Home prices continue to rise in 2004
Alicia Robinson
Single-family home prices in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa continued
their skyward climb in January, with price increases in both cities
surpassing statewide growth, data from the Orange Coast Assn. of
Realtors showed.
The median price for an existing single family home in Costa Mesa
jumped 23.5% to $525,000 in January, up from $425,000 in the same
month in 2003.
In Newport Beach, a median-priced single family home cost $1.4
million last month, a 31.7% increase from the January 2003 median
price of $1.07 million.
As long as interest rates hold and inventory remains low, prices
in the Newport-Mesa housing market will keep going up, local real
estate agents said.
Across the state, the median price for a single-family home rose
20.7% in January compared with the same month in 2003, the California
Assn. of Realtors reported this week. The median price rose from
$336,210 in January 2003 to $405,720 last month.
While the number of homes sold in California in January increased
5.3% when compared with the same month a year ago, the lack of
inventory locally led to a lower number of home sales in January
compared with the same period in 2003.
The competitive market in Newport-Mesa has driven some real estate
agents to use new tactics to do business, said Kent McNaughton, a
Newport Beach sales executive for First Team Real Estate.
Some agents are sending direct mailings to neighborhoods where
their clients want to live to see if any homeowners are open to an
offer, and others are networking on a daily basis with other agents,
he said.
“You literally have to run classified ads in the newspapers
[saying] homes wanted in certain neighborhoods,” McNaughton said.
“Obviously, you have to have complete communication with your
client because once a home is located you have to act immediately.”
As of Wednesday, in the 40,000-home marketplace of Newport Beach
and east Costa Mesa, only 227 single-family homes were for sale, said
Steve High, president of Strada Properties.
“That is just a staggeringly low inventory,” he said. “It is
making us be watchdogs for inventory for our clients.”
High expected interest rates to stay low through 2004, while
McNaughton predicted low rates will last for the next two to three
years.
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