By Jim Buchta jim.buchta@startribune.com
Higher house prices beckoned sellers to list their homes in the Twin Cities area last month. Buyers weren't as plentiful.
During September there was a 7 percent jump in number of properties listed for sale, but a 7 percent decline in home sales compared with last year.
It's a condition that should have produced lower prices. Instead, the median price of home sales rose 5 percent to $205,000 in September, the 31st consecutive month of higher year-over-year prices.
The disparity between falling sales and rising prices is a reflection of a recent shift in the market: With foreclosure rates nearing pre-crisis levels, the investors who once dominated the market are quickly fleeing.
While the decline in sales is frustrating to many would-be sellers, this change in fundamentals is being viewed as a positive sign.
"This is a healthy trend for the market," said Herb Tousley, director of the Shenehon Center for Real Estate at the University of St. Thomas' Opus College of Business. "And I expect this trend to continue into the first half of next year."
Across the nation, foreclosure rates have been on the decline, especially in markets where the economy is improving. That's been particularly true in the Twin Cities metro, where the unemployment rate is lower than the national average and the economy has improved more swiftly.