At the stroke of midnight on April 30th the Federal first time home buyer tax credit will end, but there is just too much demand for it to spell the end to demand. Everybody within the real estate trenches, blogs and media have been looking to the end of the tax credit like the infamous Y2K predictions of a little more than decade ago. Remember those days? I had a neighbor who bought a trash can from the local hardware store and filled it with bottled water and canned goods claiming that the end of life as we knew it was upon us. Governments, banks, power companies, airports, traffic systems and more were all supposed to fail on the first day of the year 2000. Nothing really happened. For Orange County real estate, the end of the tax credit is not going to have much of an impact either. Don’t get me wrong; all of the government stimulus has definitely had a profound impact of the real estate market right in our very own backyard; however, it is time to move on. The program has to end sometime and it might as well be during the hottest time of the year, the Spring market. Yes, we have had buyers hurry to cash in on the credits, but there are enough first time home buyers that have been unsuccessful in purchasing thus far that will still be looking. The reports from the trenches are that these buyers are not about to do an about face and leave the market with their tales between their legs. More recently, many buyers saw the credit as a perk. The new California tax credit that starts this Monday is only going to last about a week due to the fact that only 17,500 first time home buyers in ALL of California will obtain the $10,000 credit (spread over three years) before the funds runs out. Yet, when California announced the credit about a month ago, demand was already hot. It did nothing to instigate more demand. The problem has been not enough supply in the lower ranges where first time home buyer activity is the greatest, not a lack of demand. Also, first time home buyer activity has been bumping along at about 25% of total activity. It is not going to drop significantly and there are plenty of non-first time home buyers in the marketplace as well.
Interest Rates: Rates are expected to rise which drops home affordability.
Buyers are motivated to purchase knowing that the expected rise in interest rates will ultimately make their payments go up. But, it is more than that. As interest rates rise, buyers can afford less of a home. This is best illustrated in an example. For a buyer with an income of $100,000 and putting 20% down, a rise in interest rates from 5% to 6% equates in in home affordability from $590,000 to $540,000, a $50,000 drop. With the government no longer committing to purchasing pools of loans, which ended on March 31st, interest rates are expected to rise a full percent over the coming year.
Housing Demand: Demand has not seen these levels since June of 2005
Demand, the number of new pending sales over the prior month, increased by 231 homes over the prior two weeks and now totals 3,979, a 3% increase and the height thus far in 2010. Demand is 347 pending sales stronger than last year at this time and 1,439 stronger than two years ago. Demand should hit a plateau through the remainder of the Spring market.
Active Listing Inventory: The active inventory has continued its gradual climb and just reached levels not seen since June of last year.
Over the past two weeks, the inventory has increased by 174 homes to 9,351, a 2% increase. We started the year at 7,165 listings and have added 2,186 homes to the active inventory to date. Last year, the inventory continued to drop from mid-March to the New Year. The increase seems gradual, but when looked at since the beginning of the year, a 31% increase is pretty profound. Agents in the trenches are stating that there are more overpriced, unrealistic sellers placing their homes on the market. Prior to the start of the year I forecasted that the discretionary seller would return; however, if more and more homes are placed on the market at unrealistic values, the inventory will continue to rise. This rise in inventory could dampen demand. This is a trend that we will have to continue to watch. If you are a homeowner contemplating placing your home on the market much higher than the most recent comparable sales and pending activity, the current market will not support your line of thinking. Buyers are not willing to pay a sizeable sum extra for a home simply because there is more demand and more competition. There is just too much distress that remains in the market and the distressed market is keeping a lid on appreciation.
Expected Market Time: Every price range experienced a drop in the expected market time. The expected market time for all of Orange County dropped slightly from 2.45 months two weeks ago to 2.35 months today. Yet, there still are two distinct markets: homes priced below $1 million, HOT, and homes priced above $1 million COLD. It is important to note that the lower the range, the HOTTER the market. For homes priced below $500,000, the hottest range, the expected market time is 1.6 months. Compare that to homes priced above $4 million where the expected market time is a frigid 29.5 months.
Distressed Inventory: The number of active foreclosures increased while the number of active short sales decreased.
The number of active distressed homes on the market, all short sales and foreclosures combined, increased by only 9 homes in the past two weeks and now total 2,790, or 29.8% of the current active inventory. Last year at this time, there were 3,724 distressed homes on the market, representing 35.9% of the active inventory. The number of foreclosures within the active listing inventory increased by 38 homes in the past two weeks from 416 to 454. The expected market time for foreclosures is 1.12 months, an extremely HOT seller’s market. Short sales, where a homeowner attempts to sell a home for less than the total outstanding loans against a home, which requires lender approval, decreased by 29 homes over the past two weeks and now total 2,336. The expected market time for short sales is 1.53 months, also a HOT seller’s market. Everybody’s looking for a deal, so there’s a lot of competition in purchasing foreclosures and short sales.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Orange County Housing Report: End of Credit Won’t End Demand
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