Thursday, December 31, 2020

2020 Was Good to Homeowner's in AZ

When we say 2020 was a record year for AZ real estate what does that mean?  Well here you go...

The wealth creation for homeowners was obscene.  We also saw huge increases in rent costs.  This means the separation in the wealth gap between 2 people with the same incomes could be drastic.  If one is a homeowner and one is a renter 2020 alone paints their financial futures drastically different.  

This has been an interesting table in 2020 as a large number of new records have been set. Examples include:

  • Highest ever active listings $/SF
  • Highest ever pending listings $/SF
  • Highest ever monthly sales $/SF
  • Highest ever annual sales $/SF
  • Highest ever listing success rate
  • Highest ever average price for monthly sales
  • Highest ever average price for annual sales
  • Highest ever median price for monthly sales
  • Highest ever average sq. ft. for monthly sales
  • Highest ever average sq. ft. for annual sales
  • Highest ever Cromford® Market Index
  • Lowest ever Cromford® Supply Index





Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Annual Appreciation Numbers - AZ #1 2020

 The year over year comparisons are below:

  1. Phoenix 12.7%
  2. San Diego 11.6%
  3. Cleveland 9.5%
  4. Boston 9.4%
  5. Portland 8.9%
  6. Tampa 8.6%
  7. Charlotte 8.6%
  8. Los Angeles 8.4%
  9. Washington 8.2%
  10. Minneapolis 7.8%
  11. San Francisco 7.7%
  12. Denver 7.0%
  13. Miami 6.8%
  14. Atlanta 6.8%
  15. Dallas 6.5%
  16. Las Vegas 6.4%
  17. Chicago 6.3%
  18. New York 6.0%

The national index increased by 8.4% over the 12 months.

________________


Footnote: Case-Shiller® is always a 3-month lag in data.

Interesting that we seem to be pacing most closely with San Diego.

If there's a surprise it's that New York prices increased! Perhaps it's reconciled with the fact that New York comes in last in year-over-year appreciation. This is something we see locally all the time - an area that has been 'slow' suddenly seems to catch fire - ebb and flow...

Friday, December 4, 2020

December Market Update

 Market Summary for the Beginning of December

Here are the basics - the ARMLS numbers for December 1, 2020 compared with December 1, 2019 for all areas & types:

  • Active Listings (excluding UCB & CCBS): 7,388 versus 13,869 last year - down 46.7% - and down 14.9% from 8,682 last month 
  • Active Listings (including UCB & CCBS): 12,481 versus 18,322 last year - down 24.1% - and down 10.2% compared with 13,901 last month
  • Pending Listings: 7,347 versus 5,864 last year - up 25.3% - but down 6.6% from 7,862 last month 
  • Under Contract Listings (including Pending, CCBS & UCB): 12,389 versus 9,572 last year - up 29.4% - but down 8.2% from 13,081 last month 
  • Monthly Sales: 9,205 versus 7,131 last year - up 29.1% - but down 3.6% from 10,024 last month
  • Monthly Average Sales Price per Sq. Ft.: $207.71 versus $179.92 last year - up 15.4% - and up 0.2% from $207.71 last month 
  • Monthly Median Sales Price: $330,000 versus $281,000 last year - up 17.4% - but down 0.6% from $332,000 last month

The supply situation has gone from bad to worse with many areas hitting record lows for the number of homes available to buy. This is not because of a low number of new listings. The flow of new listings was respectable in November and exceeded the total for November 2019 and 2018. However, it increased by far less than the annual increase in demand and many of these new listings went under contract within days of listing. We exited November with 15% fewer homes for sale than we entered it. We have run out of adjectives to describe the weakness of the supply situation. It looks almost certain that supply will collapse further during December, so if we had a good adjective we would need a better one for January 3. Demand is extraordinarily strong for this late in the season, so we currently have a market that is more unbalanced (in favor of sellers) than we have ever seen before, even at the height of the 2005 bubble. But next month will be even more extreme.

