Women Drive Real Estate Purchases Secured Home Improvement Loans: Creating A Haven For Yourself!
Dec 06

Central San Diego Real Estate Market - Mid Year Snapshot Of Median Prices (2006) - Single Family Homes

Central San Diego Real Estate Market – Mid Year Snapshot of Median Prices (2006) – Single Family Homes

As of this writing, the San Diego real estate markets appears to have shifted from one that favors sellers to one that favors buyers. However, this premise may not hold true for all communities within San Diego, as median prices for some communities continue to rise while others fall.

While there are many metrics to evaluate the real estate pricing trends of a community, one commonly used parameter is to evaluate the median price of homes from one point in time against a prior point of time. The median price reflects the point at which half the homes are above a particular price point, and half the homes are below a particular price point. The median price metric provides one method to analyze the direction of home prices, but should not be used as the sole source of data from which to form conclusions.

The data below is a comparison of median prices for various communities in central San Diego County, comparing data from June 2005 against data for June 2006. This information is only one metric at a particular point in time, and other metrics or data from future months may support or dispute the pricing trends noted below. For some of the San Diego communities presented below, very few homes sold during June 2006, which diminishes the usefulness of the median price metric.

COMMUNITIES WITH INCREASES IN MEDIAN PRICE – SINGLE FAMILY HOMES – JUNE 2006

The data below pertains only to the sales of single-family homes, and does not include condominiums or townhomes. The data is organized by the magnitude of change in median price, with the highest change in median price presented first.

For the Coronado real estate market, the median price was $1,775,000, which represents a 14.7% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 15 homes sold in June 2006 (21 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Point Loma real estate market, the median price was $1,024,068, which represents an 11.4% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 20 homes sold in June 2006 (14 homes sold in June 2005).

For the University City (UTC) real estate market, the median price was $780,000, which represents a 10.6% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 5 homes sold in June 2006 (19 homes sold in June 2005).

For the La Jolla real estate market, the median price was $1,692,500, which represents a 10.3% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 28 homes sold in June 2006 (38 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Logan Heights real estate market, the median price was $425,000, which represents a 7.6% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 13 homes sold in June 2006 (14 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Paradise Hills real estate market, the median price was $507,500, which represents a 5.7% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 8 homes sold in June 2006 (16 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Mission Hills real estate market, the median price was $927,500, which represents a 3.1% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 11 homes sold in June 2006 (12 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Scripps Ranch (Scripps Miramar) real estate market, the median price was $759,250, which represents a 2.8% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 34 homes sold this month (43 homes sold in June 2005).

For the San Carlos real estate market, the median price was $563,000, which represents a 2.4% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 12 homes sold in June 2006 (16 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Del Cerro real estate market, the median price was $557,500, which represents a 2.1% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 13 homes sold in June 2006 (30 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Normal Heights real estate market, the median price was $676,250, which represents a 1.7% increase from the same time last year. Approximately 20 homes sold in June 2006 (19 homes sold in June 2005).

COMMUNITIES WITH DECREASES IN MEDIAN PRICE – SINGLE FAMILY HOMES – JUNE 2006

The data below pertains only to the sales of single-family homes, and does not include condominiums or townhomes. The data is organized by the magnitude of change in median price, with the highest change in median price presented first.

For the Old Town real estate market, the median price was $580,000, which was a 19.1% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 5 homes sold in June 2006 (14 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Golden Hill real estate market, the median price was $451,000, which was a 16.4% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 10 homes sold in June 2006 (13 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Pacific Beach real estate market, the median price was $851,960, which represents a 14.8% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 15 homes sold in June 2006 (19 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Tierrasanta real estate market, the median price was $570,000, which represents a 12.6% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 9 homes sold in June 2006 (17 homes sold in June 2005).

For the North Park real estate market, the median price was $560,000, which represents a 9.7% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 31 homes sold in June 2006 (16 homes sold in June 2005).

For the College Grove real estate market, the median price was $475,000, which represents a 5.9% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 38 homes sold in June 2006 (40 homes sold in June 2005).

For the City Heights real estate market, the median price was $390,00, which represents a 5.3% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 17 homes sold in June 2006 (30 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Mira Mesa real estate market, the median price was $510,000, which represents a 4.7% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 45 homes sold in June 2006 (47 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Linda Vista real estate market, the median price was $510,000, which represents a 4.2% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 16 homes sold in June 2006 (17 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Mission Valley real estate market, the median price was $510,000, which represents a 3.8% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 7 homes sold in June 2006 (18 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Encanto real estate market, the median price was $435,000, which represents a 3.3% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 36 homes sold in June 2006 (47 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Clairemont real estate market, the median price was $555,000, which represents a 2.6% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 30 homes sold in June 2006 (34 homes sold in June 2005).

For the Sorrento Valley real estate market, the median price was $861,000, which represents a 1% decline from the same time last year. Approximately 6 homes sold in June 2006 (5 homes sold in June 2005).

