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Southland home sales, prices continue their fall

Both dropped last month, convincing some analysts that the housing downturn will keep dragging on.

January 16, 2008|Peter Y. Hong, Times Staff Writer

Southern California home sales and prices plummeted again in December, solidifying a view among analysts that the housing slump will not end soon.

"I don't expect it to get better in 2008," UCLA economist Ryan Ratcliff said, citing prices that have fallen out of step with incomes and tightened lending standards.


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The median sales price for Southern California houses and condominiums in December was $425,000, down from $435,000 in November and 16% below the peak of $505,000 set last year, DataQuick Information Systems reported Tuesday.

The number of homes sold last month fell 45% from a year earlier, to a level DataQuick called "by far the lowest" for any December since the firm began its data analysis in 1988.

The declining sales and prices continued a downturn that began last spring.

There is now wide agreement among economists that housing prices were inflated by the easy availability of mortgage loans to people who could not afford the payments.

As those loans go into default, it's putting foreclosures on the market at discount prices -- further weakening home prices.

"There's very little discretionary buying now," said DataQuick analyst Andrew LePage, citing the "extremely low" sales volume.

The real estate market now is shaped by "people trying to avoid foreclosure, banks trying to unload [repossessed] houses and builders who need to move houses," he said.

Throughout last year, many economists had taken care not to overstate the severity of the housing slump, noting that employment has remained strong. Past housing downturns usually followed a sharp rise in joblessness.

This time, USC economist Gary Painter said, extremely cheap credit led to dramatic price leaps as unemployment has held at low levels, so "we didn't really have past history to judge what that could do to housing cycles. Now we know those prices were not sustainable."

Painter believes home prices won't recover before late 2009.

A recovery could follow interest rate cuts if prices also fall and incomes and inflation rise to eventually make property more affordable, but that would not happen quickly, Ratcliff of UCLA said.

"In the beginning of 2009 there might be some light at the end of the tunnel, but there's always some tunnel left to go when you see the light," he said.

Last month, DataQuick said, just 13,240 houses and condos were sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties, including new construction. That was 24% under the previous record-low December sales count in 1990.

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