You may wonder why average and median prices did not rise in November over October. This is because the sales mix shifted in favor of smaller homes - the average size dropped from 2,061 sq. ft. to 2,016. This is a 2.2% fall, an unusually large shift for a single month. There were more ordinary homes in the mix and fewer of the ultra-expensive luxury homes. The unit volume was huge however, especially considering the tight supply. November was a very short month with only 18 working days, so 9,205 is a very impressive number for closed listings, up almost 30% from last year, when we thought we had a very strong market.

There seems to be a certain amount of denial in some quarters. Concerns about delinquency rates and forbearance are being widely discussed. The idea is often expressed that this can reverse the current situation, as if this is a foregone conclusion. We do not think the level of delinquency is anything like high enough to seriously disrupt the housing market. For such drama you probably need to look to the commercial real estate market, particularly the retail, office and hotel sectors. Housing has been bolstered by the pandemic. This is a worldwide phenomenon, not confined to Arizona or even the USA. At times of medical emergency, people really value their homes across the globe.

We would agree that a market cannot keep getting hotter forever, but according to Black Knight Financial Services, the level of delinquency has fallen for the last 5 months. Prepayment activity is the highest since 2004. It is likely that we will see more distressed sales in 2021 than 2020, but 2020 was a record all-time low and reverting to normal would help a bit with the supply situation. In fact we would have to see a colossal increase in delinquency from current levels just to get back to normal supply conditions. 

There is a widely held but mistaken belief that foreclosures cause price declines. It is the other way round. Price declines destroy owner equity which eliminates their incentive to avoid foreclosure. In fact in Arizona foreclosure becomes a preferred option when you have negative equity because it wipes out all the loan, not just the amount covered by the trustee sale proceeds. Many other states do not allow this. Short sales do a similar thing but require many parties to cooperate. Foreclosure is easy and quick and you walk away with your loan written off.

However when you have significant equity the situation is very different. The owner wants to release that equity for their own use. With the average appreciation over the last 12 months of 16%, most owners currently have a lot of equity. Smart people are not going to let their home go to foreclosure if they can help it; they will sell it and repay their loan with the proceeds, keeping the excess funds and their credit intact. This will continue unless prices decline significantly. Prices only decline when there is an excess of supply.

In 2006 average $/SF started to decline after June and established a strong downward trend in 2007 due to a huge excess of supply. This was BEFORE the foreclosure wave really got going, not after. The peak of foreclosures happened between 2008 and 2010, dumping unloved homes onto the market and accelerating the price decline, reaching the lowest point in 2011. Note that it was the excess supply of 2006 that triggered the price declines which then triggered the foreclosures. With excess supply in 2006 and 2007 it was very hard to sell your home to avoid foreclosure and few investors were interested in catching a falling knife.

I hope it is obvious how the current situation is different from 2005. The most significant factors are the very low vacancy rate (very high in 2005) and the very high rate of rent increases. Rising rental rates are a fundamental support for home prices because they represent a great return on investment for potential landlords. In 2005 rental rates were very low and declining, a very ominous sign that few people noticed at the time. Today, rents are increasing at a rate of 15% in just the last 6 months, which you can see here:

image.png

Predictions for December:

  • closings will be higher than November
  • average price per sq. ft. will rise from November
  • dollar volume will set a new all-time record for December
  • supply will decline further reaching a low point on January 1, 2021
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Year-over-year listing inventory off nearly 50%, with sales up almost 30% and you have the one-liner that pretty much says it all!

Add to that an average annual appreciation at about 16% on home sales; with 15% increase in rents just over just the last 6 months and you have the consequence of the supply / demand imbalance.

Building on a point we've recently made and Bill Gray reinforced yesterday -  Arizona and Idaho are the top destination States by inbound moves (according to the moving industry), with relative 'affordability' when compared to other major metros.

Assuming record low interest rates remain as part of the Fed's plan to support the recovering economy, there's every reason to believe the dynamics will continue into 2021.

