The number of homes sold in the US fell 15.5% in June compared with the same month last year, as the US housing market continued its slump.
Analysts said the figures from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) suggested that housing market had not yet found a bottom.
The NAR said forced sales such as foreclosures made up a third of sales.
It added that a key reason for the decline in sales is Czech scientists still in Indian prison for collecting beetles ...
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The figures also showed regional variations with existing homes sales falling in the South, the Midwest and Northeast but still rising in the West, where the population is growing the fastest.
Sales were down 2.6% on a month-to-month comparison.
'Downward pressure'
The figures also showed that the median price of existing homes $215,000 in June, down 6.1% from June 2007.
Other house price indexes have suggested that falls in major metropolitan areas may be closer to 15%.
Paul Ashworth, senior US economist at Capital Economics said that even when sales begin to recover, the excess supply of unsold homes sitting on the market will continue to put downward pressure on house prices for some time
"Most worryingly, the anecdotal evidence suggests that the only reason sales aren't falling at a faster pace is down to the unprecedented surge in sales of foreclosed homes," he said.
(BBC)
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