Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Housing market remains sluggish

February home sales in the region fell to the fourth-lowest level on record, figures show

- By Jeff Colli■s JeffCollin­s@scng.com

Southern California's spring homebuying season got off to a slow start last month with high mortgage rates and too few homes for sale suppressin­g transactio­ns and prices.

The median price of a Southern California home — or the price at the midpoint of all sales — was $690,000 in February, real estate data firm CoreLogic will report today.

That's down $2,000 from a year ago and down $70,000 from last April and May when home prices went into an eight-month nose dive.

Sales, meanwhile, fell 37.6% to 11,068 transactio­ns in the 12 months ending in February, CoreLogic reported. That's the secondlowe­st tally for a February and the fourth lowest for any month in records dating back 35 years.

February typically marks the start of the spring buying season, the busiest time of year for home sales. Activity at open houses picked up in mid-January, as if someone threw a switch, several agents said.

But high interest rates and low inventory are holding the market back, housing economists said.

New listings in the region were down at least 38.5% in February, according to Zillow. Redfin numbers show total listings — both new and those taking longer to sell — were 40% below average.

“Home sellers seem to be sitting out the early spring selling season in surprising numbers,” Zillow Senior Economist Jeff Tucker said.

At the same time, monthly house payments for a medianpric­ed home were 30% higher last month than a year earlier, even though the median home price was 0.3% lower.

As a result, homes are taking longer to sell and are going for a lot less.

Just a third of Southern California's homes sold above the seller's asking price, compared with two-thirds a year ago, Redfin figures show. The average time on the market was about eight weeks versus 3½ weeks last year.

“This market is not as frenzied as it was during the last two years,” Zillow's Tucker said.

Homeowners aren't giving up their current low mortgage rates to sell at a time when there are fewer buyers able to afford a home, market analysts said.

“Why move?” homeowners are saying, Steve Thomas of Reports On Housing said. “There haven't been enough homes coming on the market since the pandemic. In Southern California, we're missing a giant piece of the marketplac­e.”

And yet, there are exceptions to the rule.

On Feb. 9, Seven Gables Real Estate agent Susan Saurastri closed escrow on a Huntington Beach fixer-upper that sold for $200,000 over the asking price after getting 45 offers. The stink of cigarettes was so bad, she had to set up a card table in the garage to meet visitors at a broker's preview.

She also sold a Fountain Valley house this month at $155,000 over the asking price after getting 33 offers.

Fellow agent Tami Masek just went into contract on another Fountain Valley house after getting 32 offers.

But these sales aren't typical, she said.

“The buyer pool has shrunk, no doubt about it,” said Saurastri, an agent for 24 years. “There are fewer people who can afford to buy.”

A mortgage rate dip in January sparked a short-lived increase in buyer interest, several agents said.

Berkshire Hathaway agent Roslynn Pomahatch said she got six offers in four days for a two-story Rancho Cucamonga house she listed in late January. But when mortgage rates started edging back up in mid-February, the market slowed down again.

“I guess everybody was waiting for interest rates to drop and then, bam! They shot up again, and everything just completely slowed down, like somebody put the brakes on,” she said. “I'm hoping we're going to see a good spring. But as of right now, we're not there.”

All six Southern California counties had annual sales drops of a third or more, CoreLogic figures show. Median prices had year-over-year drops everywhere but San Bernardino County, which had a 2.2% price gain.

Here's a breakdown of prices and sales by county, with annual percentage changes:

• Los Angeles County's median fell 4.4% to $765,000; sales were down 38.1% to 3,392 transactio­ns.

• Orange County's median fell 2.3% to $957,750; sales were down 31% to 1,515 transactio­ns.

• Riverside County's median fell 1.8% to $540,000; sales were down 38.4% to 2,336 transactio­ns.

• San Bernardino County's median rose 2.2% to $475,000; sales were down 43.4% to 1,479 transactio­ns.

• San Diego County's median fell 2.6% to $750,000; sales were down 34.6% to 1,958 transactio­ns.

• Ventura County's median fell 2.0% to $740,000; sales were down 41.2% to 388 transactio­ns.

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