Market Summary for the Beginning of August

August 13, 2011 at 8:48 AM Leave a comment

Although we didn’t see the record breaking sales numbers of June, July had plenty of positive news for market watchers. An important exception was pricing, and no doubt much will be made of that by the housing doom folks, but then Cromford Report readers all know that pricing is a trailing indicator, don’t we?

According to the current ARMLS data, 8,522 homes closed during July across all areas and types. This is 19.4% below the 10,568 we are measuring today for  June. This dip between June and July is a normal seasonal effect. The key comparison to make is with July 2010. Here we are up 23.3% compared with 6,911 a clear sign that the market is healthier today than it was last year when we were reporting significant deterioration.

Due to the exceptionally large number of short sales in the ARMLS numbers, we experience a lot of “turbulence” in these sales numbers and they continue to change for many weeks after the end of the month. On July 2 last month we could see 3,057 short sales and pre-foreclosures across Greater Phoenix but this number is now measured at 2,481. The flexmls system automatically closes pending transactions when their Close of Escrow date is reached. Quite often a snag occurs in real life and a sale fails to  close when expected and  has to be manually reversed later. This is far more likely to happen with short sales than other types because of the large number of approvals and documents needed to successfully close escrow. As usual our sales counts will be constantly monitored and corrected as newer statistics emerge on a daily basis. The 19% drop-out rate for June is the highest we have seen and is unlikely to be repeated in July’s numbers, but please treat all reports with caution due to this effect.

Here are some key figures for all areas & types:

Pending Listings: 11,491 on August 1, down 6% from 12,224 on July 1, but up 17% compared with August 1, 2010.

Active Listings: 27,787 on August 1, down 3.6% from 28,837 on July 1, and down 34.6% compared with August 1, 2010.

Listing Success Rate: 74.4% on August 1 which compares favorably with 73.5% on July 1 and very favorably with 58.5% on August 1, 2010.

In a normal year supply starts to increase from the beginning of July, so that 3.6% decline in active listings is a positive sign. Because of the lower monthly sales rate in July, months of supply has edged up from 2.9 to 3.0 months, but this is well below normal. The average months of supply for 2001 onwards is 5.8 months. A less volatile way to measure inventory is to divide active listings by the annual sales rate as this largely eliminates seasonal effects. Here we are seeing 105 days of inventory, improving from the 110 we measured last month and the lowest number of days of inventory since February 2006. The average days inventory since January 2001 is 174, so we have a significant under-supply of homes for sale through ARMLS.

Supply continues to drop while demand remains relatively strong. However that demand is not evenly distributed across the price ranges. In the last month we have seen the market strengthen at the low end while losing a lot of momentum at the middle and high end. Compared with July 2010, this month saw dramatic sales growth for single family homes below $100,000 but above that figure the picture is mixed. A few ranges performed fairly well, notably $100K->$125K, $175K->$200K, $400K->$500K and $1.5M->$2M, but there was a huge hole at the very top end of the market. Last year we had eleven closed sales over $3,000,000 during July and this July we have just one. Sales volumes are also down between $225K and $400K and between $600K and $1.5M. As you can imagine, an increase in the volumes under $100,000 pulls the average sales price and the average sales price per sq. ft. down substantially. The sales weakness in the higher range exacerbates this. However all that buying at the low end has caused the median sales price to stay fairly strong and it has barely changed over the last seven months.

As is normal when a market is attempting to recover from a long and disastrous plunge, there are plenty of conflicting signals:

Signs That Prices Are Going to Go Down

  • The average list price per sq ft for pending listings continues to drift downwards, down 1.5% in the last month.
  • The average asking price per sq. ft. for normal listings has fallen by 1.6% in the last month.
  • Monthly average sales prices are making fresh lows.

Signs That Prices Are Going to Go Up

  • The average asking price per sq. ft.  for lender owned homes has risen by 7.4% in the last month.
  • Sold price as a percentage of list continues to go up.
  • Remarkably few listings are being canceled or expired.
  • Investors are now purchasing nearly 40% of the properties auctioned at trustee sales in Maricopa County.
  • Average days on market for closed sales is coming down.

Signs That Price Are Going to Stay Flat

  • The average asking price per sq. ft. for short sales and pre-foreclosure has barely moved in the last month.
  • Median sales prices are essentially flat.

So you can take your pick. It seems to me that although the supply/demand imbalance is becoming extreme, demand from investors alone is unlikely to sustain a significant upward price movement. We may have to wait until the general public realizes the degree to which the reality and perception of the supply picture have diverged, so that fear of missing out on a bargain overcomes the fear of prices dropping yet further.

There are still many sources claiming that a “new tidal wave of foreclosures” is going to hit the Phoenix area. This is pure imagination and reminds me of the Y2K phenomenon in 1999. Despite a busy final week in July, the trustees of Maricopa County only issued 4,194 new notices of which 4,015 were residential. This compares with 8,140 in total and 7,802 residential for July last year. Foreclosure notices are down 48% to the lowest level since December 2007. As for actual trustee sales, we had 3,330 in July of which 3,176 were residential. This is 31% down from July last year and 36% below March this year. The trend is obvious and strongly downward and it seems  we are  about 75% of the way through the foreclosure tsunami of 2007-2012. This observation is only made about Maricopa County and is probably not true elsewhere, especially in states that use a judicial foreclosure process.

