Showing posts with label Real Estate Stats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Real Estate Stats. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

For-Sale-By-Owner Transactions Drop to All-Time Low

The number of U.S. homeowners who sell their houses without the assistance of a real estate professional has declined to the lowest level in nearly 35 years, as more sellers discover that the process requires plenty of work and actually nets a lower final sales price.fsbo_sm
According to the National Association of Realtors’ 2015 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, only 8 percent of U.S. home sellers report selling their homes themselves, the fewest since the survey began in 1981. In 2004, for-sale-by-owner transactions accounted for 14 percent of home sales, and that number has been gradually dropping since.
Although some sellers might reason that they can save money by avoiding paying a commission, they are actually leaving a chunk of change on the table. NAR says that the median sales price for a home that sells under the guidance of a professional is $249,000 compared with $210,000 for by-owner sales. In 38 percent of for-sale-by-owner situations, the buyer and seller are acquainted or related, and in those cases, the median sales price plummets to $151,900.
Nor should owners who opt to sell their homes themselves expect a speedier sales process. NAR says that the median time on market is about the same for by-owner and professionally brokered sales: four weeks.
Sellers who choose to go it alone can expect to expend a considerable amount of time and effort on the process, beginning with researching current market conditions and regulations. They will then need to gather a list of prospective buyers and plan and execute a marketing campaign. Owners who sold their homes without a professional report a variety of time-consuming efforts essential to a successful sale: posting the listing on multiple websites, registering the property with the local MLS, creating social media campaigns, and planning and hosting open houses.
An overwhelming majority of buyers  87 percent — turn to a real estate professional or brokerage when the time comes to search for a home. Of those that did employ the services of a professional, 88 percent said that they would be return clients. Just over half of respondents said that assistance in finding the right home was the most important factor in choosing a professional, and 41 percent sought a referral from a friend or relative.




Friday, March 29, 2013

3 Financial Reasons to Buy a Home NOW! (Part I)




This week, we are going to look at the three financial reasons to buy a home now instead of waiting: prices are rising at an accelerated rate, interest rates are increasing and rents are skyrocketing. – The KCM Crew



Prices Are Rising at an Accelerated Rate
The price of a home is the major consideration when deciding whether or not it makes financial sense to purchase a house. Experts are not only projecting that house values will increase in 2013. They are also more optimistic in the level of appreciation they are projecting as the market begins to heat up. Here are some examples:




The Home Price Expectation Survey
The latest survey of a nationwide panel of 118 economists, real estate experts and investment and market strategists reveals they project home values to end 2013 up an average of 4.6% according to the first quarter. This is after they had projected a 3.1% increase just three months ago.


Bank of America

In a report titled, Someone Say House Party?, Bank of America analysts revised their projections upward:

“Home prices continue to show momentum amid shrinking inventory and record high affordability, prompting us to revise up our original forecast of 4.7% for home prices this year. We now expect national home prices, as defined by the S&P Case Shiller home price index, to increase 8% this year.”



Capital Economics

According to a report in DSNews, Capital Economics also upgraded their prediction:

“Strong demand and tight inventory have brought existing home sales back to ‘normal’ levels, and further gains are possible, according to the latest market report from Capital Economics. Additionally, market conditions may prompt lenders to “loosen the purse strings slightly” and lend a little more freely.

These conditions, combined with broader economic indicators, lead Capital Economics to revise its previous forecast of a 5% price gain this year up to 8%.”




Morgan Stanley

In an article from HousingWire, Morgan Stanley joined the party:

“Strong momentum in home prices as well as housing activity gave Morgan Stanley analysts enough confidence to upgrade their home price appreciation projections to roughly 7% (from 5%) for 2013, according to its latest global securitized credit report…

“The momentum in most metrics of housing activity is running well ahead of the pace we had expected,” said James Egan, Jose Cambronero and Vishwanath Tirupattur, analysts for Morgan Stanley.”

Not only are prices projected to appreciate. Experts are actually revising their projections upward as demand maintains its momentum.

Tomorrow, we will look at increasing interest rates.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Why Real Estate Brokers Are Alive and Kicking

Why haven’t companies like Zillow, Trulia, and Redfin killed off real estate brokers?

 

Businessweek recently published an article that asked the question but didn’t offer up a definitive answer. But we don’t think it’s a mystery: There are perfectly logical and compelling reasons that explain why the disintermediation of real estate professionals hasn’t happened.

We’ve discussed this before in explaining why real estate professionals aren’t dinosaurs. But for now, let’s take a look at where this article missed the mark.

