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New home sales are on pace to reach 435,100 new homes sold this year, the most since 2008, according to Bloomberg. In November, purchases of new U.S. homes exceeded projections, holding near a five-year high and showing the housing recovery was gaining momentum even as mortgage rates climbed.
Through the third quarter of 2013, more than 3 million homeowners returned to positive equity and homeowner equity increased by $33 billion. Some 7.1 million homes, or 14.5 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage, were still in negative equity at the end of the second quarter of 2013. This figure is down from 9.6 million homes, or 19.7 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage, at the end of the first quarter of 2013, according to CoreLogic.
By the end of October, homeowners in 55 of the nation's 100 largest markets have now recovered more than half of the equity they lost in the housing crash. Of the 84 all markets that achieved more than a 100 percent rebound in November, 58 were midsize. Additionally, 58 midsize markets (28 percent of the U.S. midsized markets) now have fully recovered prices.
Mortgage rates rose about one full point during the year, which made buying a home more expensive for many. But at long last lending standards have begun to loosen up, perhaps because many originators are shifting from refinancing to purchase loans. Median FICO scores, for example, were at 729 in November, down from 750 in November 2012. Closing rates were 53.1 percent compared to 52.3 percent in 2012.
Consumer confidence in housing significantly widened in 2012, The share of consumers who believe it's a good time buy a house declined to 65 percent - an all-time low - while the number of those who believe mortgage rates will go up in the next year fell to 57 percent, according to Fannie Mae's latest monthly survey.
Was 2013 a good year for you? What are you hoping 2014 will bring? Here's wishing that the year to come brings you even better returns than the year past.
For more information, visit www.realestateeconomywatch.com.
Published with permission from RISMedia.
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