Baltimore Washington DC Region Sees 22 Percent Decline in Home Sales : The Real Estate Bloggers

Baltimore Washington DC Region Sees 22 Percent Decline in Home Sales

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

The market has slowed down significantly as the transition from an overheated market to a buyers market occurs. The sellers are clinging to the previous prices they got for their homes, and many are putting their homes on the market to try to lock in their gains before the market retrenches.

Now the Baltimore and Washington DC markets, which at this point last year were overheated,  need to settle in and find its equillibrium. The sellers have to find the comfort area for buyers and the buyers have to find the point that they are confident to buy their home and not have significant losses.

Overall 3,909 houses sold at an average price of $319,633 in Baltimore and the five surrounding counties, compared with 5,048 homes in June 2005, according to statistics compiled by Metropolitan Regional Information Systems Inc. That represents the steepest year- over-year decline for any month since Rockville-based MRIS began tracking data in the region in March 1999. Sales fell in every jurisdiction.

Selling also took longer - 51 days on average versus 38 days a year earlier - as the number of houses for sale continued to mushroom. There were more than twice as many houses for sale in June this year as last, MRIS statistics showed, with 6,950 new listings added during the month but just 3,137 contracts signed. In total, more than 16,000 houses were on the market in June in the city and five surrounding counties.

“The market has changed to significantly more sellers,” said Stephanie Bamberger, a Realtor with Zip Realty. “The buyers I’ve been working with are not as anxious to jump on properties as they’d been in the past year. There’s more hesitation and not wanting to pay the price sellers are asking.” via the baltimoresun.com.

 

Related posts:
  1. Los Angeles Home Sales Fall 12.9%, But Median Price Increases 6.5 Percent
  2. Northern Texas Sees Pre-owned Sales Drop - Median Prices Rise
  3. New Home Sales Down 22 Percent From Last Year - Dow Down 300 Points
  4. April 2007 Existing Home Sales Fall 2.6 Percent
  5. North Carolina Triad Region Shows Strong Growth



Previous Post: From a Red Paper Clip to House - The Power of Craigslist | Next Post: Kenneth Cooper, Father of Aerobics, To Build Healthy Lifestyle Community



 

If you enjoyed this post, we can deliver daily content from the Real Estate Bloggers.

Subscribe using your RSS Reader

Or Get Updates Delivered Daily By E-Mail:


Post a Response

« Back to text comment