Value and Visceral Reactions

Chart on Zillow, Trulia, Redfin, Move.com financesThe author, Brad Stone, starts off by noting that Internet real estate aggregators Zillow, Trulia, and Realtor.com (owned by Move.com) and online brokerage Redfin are attracting plenty of visitors and, for some, generating plenty of revenue (see chart, right).

“It all looks at first glance like the same kind of electronic marketplace that has eliminated travel agents, decimated classified ads, depressed stock brokers, and taken the swagger out of car dealers,” he writes.

But that assumption misses a couple of key factors.
First, the electronic marketplace eliminates the bricks-and-mortar marketplace only if it benefits the consumer. On the whole, consumers are smart. They’re motivated. They’re shrewd about bargains. And if they can do something on their own quickly, easily, and effectively while saving money, you can be sure they’ll do it.

That’s why Expedia.com has supplanted travel agents, online banking and ATMs have reduced banks’ physical footprints, and Amazon.com has become a behemoth in the book industry. Consumers saw the benefits and jumped aboard in droves.

If it hasn’t happened with the real estate industry despite all the efforts of Redfin and its ilk, it’s not a marketing failure: It’s a value proposition failure.

Second, electronic beats real only if the end product is homogeneous. A book is a book is a book. To a slightly lesser extent, you can say the same about a hotel room, a plane flight, or a stock transaction. But almost every house is different. Not just structurally, but for the “it just feels right” qualities that make a house the right home for one person or another, and for the context of place that surrounds it.
Buying or not buying a home can come down to a purely visceral reaction: how it smells, if you like the view, if the small rooms make you feel cozy or suffocated.

Seriously: Have you ever “felt” something about a plane ticket?


Consumers Aren’t Stupid

Stone’s article, like many others addressing this question, seems to suggest that consumers would stop using real estate professionals if they just thought about it for a minute.

Please. In an age when almost limitless real estate information is at our fingertips, suggesting that consumers are somehow oblivious to the realities of a real estate transaction is foolish.

Stone’s article takes this tack when he cites studies that show, presumably, just how untrustworthy our industry can be – including one that alleges “collusion” and one that suggests people who sell their homes by themselves get better prices. The unspoken conclusion is that if, despite these obvious problems, people still use real estate professionals … well, consumers must be stupid!

But a closer looks suggests these studies may not tell the whole story – or are significantly behind the times.
For example, in a 2008 study, economists Steven D. Levitt (yes, the guy behind “Freakonomics”) and Chad Syverson discuss the collusion argument:
“If a buyer’s agent offers clients low-cost access to online home listings, for example, other agents can refuse to make their own listings available through such channels. Or, if a seller’s agent cuts her commission rate, other agents may be able to steer their potential buyers away from her listings.”
Today, here in the Bay Area, the supply of available homes is so limited that bidding wars have returned, the number of days from listing to sale are plummeting, all-cash offers are rising, and most homes are selling over asking price. The trend has been growing since the middle of last year and shows no signs of lessening — the chart below illustrates the Bay Area real estate market velocity in just the first seven weeks of 2013.






Chart showing market data for the first six weeks of 2013

In this hypercompetitive market, do you honestly think any real estate professional would steer a client AWAY from a home for sale? Or refuse to make her clients’ listings available to a buyer represented by a company like Redfin?
Besides, in addition to being unethical and strategically unsound, it would be just about impossible for any real estate professional to “hide” listings from a client. In 2011, 88 percent of home buyers used the Internet as a source of information in their home searches. Good luck trying to keep a client from stumbling on a home you want to hide!
And then there’s the for-sale-by-owner (FSBO) study cited, which found that an owner’s use of a real estate professional to sell a property reduced the eventual selling price by 5.9 percent to 7.7 percent, compared with homes sold by the owner directly.

Now for the fine print:
The homes in that study were all university housing on the Stanford campus. Ownership of the homes was limited to Stanford faculty and some senior staff. And none of the listings were on the MLS. So we can’t consider this a credible study of true market dynamics by any measure.

Let’s take a look at the real world instead. According to the National Association of Realtors, homes for sale by owner netted an average sales price of $150,000 in 2012. For home sales assisted by a real estate professional, the price spiked to $215,000. That’s a whopping 43 percent difference.
We’re betting that most consumers are savvy enough to use the Internet and to understand the real FSBO numbers. So, sorry, we don’t buy the argument that hapless consumers are just being misled and misinformed and THAT is why they aren’t flocking to Internet brokers.


Dollars and Good Sense

Finally, the inevitable “why are consumers still paying those fees?” argument comes up. Stone discusses the rise of Internet research, notes that real estate fees have remained relatively stable over time even though consumers seem to be doing more of the legwork, and adds, “Economists have long been perplexed by the resilience of the real estate agent.”

