Page 1 of 6 37 Friday, February 5, 2016 epaper Subscribe Sign Out Home News Business Sports Entertainment Arts & Life Opinion Obits Marketplace DMNstore Wall Street Airlines Technology Economy & You Top 100 Real Estate Autos Residential Real Estate Search Where home prices are rising the fastest in D-FW Facebook Twitter Email 5 Comments Print By STEVE BROWN REAL ESTATE EDITOR Published: 04 February 2016 12:19 PM Updated: 04 February 2016 11:24 PM Southern Dallas scored big wins in the 2015 housing market. Residential districts stretching from Oak Cliff to Ellis County had some of the largest gains in home prices and sales last year. At the same time, home sales stuttered in northern suburbs where a lack of homes on the market cut into 2015 sales totals. Demand for affordable housing led the big price gains in residential districts in Southeast Dallas, Cedar Hill, Kaufman and Ellis counties, according to year-end North Texas home price data from the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University. Preowned home sales for last year rose by 12 to 20 percent in those markets, compared to less than a 5 percent 2015 home sales rise in the almost 50 North Texas markets The Dallas Morning News tracks each quarter. Home sales and prices in some of those southern residential districts were still making up ground lost during the housing crash, real estate agents say. The downturn hit those markets particularly hard, said Jim Fite, CEO of Century 21 Judge Fite Realtors. Those markets have had
Page 2 of 6 to come back farther the catch up with the rest of the world. Fite said strong demand from investors hunting homes in areas stretching from Cedar Hill and Lancaster to Garland and Mesquite have pushed up prices in those neighborhoods. The investor business is still going crazy. Some of them are paying too much money for these homes more than rents justify, he said. They are betting on appreciation and that s a bit frightening. Home sales price appreciation was a factor in almost every Dallasarea neighborhood in 2015. (up 19 percent). The biggest price gains were in Southeast Dallas and Oak Cliff (median price up 24 percent from 2014), The Colony and Southern Dallas (up 22 percent) and Euless These areas all saw strong home sales last year. While initially much of this activity stemmed from investors, increasingly we are hearing that the consumer is finding that the mortgage qualification process is less onerous, said Ted Wilson with Dallas-based housing analyst Residential Strategies. I think there are still hurdles for a lot of households in these markets, but I also think the improving economy and housing conditions are starting to bring more buyers back. What you are seeing in these markets might be part of that trend. Home inventories were the tightest in The Colony, Bedford and Richardson with less than a one-month supply. Mesquite, Carrollton-Farmers Branch, Garland, Plano, Grand Prairie, Grapevine, Sachse-Rowlett, Wylie and McKinney all had less than a 1.5 month inventory of houses on the market with real estate agents last year. A 6-month supply of homes is considered a normal market.
Page 3 of 6 The strong performance in these areas is due to the limited choices for homebuyers, said David Brown with housing industry analyst Metrostudy Inc. It is also getting driven by strong investor demand. In many of the moderately priced submarkets, over a third of the sales during 2015 were to investors. More than 62,000 preowned single-family homes were sold by real estate agents last year in the Dallas-area an all-time high number of property purchases. Most analysts are forecasting a decline in housing activity this year unless more properties come on the market. We are beginning to see some early numbers that suggest the slowdown in housing is coming or starting, said Dr. James Gaines, chief economist with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University. Dallas is on the margin. First half of the year will still look strong, Gaines said. Second half of year will tell the tale. On Twitter: @SteveBrownDMN Facebook Twitter Email Comments Print 5 Promoted Stories From The Web Should You Consider Getting A Financial Your 401k Isn't Growing as Fast as It Why did the Richest Man in the World Baltimore Multi- Millionaire Warns: Merrill Lynch Mint.com Retirement Income Insider MoneyWise 411 Recommended by Editor Picks Mark Wahlberg's Daughter Steals Spotlight Sponsored By
Page 4 of 6 Comments To post a comment, log into your chosen social network and then add your comment below. Your comments are subject to our Terms of Service and the privacy policy and terms of service of your social network. If you do not want to comment with a social network, please consider writing a letter to the editor. 5 comments Sign in 182 people listening + Follow Share Newest Oldest Hot Threads smichaelclark 17 minutes ago We homeowners are glad they are going up for what ever reason. My home is 10 years old and is valued at half what I paid for it. Uneducated people out here don't understand they are just glad taxes dropped so low. No tax base is why there is nothing out here. It's why you are in a food desert Like Reply ManuDance It's a way for them to get higher property taxes from us 10 hours ago Like Reply Roy I'm just glad prices are going up after so many years of stagnation. 14 hours ago
Page 5 of 6 1 Like Reply Texan41 South Dallas will finally start booming. 15 hours ago Like Reply Maddog Welcome to Cali sothern-style! 17 hours ago 1 Like Reply
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