The Market Has Found Its Groove

June 16, 2009

The year is flying by or a least it seems that way. We are close to the mid-year point. The trends are clear and the market has found its groove.  The good news is that months supply of inventory (MSI) has dropped dramatically from last May. This May, six out of nine counties are under 5 months MSI with 5 months being average for a normal real estate market. Last May, only one county was under 5 months (SF at 3.3 months). In fact, five of the nine are currently under 4 months MSI.

The change has come from banks unloading the bulk of their REOs and short sale properties. The under $500K properties have flown off the shelf. Inventories are now anemic with few exceptions. Seven out of nine Bay Area counties have less than a 3 months supply of inventory (MSI) in the $500K and under price segment. Only Napa at 3.3 MSI, Marin 5.6 MSI and SF 5.7 MSI are above the 3 month mark. We have begun to see improvement in the $500K to $1 mil. price range.  Five counties are under 5 months, only Marin 5.4, Sonoma 7.2, Solano 9.0, and Napa 12.6 are over. However, eight of the nine counties have fallen month over month for the last 3 months. Some of the reduction is due to seasonality, however as prices have dropped, buyers have taken advantage of the values and interest rates.  The most challenged price segment has been the million dollar plus.  The MSI has been most impacted in this sector. It varies from a low of 7.3 months in SF (last May it was at 2.4 months) to a high of 50 months in Napa (Napa varies significantly from month to month depending on the no. of closes in this price segment–last month was 35 months).  There is a bit of a silver lining in that six of the nine counties months supply of inventory has dropped month over month for the last three months. Only Solano, Napa and Alameda have varied up and down in the million dollar plus price range.

Median and average sales price continues to fall in all counties, but at a slower pace than over last year. In fact, 6 out of the 9 counties (Alameda, Contra Costa, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties) have actually had median price increases month over month for the last three months. Eight out of nine counties increased median price over April.  Only time will tell if this can be sustained, but it is a positive sign.

Those counties with the highest declines in median sales price have had the greatest increase in sales over last May and conversely, those with the smallest declines in median sales price have had either the lowest increase or actually declined in units sold over last May.  The three counties that had the largest declines in median price had some of the highest increases in sold units—Contra Costa (-41% MP/+21% Solds), Solano (-36%MP/+56% Solds) and Santa Clara (-33%MP/+14% Solds). The counties with the lowest median price declines had decreases in solds—San Francisco (-14%MP/-35% Solds) and San Mateo (-17%MP/-7% Solds). Only Marin county did not follow this pattern. Marin median price declined -33% and also solds declined -10%. A bit of the double whammy.

New pending sales this May compared to last May have shown marked improvement. Every county except for San Francisco is up over last year. Anywhere from a high of 130% in Solano County to 21% in San Mateo. San Francisco, the only county not up over last year, was off a mere 4%.  

These trends seem to be continuing in the month of June, in spite of interest rates rising nearly a percent over the last three weeks.  Although interest rates have increased, they still are at historic lows. Multiple offers are still occurring primarily in the under $900K range. A Berkeley 3 bedr. 2 bath home listed at $895K received 7 offers selling above list price.  We did have a $1.5 mil. Piedmont 3 bedr. 3.5 bath home that garnered 4 offers and also sold over list price. 

Open house activity appears to be strongest in San Francisco and the East Bay.  Most open houses are attracting double digit activity. The North Bay is mixed depending on location. Wine country open home activity lags in comparison to other Bay Area locations.

Have we hit bottom?  I think in the lower third of the market we have. REOs and short sales have set the bar. We are beginning to see the upper two-thirds readjusting as prices drop.  All buyers are looking for value-pricing, location and exceptional condition when deciding to make an offer. There is no shortage of demand or ability. Jim Cramer, the outspoken CNBC host thinks we are there. He is buying.  Listen to the interview by the Huffington Post.

If you really want to know when the economy has turned around, just track men’s underwear sales.  Michael Brush in his column on CNN Money writes that when men start buying underwear again, we know there is a turnaround. Read more on what other indicators can track the bottom of the current recession.

I think we can look for brighter days ahead in 2010 and a more balanced market in 2011, as the fear that griped consumers in the last quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of this year has turned into a cautious, deliberate, reasoned pragmatism that is allowing the real estate market to heal itself.  It will take time and it could still have some falls along the way, but when all is said and done, owning a piece of the rock is still one of America’s most cherished values.

Entry Filed under: Goldman Report. .

7 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Steve  |  June 16, 2009 at 2:36 PM

    Nice column, Avram – especially the last item on the men’s underwear indicator and the market. Gives whole new meaning to the term “shorting” the market. Sorry, couldn’t resist :-)

  • 2. avigee  |  June 16, 2009 at 2:42 PM

    Leave to a former journalist to have a great play on words.

  • 3. Tom Nemeth  |  June 16, 2009 at 2:54 PM

    So – when men start buying underwear, the boom economy is coming. Is this because women’s underwear sales support the bust economy?

  • 4. Chris Trapani, President Sereno Group  |  June 16, 2009 at 3:23 PM

    We had 15 offfers on a property in Mountain View with Los Altos Schools last night. Listed at $998,000 went well over asking price.

    Of course we also had a typical REO experience listed under 400k in San Jose that received about 50 offers, sold all cash, 10 day coe over list- last week, represented buyer.

    We are seeing strong activity in Los Gatos and Saratoga up to $2million now and starting to work between 2-3 million. Blossom Manor area of Los Gatos has seen about 6 to 7 sales in the past few weeks alone between $1-2 million.

    PA and Los Altos seeing some north of $3m, the ones that we have sold/closed have been almost all cash deals/no loans.

    Seeing the activity working strong in Willow Glen area of San Jose and also moving into Almaden in the under and a bit over $1m price segment.

    Pricing remains key still as you know in any price range. Agressive pricing for the right house is bringing out the buyers in full force and driving up sales prices. There are some nice houses that came on the market 30, 60 and 90 days ago before the market pick up, they were priced high to begin with- many of these are sitting with no activity- while sellers are struggling with realistic pricing for today.

    Thank you for the great info Avram.

    Sincerely,

    Chris Trapani
    Owner/CEO
    Sereno Group Real Estate
    chris@serenogroup.com

  • 5. Kathee Shatter  |  June 16, 2009 at 11:37 PM

    If we all buy the men in our lives underwear for Father’s Day, could we “make a market”??…I just want to do my part.

  • 6. Rob Regan  |  June 17, 2009 at 12:21 PM

    I just bought some underwear yesterday, before reading your column – seriously. But also got cheaper than I used to, and on sale. So I predict the recession is almost over, but a weak recovery. We’re all bargain shopping these days…. no more conspicuous consumption.

    Interesting that SF sales are off 35% but pendings are only off 4%. So presumably the next sales report will only be off 4%. We need volume if we’re to avoid further price drops.

  • 7. Serafino Bianchi  |  July 1, 2009 at 1:14 PM

    I just lost a deal in Concord that had 24 offers. We offered $ 59,000 over the ask with $ 100,000 cash down.
    It went for more to an all cash buyer.
    This was an REO listed at $ 280,000 in a good area of Concord, but only 1147 sq. ft.
    This is the 4th property my clients lost due to overbidding.
    Very frustrating.
    What groove is this??

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