Well, it’s really not that hard to understand from our perspective.
The Internet has made things easier in some respects (access to information) but far more complicated in others (how to parse the flood of data that’s out there). Real estate professionals, with their unique knowledge of local markets, years of experience, and insightful recommendations, thus become paradoxically even more important: They are the guide through the jungle of all that data.

The digital world also means their costs to successfully market their clients’ properties have risen. They don’t just need postcards these days – they need dedicated websites for each property, video tours, high-end digital photography, QR codes for their signs … and the list goes on. There’s a plethora of new digital marketing opportunities that the real estate professional needs to seize (and pay for).

In part that’s why fees have remained stable. And it’s also worth noting that all real estate commissions are, of course, negotiable. But there’s a bigger reason why consumers are still willing to pay the fees. It’s simply this: expertise.

If the article claimed to be “perplexed by the resilience of specialized orthopedic surgeons” or the continued demand for skilled woodworkers or top-notch computer technicians, we’d laugh. After all, there’s a reason why certain professions remain steady or in-demand. It’s that people are willing to pay a highly trained expert — not a general practitioner, not a handyman, not their cousin’s friend Bill — for a better outcome.

http://blog.pacunion.com/wp-content/uploads/SFSalesVolume-png.png


And when it comes to buying or selling a home, which is one of the most significant transactions of their lives, most consumers don’t want to sacrifice expert representation just to get a discount.

Yes, Redfin, the discount online brokerage, does appeal to some, especially with its great search technology. But people seemingly don’t find much value in the advice and services of Redfin’s real estate professionals. After nearly nine years and millions in venture capital money, Redfin remains a niche player.

Here in the Bay Area, perhaps the most “wired” market in the country, Redfin’s market share is negligible. For example, in San Francisco, sales volume leader Coldwell Banker posted $1.9 billion in 2012 sales. Pacific Union, in third place, had $1.1 billion. By contrast, Redfin netted just $58 million.

Similarly, in Marin, Frank Howard Allen led the pack with $1.16 billion in 2012 sales; Pacific Union was second with $827 million. And Redfin? It barely made the charts at $2 million.



Summing Up

So, why haven’t the Zillows and Redfins of the world killed off real estate brokers? Because they can’t replace what makes our professionals essential to the transaction: the market mastery, the in-the-trenches experience, the advice and recommendations that take decades to develop. They can’t match the combination of deep knowledge, insight, and instinct that allow our people to identify a client’s dream home –  and ultimately make that client’s dreams a reality.

The Internet is great for research. But search algorithms, virtual tours, and robots just can’t replace professional expertise.

It’s really that simple.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Now Is The Best Time to Buy Your Dream Home


A recent survey showed that 3 out of 4 future home buyers (who are not first time buyers) plan to move up to some form of a ‘better’ home. The breakdown:
§Move to a significantly bigger home (49%)
§Move to a nicer home (17.5%)
§Move to a nicer part of town (8.6%)
If you or your family falls into any one of these categories, you should strongly consider making the move sooner than later. The ‘cost’ of your new dream house will be determined by two factors: the price of the house and the mortgage interest rate. Both are projected to increase this year.

Prices Set to Increase

In the recent Home Price Expectation Survey,105 leading housing analysts called for a 3.1% increase in home values by the end of 2013.

Mortgage Interest Rates Projected to Increase

According to theMortgage Bankers Association, after reaching record lows in 2012, the 30 year mortgage rates are expected to creep up slowly in 2013 to 4.4%.
Now is a great time to buy the home you always dreamt of owning. However, the longer you wait, the more it will cost.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Real Estate Roundup: Luxury Homes in Demand; Mortgage Rates, Home Prices Rising

Here’s a look at recent news of interest to homebuyers, home sellers, and the home-curious:

LUXURY HOME SALES SET RECORDS



The number of homes sold for $1 million or more in California rose last year to its highest level since 2007, with exceptionally strong sales of higher-end homes.
Homes selling for more than $5 million totaled 697 in 2012, far surpassing the previous record high of 491 set in 2011, according to DataQuick, a real estate research firm. Those selling for $4 to $5 million also set a record, 460, up from 344 the year before.
In all, 26,993 homes sold for $1 million or more in 2012, up 27 percent from 2011 and the highest number since 42,502 sold in 2007. The all-time high was in 2005, when 54,773 homes sold for $1 million or more.
The most expensive sale was an 8,930-square-foot home in Woodside, in San Mateo County, that sold for $117,500,000 in November.
Virtually all home sales in some communities went for $1 million or more, including Ross in Marin County, Atherton and Hillsborough in San Mateo County, and Los Altos in Santa Clara County.



