Chicago existing home, condo sales plunge in Jan.

By Mary Ellen Podmolik
Posted Feb. 23 at 11:05 a.m.

Sales of existing homes in the Chicago area fell last month, and plunged dramatically within the city of Chicago, but consumers who did close transactions were able to buy a lot of house for their money.

The Illinois Association of Realtors said Wednesday that 3,844 single-family homes and condominiums were sold in January, a 2 percent drop from January 2010. Sales activity within the collar counties mitigated the anemic performance within the city of Chicago, and especially in the condo market.

The overall sales declines were expected, in part because of difficult comparisons with a year ago, when federal homebuyer tax credits spurred the market. The price declines show the effect that distressed sales continue to have on the broader market.

For the nine-county Chicago area, the median price of $158,000 was a 9.7 percent drop from January 2010.

Within the city of Chicago, condo sales fell 13.9 percent, to 564 units sold, and the median price of $239,000 was a 14.6 percent decline from a year ago. The median price of a single-family home fared better, rising 6.4 percent to $125,000, but sales during the month fell 14.1 percent to 470 homes sold.

How big of a factor were heavily discounted foreclosures and short sales in Chicago last month? Distressed properties accounted for 54 percent of all single-family transactions and 46 percent of all condo sales, according to the Chicago Association of Realtors.

While sales were down 7 percent in Cook County, sales rose in DuPage, DeKalb, Grundy, Kane and Lake counties.

“Sales declined by a very small amount in January year-over-year and would have been higher than 2010 had the effect of the homebuyer tax credit been removed,” said Geoffrey Hewings, director of University of Illinois’ Regional Economics Applications Laboratory. “Prices, however, are still being challenged by the volume of distressed properties on the market.”

One factor that might spur more consumers to consider home purchases was rising rents that are expected as demand for units rises and supply contracts, Hewings noted.

Separately, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Wednesday that applications for loans to refinance or purchase homes rose last week, largely because turmoil in the Middle East helped drive down interest rates. The average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage with a 20 percent down payment last week was 5 percent, with .97 point, compared with 5.12 percent, with .85 point the previous week.

Applications for home purchases rose 5.1 percent, while refinancing applications increased 17.8 percent.

How big of a factor were heavily discounted foreclosures and short sales in Chicago last month? Distressed properties accounted for 54 percent of all single-family transactions and 46 percent of all condo sales, according to the Chicago Association of Realtors.

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5 comments:

  1. mike Feb. 23 at 9:58 a.m.

    Where is DePage?

  2. trivialthings Feb. 23 at 11:05 a.m.

    Who in their right mind would want to live in Chicago, or Cook County for that matter? Property taxes that are outrageous, sales taxes the highest in the country, the “parking meter, scam, along with all the other Public owned assets sold of by Emperor Shortshanks, and all sorts of “other” fees the thieving politicians can levy! Now Rahm is going to add his “taxes” to the pile atop the 66% hike in State taxes. The tax paying public and businesses are leaving Chicago, as the census shows. The City employees are being held captive to sustain the tax base and the “Sanctuary/Welfare” status is rising. Welcome to the new Socialist DemocRATic creation/copy of Detroit!

  3. Jim Murrin Feb. 23 at 3:42 pm

    Property values for condominiums in Chicago are below 2001 levels in most neighborhoods. With 2+ years of foreclosures in the pipeline we still have not hit the bottom. Some people have spoken about a double dip within the real estate market. Personally, I don’t think the first dip is finished. Once we hit bottom we will have a year of stabilization. Then 1-3% appreciation for the next decade if we are lucky.

    Jim Murrin

    Director of Short Sales

    Chicago Short Sale Specialists
    425 W. North Ave. | Chicago, IL 60610
    O: 312.867.2194 | F: 312.229.9182
    Serving Chicago & Surrounding Suburbs
    Learn more at http://www.chicagoshortsalespecialists.com
    Short Sale Partners with http://www.yds-inc.com
    Short Sale and Foreclosure Resource Certified – SFR Designation

  4. Greg Feb. 23 at 4:09 pm

    or in Illinios for that matter, in Dupage you not only have the outrages taxes, but you have to deal with the police state also. Wisconsin looks better and better

  5. Anne Feb. 24 at 1:48 a.m.

    Trivialthings –

    Can you please just bag it and shut up? It would be much appreciated. I have an idea, instead of complaining about everything, why don’t you do something about it.

    And again, bag it. No one cares to hear your ridiculous rants. At least I don’t.