Home values still through the roof
Andrew Edwards
The cost of buying a home in Newport-Mesa continued to get more
expensive in May. Real estate statistics released Thursday showed
median home prices went up in all but one local zip code.
The figures, compiled by La Jolla-based DataQuick Information
Services, showed that the median price for a home or condo in
Newport-Mesa ranged from a pricy low of $602,000 in south Costa Mesa
to $3.8 million on Balboa Island in May.
The statistics compared May 2005 prices to those in the same month
last year. The only part of Newport-Mesa where year-over-year prices
dipped was Corona del Mar, where median home and condo prices dropped
3.4% to $1.5 million.
Home prices continue to rise because of a low supply of available
homes, First Team Real Estate agent Lori Robnett said.
“There’s not a whole lot out there,” said, Robnett, who sells
houses in Costa Mesa. “I think the cheapest house out there is
$599,000.”
Though homeowners could expect to fetch a high asking price for
their house, people around Newport-Mesa may not be putting their
houses on the market because the high prices in the area make it hard
to use equity to move up to better digs, said real estate agent Kent
McNaughton, who sells homes in Newport Beach, Newport Coast and
Laguna Beach for First Team Real Estate.
“Why make the move?,” McNaughton asked.
Though home prices continued to climb in May, the rate of
appreciation has slowed, DataQuick reported. The company released
figures for Orange County as a whole Wednesday. Across the county,
the median price for a home or condo was $590,000. The new median
price was an 8.7% climb above May 2004 numbers. According to
DataQuick, May was the first time in more than three-and-a-half years
that Orange County’s year-over-year increase was in the single
digits.
In a statement, DataQuick president Marshall Prentice said no one
can tell if home prices will make a “soft landing” or begin to drop.
G. Christopher Davis, director of the real estate management program
at UC Irvine’s Paul Merage School of Business, believes Southern
California’s population pressures will bolster home prices.
“The simple economic formula of supply and demand will mean that
prices will continue to rise,” Davis said.
McNaughton does not worry about a real estate bubble, but believes
the market could undergo a correction in the next two to three years
if interest rates go up.
“The only danger that I see on the horizon for the real estate
market would be if interest rates rise dramatically or substantially
over the next few years,” he said,
McNaughton expects rates to go up some time in the next two to
three years. He said a home buyer using an adjustable rate mortgage
or interest-only loan to buy a house could be hit hard if rates go
up. People who take out interest-only loans only pay interest at the
beginning of the loan, before being required to pay back the
principal along with interest.
As of Thursday, the average rate for a one-year adjustable rate
mortgage was 4.25%, and the average five-year hybrid adjustable rate
mortgage rate was 5.1%, according to mortgage finance company Freddie
Mac. Average rates for both types of mortgage increased over the
previous week.
Freddie Mac also reported higher rates for 30-year and 5-year
fixed year mortgages Thursday. Average rates climbed 5.63% and 5.22%,
respectively.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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