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Warning sign: House flipping on the rise again


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2018 Apr 19, 7:02pm   2,657 views  13 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

https://www.npr.org/2018/04/17/601925433/a-decade-after-the-bubble-burst-house-flipping-is-on-the-rise

... a decade after the U.S. housing bubble burst, house flipping is on the rise again. Defined as reselling a house within a year of purchase, flipping is at an 11-year high in the United States and it's the subject of dozens of TV shows and weekend workshops promising to teach real estate novices how to make a fortune.

New research shows that flippers contributed to the housing crash of the mid-2000s more than economists initially realized. Because some of the same practices from the boom are making a comeback, some market watchers are concerned that the real estate market might once again be nearing a bubble.

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1   Onvacation   2018 Apr 19, 9:34pm  

Every time a new loan is made the banks create more money out of thin air. This money is frontloaded with fees and must be paid back with interest. As creaters of this money the banks own the real estate, kinda.

The system is broken. The crisis of 2008 was papered over and now the banks are richer and the rest of us have to spend more to get less.
2   Shaman   2018 Apr 20, 6:19am  

A house I looked at possibly buying almost two years ago ($725k) is back on the market at $1.3 million! It’s been renovated within an inch of its life, although the yard is still pretty basic.
Still, a half million jump in price seems excessive. I’m not sure the neighborhood supports it. The zip code is great, but the physical location is between two freeways.
Definitely a flip tho.
3   anonymous   2019 Feb 28, 6:06pm  

Lending for home flipping climbs to 11-year high in 2018, U.S. Home Flipping Returns Drop to Seven-Year Low in 2018



Top Major Market Flipping Rates in Memphis, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Tampa, Birmingham; Almost $20 Billion In Financed Flips in 2018, Up 8 Percent From 2017 to 11-Year High

IRVINE, Calif. – February, 28 2019 — ATTOM Data Solutions, curator of the nation’s premier property database, today released its Q4 and Year-End 2018 U.S. Home Flipping Report, which shows that 207,957 U.S. single family homes and condos were flipped in 2018, down 4 percent from the 216,537 home flips in 2017.

The 207,957 homes flipped in 2018 represented 5.6 percent of all single-family home and condo sales during the year, stagnant from 5.6 percent of all sales in 2017 but up from 5.1 percent of all sales back in 2008.

A total of 146,020 entities (individuals and institutions) flipped homes in 2018, down .4 percent from the 146,623 entities that flipped in 2017 but up 63.1 percent from 89,539 entities that flipped 10-years ago.

“With mortgage rates remaining strong and people staying in their homes longer, we have started to see a bit of a flipping rate slowdown,” said Todd Teta, chief product officer at ATTOM Data Solutions. “However, this isn’t to say home flipping is going away. The market is still ripe with investors flipping and bargains still await, especially in the lowest-priced areas of the country, where levels of financial distress remain highest.”

Home flip lending volume up 8 percent to 11-year high

The total dollar volume of financed home flip purchases was $19.9 billion for homes flipped in 2018, up 8 percent from $18.5 billion in 2017 to the highest level since 2007 — an 11-year high.

2018 Year-End Home Flipping Financing Trends

Flipped homes originally purchased by the investor with financing represented 39.1 percent of homes flipped in 2018, down from 39.4 percent in 2017 and down from 41.0 percent in 2008.

Among 53 metropolitan statistical areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the highest percentage of 2018 completed flips purchased with financing were Denver, Colorado (53.7 percent); Providence, Rhode Island (51.8 percent); Seattle, Washington (51.8 percent); San Diego, California (51.6 percent); and San Francisco, California (50.8 percent).

Share of flips sold to FHA buyers at an 11-year low

Of the homes flipped in 2018, 13.8 percent were sold to FHA borrowers — likely first-time homebuyers — down from 17 percent in 2017 to an 11-year low.

Among 53 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the smallest share of completed flips sold to FHA buyers in 2018 were San Jose, California (1.3 percent); Raleigh, North Carolina (4.3 percent); San Francisco, California (6.0 percent); Memphis, Tennessee (6.5 percent); and San Diego, California (7.2 percent).

