Great Price Trend News for California From C.A.R.
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
California Price Shows Year-To-Year Gain for First Time in Two Years
By: Robert A. Kleinhenz , Ph.D., Deputy Chief Economist
The median price of a home in California experienced its first year-to-year gain in over two years during the month of November, as the California housing market continued recent trends in terms of prices, supply, and sales. The monthly median price crossed the $300,000 threshold in November with a median of $304,520, up 2.4 percent from the October median price of $297,500 and up 5.8 percent from $287,880 a year earlier. The situation has improved greatly from a year ago during the worst of the financial crisis, when the median price had registered 41.3 percent year-to-year decline.
After a 59 percent peak-to-trough decline, the California median price has increased 24.1 percent from a trough of $245,170 that occurred in February 2009. The increase in price has been sustained by a combination of lean supply and high demand, the latter triggered by historically high affordability (See November article). By comparison, the NAR national median price for existing single family homes, which experienced a 29 percent peak-to-trough decline, has increased by 4.7 percent from its trough of $164,200 in January 2009 to $171,900 in November 2009.
This has been obvious in the Bay Area market, especially affluent areas such as Los Gatos and Cupertino.
Nine consecutive month-to-month increases in the California median price have been the result of the lean inventory conditions throughout the year. The MLS-based unsold inventory index for California has averaged 4.8 months since the start of the year, well below the 7 month long run average. (See the October article for an analysis of the relationship between MLS-based unsold inventory, defaults, and foreclosures). By comparison, the national unsold inventory index for single family homes has averaged 8.4 months over the year. Inventory levels in both California and the US have trended down for most of the year.
As for sales, California returned to pre-peak levels of sales in late 2008 and sustained them throughout 2009. With sales of 536,720 homes in November, the market was 4.6 percent lower than the October sales figure of 562,400, but 4.7 percent above the November 2008 figure of 512,840. Sales throughout the year have averaged 545,600, compared with the pre-peak monthly average over the 2000-2002 period of 537,300 homes. Over the 2000-2002 period, US sales of existing homes averaged 4.8 million homes, compared with the low- to mid-4 million range of sales that the national market experienced from late 2007 until late this year when sales
The year-to-year increase in the California median price is the latest sign of turnaround from the dire circumstances facing the statewide housing market a year ago. Its foreclosure problems notwithstanding, California’s housing market appears to be ahead of the national market, both in terms of hitting bottom and in demonstrating important signs of market stability and improvement.

Great post, Michael. Bringing market news closer to home is a great idea. I am actually expanding my local market reporting in order to let all people in my market know what is gong on at home and not so much on a national or state level.
You know the old saying: All Real Estate is Local.
Thanks Mark, I have been trying to expand and contract the info as is pertinent. I am working on Los Gatos yearly stats tonight.
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