The Orange County Housing Inventory has inflated by 48% since the beginning of the year on the backs of unrealistic sellers.
Unrealistic Sellers: Overpriced homes have flooded the market.
Reports of tremendous competition among buyers have fueled unrealistic seller expectations. Reports of multiple offers and homes selling quickly have fueled it as well. Reports of an increase in the median sales price did not help either. Yes, there has been a lot of demand and homes have sold quickly, procuring multiple offers. However, none of this would have happened had it not been for a major increase in home affordability. There has been a culture shift in the past few years where people have gone from spending frivolously (and often recklessly) to saving, paying off debt and making sure that every penny counts. Five years ago home buyers were racing to buy homes at whatever price. Today, buyers have become “spreadsheet” buyers, not wanting to pay much more than the last closed sale, regardless of the amount of competition. Sure, after writing offer after offer after offer a buyer is more willing to up the ante a bit and pay a couple thousand dollars above the most recent comparable sale, but they are NOT going to pay an extra $25,000. That is how we have experienced slight appreciation over the past year. In the hottest ranges, buyers have been willing to pay a little bit extra to procure a home. Over the course of the past year, the small incremental increases have amounted to a positive change in pricing. But think about it; a 5% change in pricing did not happen overnight. The reports in a change in pricing are YEAR OVER YEAR. Back in the heydays of the mid-2000’s homes were increasing a lot faster. That just is not the case this time around. Homeowners have been fooled, thinking the market has not just bottomed, it has recovered. There have been so many homeowners who have sat on the sidelines waiting for the market to recover so that they could finally sell. These pent up sellers have been placing their homes on the market at ridiculous values. They have taken an increase of 5% over a year to mean that they can price their home 5% above the most recent comparable sale. Spreadsheet buyers are just not going to bite. The economy is too fragile for this line of thinking. Yes, there is a premium to selling a home with equity versus the short sale down the street; HOWEVER, a buyer is not going to pay thousands of dollars more. The bottom line: sellers really need to take a hard look in the mirror and ask whether or not they really can drop to the realistic fair market value of their home. If not, they need to stop wasting everybody’s time and pull their home off of the market.
Active Listing Inventory: The proof that unrealistic sellers have flooded the market, an unabated increase in the inventory.
This year the Orange County housing inventory has grown by 3,524 homes, a 48% increase. In the past two weeks, the inventory has grown by 355 homes, a 3% increase, and now totals 10,817. Last year at this time the inventory was at 8,946 homes, 1,871 fewer than today. Every range has experienced growth, but the most substantial growth can be found between $250,000 and $1 million with a 71% increase.
Housing Demand: Independence Day typically marks a drop in demand, this year is not exception.
Since artificially peaking at the end of April due to the end of the First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit, an $8,000 incentive, demand has dropped 28%. Demand, the number of new pending sales over the prior month, decreased by 247 in the past two weeks and now totals 2,860, levels not seen since January of this year. From here, demand typically rises slightly and peaks at the end of August before slowly deteriorating for the remainder of the year.
Expected Market Time: After bottoming at the end of April, the expected market time for homes in the OC has increased to its highest level of the year.
With an increase in the active listing inventory and a decrease in demand, the expected market time increased from 3.37 months two weeks ago to 3.78 months today. The overall market is still a “seller’s market,” but it is moving in the wrong direction. Remember, this seller’s market is different. There may be a lot of buyers and a lot of competition, but spreadsheet buyers are unwilling to pay much of a premium over the last comparable sale. At the end of April, the expected market time was at 2.35 months. Last year at this time the expected market time was at 2.66 months. For homes priced above $1 million, the expected market time is 10.61 months. Contrast that with homes priced below $1 million where the expected market time is 3.22 months.
Foreclosures and Short Sales: So far this year, the distressed inventory has grown by 29%.
The active distressed inventory has increased from 2,555 homes at the beginning of the year to 3,307, levels not seen since May of 2009. The distressed inventory now represents 31% of the current active inventory. Last year at this time, there were 2,766 distressed homes on the market, 541 fewer than today. The number of foreclosures within the active listing inventory increased by 19 homes in the past two weeks from 559 to 578. The expected market time for foreclosures is 1.73 months, an exceptionally HOT seller’s market. Short sales, where a homeowner attempts to sell a home for less than the total outstanding loans against a home, requiring lender approval, increased by 71 homes over the past two weeks and now total 2,729. The expected market time for short sales is 2.52 months, still a HOT seller’s market.
Monday, July 12, 2010
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