San Diego Median Home Price drops slightly in July
San Diego County’s median home price dropped slightly to $730,500 in July — its first reduction in six months.
The median price is still up 15.2% in a year and record highs have been reached on an almost monthly basis throughout the pandemic, said data released by CoreLogic/DQNews. The peak was in June when the median hit $749,750.
Analysts said a drop in the median by $19,250 was not large enough to signal a shift in the market. They said the same pressures on the market still exist: Growing wages of stay-at-home workers, tight inventory and low mortgage rates.
“In the view of a lot of our members, it is probably just a momentary blip,” said Hope Atuel, the executive director of the San Diego-based Asian Real Estate Association of America. “I don’t think we will see prices drop significantly. I do think at the end of year we will see significant gains in prices.”
She said the inventory of homes typically goes down around this time of year as parents are unlikely to move as the school year starts.
The number of homes for sale was up in July from low points earlier this year, but still down by historical norms. There were 4,280 homes listed for sale from July 5 to Aug. 1. That is down from 5,758 around the same time in 2020; 8,413 in 2019; and 8,573 in 2018.
Real estate agents said mortgage interest rates have continued to motivate buyers. The interest rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage was 2.87% in July, said Freddie Mac, down from 3.02% the year before. The rate is up from December’s average of 2.68%, which was the lowest in records going back to 1971.
The resale median home price hit a new record of $840,000, up by $1,000 from the previous peak in June. Resale condo median was $550,000, down by $11,000 from the peak in June.
Newly built homes, which include new single-family and condos, hit a median of $677,000. That is short of the new-home record of $812,500 in October 2018, which reflected an increase in luxury single-family homes for sale.
Prices gains were flat across Southern California in July but up 17.5% in a year in the six-county region. Riverside County had the biggest annual increase, 23.2%, for a median of $525,000.
It was followed by San Bernardino County, up 21.3% for a median of $455,000; Los Angeles County, up 18.7% for a median of $795,000; Orange County, up 16.6% for a median of $904,000; Ventura County, up 16.5% with a median of $735,000; and San Diego County with its 15.2% rise.
Source: SDuniontribune by Phillip Molnar