Home sales and prices continue to rise on an annual basis, and as those numbers have climbed, the number of short sales going through the market has dropped. Short sales, which are home sales in which the sale price is less than the total of the outstanding mortgages secured by the property, made up 5.3 percent of all sales in October, according to RealtyTrac's[3] monthly foreclosure report. That's down from 6.3 percent in September and 11.2 percent in October 2012.
The national median sales prices stayed consistent from September to October at $170,000, which is a 6 percent year-over-year increase. The annualized sales rate hit 5.6 million, a 2 percent increase from September and a 13 percent surge from October 2012. Despite the drop in short sales, they remain a large part of real estate in states riddled with distressed properties. In October, 14.2 percent of Nevada's home sales were short sales, the highest share among all states. Florida was runner-up at 13.6 percent, followed by Maryland (8.2 percent), Michigan (6.7 percent) and Illinois (6.2 percent).
While Blomquist cited cash sales as a contributing factor to the decline in short sales, some of those same states reported a high percentage of cash sales. Nationwide, such transactions -- those that have no loan recorded at the time of sale -- accounted for 44.2 percent of all sales, a 33.9 percent increase from the same time last year. The percentage of cash sales in September was revised to 45 percent.
Florida led all states with 65.6 percent of its sales completed in cash, followed by Nevada (55.5 percent), Georgia (55.4 percent), South Carolina (53.9 percent), Michigan (49.5 percent) and Ohio (49.2 percent).
Source : http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2013/12/02/housing-short-sales-decline-2013/
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