Saturday, February 5, 2011

Orange County Housing Report: Housing Demand is Back!

For the Orange County housing market, the Super Bowl typically marks the largest increases in housing demand.

A Normal Housing Cycle: Demand may not quite be at where it was in the mid-2000’s, but it is finally following a normal cyclical pattern.
Absent housing rebates, the real estate market is finally functioning on its own. It is easier to gauge where the market is heading. Demand is not being propped up like it was last year in the spring or 2009 in the winter with the first time home buyer tax credits. So, what does a “normal” housing cycle mean to Orange County? After taking down the holiday decorations, stuffing them into their corresponding boxes and then putting them away in the attic, everybody has been able to turn their attention to life as usual. That includes the return of buyer demand. Demand surges at the end of January, levels off in February and then swells to its highest point of the year from March through May, the spring market. At the same time, many sellers know it’s the best time of the year to sell, so a larger number of homeowners place their homes on the market. WARNING TO SELLERS: just because it is the best time of the year to sell, that does NOT mean that buyers are willing to pay a premium for a home in today’s market. Buyers today are “spreadsheet buyers,” meaning they are going to concentrate on the most recent comparable and pending sales to carefully arrive at price. They do not want to overpay for a home and will patiently wait for realistic sellers to negotiate with. My fear for the Orange County housing market is that a number of unrealistic sellers, and even unrealistically priced bank foreclosures, will hit the market like they did last year. I am holding out for a return of the discretionary seller. Sellers should only place their homes on the market if and only if they are ready to do what it takes to sell their home, starting with carefully arriving at price just like buyers. For the spring, expected market time will fall to its lowest point of the year. From June through August, the summer months, the second best time of the year to sell a home, demand will fall slightly, yet the steady stream of homes coming on the market will continue. Many sellers mistaken the summer as the best time of the year to sell a home. Expected market time will rise slightly during the summer market. With the kids starting school, purchasing a home is not as convenient, so demand begins to decelerate further and so does the stream of homes placed on the market. The expected market time during the autumn market remains about the same as the summer. With goblins and ghosts running from door to door chanting “TRICK OR TREAT,” the Orange County housing market transitions to the slowest time of the year, the holiday market. With all of the distractions of the holidays, demand decelerates until it reaches its lowest point of the housing cycle, New Year’s Day. The stream of homes that hit the market slows considerably. Buyers in the marketplace often complain of “nothing new” to look at. The expected market time during the holidays typically rises slightly. This is an outline of a normal housing cycle in Orange County. We have not witnessed a normal cycle in years. There is something refreshing about normal.

Housing Demand: In the last two weeks, housing demand surged.
Demand, the number of new pending sales over the prior month, increased by 26% in the past two weeks, adding an additional 564 homes, and now totals 2,718 pending sales. Thus far this year, demand is a mirror image of 2009, prior to any artificial government stimulus. Last year, there were 530 additional pending sales; but, remember that demand was being propped up by the $8,000 first time home buyer tax credit.

The Active Inventory: the inventory is rising at the same pace as last year.
Two years ago, sellers approached the market with extreme caution. Last year, everybody threw caution into the wind and replaced it with unwarranted optimism. They fell for news of year over year increases in the median sales price and multiple offers on many listed homes. The problem with the median sales price is that it is not an accurate gauge of appreciations or depreciation. It will give an overall feel for where house values are headed, but is not precise. Stack up all sales in a month and take the exact middle value and you get the median sales price. If all of a sudden there is an increase in the number of upper range homes sold, the median sales price is skewed upward. When values were falling like a rock at the end of 2007 and beginning of 2008, only the lower range was selling, the median sales price was skewed lower. Unwarranted optimism is my number one concern for the housing market in 2011. Only realistic homeowners will succeed in today’s marketplace.

In the past two weeks the active inventory added an additional 164 homes and now totals 10,389 homes. Last year at this time there were 2,532 fewer homes on the market.

Expected Market Time and Price Ranges: the expected market time increases as the price range increases.
For Orange County as a whole, the expected market time has dropped in the past month from 5.10 months to 3.82 months today, a slight seller’s market. For homes priced below $750,000, 76% of the active listing inventory, the expected market time is a robust 3.37 months. Even though it is technically a seller’s market, do not expect appreciation. There are just too many distressed homes in the marketplace, keeping a lid on appreciation. For homes priced between $750,000 and $1.5 million, the expected market time is 4.91 months, technically a market in equilibrium. From $1.5 million to $2.5 million, the expected market time is actually at its lowest level in several years. Still a buyer’s market, the expected market time is 9.43 months. For homes above $4 million, there are 277 homes on the market and only 2 pending sales within the last month. That’s an expected market time of just over 138 months. That is most likely an anomaly, but a strong indicator that the highest priced homes on the market should be prepared for a slow 2011.

The Distressed Market: there’s still not much change in the distressed market.
In the past two weeks the active distressed inventory, both foreclosure and short sales, dropped by 13 homes. Not much has changed since last September, growing by only 65 homes, now totaling 4,104. There are 726 foreclosures on the market, adding just two homes in the past two weeks. The expected market time for foreclosures is 1.64 months, a HOT seller’s market. There are currently 3,378 short sales on the active market with an expected market time of 2.85 months, also a seller’s market. Expect the distressed inventory to slightly increase as the year progresses. Do not expect a wave of new distressed activity.

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