And finally, always wary of the broad brush, here are the Cromford Report's most recent appreciation figures by List Price Range:
image.png

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Supply - Its Worse Than You Think

New supply tends to be thin on the ground between mid November and the end of December, though we are seeing a higher rate of arrival than we did in 2019 and 2018. This increased rate is not enough to compensate for the elevated demand and the number of homes available for sale is declining in the vast majority of areas.

We have had so little supply for so long, it is easy to forget what normal is like. Here are a few examples of what is available compared with the long term average:

Market SegmentActive excluding UCB & CCBSLong Term AverageDifference
All Areas & Types8,25727,009-69%
Greater Phoenix7,61621,678-65%
Greater Phoenix Single-Family Detached5,56416,850-67%
Greater Phoenix Townhomes6431.385-54%
Greater Phoenix Apartment Style7521,298-42%
Greater Phoenix Twin / Duplex62127-51%
Greater Phoenix Patio Home109286-62%
Greater Phoenix Mobile Home464679-32%
Greater Phoenix Loft Style1739-56%
Greater Phoenix Modular / Manufactured516-69%
Single-Family Detached Homes in:   
Phoenix1,1934.469-73%
Mesa3901,587-75%
Scottsdale8092,290-65%
Peoria245886-72%
Queen Creek / San Tan Valley196958-80%
Avondale56349-84%
Paradise Valley195325-40%
Fountain Hills83250-67%
Cave Creek105259-59%
Buckeye151487-69%
Maricopa115415-72%
Chandler196977-80%
Glendale168908-81%
Gilbert1791,109-84%
Surprise243907-73%
Goodyear133552-76%
Tempe99293-66%
Gold Canyon79209-62%
Sun Lakes36150-76%
Arizona City20107-81%
Tolleson11170-94%
Litchfield Park57198-71%
Sun City West82292-72%
Laveen45232-81%
Anthem27211-87%
Apache Junction40195-79%
Casa Grande81330-75%
El Mirage20150-87%
Sun City115301-62%
Florence43160-73%
Coolidge3498-65%

 

The housing market is short of everything, everywhere.

The dwelling types that are least scarce are mobile homes & apartment-style condos. Geographically, the most expensive areas are down less but are still massively short of supply compared with average. This is exacerbated by the unusually high demand for high-end homes

Tolleson wins the prize for the lowest supply compared with its long term average. Anthem and El Mirage are runners-up...

__________________


The above is a great reference I give my client's for perspective, particularly for potential buyers. One has to consider what could change the disparity between supply and demand: 

Demand: Factors that could dampen demand? Higher interest rates. Loss of affordability. Other geopolitical possibilities? Certainly. But unlikely.

Supply: On the supply side it's also difficult to see where the inventory part of the equation changes much. Builders are building. Homes.com says there are 3211 new homes for Sale in Maricopa County. However, FlexMLS shows only 95 available active new homes (built in 2020). The total current available 'Active' inventory excluding UCB is a shocking 7721, even though there were 10,420 new listings in October. 

Clearly, Supply continues to lose ground relative to demand. The current 7721 Active listings in ARMLS should break the record low of 8342 set in April of 2005!

Once again, message to buyers: Time is not on your side. Anticipating even greater demand with our traditional high season just ahead, the best Christmas ever might be a new chimney for Santa to navigate! And hurry, only 29 'shopping days' left:)

For your Holiday Season success,

Monday, November 23, 2020

Annual Appreciation Numbers

The line charts below show the annual appreciation based on annual average sales price per square foot for single-family detached homes in the 17 largest cities by dollar volume broken out by area:

Phoenix:
phoenix appreciation.jpg
SE Valley:
East Valley Appreciation.jpg
West Valley:
West Valley Appreciation.jpg
NE Valley:
NE Valley Appreciation.jpg
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2 observations: 
  1. The visual trend line makes it easy to see that Annual Appreciation by Price per Sq. Foot is accelerating Valleywide - clearly reflecting both the lack of inventory relative to an unseasonably sustained demand and...
  2. With long term appreciation in the Valley averaging around 5% per year we're on track to be about double that in this year of the pandemic!

