Monday, March 23, 2009

Orange County Housing Report: 21% Fewer Distressed Homes on the Market

As the market marches forward, the distressed active inventory, both foreclosures and short sales, has dropped by 21% since its peak in August of 2008. There have been various explanations for a dip in the number of distressed sales, like legislation that lengthens the amount of time to file a notice of default (when somebody is behind on their mortgage) and ultimately delay foreclosure. The problem with that theory is that the distressed inventory has been steadily dropping for seven months. The distressed inventory has dropped by 1,277 homes, or 21%. On August 7, 2008, the distressed inventory was at 5,950 homes and represented 41% of the 14,348 total active inventory (both distressed and non-distressed listings). Today, the distressed inventory has fallen to 4,673, 40% of the 11,606 total active inventory. One year ago today, the distressed inventory was at 5,221, 548 more that today, the second report in a row with a year over year improvement. However, the distressed inventory is still extremely high. This inventory needs to drop significantly for the real estate market to start to appreciate once again. The rate that it drops is slow because of the number of bad loans in the system combined with a high unemployment. However, in the lower ranges, the rate of depreciation has slowed remarkably, and even bottomed in some areas. This is due primarily to the extremely high demand in the lower ranges, homes priced below $500,000. This range accounts for 49% of the total active inventory, but 73% of demand. There are some cities with expected market times close to two months, technically a seller’s market. A lot of this demand has been fueled by the drop in prices and the desire to acquire a bank owned, foreclosed home. Buyers looking for a home below $500,000 need to be prepared for a lot of competition. The average sales to list price ratio for foreclosed homes is 101%, meaning that, on average, the home is selling for above the list price. Short sales DOMINATE the distressed sales market within Orange County and account for 80.7% of all distressed homes. The other 19.4% are foreclosures, the hottest properties in the county. There are currently 905 foreclosures on the market and demand, the number of homes placed into escrow within the last month, is at 882 pending sales. The expected market time for foreclosure is 1.03 months. Foreclosures are so hot, that multiple offers are the norm. The demand is similar to 2005 demand for all homes, CRAZY seller’s market. Buyers in today’s market expect a discount and expect to be able to take their time in making a decision to write a purchase offer. Most buyers must learn the hard way, after losing a property or two, that these homes generate tremendous buyer competition. The expected market time for short sales has dropped significantly, now at 4.95 months, but this figure is grossly overinflated due to the nature of short sales. Short sales are where a homeowner attempts to sell their home, owing more than their home is worth. Even though most short sales have an agreed upon purchase offer between a buyer and the seller, most are continually marketed as an active listing rather than as a pending sale because of the belief by many that they do not have an official acceptance until the lender approves the sale at a discount in what is owed. In the trenches, agents are reporting that vast majority of short sales that are a part of the active inventory have offers that are already submitted to the lender(s). Another giant drawback to short sales is that the “lender approval” process can take weeks to months to obtain. Often, by the time a lender does approve of a short sale offer, the buyer has already moved onto another home. The bottom line, there may be a lot of distressed homes on the market, but as a buyer, expect a lot of competition.

So how do the numbers look? In the past two weeks, demand, the number of new pending sales within the prior month, increased by 46 pending sales to 2,670. Last year at this time there were 587 fewer pending sales, totaling 2,083. Two years ago there were 2,195 pending sales, 475 fewer than today. All of the recent stimulus aimed specifically at real estate should begin to trickle down into the Orange County real estate scene in the form of increased demand within the next couple of weeks. In the trenches, agents are already reporting increased buyer interest, increased open house activity and more buyers on the verge of writing after fence sitting for quite some time. All of the ingredients for an increase are there: historically low interest rates, government incentives to purchase now, and a lot of government intervention aimed at placing a sound bottom underneath the housing market. Prices, especially in the upper ranges, may continue to fall; however, what most buyers fail to consider is that these historically low interest rates will not be around forever. Instead, with all of the money that the federal government is pumping into our economy, the U.S. economy will most certainly endure a major increase in inflation down the road. The Federal Reserve responds to an increase in inflation with an increase in interest rates. In 1990, interest rates were thought to be at a great level when they broke just below 10%. At 5%, today’s approximate interest rate, the payment for a $500,000 loan is $2,684. At 7%, the payment is $3,327, an increase of $643 per month. At 10%, the payment would be $4,388, a difference of $1,704. Even if homes were to fall an additional 10%, a 7% loan at $450,000 would be $2,994, still $310 a month more than a 5% loan at $500,000. At 10% it would be $1,265 more per month. The beauty of homeownership in Orange County is it is an incredible long term investment. So, if you are a buyer and can live in your home for more than just a few years, ultimately it makes sense to buy as soon as you isolate the home that best fits your family’s criteria and budget. It may not pay to wait because after the economy turns around, inflation will increase interest rates. Almost all buyers fail to factor the negative effects of increasing interest rates, which can be profound.

The active listing inventory continues to remain relatively unchanged so far this year, increasing by only 65 homes over the past month, bringing the current total to 11,606. Last year the active inventory was at 15,617 homes, 35% higher. Two years ago there were 1,767 additional homes on the market, totaling 13,373, 15% higher. The current expected market time decreased slightly from 4.41 months two weeks ago to 4.35 months today. Last year the expected market time was 7.5 months. Two year ago the expected market time was 6.09 months. Total Orange County pending sales continues to reach record heights over the past two reports. I started tracking the statistic back in September of 2006. After increasing by 142 homes over the past two weeks, the total pending count has reached 4,550 pending sales. Last year at this time, total pending sales totaled 2,852, 1,698 fewer than today. Two years ago it was at 3,321, 1,229 fewer.

