Your Phoenix Real Estate ExpertsProviding Unparalleled Real Estate Service to Home Buyers and SellersThe Cromford Report™ Monthly Market Review September 2011 Brought to you by: The Kennedy Group is pleased to provide this Mid-Month Market Report. The latest real estate trends and statistics are delivered each month in our Market Report as a complimentary service. Our business is built around the concept of educating and providing the personal service that our clients have come to depend upon. It is with this philosophy that we offer select data from the Cromford Report to our clients, associates and friends. It is intended to keep you informed on critical market trends that affect the Real Estate profession.
This month we bring you a comprehensive market summery by Mike Orr of The Cromford Reports. Enjoy! August was similar to July but different from the first half of 2011. Apparently spooked by the debt crisis and the corresponding turmoil in the stock market, the middle and upper end of the market went quiet in July and August, especially for homes over $2,000,000, but the demand for homes under $100,000 continued to go from strength to strength and supply is now very low in several of the lower priced locations. Looking into the ARMLS data across all areas and types we see the following:
Please don't waste time looking for negative signals among these numbers. There aren't any. The numbers say the market is in very good shape with demand far outstripping supply. Most potential homeowners, however, would disagree – understandably. Normal home buyers tend to pay far more attention to their emotions than local housing market data. Most people are still experiencing too much fear to consider home ownership or upgrading, with an uncertain economy, poor employment statistics and the psychology of crowds discouraging them from taking advantage of the lowest pricing in over a decade, even with historically low interest rates as the icing on the cake. In addition we have some very real factors keeping pricing down. Appraisals are almost universally conservative; often coming in lower than the buyer is willing to pay. Lending is highly constrained by extremely cautious underwriting. A large number of homeowners have negative equity putting a damper on their financial plans. In fact, almost everything is the exact opposite of the first half of 2006, when the numbers indicated clearly that the market was headed for disaster but nobody paid any attention. Then we could see appraisals supporting ever increasing prices, lending policies were more relaxed than ever and everybody seemed to believe that prices could only go up. Indeed they believed this right up to the point of collapse. Now it seems to be popular to believe that prices will fall further. Indeed with the current negative sentiment it is certainly possible they may fall a little further for a short while, especially if the upper end of the market stays quiet. However, it is also inevitable that they will, at some point, increase from the current levels – and the market statistics indicate that this may be sooner than most people think. We're talking about basic economics here. When demand is well above normal and supply is well below normal, prices cannot fall indefinitely. In the past the laws of supply and demand have only been ignored for about 18 months at maximum. Then we have seen them cut in with a vengeance. We have gone 9 months so far with the market indicators and pricing going in opposite directions. So where is pricing now? The lowest point so far for the monthly average sales price on ARMLS is $150,448 on August 25. The lowest point for the overall monthly average $/SF is $78.79, also on August 25. We are currently very slightly above that low point and drifting aimlessly. The lowest point so far for overall monthly median sales price is $107,000 reached on February 22, with August 9, 17 and 18 all matching that level. We are currently above that low point – back around $110,000 with no clear sign of direction. The pricing averages are lower than February but the medians are not. This is caused by the relative weakness of the mid to high end market, a weakness which drags the averages down but has only marginal effect on medians. In contrast to the spring, prices are now falling at the higher end of the market. The lower end has achieved stability in sales pricing while asking prices are strongly rising and pending prices are showing early signs of increases in certain markets. Competition among landlords for good rental homes is extremely strong and the markets in their favorite locations are very active. This is also reflected in prices paid at trustee sales. which are more competitive now than at any time since 2005. El Mirage, Maricopa, Tolleson, Avondale, all have extremely low levels of inventory – so low that sales volumes are now being affected. The number of lender-owned homes for sale in many of these areas is a tiny fraction of the peak level of the winter of 2008/2009. In fact, a comparison of REO single family home inventory in January 2009 and September 2011 is very revealing:
By all means, please show this table to those who still talk of a "huge glut of foreclosed homes for sale"! It just isn’t there. |
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