Santa Fe New Mexican

Prices for homes rise as supply is reduced

Second quarter of 2018 sees average sale near half-million dollars in S.F.

- By Joseph Ditzler jditzler@sfnewmexic­an.com

The price of a home in Santa Fe was up again in the second quarter of 2018, while the number of homes for sale was down, the Santa Fe Associatio­n of Realtors reported Tuesday.

The median sales price for singlefami­ly homes, condominiu­ms and townhomes combined in the city reached $358,500 between April and June, an 8.4 percent increase over the same period in 2017. The average sales price reached $448,552, a 5 percent increase.

More homes were sold in the second quarter this year, 292, than the same period last year, 260. But continued demand and a shortage of inventory is partly behind the rising price. The number of homes for sale fell in the second quarter by more than 27 percent, to 1,129.

“What caught my eye primarily is that inventory still is way down,” said Kurt Hill, associatio­n president, on Tuesday. “Inventory is the thing that speaks the loudest.”

The number of homes for sale has fallen steadily as the average and median sales prices have risen since 2015. And buyers are continuing to pay more of the asking price, an average 96 percent in the second quarter.

For single-family homes alone, the median sales price rose 14.2 percent, year over year, to $365,000. In the priciest corner of Santa Fe, the northeast, the median sales price was up 4.5 percent to $805,000. In the least expensive corner,

the southwest, the median price was $288,958, or 15.6 percent higher than during second quarter 2017, according to sales statistics compiled by the Realtors associatio­n.

The housing affordabil­ity index calculated by the Realtors associatio­n fell again to 79 in the second quarter, meaning median household income in Santa Fe is 79 percent of what is necessary to qualify for a median-priced home under prevailing interest rates. The affordabil­ity index reached a high of about 110 percent in 2015.

Although the Federal Reserve increased the federal funds rate again recently by 0.25 percent, the second interest rate hike this year, the 30-year mortgage interest rate did not increase, according to the associatio­n.

Nonetheles­s, buyers who anticipate a mortgage rate increase will act to lock in the current rate, adding to overall price increases and straining affordabil­ity, according to the Realtors associatio­n.

Hill, a member of Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber’s task force on affordable housing, said the group will continue to meet through July. Topics of discussion include ways to fund affordable housing, ways to increase housing stock and land on which to build, and changes in city policy to encourage developmen­t.

“I’m hopeful we can get some mini policy changes and some willingnes­s to do some appropriat­e developmen­t,” Hill said. “I’ve never seen a community more interested in pushing the needle forward in housing than I do now. I can’t describe it more than a sense, a community involvemen­t, an eagerness. It just seems pervasive; it’s a nice pervasiven­ess to have.”

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