Source:  http://cromfordreport.com

Advertisement

Entry filed under: Market Conditions. Tags: , .

Making an Offer on a Fannie Mae Owned Property Market Summary for the Beginning of September

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Previous Blog Posts

Previous Blog Posts

RSS National Real Estate News

RSS Arizona Business News

  • Coyotes' deal inching towards completion goal February 24, 2012
    There are more murmurs that a Phoenix Coyotes sales from the National Hockey League to former San Jose Sharks CEO Greg Jamison is close to a done deal. That would keep the Coyotes in Arizona and not scooting off to Quebec City, Seattle or another market. The Roc & Manuch Show on KDUS 1060 AM in Phoenix is reporting the Coyotes sale could be made official […]
    Mike Sunnucks
  • Hunt Construction set for Wichita airport terminal project February 24, 2012
    Dondlinger & Sons Construction submitted the low bid Friday to be general contractor for the new Wichita Mid-Continent Airport terminal. Its bid was $99,370,542. Nine other companies submitted bids. Assuming Dondlinger and its partner on the project, Phoenix-based Hunt Construction Group, get all the necessary approvals, it could awarded the construction […]
    John Stearns
  • See inside our Women in Business event and meet the honorees February 24, 2012
    Leadership, passion and determination were the themes of the evening as more than 400 attendees helped to celebrate the Phoenix Business Journal’s Women in Business honorees last night at the Arizona Biltmore Resort and Spa. The Phoenix Business Journal consistently recognizes the contributions of women to the business community, and this year, we celebrate […]
    Ilana Lowery
  • Arizona Corporation Commission to take no position on energy policy bill February 24, 2012
    The Arizona Corporation Commission voted on Thursday to take no position on a bill in the Legislature that would require energy policy approved at the commission also be approved at the capitol. Commissioners voted 3-2 to remain neutral on House Bill 2789, which would require changes in the state's renewable energy or energy efficiency policies, among o […]
    Patrick O'Grady
  • Pinnacle West increases 4Q profit, sees lower annual income February 24, 2012
    Pinnacle West Capital Corp. saw better profits in the fourth quarter but a yearly dip as the parent company of Arizona Public Service Co. continues to hold the line on costs amid energy efficiency efforts and cooler weather that drove use down. Phoenix-based Pinnacle West (NYSE: PNW) reported a profit of $12.6 million for the quarter that ended Dec. 31, or 1 […]
    Patrick O'Grady

RSS Business News

  • Dow 13,000 is a big number, but it's just a number
    Big, round numbers are hard to ignore. That's why we pay attention when the odometer clicks over to 100,000 miles, and why the world threw a party at the dawn of 2000 instead of the technical start of the millennium in 2001....
  • S&P 500 index hits highest point since June 2008
    NEW YORK (AP) -- A two-point gain was enough to push the Standard & Poor's 500 index to its highest level since June 2008, three months before the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the darkest days of the financial crisis....
  • AP IMPACT: Lender's own probe links it to suicides
    MUMBAI, India (AP) -- First they were stripped of their utensils, furniture, mobile phones, televisions, ration cards and heirloom gold jewelry. Then, some of them drank pesticide. One woman threw herself in a pond. Another jumped into a well with her children....
  • Miracle diet pill? A safe drug is elusive
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The battle of the bulge has been a big, fat failure for U.S. drugmakers. But that hasn't stopped them from trying....
  • Judge awards iPhone user $850 in throttling case
    SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (AP) -- When AT&T started slowing down the data service for his iPhone, Matt Spaccarelli, an unemployed truck driver and student, took the country's largest telecommunications company to small claims court. And won....
  • Oil prices rising to near 2011 highs
    NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil prices are approaching last year's highs as tensions increase over Iran's nuclear program. The rise pushed gasoline prices on Friday to a national average of $3.65 per gallon, the highest ever for this time of year....
  • Bazaarvoice, Proto Labs surge in market debuts
    LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A splashy Wall Street debut by Bazaarvoice Inc. and Proto Labs Inc. is the latest sign that investor appetite for initial public offerings has rebounded after a dismal IPO market in 2011....
  • El Paso Corp. to sell oil, gas assets for $7.15B
    HOUSTON (AP) -- El Paso Corp. said Friday that it is selling its oil and gas exploration and production business to an investor group for $7.15 billion....
  • FDIC closes small banks in Georgia, Minnesota
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Regulators on Friday shuttered small banks in Georgia and Minnesota, bringing to 11 the number of U.S. bank failures this year....
  • New-home sales dip after 4 straight monthly gains
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sales of new homes dipped in January but the final quarter of 2011 was stronger than first estimated....

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 193 other followers