeast. Sales fell 1.7 percent there, the only region to show a decline. Those sales will likely be completed in future months, the group said.
The median price for previously occupied homes increased 11.1 percent from a year ago to $178,600, the Realtors said.
A decline in the number of homes available for sale is helping push prices higher. There were only 2.14 million homes available for sale at the end of the month, the lowest supply in 10 years.
It would take only 5.4 months to exhaust that supply at the current sales pace. That’s the lowest sales-to-inventory ratio since February 2006.
Prices are also benefiting from the mix of homes being sold. Sales of homes priced at $500,000 and above have jumped more than 40 percent in the past year. Sales of homes and condominiums that cost less than $100,000 fell 0.6 percent.
There have been other positive signals from the housing market. Applications for mortgage loans to buy homes jumped 11 percent in the week ended Nov. 9, compared with a week earlier, the Mortgage Bankers’ Association said last week. Purchase applications are up 22 percent in the past year.
Foreclosures are slowing. The number of properties that began the foreclosure process in the first 10 months of the year fell 8 percent compared with the same period last year, industry research firm RealtyTrac of Irvine, Calif., said last week.
And builders broke ground on new homes and apartments at the fastest pace in more than four years in September. The jump could help boost the economy and hiring.
Still, the market has a long way back to full health. Many potential home buyers cannot meet stricter lending standards or produce larger down payments required by banks.
That can be a particular problem for first-time homebuyers. They accounted for 31 percent of sales in October, down slightly from September and below the 40 percent that is common in a healthy market.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said last Thursday that banks’ overly tight lending standards could be preventing sales and holding back the U.S. economy.
Beacon Journal business writer Katie Byard contributed to this report.