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Rent vs. Buy - Heaving Swing for Buying in Last 5 Months

Demand for Homes Up 36%
Rents up 17% Since April

For Buyers:
The Rent vs. Buy scenario has become heavily in favor of buying over the last 5 months.  Eviction moratoriums due to the pandemic have greatly reduced turnover rates in a rental market that is already short of supply.  Lease rates on listings through the Arizona Regional MLS have increased 17% since April overall; and for a home between 1,500-2,000sf the median lease price in the 4th Quarter is $1,850 a month, up a whopping $255 from the 4th Quarter last year. 

While leases have been rising, home values have also risen 16%; however, declining interest rates have kept the level of the monthly payment. The median sales price for a 1,500-2,000sf home is currently $316,000, up $27,000 since April.  Despite this 9% increase (assuming a $15,000-$30,000 investment and interest rate under 3%), purchasing a home could possibly save a renter hundreds of dollars on their monthly budget while simultaneously building equity and ensuring a level of stability in their housing cost.

For Sellers:
While many people are waiting for the final results of the 2020 election, at least one thing is for certain in Greater Phoenix.  The housing market will not crash in 2021 regardless of the outcome. It may be hard to believe, but the new and resale housing markets don’t move quickly. Unlike the stock market where it takes a push of a button to sell a stock and record the price, it takes longer to sell a home between the marketing time and escrow process. In today’s market, it may take up to a week to negotiate an offer and another 30-45 days for the price to be publicly recorded.  When a market weakens, it takes longer.

Supply in Greater Phoenix has been gradually shrinking for 6 years and was the driver behind price appreciation until the pandemic. To put things in perspective, the Arizona Regional MLS should seasonally have between 25,000-30,000 listings active at this time of year; as of November 9th there are under 8,600.  That type of shortage doesn’t happen overnight and new construction will not be able to fill the gap quickly.

Listings Under Contract should seasonally have between 9,000-10,000 in escrow at this time of year;  as of November 9th there are over 13,000.  This level was reached in June and has stayed consistent for nearly 5 months. Even if demand were to scale back in 2021 and return to a normal level, the market would not see a massive drop in prices; just a slowing in appreciation.

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Luxury Demand Skyrockets

The explosion in demand for luxury homes continues to amaze. During October there were 101 closed listings across Greater Phoenix with prices over $2 million. This is a truly colossal total, given that the previous record for October was 38. In fact it is quite rare for the over $2M count to exceed 50 during any month. Since January 2000 it has happened only 13 times, all but 2 of these occurring since 2018. The monthly total has exceeded 66 only 3 times. All 3 of those times have been during the last 4 months. There have been 627 closed listings over $2 million in 2020, Last year we counted 445. The annual increase is therefore 41%. Is it going to continue in November? Probably, given that there have been 25 closings during the first 5 working days alone. _________________ MikeB Commentary ~ So, money is moving here. And RLSIR is getting the Lyon's share of the luxury sector. The Cromford Daily Observation above counts 101 closed listings in greater Phoenix (ARMLS) over $2M. I must be counting differently somehow, because I get 130! Of those 130 RLSIR is on 52 sides, or 40% of the 130 luxury transactions over $2M. 40 of those 52 sides came from 20 transactions where RLSIR had both sides - most notably Lisa Westcott and Shawna Warners record-breaking $24.1M sale. And on several transactions, one agent or one team double sided the transaction i.e. represented both buyer and seller!

