The National Association of Realtors said home sales increased in...

The National Association of Realtors said home sales increased in January, but the number was buoyed by foreclosures and cash-only sales, indicating speculators may have entered the market. (April 2008) Credit: Getty Images

WASHINGTON -- More people bought previously occupied homes in January. But sales surged on a rising number of foreclosures and all-cash deals, and not first-time home buyers.

The rising number of distressed sales forced home prices down to the lowest level in nearly nine years, a troubling sign for the struggling housing sector.

The National Association of Realtors said Wednesday that sales of previously occupied homes rose slightly last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.36 million. That's up 2.7 percent from 5.22 million in December.

The pace is still far below the 6 million homes per year that economists say represents a healthy market. And the number of first-time home buyers shrunk to 29 percent of the market. A more healthy level of first-time home buyers is about 40 percent, according to the trade group.

Foreclosures represented 37 percent of sales in January. And all-cash transactions accounted for 32 percent of home sales - double the rate from two years ago when the trade group began tracking these deals. In places like Las Vegas and Miami, cash deals represent half of all sales.

One reasons cash sales are rising is that a growing number of purchases are being made by investors, the Realtors group said.

Millions of foreclosures have forced down home prices and more are expected this year. The median price of a home sold in January was $158,800. That's a decrease of 3.7 percent from a year ago and the lowest point since April 2002.

Tight credit has made mortgage loans tough to come by. And some potential buyers who could qualify for loans are hesitant to enter the market, worried that prices will fall further.

High unemployment is also deterring buyers. Job growth, while expected to pick up this year, will not likely raise home sales to healthier levels.

With mortgage rates rising, mortgage applications have been volatile and are now near their lowest levels in 15 years. Economists say it could take years for home sales to return to healthy levels.

Last year, home sales fell to 4.9 million, the lowest level in 13 years, the Realtors reported.

One obstacle to a housing recovery is the glut of unsold homes on the market. Those numbers fell to 3.38 million units in January. It would take 7.6 months to clear them off the market at the January sales pace. Most analysts say a six-month supply represents a healthy supply of homes.

Analysts said the situation is much worse when the "shadow inventory" of homes is taken into account. These are homes that are in the early stages of the foreclosure process but have not been put on the market yet for resale.

For January, sales were up in three of the four regions of the country led by an 7.9 percent rise in the West. Sales were up 3.6 percent in the South, 1.8 percent in the Midwest and down 4.6 percent in the Northeast.

The January increase was driven by a 2.4 percent rise in sales of single-family homes which pushed activity in this area to an annual rate of 4.69 million units. Sales of condominiums were up 4.7 percent to a rate of 670,000 units.

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