MORTGAGE RATES CLIMB HIGHER


Mortgage rates continued to rise last week as the U.S. economy improved, led in part by the recovering housing market.
Freddie Mac, in its weekly interest-rate report, said 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 3.53 percent, up from 3.42 percent the week before. That’s still below the same week last year, when 30-year mortgages averaged 3.87 percent.
Last week’s rate marked the first time the 30-year rate topped 3.5 percent since Sept. 13. The all-time low, 3.31 percent, was set Nov. 21.


HOME PRICES KEEP RISING


The Bay Area marked nine straight months of steadily rising home prices — the longest continuous run in seven years — according to the latest statistics from the Case-Shiller home price index.
Home prices rose 1.4 percent from October to November and were up 12.7 percent since November 2011 in the San Francisco metro area, which includes Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo counties.
Bay Area home prices recorded the second-highest annual growth rate in the nation, following Phoenix at 22.8 percent. Nationwide, prices in the 20 largest metro areas rose an average of 5.5 percent.


REAL ESTATE: BEST INDUSTRY TO WORK IN


Even after a five-year, industry-wide slump, a survey of 1 million workers nationwide found that real estate is the best industry to work in.
Real estate professionals “continue to love their jobs and the companies they work for,” according to a survey by WorkplaceDynamics. “Realtors and others working in the real estate industry appreciate that they have a great deal of control over their own destiny, a strong connection to their work, and a sense of personal accomplishment each and every day. All of which led them to highly rank their workplaces.”
The survey, conducted with 30 newspapers across the country, polled 1 million employees from 872 companies to generate a list of the top workplaces.


 FANNIE, FREDDIE TO ALLOW WALKAWAYS


Underwater borrowers who have stayed current with their mortgage payments but face a hardship may be able to give up their properties and get their debt erased,  according to new guidelines from mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Non-delinquent borrowers who can document a hardship such as an illness, job change, or other reasons they need to move will become eligible in March to apply for a deed-in-lieu transaction that erases the difference between a property’s value and the size of its mortgage.




(Illustration courtesy 401(K) 2013, via Flickr.)

Friday, February 1, 2013

5 Reasons You Should List Your House TODAY!

Many homeowners are waiting until the Spring ‘buying season’ to list their homes for sale. Here are five reasons why that might not make sense this year:
 

1.) Demand Is High

Homes are selling at a pace not seen since 2007. The most recent Existing Home Sales Report by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) showed that annual sales in 2012 increased 9.2% over 2011. There are buyers out there right now and they are serious about purchasing.
 

2.) Supply Is Low

The monthly supply of houses for sale is at its lowest point (4.4 months) since May of 2005. The current month’s supply is down 21.6% from the same time last year. Historically, inventory increases dramatically in the spring. Selling now when demand is high and supply is low may garner you your best price.

3.) New Construction Is Coming Back

Over the last several years, most homeowners selling their home did not have to compete with a new construction project around the block. As the market is recovering, more and more builders are jumping back in. These ‘shiny’ new homes will again become competition as they are an attractive alternative to many purchasers.

4.) Interest Rates Are Projected to Inch Up

The Mortgage Bankers’ Association has projected mortgage interest rates will inch up approximately one full point in 2013. Whether you are moving up or moving down, your housing expense will be more a year from now if a mortgage is necessary to purchase your next home.

5.) Timelines Will Be Shorter

The dramatic increase in transactions caused many challenges to the process of buying or selling a home in 2012. We waited for inspections, dealt with last minute appraisals and prayed that the bank didn’t ask for ‘just one more piece of paper’ before issuing a commitment on the mortgage. There are fewer transactions this time of year. That means that timetables on each component of the home buying process will be friendlier for those involved in transactions over the next 90 days.


These are five good reasons why you should consider listing your house today instead of waiting.








Article & photos sourced from www.kcmblog.com

Monday, January 28, 2013

Real Estate Roundup: 2012 a Good Year for Home Sales, Prices, Bad for Housing Forecasts

Here’s a look at recent news of interest to homebuyers, home sellers, and the home-curious:




 

BIG JUMP IN NEW-HOME SALES

Homebuilders are back in business, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, which reported last week that sales of new single-family homes rose 20 percent from 2011 to 2012, and 32 percent in Western states.
That’s great news for the construction industry, of course, coming after six years of declines, but financial news blogger Bill McBride notes that 2012 was still the third worst year in new-home construction records dating back to 1963. The two lowest years were 2010 and 2011.