The condition of the Orange County real estate market really depends upon the price range. The story of 2009 remains the same, the lower the price range, the hotter the market. The hottest range is detached homes below $250,000 with an expected market time of only 1.94 months. However, there are only 303 detached homes in that range. The second hottest range is detached homes between $250,000 and $500,000, with an expected market time of 2.27 months.

It will be interesting to see the impact of all of the recent stimulus within the various ranges. We can expect the lower ranges to improve and eventually bottom first. It won’t be until confidence is restored in the financial marketplace, the current focus of the Federal Reserve, the Obama administration and Congress, that we will see a bottom in the upper ranges.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Orange County Housing Report: A Stimulating Pause

As all of the details of the various stimulus plans are slowly making their way to Main Street, the Orange County housing market has slowed as well. The tax credit for first time home buyers (individuals who have not owned within the prior 3 years), the increased conventional loan limit to $729,750, the unveiling of the details to help instigate lenders to refinance loans for homeowners who are as much as 5% upside down in their homes, and the unveiling of the finer points to help promote loan modifications, are only just beginning to make their way to the experts and professionals that work within the real estate and lending industries. It is no wonder that there has been a pause in recent Orange County demand as buyers are just not yet aware of how all of the recent fanfare applies to them. Also, there has benn recent news of even more stimulus to come to help resurrect the dormant financial engine that keeps our economy in gear. The frozen financial markets are only moving because the U.S. Treasury is purchasing pools of loans to keep lending flowing. The government is working on incentives to motivate investors to enter the game as well. They are looking to help purchase “toxic assets,” a term that simply means “bad loans,” to help instigate lenders to lend again. The problem thus far has been that lenders have received billions of dollars from the government only to clamp down further on lending. Part of the problem is that for every loan that is bad, they have to have a certain threshold of capital set aside. With so many bad loans on the books, lenders have had to maintain hordes of capital in the form of reserves and they cannot use that money for new loans. So, this is what the government is sifting through in the background to repair out financial markets and restore confidence in the U.S. financial system once again. As more and more of these programs are unveiled there will be a slight delay until it trickles down to the Orange County marketplace. Similarly, the new higher conventional loan limits that were unveiled in February of 2007 took over a month until it finally hit Main Street in the form of new loans. The latest round of stimulus was only unveiled in the third week of February of this year, but the real estate and financial industries are still ironing out all of the details. With all of the stimulus and record low interest rates, each program is going to slowly trickle down in the form of increased demand in real estate in weeks and months to come.

So how do the numbers look? In the past two weeks, demand, the number of new pending sales within the prior month, decreased by 195 homes to 2,624. Last year at this time there were 731 fewer pending sales, totaling 1,893. Two years ago there were 2,388 pending sales, 236 fewer than today. The affects on demand from the stimulus plan should probably start to play out within the Orange County real estate marketplace over the next month. The active listing inventory has remained relatively unchanged so far this year, increasing by only 43 homes over the past month, bringing the current total to 11,562. Last year the active inventory was at 15,412 homes, 33% higher. Two years ago there were 996 additional homes on the market, totaling 12,558, 10% higher. The current expected market time increased from 4.09 months two weeks ago to 4.41 months today. Last year the expected market time was 8.14 months. Two year ago the expected market time was 5.26 months. Total Orange County pending sales is at a much healthier level compared to the last two years. Currently, total pending sales is at 4,408, an increase of 67 pending sales in the past two weeks. This is the highest level for total pending sales since I began tracking this figure back in September of 2006. Last year at this time, total pending sales totaled 2,524, 1,884 fewer than today. Two years ago it was at 3,419, 989 fewer compared to today. Today marks the first time that the distressed inventory is lower compared to the prior year, after falling by another 99 foreclosures and short sales over the prior two weeks to 4,408. One year ago today, the distressed inventory was at 5,057, 649 more than today. Since peaking on August 7th at 5,950, the distressed active inventory has dropped by 20%; that is 1,166 fewer distressed homes on the active market. The distressed inventory represents 41% of the total active inventory, dropping from 42% two weeks ago. The number of pending sales that are either a short sale or a foreclosure remained at 62%. The expected market time for foreclosures increased slightly from its record low of .99 months two weeks ago to 1.08 months today. Foreclosures remain the hottest category of homes within the Orange County marketplace today. The expected market time for short sales dropped ever so slightly from 5.16 months to 5.14 months today, a record low for the current housing downturn.

The condition of the Orange County real estate market really depends upon the price range. Of course, the lower the price range, the hotter the market. The hottest range is detached homes below $250,000 with an expected market time of only 1.95 months. However, there are only 321 detached homes within the detached active home inventory out of 6,966 total, less than 5%. The second hottest range is detached homes between $250,000 and $500,000 with an expected market time of 2.46 months. There are 1,905 detached homes within that range, 27% of the detached inventory.

It will be interesting to witness the ramifications of increased demand in the lower ranges. The lower ranges are already hot and there have been reports from the trenches that a bottom in pricing has been achieved in many areas where prices have not changed over the course of the past few months. As a stronger bottom is established in the lower ranges throughout Orange County, and the flow of financial system is restored, the strength in the market will eventually start to trickle up to the higher ranges.