Tuesday, October 25, 2011

ARMLS STATS 10/25/2011

Pendings Rise, Inventory Flat
October to be a slow month for sales



Pending: 11,425 ( +147 from last week)
Pending Sfam: 9,941 ( +100 from last week)

AWC: 7,659 ( -127 from last week)
AWC Sfam: 6,620 ( -117 from last week)

Active: 19,733 ( +43 from last week)
Active Sfam: 15,507 ( +73 from last week)

Closed 10/17-10/23: 1,553
Closed Sfam: 1,323

New listings in October: 7,453



October is shaping up to be a soft month this year, with sales perhaps reaching their lowest point since February. Much of this has to do with the summer swoon we experienced when the debt discussions came about. Weakened consumer confidence is the result. There are of course, other factors. October is often the third weakest sales month of the year, research shows. We are going to be looking at sales in the 7000, most likely, and I think it will surpass February, but we will have to see how this week goes. The good news is that pendings are trending upward again, although we are likely to see that fall at the end of the month when there is a rush of sales.
Active listings are also climbing, as expected, but ever so slightly as to be almost flat. We are in our slow season, but we still continue to see soft numbers of listings. Less listings and more sales means its difficult for inventory to grow. A few more months of this level of inventory growth and relative sales, and we will be back to our big sales months with very limited inventory to satiate it with.

I want to focus on pending growth; if we can maintain pending sales in the high 11,000's into 12,000's, through the winter months, it probably means a strong recovery in March, including on prices. That will mean relatively few homes available, and lots of demand, because once we get to March there will be a lot of buying pressure on the relatively few homes available. I would also like to mention that pendings are a very true indicator of traditional sales; professional investors are buying many of the homes at courthouse steps, while retail investors and home livers buy them through MLS. The word is that there is strong demand at the auctions, which means inevitably some of these homes will appear in MLS once rehabbed. However, many will be turned into rentals, and ultimately, we may see the effect of too many investor purchases turning into a boon to renters in a few years, as there will be a lot of rental properties. Of course, right now, there are lots of renters, so it is lucrative. There was article discussing that today: there is solid growth in revenue for investors.

Overall, we are kind of sitting in the doldrums for a while; the president came up with some new programs for refinancing that I think almost everyone is non-plussed about. The government can't save housing short of making lenders take a massive haircut, or do quickly adjustable loans, and they are not doing that. Everything is a half-measure, so don't expect their program to make a lot of difference or cause even a stir.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

ARMLS STATS 10/18/2011

Pendings, Inventory, both Up but statistically Flat
Median price might be rising, median asking price Sharply higher
Builder sentiment getting stronger?


Pending: 11,278 ( +60 from last week)
Pending Sfam: 9,841 ( +48 from last week)

AWC: 7,786 ( +62 from last week)
AWC SFam: 6,737 ( +54 from last week)

Active: 19,690 ( +96 from last week)
Active Sfam: 15,434 ( +65 from last week)

Closed 10/10-10/16: 1,643 ( +379 from last week)
Closed Sfam: 1,414 ( +311 from last week)

New Listings in October: 5,259

Median Price: $115,000 (+$2000 from September)


Just a couple of comments. Listings toward the end of September grew faster than expected, so there might be more inventory coming than we have seen all year. Through September 13th, there were only 3367 new listings, but the month finished with 9700, so there were quite a few added late. It still is way below last September- 24% less, but its significant to note the number of new listings accelerated. We are through the 18th of october, and we have 5259, which a bit ahead of September's pace. September did finish with upwards of 9700, so the pace was something like 323 a day, while we are currently at 292 a day in October. It certainly doesn't look like any overwhelming number, but it does seem to be growing slightly. Not unexpected, but significant anyway.

Secondly, we are perhaps beginning to see the median price rise take hold. The October median was substantially higher, and so far we are running a bit higher than that, at $115,000. That doesn't mean we will stay there; it often falls off at the end of the month when a large bulk of homes sold, but that didn't occur in September. It stayed fairly high. We shouldn't expect straightline northward movement in the median price, especially considering the time of year we are in, but the bias seems to be higher, even if the number stays relatively flat. Another good sign for the housing industry. It is only an indicator and not a direct route to higher prices, but the median listing price has been climbing, and so far in October is $20,000 higher than last October, and $10,000 higher than last month, which was up already near $10,000 from the previous month. There is either optimism by sellers, or the low end is being cleaned out and higher end homes are being put on the market. Its not a direct indicator, but certainly the higher asking price is a good sign.

Inventory has started to rise a bit; nothing substantial, and statistically almost nothing, but it has gone up three weeks in a row after falling pretty much every week all year. It is our relatively slow time, but in retrospect, September was a decent month for activity, with over 8100 homes sold. I don't expect October to hold up to that level. We are running behind that pace, and I expect it to fall into the 7000's. Certainly not a bad number, its just a slower time of the year. It should handily beat last October's 6,521 sales, but we will have to wait and see. We have started to see the fallout a bit of the economic malaise of the summer gov't uncertainty. It's not terrible, but it would be nice if we were really hitting on all cylinders. Pendings were up slightly, but statistically, they were virtually flat.

The one really bright spot that came out today was a marked increase in the Builder's sentiment index. It is still exceedingly poor, but these were the biggest jumps in a year. If the builders have reason for optimism, perhaps we do to.

I think it is fairly safe to say we are in hibernation mode until the spring buying season. We seem to be holding up pretty well, but I don't see any fundamental changes to the housing market locally until we get to the high demand months. What we do want to monitor is new inventory; it has remained exceptionally light all year, which has allowed us some room for recovery. If we don't have any great changes in the trends, we could have a very strong market going forward in 2012.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Pendings and Active with Contingency Rise
Inventory Rises slightly as expected

Pending: 11,218 ( +236 from last week)
Pending Sfam: 9,793 ( +179 from last week)

AWC: 7,724 ( +170 from last week)
AWC Sfam: 6,683 ( +127 from last week)

Active: 19,594 ( +114 from last week)
Active Sfam: 15,369 ( +120 from last week)

Closed: 10/3-10/9: 1,264
Closed sfam: 1,103

No commentary this week; nothing really interesting with these numbers.