EXISTING-HOME SALES UP 6.3%

The National Association of Realtors’ year-end housing totals tell a remarkable story: Existing-home sales rose 9.2 percent in 2012 from 2011, a five-year high, and the national median existing-home price was up 6.3 percent.
Pent-up demand is sustaining the market, according to NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun.
“The number of potential buyers who stayed on the sidelines accumulated during the recession, but they started entering the market early last year as their financial ability and confidence steadily grew, along with home prices,” Yun said in a statement.
“Likely job creation and household formation will continue to fuel that growth. Both sales and prices will again be higher in 2013.”


DECEMBER DIP IN PENDING SALES

Pending home sales were down 6.5 percent in December from a year earlier, according to the California Association of Realtors, which blamed the shortfall on a lack of homes for sale. Pending home sales are forward-looking indicators of future sales activity, providing information on the future direction of the market.


ZILLOW: HOME PRICES ‘SUPERCHARGED’

Home prices rose an average of 5.9 percent in 2012, which Zillow Inc., in its quarterly real estate report, called “supercharged” and unlikely to last.
In the San Francisco metro area, the median home price rose 14 percent in 2012 to $526,200, Zillow said, while rents rose 5.1 percent to $2,517.
“We don’t believe that the current pace of home value appreciation in many parts of the country is sustainable, due in part to the origin of this appreciation, which we believe to be negative-equity fueled inventory shortages,” Zillow said on its blog. “High rates of negative equity continue to keep homeowners locked in their homes thereby limiting the overall supply of for-sale homes and helping to fuel intense price appreciation.”
The annual home price appreciation in the 1990s was 2.6 percent, and Zillow forecast a moderate average price increase of 3.3 percent for 2013.


CALIFORNIA FORECLOSURES DOWN 38%

The number of California homeowners pushed into foreclosure in the fourth quarter of 2012 fell 38 percent from a year earlier, the lowest level in six years.
Market research firm DataQuick attributed the steep decline to rising home values, an improving economy, and a shift toward short sales.
In the Bay Area, formal notices of default fell an average of 46 percent year over year, ranging from a 42 percent drop in San Francisco to a 51 percent decline in San Mateo County.


2012 PREDICTIONS — HOW ACCURATE?

The Wall Street Journal’s real estate blog last week revisited the December 2011 predictions of economists and housing analysts for 2012 and found that, overall, they would have done just as well by flipping a coin.
Of 94 people who made predictions for 2012, 42 said home prices would fall on a year-over-year basis, and only five predicted annual gains of 3 percent or higher. One forecaster called for prices to fall 10 percent.
Looking ahead, “the vast majority” of more than 100 analysts polled in December said home prices will rise in 2013, with a median forecast of a 3 percent gain. The median forecast also predicted that prices will rise by 23 percent through 2017.



(Toy houses photo courtesy of Woodleywonderworks, via Flickr.)

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Year End Reports Reveal Market Coming Back

Every year-end housing report revealed that the real estate market is recovering quite nicely. Here is a quick synopsis of each:


Existing Home Sales Report

  • Total existing-home sales rose 5.9 percent in November over last month
  • Sales are 14.5 percent higher than November 2011
  • Sales are at the highest level since November 2009
  • The national median existing-home price was $180,600 in November, up 10.1 percent from November 2011
  • Total housing inventory at the end of November fell to a 4.8-month supply; it was 5.3 months in October, and is the lowest housing supply since September of 2005 when it was 4.6 months

Pending Sales Report

  • Pending home sales increased in November for the third straight month and reached the highest level in two-and-a-half years
  • The index is at the highest level since April 2010 when buyers were rushing to beat the deadline for the home buyer tax credit
  • With the exception of several months affected by tax stimulus, the last time there was a higher reading was in February 2007
  • On a year-over-year basis, pending home sales have risen for 19 consecutive months

New Home Sales Report

  • Sales of new homes rose 4.4% in November to a two-and-a-half-year high
  • This is the highest level since April 2010, when a temporary tax credit boosted demand.
  • Sales are now 15.3% higher compared to one year ago

Case Shiller Home Price Index

  • Home prices rose 4.3% in the 12 months ending in October
  • In nineteen of the 20 cities covered, annual returns in October were higher than September



    Article and photo sourced from www.KCMBlog.com

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Mortgage Rates At Another Record Low


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) --(Nov. 15th)

Mortgage rates dropped again this week, sending both 15-year and 30-year fixed-rate loans to record lows.