Among the 53 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the highest share of completed flips sold to all-cash buyers — often other real estate investors — in 2018 were Detroit, Michigan (48.8 percent); Birmingham, Alabama (42.4 percent); Jacksonville, Florida (39.8 percent); Miami, Florida (38.3 percent); and Buffalo, New York (38.0 percent).

Average home flipping returns drop to a four-year low

Completed home flips in 2018 yielded an average gross profit of $65,000 (difference between median purchase price and median flipped sale price), down 3 percent from an average gross flipping profit of $66,900 in 2017.

2018 Year-End Home Flipping Gross Profits and Returns

The average gross flipping profit of $65,000 in 2018 represented an average 44.8 percent return on investment (percentage of original purchase price), down from 50.3 percent in 2017 and down from an all-time high average gross flipping ROI of 51.0 percent in 2016.

Among 176 metro areas with a population of at least 200,000 and at least 100 home flips in 2018, those with the highest average gross flipping ROI were Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (144.2 percent); Scranton, Pennsylvania (131.7 percent); Atlantic City, New Jersey (113.2 percent); Cleveland, Ohio (112.1 percent); and Erie, Pennsylvania (109.3 percent).

Along with Pittsburgh and Cleveland, other major metro areas with at least 1 million people and gross flipping ROI of at least 80 percent were Philadelphia (109.0 percent); Baltimore (103.5 percent); Buffalo (96.2 percent); Memphis (86.5 percent); and Cincinnati (84.2 percent).

Highest home flipping rates in Memphis, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Tampa, Birmingham

Among 53 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the highest home flipping rate in 2018 were Memphis, Tennessee (11.7 percent); Phoenix, Arizona (9.1 percent); Las Vegas, Nevada (8.7 percent); Tampa-St. Petersburg, Florida (8.2 percent); Birmingham, Alabama (7.6 percent).

Other major markets in the top 10 for highest 2018 home flipping rate were Baltimore, Maryland; St. Louis, Missouri; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Orlando, Florida; and Nashville, Tennessee.

Among 6,015 zip codes with at least 10 home flips completed in 2018 and a population greater than 5,000, the highest home flipping rate was in 38141 in Memphis where home flips represented 29.5 percent of all home sales for the year. Other zip codes in the top 20 for highest 2018 home flipping rate included zip codes in Donna, Texas; Miami, Florida; Washington, D.C.; Jamaica, New York; Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Compton, California; and Phoenix, Arizona.

Biggest increase in home flipping rates in Boston, Tucson, Raleigh, Columbus, Hartford

Among metro areas with at least 1 million people, those with the biggest annual increase in home flipping rate in 2018 were Boston, Massachusetts (up 33.3 percent); Tucson, Arizona (up 27.3 percent); Raleigh, North Carolina (up 24.5 percent); Columbus, Ohio (up 13.1 percent); and Hartford, Connecticut (up 12.8 percent).

Other major markets in the top 10 for biggest increase in home flipping rate in 2018 were New York, New York; Charlotte, North Carolina; Grand Rapids, Michigan, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

While 20 out of the 53 metro areas with at least 1 million people saw an increase in the home flipping rate in 2018, those that saw a decrease, included Kansas City, Missouri (down 25.2 percent); Buffalo, New York (down 17.5 percent); Indianapolis, Indiana (down 16.3 percent); Seattle, Washington (down 15.9 percent) and Salt Lake City, Utah (down 14.0 percent).

Average time to flip down slightly from 2017

Homes flipped in 2018 took an average of 180 days to complete the flip, down from 181 days in 2017 but up from 159 average days to flip 10-years ago.

Among 176 metro areas with a population of at least 200,000 and at least 100 home flips in 2018, those with the longest average time to flip were Provo, Utah (219 days); Boise, Idaho (215 days); Erie, Pennsylvania (213 days); Gainesville, Florida (213 days); and Kalamazoo, Michigan (212 days).

High-level takeaways from Q4 2018 dataset:

The 47,071 home flips in Q4 2018 were completed by 37,379 investors, a ratio of 1.26 flips per investor.

The share of homes flipped in Q4 2018 that were purchased by the flipper with financing represented 36.4 percent of all homes flipped in the quarter, down from 39.1 percent in the previous quarter and down from 39.5 percent in Q4 2017, to a two-year low.