ADVISORY

Homebuyers and home sellers should keep in mind that the data above is simply a snapshot in time, and is not conclusive of the pricing trends for any community. For some communities presented above, very few homes were sold during June 2006, which makes the use of the median price metric of limited value. The data must be evaluated over a longer duration, and involve multiple metrics to fully understand enduring market trends. Contact your Realtor to obtain information about enduring market trends for any given community.

Anyway, you can enrich your knowledge with watch these awesome video related to real estate

Jim Cramer devating a spokeperson for the NAR

Help answer the question about real estate

written by Urban Probe Admin \\ tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

25 Responses to “Central San Diego Real Estate Market – Mid Year Snapshot Of Median Prices (2006) – Single Family Homes”

  1. ilikehwy40 Says:

    Jim Cramer should get out of stocks and into real estate. He has a better nack for it.

    And did that guy say that in summer of 2009 people who bought a house then will get 94% returns? Cramer is right about the motivation of people who sell stocks or property. They both are unwarrantably confident in the area they make money in.

  2. MSGOODBAR Says:

    Getting rid of realtors are a bit drastic because some people who are selling their homes find it easier to do. I want them and all the other players involved in real estate that buyers and investors used to be regulated the same way appraisers, engineers, and inspectors are. The field of real estate is not fair.

  3. drunkenmonkeyrage Says:

    damn, he was dead on with this one, markets tanked

  4. mongobobo Says:

    was a ‘good deal’ at 3500. And you’d STILL be underwater.

  5. mongobobo Says:

    It’s time we got rid of realtors and just use craigslist or something. Get agree upon a lawyer to finalize the paperwork and save some money.

  6. bowler866 Says:

    Boy he hit that on the head didn’t he!

  7. VivaMydick Says:

    He tells you to sell RE just so the globalists can buy it. Don’t do it, don’t panic. Don’t you remember how they always take over the market, e.g. Rothschild in 1815 and the bankers during the Great Depression.
    Globalist confiscate millions of acres for NAFTA from Mexico to Canada

  8. mulleygraves Says:

    “Great shape” a year from sept 2007, “Slight increase” from the other guy HAHAHAHA read Austrian economics and maybe you won’t be this stupid.

  9. DrewDownsManagement Says:

    Nice Vid. I enjoyed it. We market properties and other things on youtube, we hope to create a large network of people interested in making money. Your video gets a five star rating from us. I hope you feel the same about ours.

  10. LeftLiberalSoCal Says:

    Isn’t it true that your customers are Realtors who tend to give business only to appraisors who “get the values right”?

    Come clean.

  11. LetItFloat Says:

    Charllote North Carolina continue to perform well despite what is going on in adjacent States. Only States with major metropolitan areas are feeling the pinch. However, the economic down turn is translating in other areas such as gas price and automobile industry and other sectors and that might be a bad news, at the same time we know the troops are coming home and that should be a positive thing to look forward to.

  12. rosewood223 Says:

    who is this black guy?

  13. Ataraxian13 Says:

    we should bail out the fed

  14. attie3 Says:

    Jim Cramer for us secretary of the treasury
    or Chairman of the Federal Reserve

  15. AntiBullS Says:

    he is same prostitute as your stock broker , bastard does not represent your best interest

  16. IronJoeHorn Says:

    notice, this was put out 2007, if u bought a house when this came out, you A: paid more than u could have now, and B: got a crummier interest rate than now that the fed just cut rates again

  17. kensho3 Says:

    the TODAY show: Hard-hitting journalism! And now, here’s Matt wearing an apron revving up for our cooking segment!

  18. mongobobo Says:

    i don’t care what area you are looking at, but if you don’t have the money, you’re not going to be able to borrow it. That slows housing everywhere.

  19. NikoEntrepreneur Says:

    I dont agree with Jim Cramer and this is mostly because when real estate is in its bottom most low is when you actually make the purchase. This is where you profit since homes are bought much cheaper, but again its all about LOCATION, what you purchased and how you purchased it. Thats it.

  20. mongobobo Says:

    Let us look at the NASDAQ circa 2000. At one point it was hi as 4800. Now it’s at around 2200. So even after 8 years it’s STILL only worth half as much as it once was. Therefore, by your logic, crank454, the NASDAQ

  21. tbreest Says:

    Here in the Phoenix area, real estate sales have had a sudden surge, granted prices have fallen sharply in the last few weeks. Listingsupply com indicates that MLS listings in the major US markets are finally starting to fall, which should mean price stability ahead. Let’s hope!

  22. MSGOODBAR Says:

    Most appraisers work for banks and investors. Some who have thier license are investors. There are some that have realtors as backhanded customers but not the majority. The government has cracked down hard on appraisers due to the S&L scandal. If they find that we have manipulated the values our license is revoked and we will never be able to practice appraising again.

  23. raidereddie Says:

    Just get rid of the BAD Realtors, actually the current downturn is taking care of that automatically. R.E. License renewals in Mass. are down.

  24. Einstiensblackid Says:

    And with someone else’s money.

  25. stinkypoon Says:

    This market is not at a bottom. There will be no market upswing. Almost every populated location location location sucks sucks sucks.

Leave a Reply

Powered by WP VideoTube