REAL ESTATE AFFORDIBILITY NEAR RECORD LOW!
The share of homes that families making the national median income could afford to buy remained above 70 percent for the sixth quarter in a row, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI). Nationally, the HOI was at 72.3 percent in the second quarter, unchanged from the same time period last year and close to the index's record-high 72.5 percent, set in first-quarter 2009. The HOI tracks the share of homes sold in a particular area that would have been affordable to a family earning the local median income. The index assumes a family can afford to spend 28 percent of its gross monthly income on housing, according to NAHB's website.
Annual median family income estimates by metropolitan area come from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The median home price nationwide was $179,000 in the second quarter of this year, up from $177,000 in 2009's second quarter. The weighted interest rate was slightly higher, 5.11 percent, in the second quarter compared with 5.03 at the same time in 2009. The national median income was $64,400. The index covered 225 metro areas. NAHB attributed the continuing high level of affordability to favorable interest rates and low home prices.
"Homeownership is within reach of more households than it has been for almost a generation," said Bob Jones, the building association's chairman, in a statement.
"Interest rates continue to hover at historic low levels, the economy is beginning to rebound, and with house prices starting to stabilize, conditions are beginning to draw homebuyers back into the market, which is a positive step on the path to recovery."
Three Rust Belt states featured prominently among the top 10 most affordable metro areas: Ohio, Michigan and Indiana. Syracuse, N.Y., was the most affordable metro area in the country, where households with the area's median family income of $64,300 could afford a whopping 97.2 percent of homes sold.
That metro area pushed Indianapolis-Carmel, Ind., which had held the top spot for nearly five years, to the 14th most affordable metro area. Syracuse had a median sales price of $88,000 in the second quarter, compared with $179,000 nationwide, according to the NAHB.
Annual median family income estimates by metropolitan area come from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The median home price nationwide was $179,000 in the second quarter of this year, up from $177,000 in 2009's second quarter. The weighted interest rate was slightly higher, 5.11 percent, in the second quarter compared with 5.03 at the same time in 2009. The national median income was $64,400. The index covered 225 metro areas. NAHB attributed the continuing high level of affordability to favorable interest rates and low home prices.
"Homeownership is within reach of more households than it has been for almost a generation," said Bob Jones, the building association's chairman, in a statement.
"Interest rates continue to hover at historic low levels, the economy is beginning to rebound, and with house prices starting to stabilize, conditions are beginning to draw homebuyers back into the market, which is a positive step on the path to recovery."
Three Rust Belt states featured prominently among the top 10 most affordable metro areas: Ohio, Michigan and Indiana. Syracuse, N.Y., was the most affordable metro area in the country, where households with the area's median family income of $64,300 could afford a whopping 97.2 percent of homes sold.
That metro area pushed Indianapolis-Carmel, Ind., which had held the top spot for nearly five years, to the 14th most affordable metro area. Syracuse had a median sales price of $88,000 in the second quarter, compared with $179,000 nationwide, according to the NAHB.
0 comments:
Post a Comment