Housing market shows signs of improvement, but foreclosures rise


Local experts on the Springfield and Urbana area housing market

Do you believe the area’s housing market is truly improving or not and why?

1. David Brisker, chief executive officer, Western Regional Information Systems & Technology Inc. (region's Multiple Listing Service)

“I have no data that is conflicting. I see units sold, I see average sales price going up….we see inventory levels going down, which means we’re selling houses faster than we’re putting on the market.”

“I can’t find any data that would make me not believe the housing recovery is well underway.”

2. Penny Underwood, clerk of courts, Champaign County

“Research indicates that the property value, of those that remain owner occupied, are staying the same or gaining ground, and the property transfers that have conspired so far this year indicate that the housing market is improving. As you know foreclosures do not happen overnight, the foreclosures now being filed were in the making two to three years prior.”

3. Tom Stoll, senior vice president, residential mortgage lending, Fifth Third Bank:

“I still have a feeling of confidence based on our activity at Fifth Third Bank. We have seen a diverse buying audience taking advantage of the low rates and attractive prices in the market across all price ranges.”

4. Wilbur Jackson, general manager, custom home builder, Andren Homes by The Jackson Group

“This is the first year we haven’t gotten anything new to build. We usually build a house or two…We’re fighting not just the economy of people willing to spend more money, but when they are willing to spend money, new construction costs are higher than a used house is going for.”

Halfway through the year, more people have purchased homes in the Springfield area and paid higher prices for them than in several years. But a high number of foreclosure cases and sluggish economy continue to hamper the housing market’s recovery, observers and officials said.

More than 2,100 total houses and condominiums were sold during the first six months of this year in Auglaize, Champaign, Clark, Logan, Mercer, Miami and Shelby counties, according to Western Regional Information Systems & Technology Inc., the Troy organization that houses the region’s Multiple Listing Service where Realtors list properties. That’s up nearly 14 percent from a year ago.

Just in Clark County, 535 houses sold from January to June this year, up nearly 16 percent from the same time period last year, according to WRIST. Just Springfield home sales rose year-over-year almost 13 percent through June to 240 closed housing contracts.

The entire region’s average sales price was approximately $102,100, an increase of about five percent.

But the number of civil cases filed in court in Clark County also rose year-over-year more than eight percent to 702 cases, according to the clerk’s office. Most civil cases are foreclosures, according to an official with the clerk’s office. In Champaign County, foreclosure cases rose the first half of this year to 139 cases filed, compared to 108 the same time the year before, according to Clerk Penny Underwood.
“I would honestly say just from our perspective it feels awfully like the same from a year ago,” said Melodee Sheils, director of Consumer Credit Counseling Service, which has a Springfield office. “The number of homeowners who are coming in either because they’re in foreclosure, there’s a threat of foreclosure, or they either just became delinquent or there’s a threat of delinquency about to happen… Our housing counselor numbers are pretty much the same from a year ago.”

The housing market is still weak because the overall economy is weak, said Tom Fitzpatrick, an economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. An “enormous” problem in Ohio cities is that there is far more housing than there is population growth, Fitzpatrick said.

“I think what we need to hope for, for a recovery, is more stability than a return to previous highs,” he said. “We either gain population or we reduce the supply of housing.”

HOME SALES

News that higher home sales and sales prices continued year-over-year to improve in the Springfield and Urbana region through the end of June marked a full year of increases, said David Brisker, chief executive officer of WRIST Inc.

“We’ve now seen four quarters in a row of average sales prices going up and sales going up. So we’re a year now into, from our perspective, the recovery. How long it’s going to last and all that, we don’t have a crystal ball,” Brisker said.

Consumers are more confident than in past years, interest rates are at records lows and demand is pent up to buy houses, driving home sales, said Brisker and Lori Fulk, a real estate agent with Real Estate II and 2012 president of the Springfield Board of Realtors. Interest rates have reached below 4 percent nationally for 30-year fixed home loans.

The average sales price over the six months of January to June in only Springfield was approximately $68,800, according to WRIST. Sales prices peaked in the region’s largest city in 2007 at more than $75,000, but before that in 2005, prices averaged just more than $69,000.

“We’re starting to turn, but not boom,” Fulk said.

FORECLOSURES

With an estimated 841 foreclosure cases filed so far this year in Clark and Champaign counties, compared to 753 the same time last year, the foreclosure crisis is not over, said area housing counselors who work with at-risk homeowners.

The difference between people defaulting on their home loans and people buying houses is jobs, said Richard Stock, director of University of Dayton’s Business Research Group.

Clark County employment is still down from 2007 levels by 2,500 to 64,000 people employed in June. Champaign is down 1,700 employed people from five years ago to 17,900 people working in June, according to figures from Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.

“Even though we’ve gained a few jobs back from our low, we still have a substantial number of people going through severe economic hardship,” Stock said.

HOME BUILDERS

A dry private home construction market in 2012 has made Habitat for Humanity the single largest builder this year in Clark County, funded by Neighborhood Stabilization funds in partnership with the city.

The number of building permits issued this year through June for single-family homes and condominiums in Champaign and Clark counties and Springfield total 38. That beats 2011 numbers by only five permits, according to data provided to the Springfield News-Sun by local government building departments.

Builders typically pull a permit when they’re close to starting construction.

Clark County Community Habitat for Humanity will build 11 houses this year in the Grand Avenue South neighborhood of Springfield, said executive director Matt Wilson. Currently nine houses are in various stages of construction and will be complete by year’s end.

The three- and four-bedroom houses sell for $80,000 to $85,000 to qualified working families.

“I would say of any individual home builder, we’re probably building more,” Wilson said. “There will be an ongoing need.”

The housing recovery won’t be in full swing until home construction gains traction, Brisker said.

“If you look at a home not only as a residence but a commodity, I can go out and find a preexisting home right now less, much less than I can build that same style house. So the best buy right now is still a preexisting home,” he said.

In other housing news, new plans are to start building over the next year a $4.5 million to $5.5 million 22-unit housing development Derby Glen Village in the Springfield neighborhood of Roscommon Drive.

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