Existing Home Sales Category

Knoxville Home Buyers It’s Time To Re-Approve Your Pre-Approval


Get re-approved for your mortgageAs the federal home buyer tax credit nears its April 30 end-date, there’s a lot of would-be home buyers in Knoxville still working to get under contract.

A piece of advice for all of them : If your pre-qualification and/or pre-approval letter is more than 8 weeks old, it would be prudent to have your lender “re-pre-approve” you.  Mortgage guidelines have been in flux and your original lender letter may now be invalid.

For example, over the past half-dozen months, the majority of mortgage lenders have reduced their risk tolerance with respect to:

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Written by Rick Smenner | Discussion: No Comments »

Existing Home Sales Flatten And Point To A Much Better Spring


Existing Home Sales Feb 2008-Feb 2010As expected, Existing Home Sales fell in February, slipping 30,000 units versus January’s numbers. It’s the 4th straight month in which Existing Home Sales were lower, month-over-month.

An “existing” home is one that is previously owned and lived-in (i.e. not new construction).

Existing Home Sales peaked in November 2009, just as the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit was set to expire. Immediately thereafter, according to the National Association of Realtors®, monthly sales plunged 17 percent in December, then another 7 percent in January.

Comparatively, February’s dip is a modest 0.6 percent and is more in line with the pre-tax-credit Existing Home Sales trend.  The real estate market is rediscovering its normal.

But “normal” may not last for long.

When the federal home buyer’s tax program was extended last year, the new rules stated that home buyers must be under contract for their new, respective homes on, or before, April 30, 2010 in order to claim up to $8,000 in federal money.  That deadline is approaching and many markets — Knoxville included — are experiencing a surge in buyer traffic as April 30 nears.

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Written by Rick Smenner | Discussion: No Comments »

Existing Home Sales Drop Again In January But Stay On The Trendline


Existing Home Sales Jan 2009-Jan 2010

But The Knoxville Real Estate Market Improves Sales Are Up…..

The winter months have not been kind to home sales.

After plunging 17 percent in December, Existing Home Sales fell by an additional 7 percent in January, according to the National Association of Realtors®. An “existing home” is a home resold by a previous owner (i.e. not new construction).

In looking at the annualized, adjusted Existing Home Sales data, we find:

  1. Sales volume is at its lowest levels since June 2009
  2. Sales volume fell below its 12-month rolling average
  3. Home supplies are at a 5-month high

These are similar findings to the New Home Sales data issued by the government last week.  That report put new home sales at a 40-year low and showed new homes supplies higher by an entire month.

But don’t think housing rebound has halted! Home sales are cyclical and there are outside forces on today’s market.

For one, the market is still feeling the after-effects of the original First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit. Sales spiked in the months leading up to the original November 2009 expiration date. A pull-back is natural and expected.

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Written by Rick Smenner | Discussion: No Comments »

As The Supply Of New Knoxville Homes Grows, So Does The Opportunity For A “Good Deal”


New Homes Supply Jan 2009-Jan 2010

Knoxville New Home Buyers Don’t  Miss Your Best Buying Opportunity Ever

The housing recovery showed particular weakness in the Knoxville New Homes Sales category last month — good news for Knoxville TN  homebuyers in in the Knoxville Real Estate Market and around the country.

A “new home” is a home for which there’s no previous owner.

New Home Sales fell 11 percent from the month prior and posted the fewest units sold in a month since 1963 — the year the government first started tracking New Home Sales data.

Right now, there are roughly 234,000 new homes for sale nationwide and, at the current sales pace, it would take 9.1 months to sell them all. This is nearly 2 months longer than at October 2009’s pace.

The reasons for the spike in supply are varied:

Now, these might be less-than-optimal developments for the economy as a whole, but for buyers of new homes, it’s a welcome turn of events. Home prices are based on supply and demand, after all.

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Written by Rick Smenner | Discussion: No Comments »

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