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Market Update - 11/5/2020

Market Summary for the Beginning of November

Here are the basics - the ARMLS numbers for November 1, 2020 compared with November 1, 2019 for all areas & types:

  • Active Listings (excluding UCB & CCBS): 8,682 versus 14,525 last year - down 40.2% - but up 7.4% from 8,101 last month
  • Active Listings (including UCB & CCBS): 13,901 versus 18,322 last year - down 24.1% - but up 4.5% compared with 13,305 last month
  • Pending Listings: 7,862 versus 5,919 last year - up 32.8% - but down 1.7% from 7,999 last month
  • Under Contract Listings (including Pending, CCBS & UCB): 13,081 versus 9,716 last year - up 34.6% - but down 0.9% from 13,203 last month
  • Monthly Sales: 9,992 versus 8,037 last year - up 20.5% - and up 3.6% from 9,641 last month
  • Monthly Average Sales Price per Sq. Ft.: $207.37 versus $174.14 last year - up 19.1% - and up 4.3% from $198.84 last month
  • Monthly Median Sales Price: $332,000 versus $285,000 last year - up 16.5% - and up 1.6% from $326,800 last month

The flow of new listings remained strong until late October but has started to fade noticeably over the last week. Since we are already very short of supply, this does not bode well for buyers who are likely to be fighting each other over a dwindling list of homes for sale during the last 2 months of the year. With demand at a very high level, especially for the normally quiet fourth quarter, the market is even more out of balance than it was last month.

Closed sales were over 20% higher than in 2019 during October. This is even more remarkable given that in 2019 October had 23 working days, 1 more than in 2020. With the average price per square foot up over 19% from last year, the dollar volume is exceptionally high at $4,272 million, up from $2,786 million last year. And last year we thought we had a strong market. We are running out of superlatives to describe the state of the current market.

Average and median prices are running away skywards, but some of this is fuelled by a sales mix which increasingly favors upscale properties. During October we saw 37 closed listings over $3 million. This is not only the highest total for any October in history, it is the highest total for any month in history. The average for all months since 2001 is 9 and in October 2019 we counted 10.

The size of the market below $300,000 is shrinking fast, constrained by lack of supply and by the fact that last year's home at $270,000 is now priced well over $300,000. However any home priced under $300,000 is likely to see hordes of buyers.

Is there any sign of the upward surge in pricing losing pace. In a word - No.

At this time last year we had no idea of the impending pandemic, but unless something similarly surprising happens in the next few months, the housing market in Greater Phoenix is unlikely to stop rising.

________________

It's amazing what our Scottsdale offices do.

Of those all-time record breaking 37 closed listings over $3 million (although I count 39), Russ Lyon Sotheby's International Realty was the listing brokerage on 14 of them (36% of the 39 actual) and was the brokerage on both sides of 11 of the 14! Or put another way, we sold 79% of our 14 listings over $3M in October, 2020. AMAZING!!!

Follow this link to see the 39: https://www.flexmls.com/link.html?1j05te2c1jv2,12,1 This link is valid until 12/5/2020.

I think you should be able to use the above in your luxury listing presentation. Afterall, sellers list with us in no small part because they feel we're best qualified to actually 'sell' their property. To be able to say most recently we did, in fact, sell about 80% of our own inventory over $3M is quite a statement.

If your next question is how did we do YTD?

RLSIR was on both sides of 25 of the 80 closings in ARMLS over $3M YTD, or 31%. Selling roughly a third of our own inventory is also amazing, but puts perspective on just how amazing was October of 2020!

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Appreciation Update - Still #1

 Cromford Daily Observation - The latest S&P / Case-Shiller® Home Price Index® numbers were published today. They cover home sales during the period June to August 2020.

Comparing with the previous month's series we see the following changes:

  1. San Diego +1.90%
  2. Cleveland +1.64%
  3. Phoenix +1.54%
  4. Los Angeles +1.36%
  5. Boston 1.33%
  6. Tampa +1.27%
  7. Washington +1.15%
  8. Seattle 1.14%
  9. Las Vegas +1.13%
  10. Portland +1.10%
  11. Miami +1.08%
  12. Dallas +0.98%
  13. New York +0.95%
  14. Charlotte +0.87%
  15. San Francisco +0.83%
  16. Denver +0.72%
  17. Minneapolis +0.68%
  18. Atlanta +0.50%
  19. Chicago +0.41%

The national average was +1.06% so Phoenix home prices increased at a much higher rate than the national average, and rose from 36th to 3rd place compared with last month.

