The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Socal home sales end 2-year decline

January data up nearly 7% after 25 months of year-over-year drops, while the slow market keeps prices climbing

- By Jeff Collins Jeffcollin­s@scng.com

Southern California’s housing slowdown may be bottoming out, with January home sales rising from year-ago levels for the first time in more than two years.

Sales had been falling on an annual basis for 25 straight months — until now.

While this past January broke that trend, its tally of 10,581 transactio­ns still ranked as the thirdlowes­t in records dating back 36 years, according to Corelogic housing data released Thursday.

The nearly 7% annual sales gain occurred mainly because the prior January was the all-time slowest month on record.

Home prices, meanwhile, continued to climb amid a severe shortage of homes for sale, Corelogic reported.

The median price of a Southern California home — or the price at the midpoint of all sales — was $705,000 in January, up by more than 5% from the year before.

Despite the gain, January’s median was down from the previous nine months. The month is typically

the slowest of the year, reflecting deals signed during the holiday season, when buyers and sellers typically take a break.

Here are the highlights from Corelogic’s latest report:

• January’s median price was $45,000 below the all-time high of $750,000 reached in April 2022, right before high mortgage rates combined with high prices to chill buyer demand.

Prices fell month-to-month starting in May 2022, dropping $80,000 to just under $670,000

in January 2023. Then, a rapid decrease in listings revived buyer competitio­n, with prices fluctuatin­g between $705,000 and $740,000 since last spring.

• Both prices and sales were up year-over-year in all six Southern California counties.

Orange County had the biggest gain in both prices and sales, with the median up 12% to nearly $1.07 million. Sales increased 13% yearover-year.

Los Angeles County had the smallest price gain percentage­wise, with the median rising 4.6% to $800,000.

The Inland Empire continued to have the best housing bargains, with a median price of $475,000 in San Bernardino County and $550,000 in Riverside County. But their annual price growth was a tepid 5.6% in San Bernardino County and 2.1% in Riverside County.

• A lack of homes for sale continued to prop up prices.

According to Redfin, the region averaged fewer than 39,000 homes for sale in November and December, when most of January’s transactio­ns went under contract, Redfin figures show.

The region had 37,594 active listings in January, down 8% from the previous year and 39% below the average for the previous 11 years. All six Southern California counties saw declines in for-sale inventory in January, according to Redfin.

• High mortgage rates continued to dampen both sales and listings.

Interest rates for the popular 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage averaged 7.4% in November and 6.8% in December, according to Freddie Mac.

The typical monthly payment for a Southern California home was nearly $3,800 in December, not counting taxes, insurance and homeowner associatio­n dues.

In addition to dampening demand, higher rates discourage­d existing homeowners from giving up their low mortgage rates and selling.

The average 30-year mortgage rate lingered below 4% for almost three years, allowing most homeowners to lock in recordlow rates.

• 2024 is projected to see improved sales and higher prices, since the industry is emerging from the slowest year on record.

Mortgage rates are expected to moderate as the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates. That, in turn, is likely to lure more home shoppers into the market.

Here’s a county-by-county breakdown of home prices and sales, with year-over-year percentage gains:

• Los Angeles County’s median rose 4.6% to $800,000; sales were up 8.0% to 3,335 transactio­ns.

• Orange County’s median rose 12.1% to nearly $1.07 million; sales were up 12.9% to 1,428 transactio­ns.

• Riverside County’s median rose 2.1% to $550,000; sales were up 8.7% to 2,259 transactio­ns.

• San Bernardino County’s median rose 5.6% to $475,000; sales were up 3.7% to 1,533 transactio­ns.

• San Diego County’s median rose 7.0% to $802,500; sales totaled 1,678 transactio­ns, unchanged from the prior January.

• Ventura County’s median rose 8.7% to $799,000; sales were up 2.7% to 348 transactio­ns.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Southern California home sales broke a two-year losing streak in January, with transactio­ns rising above prior-year levels for the first time since December 2021.
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Southern California home sales broke a two-year losing streak in January, with transactio­ns rising above prior-year levels for the first time since December 2021.

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