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Alan Smith
Agent
    Years of Experience: 6

    CSP - Certified New Home Sales Professional

Direct: 208-473-0343

Office: 208-377-2999



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Re/Max - Elite Properties
10062 W Fairview Ave Ste. 120
Boise, ID
208-377-2999


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Posts Tagged ‘Boise Real Estate Market’

Boise Area Real Estate Market and Ada County Home Sales for July

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

For the month of July . . . 

392  - Single Family Homes sold in Ada County in July.  
510 – the number sold during July 2009.  24% fewer.
17% – were short sales
29% – were bank-owned
54% – were non-default.
160 – days on market for short sales
  48 – days on market for bank owned
  82 – days on market for non-default
$195,595 – average price for SFH in Ada Co.
$160,000 – median price for SFH in Ada Co.
3288 – number of active listings in July
.0972 – ratio of sold-to-ask price for non-default sales
.0971 – ratio of sold-to-ask price for bank-owned sales
.0976 – ratio of sold-to-ask price for short sales

There are the stats for single family home sales in Ada County for July.  But how do these numbers relate to their trends?  Where is the market going?

Right now, that’s not an easy question to answer.  The usual, annual real estate activity cycle has been skewed by the on-going macro-economic environment.  The usefulness of Year-over-Year comparisons has been diluted.  Market disturbances caused by short sales and bank-owned properties throw off trend-reading to the extent that extrapolations are strictly for entertainment.

I’ll provide the analogs, and you can make your own assumptions. 

Here are the monthly home sales for the year so far: 
J/279, F/350, M/567, A/659, M/625, J/630, J/392

 The profile for home sales activity through each year is a fixed perennial template.  To wit:  (click on the graphic to enlarge)

The only thing that really changes is the amplitude, depending on the level of activity, for any particular year.

Average and Median prices:  Providing there are no more government-policy, or finance- industry unexploded IEDs, it appears that local prices have bounced off the bottom twice.  The latest trough may have been a result of the volume of buyers taking advantage of the First-Timer/Move-Up tax credit.  The bulk of those sales occurred in the lower price- strata, pulling the overalls lower, up to the time of the offer’s expiration.

 Here’s what prices look like graphically, beginning from January ‘07 

The most interesting statistic is the sold-to-ask price ratio.  This may be another indication that prices have bottomed.  Each is less than three percent lower than the asking price.  A year ago, this ratio was around 5 to 6 percent of the asking price.  This current compression just might be signaling an impending transition from a buyer’s to a seller’s market.  At the least, we may be looking at an impending balanced market.

Finally, what has the composition of sold homes been doing?  Are there really more short sales coming into the market?  Or, are foreclosures overwhelming normal, non-default sales?  See for yourself . . .

It looks as though the trend is that non-default offerings are returning to being the norm – but slowly.  Keep in mind that those that were once among the short sale offerings may shift at any time by force of foreclosure into a bank-owned offering.  So, the short sale results are more like the result of a snapshot than a true comparison of short sales vs non-defaults vs bank-owned properties.

My conclusion:  If you have been thinking about buying, or selling, but waiting for a sign –you may be staring into an incipient Green Light.

Like In Politics, All Real Estate Is Local

Friday, June 4th, 2010

In the next few days, the media will be reporting the home sales results for May.  The numbers will be interesting, but probably misleading.  That’s safe to say because what’s reported usually is a very broad result – a national number.  Viewed more finely however,  a more useful story emerges.  You’ll find that there are regions which are still languishing, and others that are rebounding.  If you own, or are looking to buy, a house in say, Ada County, it makes a difference. 

Here in the Boise area, what you should hear about local median and average home prices for May, is that they rose month over month.  I’ll have exact numbers in about a week, when the local association reports. 

For a fuller understanding of market direction, there are additional pertinent numbers, such as total sales and number of active listings.  Look for May’s total sales to have not changed much from April.  The number for average active listings should have edged-up month-over-month, as it has since January. 