These are very strong price rises for a single month and show the earlier CoreLogic home price forecasts to be wildly inaccurate. These forecasts will have to be revised upwards substantially over the next few months.

The year over year comparisons are below:

  1. Phoenix 9.0%
  2. Seattle 7.8%
  3. San Diego 7.1%
  4. Cleveland 6.4%
  5. Tampa 6.4%
  6. Los Angeles 6.4%
  7. Charlotte 6.3%
  8. Portland 5.8%
  9. Minneapolis 5.4%
  10. Washington 5.4%
  11. Boston 5.4%
  12. Denver 5.0%
  13. Atlanta 4.9%
  14. Miami 4.6%
  15. Las Vegas 4.4%
  16. Dallas 4.0%
  17. San Francisco 4.0%
  18. New York 2.7%
  19. Chicago 1.2%

The national average was 5.4%, up from 4.8% and showing a rapidly rising trend.. Phoenix remains well out in front on the annual measurement.

________________

When annual appreciation exceeds the long term average of around 5% it's particularly noteworthy e.g. Phoenix 9%! 

As always, keep in mind this is broad brush and inherently dated - 3-months old. This is why the commentary suggests These forecasts will have to be revised upwards substantially over the next few months.


It will be interesting to see what the combination of a national election followed by the holiday season will have. Maybe we'll have a little better idea after next week, though the dynamics we're seeing in the market - demand outpacing supply - will no doubt continue, albeit with some seasonal adjustments i.e. perhaps a bit more inventory; perhaps some tempering in demand. But we'll see soon enough!

Friday, October 16, 2020

Market Update - Still an Inventory Problem

 2020-10 Infographic.jpg

 For Buyers:
A common complaint in the resale market is “there’s nothing for sale”.  However, from July through September, the Realtor® community added 30,340 brand new listings to the Arizona Regional MLS and sold 27,746, leaving just 8,203 remaining listings for sale.  That makes this 3rd Quarter the 2nd best in Greater Phoenix history for closings, falling just 436 sales short of 2005.  If that’s not impressive enough, there are another 13,502 properties currently under contract and scheduled to close in the next 30-45 days; up 36% from this time last year.  With this information, we can conclude that there is plenty for sale, but many listings are simply not in Active status longer than 24 hours in order to be counted.  Getting the supply count to rise right now is like trying to fill a bathtub when the drain is wide open.

Over half of all listings that went under contract in the 3rd Quarter were Active for only 9 days or less prior to contract.  To quote the movie “Spaceballs”, that’s ludicrous speed!  As exhausting and stressful as it is for buyers and their agents, supply and demand measures indicate prices in Greater Phoenix will continue to rise well into 2021. Hopefully, the short-term pain will lead to long-term gain for those who ultimately win a successful contract.

For Sellers:
Appreciation has accelerated significantly since June of this year.  The median sale price is up 18% since last October, but the current measure of $329,900 is up 12% from where it was just 4 months ago at $295,000. While that’s exciting for sellers, the speed at which homes are selling is causing some to worry they will not find somewhere to go after their home closes.  As a result, Realtors® are dusting off rarely used seller contingency addendums stating that any accepted contract will be contingent on the seller finding a home themselves prior to close. 

Compared to last year, sellers are asking 15-20% more for their homes in all price ranges between $150K-$500K. Between $500K-$1M, list prices are up 9-13% and 3-8% for price ranges over $1M.  The highest percentage of sales over asking price in the last 30 days are occurring between $200K-$400K with a measure of 34-45%.  While that’s a high percentage, it’s not the majority of sales. Most properties are still closing at or below asking price. However, for those who did go over the asking price under $400K, most winning bids were within $7,000 of list.