According to mortgage giant Freddie Mac, the average rate on the 30-year fell to 3.34%, 0.06 percentage point lower than last week. The 15 year fell 0.04 percentage point to 2.65%

The new lows reflect increased demand for government bonds, according to Keith Gumbinger, of HSH.com, a mortgage information company.

"It's a flight to quality," he said. "You may have noticed that stocks sold off last week after the election."

When investors turn away from stocks, they often park their cash in Treasurys, and the added demand brings down bond yields.
 Mortgage rates tend to track those yields down.

A secondary factor, said Gumbinger, was a drop in demand for loans, some of which was related to Superstorm Sandy, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Monday, November 19, 2012

October Monthly Market Update Hits the Press


San Francisco sellers enjoyed a big spike in homes, condos, and tenancies-in-common finding buyers in October. The percentage of those properties in contract rose to 42 percent overall, compared with 34 percent in September. Properties priced under $1 million showed the most demand: In the $750,000 to $1 million range as well as the $500,000 to $750,000 range, about 46 percent were in contract; for properties in the $100,000 to $500,000 range, 43 percent were taken. Looking at individual districts, District 3 (Lakeshore, Lakeside, Oceanview) and District 4 (St. Francis Wood, Forest Hill, West Portal, Twin Peaks) were epicenters of activity; both areas saw fully half of available homes and condominiums go under contract in October.



 
This update contains the raw numbers for the past month's sales for the month of October in San Francisco.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Is it time to buy a rental property?

Yesterday, the KCM blog discussed rising rents and their impact on the long term housing expense of tenants. Today, we want to look at the opportunities that single-family rental units present for the small investor.

With house prices inching up and rents skyrocketing, this may be the perfect time to invest in single family residential real estate.

If you do, you won’t be alone. According to the National Association of Realtors’ (NAR) 2012 3rd Quarter Metro Area Report:
“Investors…accounted for 17 percent of all transactions in the third quarter.”
More than one out of every six houses sold are purchased by an investor.

In the most recent MarketPulse Report by CoreLogic, their Principal Economist, Sam Khater, wrote on the subject in a story titled Roll Tide, or The Rise of the Single Family Rental Market.

The major takeaways from the article are:
  • The single-family rental market remained very active in the late summer of 2012 with increases in demand, tightening inventory and rising rents.
  • Nationally, rental leasing volumes were up every month for two years. In August, they were up 7% over last year.
  • Supply was down 11% over the same period.
  • This tightness in supply has caused rents to increase.
  • Rent growth is expected to increase at a ‘strong clip’ late in 2012 and in 2013.
If a private investor is looking for a great hands-on opportunity, perhaps purchasing a single-family house to rent out makes sense. Check with Joske Thompson to uncover the opportunities in your region.


Majority of Content Written and Contributted by the KCMblog.com

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

2012 Q3 Market Update

Quarterly Real Estate Report Q3.2012
Pacific Union International
Agent Photo
Joske Thompson
Neighborhood DataProperties for SaleJoske Thompson Blog
This year has been a whirlwind in the real estate world.

As you are probably aware our market has defied most professional predictions of where real estate is headed.

My quarterly report will hopefully explain the market's current position and where you can expect it to be in the near future.

As the average prices of homes have increased, the chance to snag a foreclosure or a short sale in this market has been dwindling. Competition for these fantastic investment opportunities are driving up the value and consequently the average price to buy into this market.

The one thing you should take away from this report is that the San Francisco market is heading up. Now is a perfect time to assess your financial future; homes prices are relatively lower and more importantly interest rates are the lowest that we have seen in our lifetimes.

Let me know how my expertise in this market can be of service to you.
San Francisco: Q3 Results
The summer months typically see a slowdown in home sales, but this summer was anything but slow. An exceptionally tight supply of homes on the market resulted in frenzied activity among buyers looking to get into contracts at all price points in the third quarter, and multiple bids were the norm for all fairly priced properties – both single-family homes and condominiums.

Sellers found themselves choosing among multiple offers – in some cases 20 or more – which helped push single-family home prices higher across the city. Prices are now very close to the highs reached at the peak of the market in 2005-2006.

The limited homes-for-sale availability, coupled with strong buyer demand, should contribute to an increase in the median price for single-family homes. We expect this will encourage more sellers to come off the sidelines, which will help inventory levels rise.

Noe Valley, with its family-friendly ambience and the easy commute to the South Bay, was one of the hottest real estate markets in the third quarter. Overall sales volume in the neighborhood was sharply up compared with Q3 in 2011 – a trend that was also seen in the rest of the city’s District 5, which includes Cole Valley, Duboce Triangle, Haight-Ashbury, Mission Valley, and Twin Peaks.

