NBN Online for the week of January 30, 2006

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Local Regs Hammer Affordable Housing, Study Finds
Tidy Katrina Cottage One Approach to Rebuilding Effort
NAHB Designations Give Members a Competitive Edge
Coast to Coast
11 Indicted in ‘Eco Terrorism’ Case
Housing Forum
Credit Unions Hold Opportunities for Builders
Politics & Government
Key Housing Issues Await Congressional Action
Economics & Finance
2005 Another Banner Year for New-Home Sales
Existing Home Sales Head Down at Record Year’s End
Data Will Show Risks of Commercial Vs. Residential Loans
Elderly Tend to Pay Off Mortgages, 2001 Survey Finds
Zero Down Common Among Entry-Level Home Buyers
Eye on the Economy
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Coping With Mini-Grinders
Business Management
How to Grow in a Slowing Market
Smaller Builders Can Compete Against the Giants
Design
'Living Large' Is Key in Latest Kitchen Design
Construction Safety
Builders Must Post 2005 Job-Related Injuries and Illnesses
Precautions Needed for Working in the Cold
Sales
Best in Sales and Marketing Honored at The Nationals at IBS
Remodelers
Remodeling Growth Entering a Slowdown
Commercial
Growing Commercial Council Takes Vision, Relevancy
Women
Builder, Mom Nicole Goolsby Heads Women’s Council
Education
IRM Welcomes 157 New Sales Designees to the Fold
Education Calendar
Green Building
Green Basics: You Don’t Have to Go Weird to Build Green
NAHB’s Green Home Building Guidelines Available Online Free
Conference Focuses on Green Building Market
Katrina
TV Station Built to Weather the Storm
International
U.S., Mexico Sign Partnership to Spur Housing
Labor
HBI Chair to Increase Housing's Profile Among the Young
Building Products
Therma-Tru Is Lowe’s Supplier of 2005
Builder's Engineer
I Always Get Slaughtered, Part 2 — Dirt Problems
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Association News
Nation’s Building News Now Searchable on NAHB Web Site
Calendar Connects Members to NAHB Resources
Key Associate Members Honored for Ongoing NAHB Support
Calendar of Events

Related Articles

2005 Another Banner Year for New-Home Sales

Existing Home Sales Head Down at Record Year’s End

Data Will Show Risks of Commercial Vs. Residential Loans

Elderly Tend to Pay Off Mortgages, 2001 Survey Finds

Eye on the Economy

Zero Down Common Among Entry-Level Home Buyers

Forty-three percent of entry-level home buyers made their purchase with no money down in 2005, up from 28% in 2004, according to an extensive National Association of Realtors® survey of consumers who bought and sold homes for the 12-month period running through last July.

Forty percent of the 7,800 consumers who responded to a questionnaire for the “2005 National Association of Realtors® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers” were first-time buyers; their median age was 32 and their median household income was $57,200.

The median home price for the entry-level group of buyers was $150,000, the Realtors® reported on Jan. 17, and the median downpayment was 2%.

The typical repeat buyer was 46 years old and had a median household income of $83,200, the study found. They placed a downpayment of 21% on a home costing $235,000; 11% of these buyers paid cash for their home.

In all, 94% of the buyers and sellers who were surveyed said that they believed their home purchase was a good financial investment.

“To underscore the value of housing as an investment, all you have to do is look at the difference in how repeat buyers purchase their next home,” said Paul Bishop, the association’s senior economist. “The wealth effect of homeownership provides the greatest source for their downpayment, which is significantly larger.

Other findings of the survey:

  • Aside from sellers who paid cash for their new home, 66% used the equity from their previous home for a downpayment.

  • The most important factors in choosing the location of the home were: neighborhood quality, 68%; proximity to a job or school, 43%; proximity to family or friends, 36%; and the school district itself, 23%. Seven other factors received responses from less than 20%.

  • Married couples made up the largest share of the housing market, accounting for 61% of transactions. Twenty-one percent of homes were purchased by single-women and 9% by single men. Unmarried couples accounted for 7% of the market.

  • The typical buyer walked through nine properties and searched eight weeks to buy a home; they moved 12 miles from their previous residence. The typical seller placed their home on the market for four weeks; had lived in it for six years; moved 15 miles to their new residence and had previously owned three homes, including the one they just sold.

  • Nine out of 10 home buyers used a real estate agent in the search process, but use of the Internet to search for a home has risen from 2% of buyers in 1995 to 74% in 2004 and 77% in 2005.

  • When asked where they first learned about the home they purchased, 24% of buyers identified the Internet, up from 15% in 2004 and only 2% in 1997. Although most buyers used a real estate agent to complete the transaction, 36% first learned about the home they bought from a real estate agent and 15% from yard signs.


“We find that the level of for-sale-by-owners is on a sustained decline and is now at a record low,” said Thomas M. Stevens, the association’s president. “In addition, a growing share of FSBO properties are not placed on the open market — they’re private transactions.”

Only 13% of sellers conducted transactions without the assistance of a real estate professional in 2005, the study found, and 39% of those transactions were “closely held” between parties who knew each other in advance.


 

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