Commentary written by Tina Tamboer, Senior Housing Analyst with The Cromford Report
©2020 Cromford Associates LLC and Tamboer Consulting LLC

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The above Buyer and Seller commentary is packed with talking points. I've highlighted those that stand out for me - particularly the fact that it's not that there aren't listings coming on the market, it's the pace of absorption that is leaving us with nearly record low 'standing' inventory. 

The other standout is that to manage the problem of Seller's fearing they won't be able to find a place to go, the 'Seller contingency'. 

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

AZ Demand in a Pandemic - Best of Both Worlds

 The COVID-19 pandemic is not letting up any time soon and this morning over 92% of the US population lives in states where the weekly count of new cases is rising. The only exceptions are Alabama, Arkansas, Hawaii, Maine, Nebraska, North Carolina, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. Record numbers of new confirmed cases are being reported by the health authorities in Alaska, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Minneapolis, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin and Wyoming.


While the pandemic is wreaking havoc in parts of the real estate market, especially, the retail, office, and hospitality sectors, single-detached housing is more popular than ever. In a trend seen around the world, buyers are seeking some open space with privacy, so larger yards are at a premium but flats in tower blocks are out of favor. Big expensive cities with crowded downtown areas are seeing an exodus to the suburbs, especially for people who can effectively work from home.

Because Phoenix does not have much dense downtown housing (none at all that is comparable to New York, Paris, Tokyo or London), its residential sector is looking very strong even for the central areas. To get some idea how much of a shock the pandemic has caused elsewhere, look to the exclusive area of Kensington and Chelsea in London. This is unaffordable to most people, but it is getting cheaper. Residential rents have fallen by a staggering 25% in the past 12 months. Landlords are in despair as their property values fall and they fail to collect an unusually large percentage of rents, especially if they include retail units. New listings are flooding onto the market, bringing prices down.

One of those landlords is the Queen. Forbes estimates that her real property portfolio has fallen by $700 million since March this year.

However, the remote parts of the UK, such as Scotland, Wales, and the North of England are experiencing the highest rates of appreciation they have witnessed since 2009. Suddenly a rural location is seen as an advantage, not an inconvenience.

Similar effects can be found in Arizona with small villages in Gila, Yavapai, and Coconino counties being overwhelmed with buyers from outside the area and often outside the state.
_________________

A positive take away from the Daily Observation above (and a question that's been on my mind and I suspect yours) is that Phoenix and by extension Tucson's urban areas are still seen as desirable - not suffering so much from the sudden, pandemic-drive and potentially sustained international migration away from the densely populated urban areas. 

Simultaneously we are clearly seeing the surge in interest from out-of-state buyers for our suburban and master-planned communities. 

Buttressing this demand has to be Arizona's broad association with golf communities, inherently providing the 'open spaces' people are seeking worldwide - giving us a new premium attractor-factor for the Arizona lifestyle.

Urban to suburban - we have the best of both new worlds!

Thursday, October 8, 2020

1/3 of Zip Codes Selling ABOVE Asking Price

With low supply and high demand we see the unusual situation where the average selling price exceeds the average list price becoming more commonplace. Here is a list of all the ZIP codes where this happened in September for single-family detached homes:

