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Archive for April 2009

Real Estate Market Begins To Shift To a Seller’s Market

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

After a tumultuous two years, the real estate market is beginning to show signs of improvement. During the last three weeks, the Maricopa County absorption rate has steadily declined. The absorption rate is the ratio between active and solds: the time it would take at the current rate of sale for the inventory to be completely sold.

At present, the rate is down to an astonishing 5.5 – a few years ago, it wasn’t uncommon for a house in Arizona to sit on the market for 25-30 months. Anything under an absorption rate of 6 is considered a sellers market.

What does this mean for those of you looking to buy a home?

The time to buy a home is now – investors are snatching up properties, and the number of properties for sale has dropped significantly:

• During the last year, the number of homes for sale in Maricopa County has hovered at 55,000 – as of April 24, only 44,707 homes are available for purchase.

• In the last 30 days, 8,121 properties closed escrow.

This means more people competing for fewer properties.

While the number of homes for sale has dropped, banks and lenders are listing properties at unbelievable low prices and waiting for buyers to bid up the price within a matter of days. Realtors are getting calls from buyers who are disappointed to learn that the homes they are interested in making offers on are homes with comparable home values sometimes as much at $20-30k above list price and with multiple offers already on the table that are well above list price. For this reason, we will primarily feature properties that are private sales (or what I call retail).

What does this mean for those of you looking to sell your home?

Some tips for those of you looking to sell a home: the prices may bounce along the bottom for some time before we see a price recovery. But I can assure you that the average person (with a loan) trying to buy a foreclosure in the $100k range is up against sometimes as many as 5 or 6 cash buyers. Only one of the those people got the property they were bidding on, which means 5 other properties will be bought by those cash buyers who are getting hungrier each time they get beat out.

The Calm Before The Storm

Monday, April 13th, 2009

As those of you who have been following my blog know, one of the main statistical areas I have been tracking is the ratio between Active (for sale) and Closed (sold) properties on the MLS. I look at the whole MLS and also target Tempe as a sample of a local market.

At the end of March I noticed that many offers on properties below $150k were going very quickly and these properties frequently had multiple offers. Concerned by this trend I decided to check the MLS and noticed that the inventory was down to 50,200 active listings, 200 away from the 50,000 threshold. The market was last below 50,000 back in January of 2007. One day later it had dropped below 50,000.

I began monitoring the numbers on a daily basis and found the inventory dropping by hundreds each day. My last check, prior to writing this blog was Wednesday, April 8, the total for active listings was 47,394 in the morning and 47,267 by the evening. A 6% drop in less then 10 days.

Going a bit deeper we see that there are 12,341 pending listings (under contract) which means the total sold for the past 30 days (7,554) could jump substantially in the next month.

The significance of this number is the ratio between Active and Solds, which gives us the absorption rate: the time it would take at the current rate of sale for the inventory to be completely sold. For the past few days that rate has hovered between 6.5 and 6.2 months. That is down from 12 months in October 2008 and 18 months in April 2008. A very significant drop.

What is more significant is the 6 months inventory is the turning point between a buyer’s market (above 6 months) and a seller’s market (below 6 months).

The main factor driving these numbers is the anecdotal evidence: that bank properties are starting to be bought up, that there are frequently multiple offers and that investors are buying bank properties in blocks of 25 or 50 units.

Many buyers have been sitting on the fence in the belief that prices will drop further. As soon as they figure out that the prices are not dropping any more, they will start buying aggressively. The calm will be over and the storm will begin.

By the time these buyers catch on, prices will already be rising and they will either be paying more or will no longer find quality products at the prices they wish to pay…

Thus the calm before the storm.

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