Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Arizona Appreciation - We're Back To #1!!

When's the market going to crash?  Not anytime soon : )

The S&P Case-Shiller® Home Price Index® was released yesterday for August 2019. It covers sales between June 1 and August 31.
Here are the month to month changes:
  1. Phoenix +0.90%
  2. Tampa +0.34%
  3. Miami +0.34%
  4. Cleveland +0.28%
  5. Atlanta +0.23%
  6. Minneapolis +0.17%
  7. Charlotte +0.14%
  8. Boston +0.12%
  9. New York +0.12%
  10. Detroit +0.11%
  11. Chicago +0.10%
  12. Dallas +0.04%
  13. Washington +0.00%
  14. Los Angeles -0.01%
  15. Portland -0.03%
  16. Denver -0.16%
  17. San Diego -0.16%
  18. Las Vegas -0.18%
  19. Seattle -0.29%
  20. San Francisco -0.47%
The national average was +0.20%. Phoenix rose from 3rd to 1st place in this table and is far out in front. 9 out of 20 cities were negative month to month.
The year over year changes were as follows:
  1. Phoenix +6.3%
  2. Charlotte +4.5%
  3. Tampa +4.3%
  4. Atlanta +4.0%
  5. Boston +3.9%
  6. Minneapolis +3.9%
  7. Detroit +3.8%
  8. Las Vegas +3.3%
  9. Cleveland +2.9%
  10. Denver +2.9%
  11. Miami +2.9%
  12. Dallas +2.8%
  13. Washington +2.7%
  14. Portland +2.6%
  15. San Diego +2.3%
  16. Chicago +1.4%
  17. Los Angeles +1.0%
  18. New York +0.9%
  19. Seattle +0.7%
  20. San Francisco -0.1%
The national average was 3.2%. Phoenix once again extended its lead at the top of the table.

Thursday, August 29, 2019

AZ Appreciation Numbers...Still moving right along


The only caveat is that for the first time in almost 8 years I saw some news of a slow down.  I never make a forecast based on one set of statistics so I'll need another quarter to determine if this is a trend or a result of something greater on a national level related to interest rates, trade, materials costs, labor etc.  
I'll be the first to publish that news, with statistical defense, and any possible impact to my areas of service specifically.
For now, compared to the rest of the country, we are doing great.
The latest numbers are based on sales that closed during the 3 months April to June 2019, so they are a bit dated by the time they are published. The month to month changes for the 20 focus cities are as follows:
  1. Detroit +1.24%
  2. Minneapolis +1.13%
  3. Boston +1.07%
  4. Phoenix +0.88%
  5. Cleveland +0.83%
  6. Chicago +0.74%
  7. San Diego +0.68%
  8. Portland +0.66%
  9. Charlotte +0.61%
  10. Seattle +0.56%
  11. Atlanta +0.52%
  12. Las Vegas +0.50%
  13. Washington +0.48%
  14. Dallas +0.44%
  15. Denver +0.42%
  16. San Francisco +0.22%
  17. Tampa +0.20%
  18. Los Angeles +0.16%
  19. Miami +0.09%
  20. New York -0.33%
Phoenix ranks 4th in this list, up from 11th last month. The national average change was +0.58%
The year over year numbers are as follows:
  1. Phoenix +5.8%
  2. Las Vegas +5.5%
  3. Tampa +4.7%
  4. Charlotte +4.5%
  5. Atlanta +4.5%
  6. Detroit +4.2%
  7. Boston +3.9%
  8. Minneapolis +3.9%
  9. Cleveland +3.4%
  10. Denver +3.4%
  11. Washington +2.9%
  12. Miami +2.8%
  13. Dallas +2.7%
  14. Portland +2.4%
  15. Los Angeles +1.6%
  16. Chicago +1.5%
  17. San Diego +1.3%
  18. New York +1.1%
  19. San Francisco +0.7%
  20. Seattle -1.3%
The national average was +3.1%.
Now we see why Phoenix hit the headlines. It took over the number one spot from Las Vegas in the year over year table.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Under Contract Up!!

The growth in listings under contract has been quite remarkable over the past few weeks.
under-contract-weekly.jpg
We can see that we started the year a long way behind 2018 but last Saturday we had caught up.
As of today we can see 13,215 listings under contract - and on April 17, 2018 there were 13,070.
That is probably worth repeating - we now have MORE listings under contract than we did at this time last year.
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Looking at the above 'observation' is encouraging. However, the immediate question that comes to mind is whether this upswing in Under Contract activity holds in the luxury sector $800K plus. 
Happily it does...showing the same steep rise in activity netting about a 1% year-over-year improvement evidenced in the graph below. And actually the same holds true in the $2M -$3M and even $3M plus sectors.
under contract hi-end.jpg
So...some good news to start your Thursday!

