Recently, there has been a decline in
real estate properties being bought since last fall. The decline in house sales last fall has left a number of unsold
real estate properties in suburban areas as the big spring selling season approaches, according to many
real estate experts. The number of
properties for sale jumped 54 percent to 4,077 as of recently, compared to a year earlier these
real estate experts are saying. The data they rely on include all the suburbs surrounding the large cities, extending out to the open
land in rural areas; the cities themselves were excluded.
Some
real estate agents expect this large supply of housing to be compounded by new sellers entering the
real estate market for the first time in February and March, which typically begins the busiest season for land for sale. Many
real estate experts are saying that they will be overstocked with
land for sale and
properties for sale because they will be acquiring more
land for sale in the near future.
real estate agents are split over what the sizable jump in inventory will do to buyers and sellers. In addition, they are worried about the impact it will have on sales and prices of
properties. Most
real estate agents are banking on a lowering of price expectations among buyers and sellers, who have witnessed years of rapidly rising prices amid a feeling that housing supply was limited. But now prices have softened, they say, and if sellers drop asking prices to more realistic levels, buyers are poised to move in and jump on the
land for sale. Last year was a real awakening for the rise in number of
properties for sale. Now, it seems buyers and sellers know the market's changed, and are concerned about getting their
land for sale before
land prices rise up too high. Last year, nobody knew about the
real estate trouble, because no one really paid attention.
There are the "more experienced"
real estate agents that have been around enough to make foresee the future and not see buyers coming out of the woodwork to snap up bargains and shrink bloated inventories of
land for sale. Many first-time buyers or renters of
real estate properties have indicated they will continue to watch the market, hoping prices fall further.
Many sellers reduced their asking prices of their
land for sale sharply at the end of last year to sell their homes and other
real estate properties. Yet, the median price of single-family homes sold in the fall, $354,000, was still slightly higher than a year earlier, according to many
real estate experts. From January through November, statewide home sales were about 3 percent below 2004 sales.
There are various explanations for the sharp increase in the number of
properties for sale. For one, unsold
properties are sitting longer. Homes and
properties for sale have been on the market for an average of 93 days, up from 84 days a year ago. But
real estate agents also said the surge in inventories of
real estate properties was based on unusually low inventories in early 2005, when the market was still booming.
As of now,
real estate experts predicted a tough spring for sellers. In April, May, and June, there is typically a surge of new listings of
properties for sale that come on the market, and they expect more this year because so many listings of
properties for sale expired unsold. Those do not currently appear as active listings and will return to the listings in coming weeks or months as new
properties for sale.