Medford real estate market
May 13th

- Image via Wikipedia
The Medford real estate market, a subset of the larger Jackson County and Southern Oregon real estate markets, has recently been facing mixed signals – with inventory declining while the average sale price declines and the jobless rate rises. According to an April 6, 2010 article in the Mail Tribune, “In what could be a good sign for the local real estate market, the number of houses for sale in Jackson County on April 1 declined 8.3 percent from a year ago. ‘There was a fear that foreclosures and distressed properties – which remain a large part of the market – were coming on at a pace buyers couldn’t keep up with,’ said Colin Mullane, an agent with Full Circle Real Estate in Ashland. ‘It’s nice to see that happening so that conventional sellers are making up about 50 percent of the houses for sale.’” The piece, composed by Greg Stiles, also stated that “The pace of sales picked up for the 14th-straight month in Jackson County with transactions during the first quarter of the year surpassing those in early 2009 by 12.4 percent, according to statistics compiled by the Southern Oregon Multiple Listing Service.”
The average sales price of Medford homes for sale, however, drastically decreased in recent months, according to an April 16, 2010 article in Oregon Business. This piece found that “More than 90 homes in Medford are on the market for less than $90,000 – a price that would have been unheard of several years ago. And while many of the cheaper homes need remodeling work, an $8,000 tax break and other incentives are making them even more affordable for bargain seekers and investors.” The article, which was originally published in the Mail Tribune, also noted that “Home prices in Medford have dropped to prices not seen in nearly two decades, deflated by a sluggish economy and a high rate of foreclosures.”
An April 21, 2010 article in the Mail Tribune detailed one of the economic difficulties causing problems for Medford real estate, saying that “Jackson County job growth has stagnated in the past year, unable to keep pace even with a declining work force. As a result, jobless figures are mired in the same double-digit strata as a year ago, even when so-called discouraged workers see their unemployment benefits end and drop out of the work force.”
Bainbridge real estate market
May 11th

- Image by Rennett Stowe via Flickr
The Bainbridge real estate market, which is a subsidiary of the larger metropolitan Seattle real estate market, has been showing generally negative trends with a few notable exceptions in the most recent months of 2010. According to an article by Inman News in the Seattle Times, “The most recent numbers for home sales showed a surge, but inventory may continue to rise beyond the summer, according to an analysis by Seattle-based Zillow.com. Both the National Association of Realtors (NAR) and the National Association of Home Builders credited the federal tax credits – $8,000 for first-time buyers and $6,500 for repeat buyers – for the March jump.” The April 30, 2010 article continued to note that “Even as existing-home sales rose, however, more homes hit the market last month than were sold. Raw unsold inventory rose 1.5 percent to 3.58 million units, according to data from NAR. ‘While the fact that March sales numbers are increasing is undoubtedly a positive sign, (that rising figure) does make one at least ponder whether the market is currently capable of clearing itself of inventory without paying people to buy homes (through tax credits),’ wrote Stan Humphries, Zillow’s chief economist.”
Home prices have been another problem for Bainbridge homes for sale, according to an online article for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. This piece found that “Home prices in Seattle dropped 0.8 percent from January to February on a seasonally adjusted basis and 5.6 percent from a year ago, according to the latest Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index. The continued drop comes at a time when the 10- and 20-city indexes both showed year-over-year increases for the first time since December 2006.”
Bainbridge real estate may also suffer from the effects of increased foreclosures in King County, which were mentioned in an April 30, 2010 article in the Puget Sound Biz Talk. This piece, written by Al Scott, reported that “The home foreclosure crisis in King County is getting worse, due in large part to a backlog of unsold houses that are clogging up the system…Now, prime borrowers are falling into foreclosure, too, whether they were with WaMu or not.”
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