The average gross flipping profit of home flips in Q4 2018 was $62,000, which represented an average 41.9 percent return on investment (percentage of original purchase price), down from 42.9 percent last quarter and down from 49.6 percent in Q4 2017, to a seven-year low.

The average square footage of homes flipped in Q4 2018 was 1,408, down from 1,412 in the previous quarter to the smallest average square footage on record for the report, going back to Q1 2005.

Homes flips completed in Q4 2018 took an average of 175 days, down from 177 days in the previous quarter and down from 178 days in Q4 2017.

Report methodology

ATTOM Data Solutions analyzed sales deed data for this report. A single-family home or condo flip was any transaction that occurred in the year where a previous sale on the same property had occurred within the last 12 months. The average gross flipping profit is the difference between the purchase price and the flipped price (not including rehab costs and other expenses incurred, which flipping veterans estimate typically run between 20 percent and 33 percent of the property’s after repair value). Gross flipping return on investment was calculated by dividing the gross flipping profit by the first sale (purchase) price.

https://www.attomdata.com/news/most-recent/2018-year-end-u-s-home-flipping-report/
4   AD   2019 Feb 28, 7:02pm  

https://www.longtermtrends.net/home-price-median-annual-income-ratio/


The median price to income ratio is around 4.4. It peaked around 5.1 in 2005.
5   BayArea   2019 Apr 11, 6:33am  

Warning sign for what?

That investors see strength in the housing market...
6   HeadSet   2019 Apr 11, 6:51am  

Every time a new loan is made the banks create more money out of thin air.

I keep hearing this but do not understand the mechanism. After all, when the borrower takes out a $200k mortgage, the bank had to supply the $200k real cash to the seller.
7   Dholliday126   2019 Apr 11, 7:54am  

My wife is in real estate and we were just talking about how many people where asking her about getting into flipping. Don't know if it's a sign of anything imminent, but it has been strange.
8   Patrick   2019 Apr 11, 8:03am  

HeadSet says
Every time a new loan is made the banks create more money out of thin air.

I keep hearing this but do not understand the mechanism. After all, when the borrower takes out a $200k mortgage, the bank had to supply the $200k real cash to the seller.


Right, but the person who deposited the $200k thinks it is still in the bank and can be withdrawn at any time. Actually, only a fraction of the $200k has to be on-hand at the bank.

So by making a loan for the whole amount, the bank has essentially put the money in two places at the same time. We started with one person who actually has $200k, and now two people think they have $200k (the buyer of the house being the other). Eventually, as the loan gets paid back, the duplication resolves itself.

Or look at it like this: when you put money on a coffee card at your coffee shop, you think you have money on the card, but the coffee shop also has your cash and can spend it. So for a time, the money is in two places at once, essentially creating more money.
9   Dholliday126   2019 Apr 11, 8:16am  

Probably a different thread, but if interest rates stay low in our lifetime and in fact go negative next crisis, makes an argument to buy/flip whatever. Renters will continue to get screwed until we get socialism.
10   Goran_K   2019 Apr 11, 8:28am  

Dholliday126 says
Renters will continue to get screwed until we get socialism.


Socialism would be far worse for renters than anything they're experiencing now.
11   just_passing_through   2019 Apr 11, 8:52am  

Goran_K says
Socialism would be far worse for renters than anything they're experiencing now.


"Renters will continue to get screwed until they get shot in the head..."

Homologous statement...
12   HeadSet   2019 Apr 11, 9:41am  

So by making a loan for the whole amount, the bank has essentially put the money in two places at the same time.

I still do not follow this. The $200k is only one place, in the hands of the seller. If the depositor wants to spend any of the $200k on deposit, the bank still has to caught up that additional money. There is not suddenly $400k being spend around the economy.
13   GNL   2019 Apr 11, 11:07am  

HeadSet says
Every time a new loan is made the banks create more money out of thin air.

I keep hearing this but do not understand the mechanism. After all, when the borrower takes out a $200k mortgage, the bank had to supply the $200k real cash to the seller.

You don't know how a fiat system works then.

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