|
PULLMAN, Wash. -- Washington homebuyers disregarded stagnant
economics and modestly higher mortgage rates and purchased
homes in record numbers during the late summer and early autumn,
said Glenn Crellin, director of the Washington Center for
Real Estate Research at Washington State University as the
center released statistics on the third quarter housing market.
During the July-September 2003 period, the home resale market
in Washington reached record levels, with sales activity surging
by 27 percent compared to the same time last year. Price increases
reflected the strong demand, generally posting increases exceeding
inflation rates. Housing construction remained strong, however
mortgage rates increased a bit. This caused affordability
to decline compared to the previous quarter but remained above
levels of a year ago.
Third quarter home sales totaled 44,070 units statewide,
the strongest
quarterly sales since WCRER began preparing statistics in
1994. The
previous record was set only three months ago. Home sales
increased
compared to a year ago in all counties except Grant/Adams
in central
Washington. Building permit statistics were also strong, with
total units permitted increasing by 22 percent compared to
last year, with
single-family permits up 16.7 percent. The weakness in multifamily
construction evident in recent quarters was not experienced
this time, as
partment permits were 40 percent above last year.
The median sales price for an existing home in Washington
was $208,000 during the third quarter, 8.6 percent higher
than last year. Half of all homes sold during the quarter
were less expensive than this median, but the increase suggests
housing prices are rising much more rapidly than overall inflation.
DeWayne Granacki, 2003 president of the Washington Association
of REALTORS®, added, "Despite higher home prices
and interest rates which have crept up from 40-year lows,
homes remain affordable to the typical family in Washington."
The housing affordability index, which measures the ability
of a middle income family (two or more persons related by
blood, marriage or adoption) to afford to purchase a median
price home using a 30-year
mortgage at prevailing interest rates (provided they had access
to a 20 percent down payment) slipped to 132.1. That indicates
that the typical family could afford to purchase a home priced
32 percent higher than the median. Housing was rated as affordable
in every county in the state except San Juan during the quarter.
First-time homebuyers continue to play an active role in
the housing
market, despite challenges of affordability. Crellin noted
that a would-be first-time buyer statewide had 77.0 percent
of the income required to qualify for the purchase of a typical
starter home, a decline from the second quarter but above
a year ago. Third quarter statistics indicate that most potential
first-time buyers would have been able to afford a starter
home in 16 Washington counties, including the Spokane, Clarkston
and Tri-Cities metropolitan areas. The greatest difficulty
achieving
homeownership in an urban area was in King County.
WCRER and WAR have produced these statistics for a decade,
timing each quarterly release to coincide with wire releases
of existing home sales by state and median home prices by
metropolitan area from the National Association of REALTORS®.
Sales data is available for everycounty and median home prices
and affordability are reported for 36 of Washington's 39 counties.
The report incorporates income revisions tied to Census 2000
in the calculation of all affordability indices.
For more information and a housing market snapshot, visit
the WCRER Web page at http://www.cbe.wsu.edu/~wcrer/
Contact:
Beverly Makhani, WSU CBE Communications director,
509/335-3957, makhani@wsu.edu
Glenn Crellin, director of the WCRER,
800/835-9683, crellin@wsu.edu
Charleen Taylor, WSU News Service,
509/335-7209, cmtaylor@wsu.edu
|