The most interesting trend is in the distribution of types of sale.  Non-Default (conventional) sales have been rising steadily, from below 50% of the total sold  - where they were in January – to possibly over 60% for May.  The larger part of the shift is coming from Bank-Owned properties, and the remainder from Short Sales.  I’ll break this out too.  Keep checking back.

Alan

The Boise Area Real Estate Market – Your Guess Is As Good As Mine

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

(My previous post is made somewhat less relevant by this one, due to additional, and more current data.)

What’s currently happening in the Boise real estate market?  Right now, your guess is as good as mine.  So, here’s somedata to help educate your guess.  The way the data are at odds with one another indicates a transitional state – which probably will resolve itself within the next month or so.  Good vision now can position your purchase, or sale, at the leading edge of the wave.

So, activity has definitely picked up.  Selection has increased, deflating demand, and reducing sellers’ leverage, resulting in lower sales-price results.  Non –default homes are still the bulk of the market, and are competing price-wise with only a small, but reasonable premium over Shorts.  Homes offered as potential short sales reside in “Foreclosure’s Waiting Room”.  That’s because, due to inherent difficulties with short sale transactions, which lengthens the process and adds to their volatility, they have a less than (anecdotally) 50% success rate.  So, many are foreclosed on before they can be successfully sold.

Perennially, the real estate market peaks in mid-summer, after having slowed down into the holidays and the new year.  Cycle-wise, we’re just in the middle of the Winter-to-Summer ramp-up.  There’s little question that prices have, generally, bottomed.  Now, for those who have deferred their buying or selling, it’s just a matter of using all the current indicators to determine when to take action.

The long-term price trend for housing is up.  Once all the factors favoring a positive direction of activity in the housing market are obvious, any delay in making a move surrenders additional appreciation.  When you decide it’s time to make the move, give me a call.  I’ll provide you with a Market Analysis of your home, so you can confirm your decision.
Regards,
Alan Smith, visit my website   (208) 473-0343

Boise Real Estate Stats

Friday, December 4th, 2009

A picture is worth a thousand words.   ’08 to ’09 home sales, by-month, in Ada County.  Now, that’s a divergence!

yoy-ttl-homes-sold-ada-01

Boise Home Prices

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

The sales results for October are out, and just skimming across the top, it looks as though house prices in Ada County are still dropping.   Both average, and median prices have fallen steadily since July, giving the impression that the bottom has yet to be found.  But, what if we look deeper. . .  

In October, the average selling price of homes (both existing and new construction) in Ada County was $180,167.  The median price was $155,000.  In September, those numbers were, respectively:  $190,608 and $162,900. So, it looks like prices are still falling.   

 But wait,  . . .that median price indicates the bulk of the sales activity occurred in the lower price ranges.  Sales of homes in the $0 – $160,000 price range were 54% of the total homes sold (585) in October!  Last January, that price range only accounted for 32% of the sales.  Since June, this is what the progression looked like:  38%, 43%, 45%, 47%, and 54%.  

There’s your First Time Home Buyers Tax Credit, for you!  The acceleration probably has to do with the (now extended) November 30th expiration.  So, home prices haven’t gone lower across the board – the weighting just became skewed.    

So, what really is the current Average Sold Price?  A quick, but unsophisticated, way to find the “un-skewed” average price is by using a “dollars per square foot” price comparison.  Dollars Per Square Foot, is the result of dividing the sold price by the size of the house.  The average Dollars Per Square Foot of the homes sold in October was 10% less than those of last January.  

Using the A-D-P-S-F yardstick, that would mean October’s (inelegantly) corrected Average Sales Price of $180,167 would be $189,835.  If the same correction were to be made month-by-month back through July (where the effect of the First Timer’s tax credit really began to show) I would be willing to bet that it would graph as a nearly flat line.  Voila!  We are on the bottom.

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: 379,000

  • Avg. Days on Market: 69

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