Home-Price Appreciation Stays
Hot in Most Metro Areas -- Rent to Own Homes in Florida Soar in Price
and Demand

After the Orlando and Cape Coral-Fort Meyers
areas of Florida, the strongest increase in the South was in the Deltona-Daytona
Beach-Ormond Beach, Fla., area, at $208,200, up 33.8 percent from the
third quarter of 2004. Next was Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, Fla.,
where the third quarter median price of $212,800 was 33.6 percent higher
than a year ago, and Ocala, Fla., at $151,500, up 31.9 percent.
NOTE: The Good Ole Days....
WASHINGTON (November 15, 2005) -- Strong annual increases
in median existing-home prices were common in most metropolitan areas
during the third quarter, according to the latest report by National
Association of Realtors®.
The association's third-quarter median existing single-family
home price survey, covering changes in 147 metropolitan statistical
areas,* shows 69 areas with double-digit annual price increases. Six
metros had small price declines.
The national median existing single-family home price
was $215,900 in the third quarter, up 14.7 percent from the third quarter
of 2004 when the median price was $188,200. The median is a typical
market price where half of the homes sold for more and half sold for
less.
Ninety-seven metros -- two-thirds of the total -- experienced increases
greater than the U.S. historic average of 6.4 percent.
David Lereah, NAR's chief economist, said the pace of price appreciation
in the third quarter is far from being normal over time. "These
historically high home price gains are the simple result of more buyers
than sellers in the market," he said. "The good news is that
inventory levels are improving, and housing supply will come close to
buyer demand in 2006. In other words, we expect a healthy and more balanced
market next year."
Since 1968, home prices generally have risen between 1 and 2 percentage
points faster than the overall rate of inflation; the historic average
price gain appears high relative to inflation because there was a period
of rapid inflation in the U.S. during the 1970s and early 1980s.
NAR President Thomas M. Stevens explained what buyers and sellers generally
can expect in the coming year. "Improvements in inventory in most
areas should take pressure off of home buyers to make snap decisions,
or find themselves in a competitive bidding situation," said Stevens,
senior vice president of NRT Inc. "This calmer real estate market
will create a more level environment for buyers in weighing options
to invest in the American dream of homeownership. Sellers will enjoy
very healthy gains on the value of their home, but should expect annual
increases to be much closer to historic levels going forward."
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to view Metro Prices Data
The strongest price increase in the nation was in the Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale
area of Arizona, where the third quarter price of $268,000 rose 55.2
percent from a year earlier.
Next was Orlando, Fla., at $261,300, up 44.8 percent
from the third quarter of 2004. Cape Coral-Fort Meyers, Fla., with a
third quarter median price of $277,600, was up 42.5 percent in the last
year.
The areas experiencing price declines were lower-priced markets, with
one or both of the conditions necessary for price softness -- local
economic weakness, primarily in jobs, or a large supply of homes for
sale in the local area.
Median third-quarter metro area prices ranged from $72,800 in Danville,
Ill., to nearly 10 times that amount in the San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont
area of California where the median price was $721,900. The second most
expensive area in the United States was Anaheim-Santa Ana (Orange Co.,
Calif.) at $710,700, followed by the Honolulu area and San Diego-Carlsbad-San
Marcos, Calif., tied at $615,000.
Other low-cost markets include, Elmira, N.Y., the second least-costly
metro, at $77,100, and Decatur, Ill., with a third-quarter typical resale
home price of $85,500.
Regionally, the strongest increase was in the West where the median
existing single-family home price rose 18.8 percent over the last year
to $322,000 during the third quarter. After Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale,
the strongest increase in the West was in the Tucson area where the
median price of $242,300 rose 34.7 percent from a year earlier, followed
by Honolulu, up 31.1 percent, and Eugene-Springfield, Ore., at $208,900,
up 25.9 percent from the third quarter of 2004.
In the Northeast, the median resale home price during the third quarter
was $249,300, up 13.2 percent from a year earlier. The strongest increase
in the region was in the Glenn Falls, N.Y., area, at $160,000, up 25.4
percent from the third quarter of 2004, followed by Kingston, N.Y.,
with a median price of $259,300, up 19.8 percent, and the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington
area of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland, at $230,600,
up 19.0 percent.
In the Midwest, the third-quarter median existing-home price of $173,300
rose 13.1 percent from the same period in 2004. The strongest increase
in the Midwest was in the Waterloo-Cedar Falls area of Iowa, where the
median price of $111,000 was 14.8 percent higher than the third quarter
of 2004. Next was Bloomington-Normal, Ill., at $170,900, up 14.5 percent,
and Rockford, Ill., at $120,400, up 13.7 percent in the last year.
In the South, the typical existing home price was $183,500
in the third quarter, up 7.7 percent from a year earlier. After the
Orlando and Cape Coral-Fort Meyers areas of Florida, the strongest increase
in the South was in the Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, Fla., area,
at $208,200, up 33.8 percent from the third quarter of 2004. Next was
Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, Fla., where the third quarter median
price of $212,800 was 33.6 percent higher than a year ago, and Ocala,
Fla., at $151,500, up 31.9 percent.
________________________________________
The National Association of Realtors, "The Voice for Real Estate,"
is America's largest trade association, representing more than 1.2 million
members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real
estate industries.
*Areas are generally metropolitan statistical areas as defined by the
U.S. Office of Management and Budget. A list of counties included in
MSA definitions is available here.
Published: November 16, 2005

Mike Payne, a Realtor with Horizon Realty, specializes in providing
Rent to own Florida Home || Florida
Lease Option Homes.
To read more special reports or to move forward with your new home on
rent-to-own terms, visit www.asolution4you.com.
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