  1. Casa Grande 85193 - average sales price 102.29% of average list price
  2. Phoenix 85031 - 101.49%
  3. El Mirage 85335 - 101.37%
  4. Mesa 85210 - 101.28%
  5. Tolleson 85353 - 101.17%
  6. Phoenix 85051 - 101.15%
  7. Chandler 85226 - 100.92%
  8. San Tan valley 85143 - 100.91%
  9. Mesa 85204 - 100.86%
  10. Arizona City 85123 - 100.84%
  11. Glendale 85302 - 100.84%
  12. Avondale 85392 - 100.83%
  13. Mesa 85208 - 100.78%
  14. Chandler 85225 - 100.78%
  15. Gilbert 85233 - 100.74%
  16. Mesa 85203 - 100.72%
  17. Glendale 85308 - 100.67%
  18. Phoenix 85017 - 100.65%
  19. Avondale 85323 - 100.62%
  20. Glendale 85304 - 100.61%
  21. Chandler 85224 - 100.60%
  22. Phoenix 85037 - 100.59%
  23. Surprise 85388 - 100.54%
  24. Gilbert 85295 - 100.53%
  25. Surprise 85379 - 100.52%
  26. Phoenix 85043 - 100.50%
  27. Phoenix 85033 - 100.49%
  28. Phoenix 85029 - 100.46%
  29. Maricopa 85138 - 100.44%
  30. Phoenix 85027 - 100.44%
  31. San Tan Valley 85140 - 100.30%
  32. Gilbert 85234 - 100.29%
  33. Peoria 85345 0 100.27%
  34. Goodyear 85338 - 100.26%
  35. Mesa 85209 - 100.21%
  36. Peoria 85381 - 100.21%
  37. Phoenix 85053 - 100.19%
  38. Gilbert 85296 - 100.19%
  39. Buckeye 85326 - 100.19%
  40. Mesa 85212 - 100.16%
  41. Glendale 85306 - 100.16%
  42. Phoenix 85008 - 100.13%
  43. Surprise 85378 - 100.10%
  44. Maricopa 85139 - 100.04%
  45. Phoenix 85044 - 100.03%
  46. Phoenix 85083 - 100.02%
  47. Glendale 85301 - 100.00%

That is almost one third of all the ZIP codes in Greater Phoenix.

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During the crash ironically we would see some of this - where a few entire zip codes had average closed sales over 100% of average list price. However, ironically, this tended to be in zip codes with a predominance of bank owned properties! How can that be? 

Those of you who were around then will recall banks would list their foreclosed properties based on a broker opinion of value (BPO's). If they didn't get it sold in a week they'd lower the price 5%...sometimes by the week! Unlike sellers, banks are not emotional! 

The net result: massive investor feeding frenzy - hence the phrase 'first in, first out' - where some of the most distressed areas become the hottest areas. 

Today, as mentioned above, we're seeing almost a third of all zip codes in Metro Phoenix averaging over list price sales. But, of course, these are not bank owned distressed situations. Today it's sheer massive demand outstripping supply. 

You're hearing this ad nauseum, but the value in this Daily Observation is having the 'evidence' to prep my buyers.

Where this info can be misleading and you need to apply some sobering reality: 

My sellers are hearing about or seeing this info and might get overly optimistic. Looking at zip codes is a broad brush. Managing unrealistic expectations is a chore...but part of the gig to be sure.

2 helpful things I do to manage overly optimistic sellers expectations:

1. When you're running your comps preparatory to taking a listing, take that group of sold comps through FlexMLS's Buyer Statistical CMA  (see sample below) -you see the average Sale/List Price ratio column (I call the 'trading range'). In other words, the difference between average list price and average sales price specific to that market segment. Typically it will be in the range of 2-5% - the average amount sellers are coming down in negotiations. It's a smart exercise, as it will quantify what's happening in that specific market, so you can make recommendations to 'competitively position' accordingly.


Statistical Buyer CMA sample.jpg

Note: On the buy-side the exercise above can help inform reasonable offers in certain market sectors.

2. In the uber high end, check the Listing Success Rate using the Cromford Tableau Charts dropdown menu posted on our STATS page. You may find that a significant percentage of high end properties still don't sell within their listing contract period (listing success rate). For example, in the graph below we're looking at the percentage of properties of $3M that aren't selling in their contracted listing period - does it surprise you that the percentage not selling is diminishing, it's still about 30%!

SR over 3M.jpg
More broadly, as we would expect, the chart below shows a direct correlation between list price and the Listing Success Rate:
SR by range.jpg