MADISON, WI – Declining home sales nationwide and bad weather here in Wisconsin combined to drive state home sales down in the first quarter of 2008 compared to that same quarter in 2007, yet home prices fell only slightly, according to figures recently released by the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association (WRFSA). Wisconsin home sales dropped 24.1 percent in the first quarter, which was somewhat higher than the rest of the Midwest region, which was down 18.3 percent. “It’s important to remember that bad weather always dampens home sales, and given the record snowfall this winter, we were expecting weak numbers for the first quarter,” said WRA Chairman Michael Spranger. “People don’t like to look at houses when the weather is bad, and the weather was definitely bad in January and February this year,” he pointed out. Spranger noted that Wisconsin’s housing market started to improve in March, which means it’s likely that much of the spring sales activity has gotten pushed into the second quarter. “The good news is that market fundamentals remain solid, with 30-year fixed rate mortgages still around 6 percent, and statewide unemployment under 5 percent in the first quarter,” Spranger said. Wisconsin’s median home prices fell by a modest margin (-3.8 percent to $154,000) in the first quarter of 2008 as compared to the first quarter of 2007. “We need to be careful interpreting changes in the median price given the rather sizeable change in sales volume, since it’s very likely that the mix of homes changed from year to year,” said Bill Malkasian, WRA President. “But it is healthy to see some price moderation.” Malkasian added, “The price change indicates that housing is becoming more affordable, while not significantly diminishing the asset value of homes. This remains an excellent time for first-time home buyers to get into the housing market given the low mortgage rates and the healthy inventories statewide.”
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||