• Re: Thanks Democrats! Los Angeles-Orange County homebuying plummets 44%

    From K Bass@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Mon Jan 9 12:19:28 2023
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.atheism, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <sro1ui$86a8$7@news.freedyn.de>
    governor.swill@gmail.com wrote:

    ...Democrats fuck up everything they touch.


    Homebuying froze in Los Angeles and Orange counties in November,
    plunging sales 44% to a record low as house payments jumped 53%
    or more.

    Sales totaled 5,878 in the two counties, down 4,686 from
    November 2021, according to data from CoreLogic. It was the
    slowest November in records dating to 1988 and the second-
    biggest 12-month decline. Closed transactions for single-family
    homes and condos, existing and new construction ran 43% below
    the average November since 1988.

    Economic skittishness, especially soaring inflation, and pricier
    home loans have frozen the housing market. Surging mortgage
    rates also cut buying power by 35% in a year, making the
    region’s high home prices even more unaffordable.

    Let’s look at where the L.A.-O.C. cooldown was most intense,
    starting with November’s sales.

    Los Angeles County had 4,118 sales, down 11% in a month and 44%
    lower in a year. Orange County had 1,760 — down 17% in a month
    and 45% lower in a year.

    Next, consider how prices moved.

    In Los Angeles County, the $785,000 median was down 2% in a
    month and 1% higher in a year. It’s also 9% off the $865,000
    record high set in April 2022.

    Orange County had a $960,000 median — up 1.1% in a month and 5%
    higher in a year. It’s also 9% off the $1,054,000 peak of May
    2022.

    Payment pain
    Pricier financing is clearly a culprit.

    The 30-year mortgage averaged 6.8% vs. 3.1% 12 months earlier.
    Here’s what my trusty spreadsheet tells us about how the rate
    jump changed a typical homebuyer’s house payment …

    Los Angeles County: Buyers got a $4,094 estimated cost per month
    for the $785,000 median vs. $2,669 a year ago on the $781,100
    median, 53% higher.

    Orange County: Buyers got a $5,007 payment on $960,000 median
    vs. $3,126 on a year ago’s $915,200 – 60% higher.

    Single-family homes
    Sales: Los Angeles County’s 2,866 transactions were down 12% in
    a month and 44% lower in a year. Orange County’s 1,004 sales
    were down 17% in a month and 49% lower in a year.

    Prices: Los Angeles County’s $830,000 median was down 2% in a
    month and 2% lower in a year. Orange County’s $1,062,000 median
    was down 4% in a month and 3% higher in a year.

    Condos
    Sales: Los Angeles County had 911 units sold — down 13% in a
    month and 50% lower in a year. Orange County had 453 units sold
    — down 22% in a month and 51% lower in a year.

    Prices: Los Angeles County’s $637,000 median was down 3% in a
    month and 1% lower in a year. Orange County’s $680,000 median
    was down 3% in a month and 4% higher in a year.

    New homes
    Sales: Los Angeles County builders sold 255 — down 4% in a
    month and 28% lower in a year. Orange County had 301 sold —
    down 8% in a month and 4% lower in a year.

    Prices: Los Angeles County’s $841,500 median was down 6% in a
    month and 8% higher in a year. Orange County’s $1,070,000 median
    was up 12% in a month and 13% higher in a year.

    Builder share: Los Angeles County’s 6.2% last month compares to
    4.8% 12 months earlier. Orange County’s 17.1% last month vs.
    compares to 9.8% 12 months earlier.

    Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern
    California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com

    <https://www.ocregister.com/2023/01/07/los-angeles-orange-county- homebuying-plummets-44-to-record-low/>

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