From Deseret News archives:
Hot home prices in Salt Lake, other cities buck trend
They may be making up for slow appreciation rates in previous years
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Today's declining prices nationwide are in part the result of an earlier explosion of short-term investors in Florida, California and other booming markets. Recently, both investors and long-term homeowners have been cashing in or cutting losses in formerly hot markets and settling in areas that avoided the boom, such as the Carolinas, parts of Georgia and Tennessee, areas of Texas, the western Mountain states and the Pacific Northwest.
"We're cutting and running," jokes Mark Hoover, 47 years old. Hoover and his wife, Melissa, 35, are both in the mortgage business, and they are moving from Florida to Austin to work for PRO-30, a mortgage lender based in Novato, Calif. But the Hoovers' move hasn't been easy. Their vacation home in Wellington, Fla., near West Palm Beach, has been on the market since October with a price tag of about $900,000, and their $1 million-to-$1.5 million primary home outside Fort Lauderdale, Fla., has sat since February.
The growth of Portland, Salt Lake City, Boise and Seattle can be attributed in part to an influx of former Californians and people opting out of slumping Las Vegas or Phoenix. The trend may have created smaller echo booms especially in Boise and Salt Lake City which have slowed in the past several months, with each city experiencing a slow winter. Other areas, too, have experienced faster-than-average appreciation, including the New York City borough of Manhattan and New Orleans.
While some worry that a new group of cities could face a boom-and-bust cycle, local real-estate agents and economists predict stable growth for the near future. Since the cities have strong economies and builders, lenders and investors are increasingly cautious, homes are less likely to become extremely overvalued than in booming markets in the first half of the decade.
Yun of the National Association of Realtors predicts prices nationally will bottom out sometime this summer. Zandi, of Moody's Economy.com, isn't so sanguine. "I'd be shocked if (prices stop depreciating) this summer; it's more likely next summer," he says.
Laura Chung, an interior decorator who recently moved to Portland, Ore., from Cambridge, Mass., sees the strong market as the ultimate stress reliever. Chung, and her husband, Eric, are considering sprucing up their new home and selling it if they find a house more to their liking a prospect that wasn't so simple back in Cambridge. "It's not this perpetual worry that we're not going to sell" the 2,500-square-foot house, she says. While Chung's move to Portland had nothing to do with the housing prices, they "definitely ease the wallet a little."
After sitting on the market from June to December 2006, the Chungs' 1,200-square-foot Cambridge, Mass., townhouse condominium sold for $70,000 less than the asking price. "The number of condos in our price point was at some record high," Chung says.
To attract a buyer, their real-estate agent suggested purchasing a flat-screen TV and including it in the price of the house. When the home finally sold, the buyer didn't want the TV.
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