In the condominium market, limited inventory woes continued through Q3, with the months’ supply of inventory tightening up. Even though inventory was down 40 percent, sales were up 38 percent, year over year – a tremendous increase.

As young professionals move into the city with cash in hand from recent tech IPOs and expansions, South Beach will certainly solidify its status as one of the most desirable neighborhoods for condos, especially along the waterfront.

Looking Forward: The constrained inventory that has played havoc with buyers over the past year is finally showing signs of loosening. Our real estate professionals are hearing of a sharp increase in business for stagers, who typically prepare properties for sale, and for professionals who do pre-sale inspections, so expect to see a wider selection of homes for sale over the next six months.
Median Sales Price
The median sales price represents the midpoint in the range of all prices paid. It indicates that half the prices paid were higher than this number, and half were lower. It is not the same measure as “average” sales price.
Single Family Homes – Median Sales Price
Click to view larger chart
Condominiums – Median Sales Price
Click to view larger chart
Months’ Supply of Inventory
The months’ supply of inventory is a measure of how quickly the current supply of homes would be sold at the current sales rate, assuming no more homes came on the market. In general, an MSI below 4 is considered a seller’s market; between 4 and 6 is a balanced market; and above 6 is a buyer’s market.
Single Family Homes – Months’ Supply of Inventory
Click to view larger chart
Condominiums – Months’ Supply of Inventory
Click to view larger chart
Average Days on the Market
Average days on the market is a measure that indicates the pace of sales activity. It tracks, on average, the number of days a listing is active until it reaches close of escrow.
Single Family Homes – Average Days on the Market
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Condominiums – Average Days on the Market
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Percentage of Properties Under Contract
Percentage of properties under contract is a forward-looking indicator of sales activity. It tracks expected home sales before the paperwork is completed and the sale actually closes.
Single Family Homes – Percentage of Properties Under Contract
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Condominiums – Percentage of Properties Under Contract
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Sales Price as a Percentage of Original Price
Measuring the final sales price as a percentage of the original list price, without price adjustments, measures the success of a seller in receiving the hoped-for sales amount, but it also indicates the level of sales activity in a region.
Single Family Homes – Sales Price as a Percentage of Original Price
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Condominiums – Sales Price as a Percentage of Original Price
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Delving into San Francisco’s Districts
San Francisco is defined by 10 separate districts, each of which encompasses several neighborhoods.
District 1:Inner Richmond, Central Richmond, Outer Richmond, Jordan Park/Laurel Heights, Lake, Lone Mountain, Sea Cliff.
District 2:Outer Sunset, Central Sunset, Inner Sunset, Outer Parkside, Parkside, Inner Parkside, Golden Gate Heights.
District 3:Pine Lake Park, Merced Manor, Lake Shore, Lakeside, Stonestown, Merced Heights, Ingleside, Ingleside Heights, Oceanview.
District 4:Balboa Terrace, Diamond Heights, Forest Hill, Forest Hill Extension, Forest Knolls, Ingleside Terrace, Midtown Terrace, Miraloma Park, Monterey Heights, Mount Davidson Manor, Sherwood Forest, St. Francis Wood, Sunnyside, West Portal, Westwood Highlands, Westwood Park.
District 5:Buena Vista/Ashbury Heights, Clarendon Heights, Cole Valley/Parnassus Heights, Corona Heights, Duboce Triangle, Eureka Valley/Dolores Heights, Glen Park, Haight-Ashbury, Mission Dolores, Noe Valley, Twin Peaks.
District 6:Alamo Square, Anza Vista, Hayes Valley, Lower Pacific Heights, North Panhandle, Western Addition.
District 7:Cow Hollow, Marina, Pacific Heights, Presidio Heights.
District 8:Downtown, Financial District/Barbary Coast, Nob Hill, North Beach, North Waterfront, Russian Hill, Telegraph Hill, Tenderloin, Van Ness/Civic Center.
District 9:Bernal Heights, Central Waterfront/Dogpatch, Inner Mission, Mission Bay, Potrero Hill, South Beach, South of Market, Yerba Buena.
District 10:Bayview, Bayview Heights, Candlestick Point, Crocker Amazon, Excelsior, Hunters Point, Little Hollywood, Outer Mission, Mission Terrace, Portola, Silver Terrace, Visitacion Valley.
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Bay Area: Is the Housing Slump Over?
By now you’ve heard the optimistic news emanating from the media and real estate experts across the country: Housing markets are back on their way up.

Home values are rising, foreclosures are dropping, and housing starts are increasing. In addition, the Federal Reserve’s plan to purchase mortgage-backed securities to the tune of $40 billion a month should contribute to the climb by pushing down mortgage rates and boosting home prices.