Thursday, January 31, 2019

National Appreciation Update

Cromford Daily Observation - The last Tuesday of every month is the date for the release of the S&P/Case-Shiller® Home Price Index® data.
This month the sales period covered is September through November 2018 and here are the month to month percentage changes for the 20 focus cities:
  1. New York +0.43%
  2. Tampa +0.38%
  3. Phoenix +0.32%
  4. Miami +0.32%
  5. Atlanta +0.28%
  6. Dallas +0.20%
  7. Charlotte +0.16%
  8. Boston +0.08%
  9. Las Vegas -0.01%
  10. Washington -0.02%
  11. Minneapolis -0.16%
  12. Los Angeles -0.30%
  13. Denver -0.32%
  14. Detroit -0.35%
  15. Portland -0.48%
  16. San Diego -0.63%
  17. Cleveland -0.66%
  18. Chicago -0.69%
  19. San Francisco -0.71%
  20. Seattle -0.73%
More than half of the cities had a negative move between October and November although the national average was still positive at +0.05%. Phoenix slipped from 1st to 3rd place being overtaken by New York and Tampa.
For the year over year change we get:
  1. Las Vegas +12.0%
  2. Phoenix +8.1%
  3. Seattle +6.3%
  4. Atlanta +6.2%
  5. Denver +6.2%
  6. Minneapolis +5.8%
  7. Detroit +5.7%
  8. Tampa +5.7%
  9. San Francisco +5.6%
  10. Boston +5.6%
  11. Charlotte +5.5%
  12. Miami +5.0%
  13. Cleveland +4.6%
  14. Los Angeles +4.4%
  15. Portland +4.4%
  16. Dallas +4.0%
  17. New York +3.5%
  18. San Diego +3.3%
  19. Chicago +3.1%
  20. Washington +2.7%
The national average was 5.2%. Phoenix remains well ahead of that number though far behind Las Vegas.
No city is showing negative appreciation on a year over year basis.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

When interest rates rise, prices fall. Actually, no.

There are a number a false myths circulating in the housing industry at the moment. Many are obviously untrue when you examine the history of the market, but are often stated as if they were natural laws.
  • when interest rates rise, home prices fall - this is hardly ever true, but I hear it claimed quite often
  • when sales volumes fall, home prices fall - this is hardly ever true, but certainly happened in the great crash of 2005-2009, so is fresh in our memory
Home prices fall when supply exceeds demand by a substantial margin. If supply is lower than demand then it is extremely unlikely that home prices will fall. We can find no examples in history of prices falling when demand exceeds supply.
Rising interest rates decrease demand, but they can also decrease supply if many home owners have an existing mortgage with a low rate. If supply is abundant and interest rates rise, then it is likely that home prices will fall. However it is surprisingly uncommon to find this situation in the last 70 years. This is because interest rate have tended to fall far more often than they have risen, and because supply has tended to be low far more often than it has been abundant. At the moment, interest rates are on an upward trend (although this trend has halted recently) but supply is a very long way from being abundant, Supply remains very low by historic standards, though it is slowly increasing.
Sales volumes fall when demand falls, but this tells us nothing about supply. Supply sometimes rises when sales volume falls (as in 2005-2009). If it rises enough to exceed demand then prices will fall until the balance is restored between supply and demand. Eventually lower prices will stimulate demand (as it did between 2009 and 2013). However it is often the case that demand falls without falling enough to match supply, and in this case prices continue to rise. This has been a common situation in the last 70 years and is also the situation right now.
If demand falls so much that it matches supply, then prices stabilize. We have not reached that point, but it did occur in 2014 for a short period. Demand then bounced back and has exceeded supply ever since.
If demand falls so much that it drops below supply, then price will tend to move lower. This is a relatively uncommon occurrence, but happened between 1989 and 1991, between 2006 and 2009 and for a short period between 2010 and 2011. The 1989 and 2010 declines were very mild, but the 2006-2009 decline was a true bubble bursting. This is something that tends to happen only once or twice a century, after almost everyone who remembers it has passed on. Bubbles require a suspension of disbelief that is impossible for someone who has already experienced one. In 2005 the most popular false myth was that house prices never go down.

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

National Update

The S&P/Case-Shiller® Home Price Index® numbers have been released for the latest sales period (August through October) and the 20 focus cities fared as follows on a month to month basis:
  1. Phoenix +0.70%
  2. New York +0.41%
  3. Las Vegas +0.33%
  4. Charlotte +0.30%
  5. Tampa +0.27%
  6. Atlanta +0.16%
  7. Miami +0.14%
  8. Boston +0.13%
  9. Los Angeles +0.11%
  10. Washington +0.02%
  11. Dallas +0.01%
  12. Detroit -0.02%
  13. San Diego -0.12%
  14. Minneapolis -0.13%
  15. Denver -0.28%
  16. Chicago -0.35%
  17. Cleveland -0.52%
  18. Portland -0.55%
  19. San Francisco -0.71%
  20. Seattle -1.05%
Once again Phoenix is at the top of the table has opened up a gap ahead of number 2 New York.
We see almost half of the focus cities with negative changes, but this is partly due to seasonality and the national average was +0.10%. Phoenix was seven times the national average and is over-performing again. As a result, it even made a mention in the Case-Shiller press release. Seattle took another large hit for a single month while San Francisco and Portland are slowing after very strong gains over the past 4 years.
For the year over year numbers we see:
  1. Las Vegas +12.8%
  2. San Francisco +7.9%
  3. Phoenix +7.7%
  4. Seattle +7.3%
  5. Denver +6.9%
  6. Tampa +6.4%
  7. Detroit +6.0%
  8. Atlanta +6.0%
  9. Minneapolis +5.9%
  10. Los Angeles +5.5%
  11. Boston +5.4%
  12. Charlotte +5.0%
  13. Portland +4.9%
  14. Cleveland +4.8%
  15. Miami +4.8%
  16. Dallas +3.9%
  17. San Diego +3.8%
  18. Chicago +3.3%
  19. New York +3.1%
  20. Washington +2.9%
The national average was +5.5% so Phoenix was well ahead of that, and it moved up to 3rd place from 5th place last month. None of the focus cities is showing a negative move year over year.
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Chris Tiller Commentary: The cautionary note with the Case-Shiller® Home Price Index® is that it is reporting data that's several months old (August - October).
What we're seeing currently in the Valley and Statewide generally are modest price gains; shorter market times and relative supply / demand balance.