Home sales in the Chicago area fell 25% in July, according to the Illinois Assn. of Realtors.
The decrease over July 2007, while steep, marked a slight improvement over recent periods. In the second quarter, Chicago-area home sales were down 29% compared with the second quarter last year.
"While most housing-related indicators reveal continued problems, there is some increasing evidence the supply and demand may be moving more into balance, especially in many metropolitan markets in Illinois," Dr. Geoffrey J.D. Hewings, director of the Regional Economics Applications Laboratory (REAL) of the University of Illinois, said in a Realtors’ release Monday.
In the nine-county Chicago region, single-family and condominium sales totaled 7,274 in July, a drop of 25.2% compared with 9,730 sales in July 2007, the Realtors’ group said in the release.
In the city of Chicago, home sales fell 20.9% in July, to 2,167 compared with 2,738 in July 2007.
The median home sale price in the Chicago area was $254,900 in July, down from $262,500 in the same period last year. The median price in the city of Chicago was $299,000 in July, down 0.3% compared with $300,000 in July 2007.
The median is the price where half the homes sold for more and half sold for less.
Statewide sales also fell 25.2% in July, to 11,021, compared with 14,738 in July 2007, the Realtors’ group said. The median sale price statewide was $199,900, a decrease of 4.8% compared with the same month last year.
“While July typically is the slower summer month for home sales in Illinois, this year the drag on the housing market is amplified by overall economic uncertainty among consumers," Kay Wirth, president of the Illinois Assn. of Realtors, said in the release.
The Realtors group's sales figures include new and existing homes. The nine-county Chicago Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area consists of Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Grundy, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry and Will.
Meanwhile, sales of existing homes rose 3.1% in the U.S. in July, easily beating Wall Street's expectations, as buyers snapped up deeply discounted properties in parts of the country hit hardest by the housing bust....more