Advertisement

Home sales improve nationally in December

Share via

Home sales rose nationally in December, marking the third consecutive month that the market has shown improvement.

Previously owned homes were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.61 million units, up 5% from November and 3.6% from December 2010, the National Assn. of Realtors said Friday.

“The market for single-family homes picked up in the second half of 2011, after being stuck near the bottom for nearly three years,” Patrick Newport, an economist with IHS Global Insight, wrote in a note to clients. “This pickup is real, but the road to recovery will be a slow one.”

Advertisement

About 1 in 3 homes sold last month was a so-called distressed sale, either a foreclosure or a short sale, the latter involving a bank allowing a home to be sold for less than the outstanding debt on the property. Roughly 1 in 3 homes was purchased using cash.

The nation’s housing inventory dropped 9.2% from the previous month to 2.38 million homes available for sale. That represents a supply of six months and a little less than a week. Economists consider about six months of supply to be a stable market.

Existing-home sales for all of 2011 inched up 1.7% to 4.26 million from 4.19 million the year before.

Advertisement

alejandro.lazo@latimes.com

Advertisement