A new report by RealtyTrac shows that 96 percent of the counties that they track are better off than they were four years ago. But still, there’s a ways to go in the housing market, with only 8 percent of the 410 U.S. counties analyzed faring better than they did during the housing boom eight years ago.
RealtyTrac analyzes housing market health by gauging four main categories: home price appreciation, affordability, percentage of bank-owned REO sales, and the unemployment rate.
“The housing recovery has taken root in hundreds of counties across the country, and almost all local housing markets are better off than they were four years ago when foreclosure activity peaked in 2010, with more than 1 million homes lost to foreclosure in that year alone,” says Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. “We saw less than half that number of bank repossessions nationwide in 2013. Even in hard-hit markets like Stockton, Las Vegas, and Lansing, Mich., where REO sales represented more than half of all sales in 2010, the percentage of REO sales has been cut at least in half.”
Home prices in three-fourths of the counties analyzed are still below 2006 levels, but low inventory has helped home prices accelerate past pre-recession levels in markets such as Seattle, San Francisco, Denver, and Oklahoma City, Blomquist notes: “Those rapid home price gains are causing a concerning drop in affordability rates in some cities, but home builders and home owners with regained equity should help provide more supply to balance out many of those markets in 2014.”
The analysis also found that 80 percent of the housing markets were better off than they were two years ago in 2012, when median home prices had reached bottom. Also, 30 percent were better off than six years ago in 2008, at the beginning of the Great Recession, according to the report.
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