Despite several years of
double-digit price growth, a new report shows South Florida homes are still
selling at median prices far lower than the region’s peak in 2007.
The report, authored by real estate
research firm RealtyTrac, states homes traded for a median of $210,000 per
property in the first quarter of 2016. That number has grown by 9 percent since
the first quarter of 2015, but it’s still 28 percent from the June 2007 peak of
$292,000 per home.
Real estate values in South Florida
— Miami in particular — boomed once the crash ended, at times by double-digit
percentages year-over-year. As the market matured, however, price appreciation
began to slow, especially in recent
months when growth has started to dip
below 8 and 9 percent.
That trend will likely continue as
sales of existing properties in South Florida’s major markets also slow
alongside inventory buildups, as broken down in the
recent Elliman reports.
Industry insiders have said slowing
prices and sales are signs of a maturing market
that’s stabilizing.
Meanwhile, South Florida’s number of
cash deals continues to fall. The RealtyTrac report shows home sales without
financing hit just under 54 percent in the first quarter, down 11 percent
year-over-year and 2 percent from the fourth quarter of 2015.
Distressed sales are also down
significantly. Of all South Florida’s home sales in the first quarter, 25
percent where either lender-owned or distressed, a reduction of 18 percent
year-over-year. — Sean Stewart-Muniz
Original Content The Real Deal
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