hilton head real estate by Larry Meyers ~ Hilton Head Island SC

"Historically Strong Home Sales Expected in 2006"

Read the December 12, 2005 press release from the

National Association of Realtors Chief Economist below!

 

MARKET ACTIVITY REPORT HILTON HEAD & BLUFFTON (YTD 2006)
Homes Sales
 
YTD 2006
Compare YTD 2005
Plantation 
# Sold
Ave. Sales Price
% of Sale to List
Ave. Days on Mkt.
Ave. Sales Price
Ave. Day on Mkt.
Sea Pines
148
$ 1,310,631.
94.62%
106
$ 1,234,565.
64
Forest Beach
15
$ 2,009,800.
96.70%
145
$ 1,648,165.
115
Shipyard
8
$ 640,000.
94.83%
94
$ 578,400.
39
Wexford
 26
$ 1,662,103.
93.98%
158
$ 1,395,383.
124
Long Cove
 20
$ 1,016,304.
97.55%
152
$ 714,320.
126
Palmetto Dunes/
Shelter Cove
79
$ 1,529,528.
94.41%
121
$1,609,918.
111
Port Royal
  23
$ 1,260,913.
92.62%
129
$ 937,799.
64
Hilton Head Plantation
174
$ 589,350.
96.20%
 65
$ 558,034.
51
Palmetto Hall
  22
$ 739,045.
96.29%
103
$ 640,559.
104
Indigo Run
 53
$ 853,050.
96.17%
89
$ 758,546.
95
Spanish Wells
 9
$ 975,066.
95.41%
111
$1,574,894.
142
Windmill Harbour
25
$ 1,090,464.
93.82%
121
$ 886,343.
139
HHI Off Plantation
93
$ 627,799.
95.52%
 81
$ 545,891.
61
Daufuskie Island
16
$ 787,968.
93.79%
 249
$ 681,560.
241
Bluffton Off Plantation
557
$ 261,481.
96.87%
78
$ 251,447.
73
Moss Creek
43
$ 509,595.
95.54%
96
$ 428,037.
81
Belfair
24
$ 820,821.
95.73%
243
$ 776,481.
191
Rose Hill
43
$ 466,611.
95.23%
102
$ 380,321.
71
Berkeley Hall
11
$ 1,077,590.
96.12%
166
$ 1,119,444.
140
Sun City
213
$ 291,545.
96.88%
39
$ 240,750.
56
LOCAL MARKET ACTIVITY REPORT (YTD 2006)
Villa Sales
 
YTD 2006
Compare YTD 2005
Plantation # Sold Average Sales Price % of Sale to List Ave. Days on Mkt. Average Sales Price Ave. Days on Mkt.
Sea Pines
77
$ 633,629.
95.78%
73
$554,106.
30
Forest Beach
139
$ 323,202.
94.02%
100
$ 301,450.
31
Shipyard
60
$ 448,669.
95.70%
102
$ 418,206.
41
Palmetto Dunes
Shelter Cove
123
$ 708,367.
95.27%
120
$ 606,300.
51
Folly Field
55
$ 253,981.
93.70%
98
$ 297,686.
35
Hilton Head Plantation
13
$ 564,153.
94.30%
318
$ 566,648.
135
Indigo Run
3
$ 467,000.
96.82%
96
$ 426,785.
110
Windmill Harbour
4
$ 460,875.
94.18%
112
$ 541,800.
112
HHI-Off Plantation
244
$ 209,441.
95.36%
  85
$ 175,117.
60
Daufuskie Island
22
$ 851,531.
94.98%
  221
$ 360,357.
208
Bluffton-Off Plantation
19
$ 180,360.
93.57%
 111
$ 151,146.
17
Moss Creek
5
$ 267,600.
95.99%
93
$ 170,333.
96

    

   

Historically Strong Home Sales Expected in 2006

WASHINGTON (December 12, 2005) – The housing market for 2005 is headed for a fifth consecutive annual record, and sales activity in 2006 is expected to be the second best year in history, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

David Lereah, NAR’s chief economist, said that market conditions are still favorable for housing. “The slowdown amounts to a tapping of the brakes on a hot market,” said Lereah. “Home sales are coming down from the mountain peak, but they will level-out at a high plateau – a plateau that is higher than previous peaks in the housing cycle. This transition to a more normal and balanced market is a good thing.”


The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage should trend up modestly and reach 6.6 percent during the second half of 2006.

Existing-home sales, expected to rise 4.7 percent to 7.10 million this year, are likely to decline 3.7 percent in 2006 to 6.84 million. New-home sales, projected to increase 7.0 percent to 1.29 million this year, are forecast to drop 4.8 percent to 1.23 million in 2006 – also the second best on record. Total housing starts for 2005 should grow 5.8 percent to 2.06 million units, the highest since 1972, and then decline 4.8 percent to 1.92 million next year.

NAR President Thomas M. Stevens from
Vienna, Va., said that housing has always been the soundest investment for most families. “As the old saying goes, homeownership beats the heck out of a drawer full of rent receipts,” said Stevens, senior vice president of NRT Inc. According to the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, the median net wealth of a homeowner household is 36 times higher than a renter household.

Stevens said that the national median home price has never declined since good recordkeeping began in 1968. “Although there can always be a temporary decline in a given area if jobs are weak and there is an oversupply of homes on the market, people who stay in their homes for a normal period of homeownership generally see healthy returns over time. There are no guarantees, but there are very good odds.”


The national median existing-home price for all housing types, which is experiencing a surge estimated at 12.7 percent to $208,800 for 2005, is expected to rise another 6.1 percent in 2006 to $221,400. The median new-home price is likely to rise 5.5 percent to $233,100 in 2005, and then grow by 7.3 percent next year to $250,100 as higher construction costs impact the market.


The
U.S. gross domestic product should grow 3.7 percent for 2005 and 4.1 percent next year. The unemployment rate is expected to decline to 4.9 percent by second quarter of 2006, and then stabilize.

The Consumer Price Index is projected to rise 3.4 percent for 2005, and 2.9 percent next year. Inflation-adjusted disposable personal income is forecast to increase 1.4 percent in 2005 and 4.5 percent in 2006.




Hilton Head Real Estate