Inventory increased and metro market prices rose at a slower pace in the fourth quarter of 2018, according to the latest quarterly report by the National Association of Realtors®, out Tuesday.

The national median existing single-family home price in the quarter was $257,600, up 4.0% from the fourth quarter of 2017 ($247,800).

Despite recent rebounds in the U.S. homeownership rate, minority home buyers continue to struggle to recover from the foreclosure crisis.
Courtesy Adobe Stock/Sean Locke

Single-family home prices increased in 92% of measured markets last quarter, with 163 out of 178 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) showing sales price gains in the fourth quarter compared to a year ago. Fourteen metro areas (8%) experienced double-digit increases, down from 18 in the third quarter.

Total existing-home sales, including single family homes and condos, decreased 1.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.180 million in the fourth quarter, down from 5.273 million in the third quarter. That number is 7.4% lower than the 5.593 million-pace during the fourth quarter of 2017.

Total existing-home sales in the Northeast sat at an annual rate of 707,000 (up 3.9% from last quarter) and are down 5.4% from a year ago. The median existing single-family home price in the Northeast was $286,000 in the fourth quarter, up 6.5% from a year ago.

In the Midwest, existing-home sales fell 0.3% in the fourth quarter and are 5.9% below a year ago. The median existing single-family home price in the Midwest set at $196,900, a 1.6% increase from the fourth quarter of 2017.

Existing-home sales in the South declined 2% in the fourth quarter and were 5.4% lower than the fourth quarter of 2017. The median existing single-family home price in the South was $228,200 in the fourth quarter, 3.3% above a year ago.

In the West, existing-home sales in the fourth quarter decreased by 6.5% and are 13.9% below a year ago. The median existing single-family home price in the West increased 1.8% year over year to $383,100.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said that in light of the various hurdles for 2018, the close of the fourth quarter was promising. “Home prices continued to rise in the vast majority of markets but with inventory steadily increasing, home prices are, on average, rising at a slower and healthier pace,” he said.

Yun said the West Coast needs more homes built. “The West region, where home prices have nearly doubled in six years, is undergoing the biggest shift with the slowest price gain and large buyer pullback.”

At the end of the fourth quarter, there were 1.55 million existing homes available for sale, 6.2% above the 1.46 million homes for sale at the end of the fourth quarter in 2017. The average supply during the fourth quarter was 4.0 months – up from 3.5 months in the fourth quarter of 2017.
National family median income rose to $77,392 in the fourth quarter, while overall affordability decreased from a year ago due to higher mortgage rates and home prices. To purchase a single-family home at the national median price, a buyer making a 5% down payment would need an income of $62,954, while a 10% down payment would require an income of $59,640, and $53,013 would be necessary for a 20% down payment.

The five most expensive housing markets in the fourth quarter were the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, California metro area, where the median existing single-family price was $1,250,000; San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, California, $952,400; Urban Honolulu, $812,900; Anaheim-Santa Ana-Irvine, California, $799,000; and San Diego-Carlsbad, $626,000.

The five lowest-cost metro areas in the fourth quarter were Decatur, Illinois, $89,300; Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, Ohio, $97,200; Cumberland, Maryland, $109,100; Elmira, New York, $111,400; and Erie, Pennsylvania, $113,300.

Metro area condominium and cooperative prices – covering changes in 61 metro areas – showed the national median existing-condo price was $237,900 in the fourth quarter, up 0.3% from the fourth quarter of 2017 ($237,100). 75% of metro areas showed gains in median condo prices from a year ago.

“Housing affordability will be the key to sustained healthy growth in the housing market in the upcoming years. That requires more homebuilding of moderately priced homes,” Yun said. “Housing starts fell far short of historically normal levels, with only 9.6 million new housing units added in the past decade; compared to 15 to 16 million that would have been needed to meet our growing population and 20 million new job additions. “Local zoning law changes, expanding construction worker training programs at trade schools and promoting the use of tax breaks for developers in the designated Opportunity Zones will all play an important role in assuring an adequate future supply of housing,” Yun said.