Friday, September 27, 2013

California Pending Home Sales Drop in August

By Andrew Khouri
LA TIMES

Buyers signed fewer contracts for homes in California last month, as higher mortgage rates hampered demand, according to a new report.

Pending home sales fell 5% in August from July, the California Assn. of Realtors said Monday. The group’s pending-sales index dropped 9% from last year. The index represents contracts signed but not yet closed -- a sign of future market activity.
“Rising interest rates over the past several months at the specter of a tapering of the Fed’s stimulus program sent buyers to the sidelines in August,” the association's chief economist, Leslie Appleton-Young, said in a statement.

IN DEPTH: Five key takeaways on America's housing market 
Still, Appleton-Young said the Federal Reserve’s decision last week to maintain its massive bond-buying program should send mortgage rates lower, helping out prospective buyers.

Freddie Mac’s survey of lenders -- taken before the Fed’s announcement -- showed the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage dropped to 4.5% last week, from 4.57% a week earlier.

Though mortgage rates may take a breather for the moment, economists predict that the Fed’s announcement will only delay an eventually rise to 5% or higher.

The Realtors group also said inventory expanded slightly in August, although it remains extremely tight. The supply of non-distressed homes for sale inched up to 3.1 months in August, from three months in July.

A supply of six months is considered normal.

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