Sounds like great news, and it is. But to those of us in the Bay Area, it’s a bit of old news. In January, we predicted we’d see the best year in housing since 2006. So far we have – and there are strong indicators that’ll continue, thanks to sustained job growth, low interest rates, and aggressive buyer demand.

If there’s a downside to all this, it’s that buyers who have been waiting on the sidelines hoping to pounce on a foreclosure or distressed property have likely missed their opportunity. The records being set for number of homes sold in the Bay Area are being accomplished with limited inventory, and this will contribute to price appreciation.

The combination of buyer demand and a continuing constrained supply of available homes is leading to a return of one of the hallmarks of the heyday of Bay Area real estate: the bidding war.

Multiple offers on well-priced properties are becoming the norm in many areas, and for every one buyer who lands the home, there are several frustrated suitors even more determined to find a new abode … thus fueling more multiple offers. We predict housing will be 3 to 6 percent more expensive by this time next year.

For more about the return of the bidding wars, read our exclusive feature story below. And best wishes for a happy, healthy, and productive year-end!
Going, Going, Gone! The Return of Bidding Wars
Throughout 2012 we’ve seen continued improvements in our housing markets, and our predictions of enjoying the best real estate year in the Bay Area since 2006 seem to be coming true.

Q3 has also brought the re-emergence of another characteristic of the heights of Bay Area real estate: bidding wars.

Multiple offers on desirable properties have become common, and the bidding wars that result can test the nerves of the most seasoned real-estate veteran.

Sellers in many Bay Area regions may receive 10 to 20 competing offers for a well-priced home; some homes are even luring 30 offers.

Our regions experiencing the most bidding-war activity in Q3 included the East Bay, Contra Costa County, Marin County, San Francisco, and Sonoma Valley. Sonoma County as a whole saw moderate numbers of multiple offers. Napa County and the Tahoe/Truckee area had the fewest bidding wars.

A robust economy, a skyrocketing housing market, and waves of tech dollars flowing from Silicon Valley spurred bidding wars during the real estate boom of the last decade. Today’s bidding wars owe more to the laws of supply and demand: too few homes on the market for too many eager buyers.

After years of stagnation, the pent-up demand for homes in the Bay Area today is palpable, fueled by historically low interest rates, economic growth, and an increasingly expensive rental market.

The problem: There’s precious little to buy.

Prospective sellers are waiting on the sidelines, unwilling or unable to enter the marketplace. More than a quarter of all Bay Area homeowners today remain underwater, owing more on their mortgages than their properties are worth. Others won’t sell because they don’t have enough equity yet to buy another home, or are holding out for higher price points.

This reluctance has driven down the supply of housing inventory across the Bay Area, which usually averages four to six months, to below two months in many regions. Cue the feeding frenzy, as hungry buyers compete against each other to land one of those homes.

Bidding wars can be great news for sellers who price their properties appropriately.

One of our real estate professionals recently helped a Bay Area client sell a home that attracted 27 bidders after just one week on the market.

“The seller was completely taken aback by the interest in the property,” our real estate professional said. “We had to be careful with the pricing, but the market was hurting for inventory.”

The home was offered at $417,000, slightly higher than comparable homes in the area. The eventual winning bid came in at $485,000 -- much of it in cash. The final selling price nearly matched what the owners paid in 2009.

Looking ahead, multiple offers will likely stay on the scene for a year or more, although gradual increases in home values will bring more homeowners above water and back in the market.

Meanwhile, although it can be frustrating for buyers to compete in a bidding war, it’s not necessarily a losing proposition. To improve your odds:

  • Get pre-approved – not just prequalified -- for a loan, and offer the highest price you can.
  • Make the highest down payment you can afford, and offer more cash if possible.
  • If you are pre-approved and time permits, consider doing inspections in advance of your offer. The seller would likely respect your intent -- and you may then consider waiving any unnecessary contingencies to expedite the process.
  • Don’t forget the personal touch: A “buyer’s letter” that lets the seller know how much you love and want the home can often spell the difference between two similar offers.
And listen to the real estate professional representing you. He or she has unique knowledge about the neighborhoods and homes you’re evaluating, as well as expert insights into market conditions, and can give you valuable advice to tip the scales in your favor.
Bay Area 10-Year Overview
Here’s a look at home sales in the Bay Area’s real estate markets in the third quarter of 2012, with a glance back at the 10 preceding third quarters.
Click here to see specific 10-year data on key cities in the Bay Area.
Recent Activity
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701 Minnesota #122 , Dogpatch
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