5
0

Housing Market Update: Nearly 1 in 5 Sellers is Dropping Their Price, the Highest Rate Since October 2019.


               
2022 May 29, 1:47pm   863 views  17 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   follow (6)  

Measures of homebuying competition are plateauing as early-stage demand posts its biggest annual decline since April 2020. However, mortgage rates may have leveled off, which could prevent demand from dropping even further.

The housing market is sending clearer signals that the pandemic-driven housing frenzy is coming to an end. Nearly one in five (19.1%) home sellers dropped their price during the four week period ending May 22—the highest level since October 2019. Measures of competition including the typical listing’s time on market, the share of homes pending sale within one week and the share of homes sold above list price have all plateaued. Mortgage-purchase applications were at a level on par with June 2020, and the number of homebuyers touring and offering on homes, as measured by the Redfin Homebuyer Demand Index, posted its largest annual decline since April 2020.

“The picture of a softening housing market is becoming more clear, especially to home sellers who are increasingly turning to price drops as buyers become more cost-conscious under higher mortgage rates,” said Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather. “For now, mortgage rates have stabilized, and I expect prices to do the same. This will remove some uncertainty for buyers. That means that as long as a home is priced conservatively, it still has a good chance of selling quickly.”

Leading indicators of homebuying activity:

Fewer people searched for “homes for sale” on Google—searches during the week ending May 21 were down 13% from a year earlier.

The seasonally-adjusted Redfin Homebuyer Demand Index—a measure of requests for home tours and other home-buying services from Redfin agents—was down 12% year over year during the week ending May 22. This was the largest decline since April 2020 when the pandemic paused most homebuying activity.

Touring activity from the first week of January through May 22 was 29 percentage points behind the same period in 2021, according to home tour technology company

Mortgage purchase applications were down 16% from a year earlier, while the seasonally-adjusted index was flat week over week during the week ending May 20.

For the week ending May 26, 30-year mortgage rates decreased slightly to 5.1%.

Key housing market takeaways for 400+ U.S. metro areas:

Unless otherwise noted, the data in this report covers the four-week period ending May 22. Redfin’s housing market data goes back through 2012.

Data based on homes listed and/or sold during the period:

The median home sale price was up 16% year over year to a record $400,000.

The median asking price of newly listed homes increased 18% year over year to $418,000, a new all-time high.

The monthly mortgage payment on the median asking price home declined slightly from a record high to $2,425 at the current 5.1% mortgage rate. This was up 42% from $1,708 a year earlier, when mortgage rates were 2.95%.

Pending home sales were down 5.4% year over year.

New listings of homes for sale were down 0.9% from a year earlier.

Active listings (the number of homes listed for sale at any point during the period) fell 13% year over year—the smallest decline since April 2020.

55% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within the first two weeks on the market, up from 53% a year earlier.

40% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within one week of hitting the market, up from 40% a year earlier.

Homes that sold were on the market for a record-low median of 15 days, down from 19 days a year earlier.

A record 57% of homes sold above list price, up from 50% a year earlier.

On average, 4.8% of homes for sale each week had a price drop. Overall, 19.1% dropped their price in the past four weeks, up from 13.0% a month earlier and 9.8% a year ago.

This was the highest share since October 2019.

The average sale-to-list price ratio, which measures how close homes are selling to their asking prices, was flat at an all-time high of 102.8%. In other words, the average home sold for 2.8% above its asking price. This was up from 101.6% a year earlier.

Refer to our metrics definition page for explanations of all the metrics used in this report.

https://www.redfin.com/news/housing-market-update-price-drops-surge-to-19pct/

Comments 1 - 17 of 17        Search these comments

1   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 May 29, 5:21pm  

I wish these things would come to pass here in the SF Bay Area region where Patrick and I live, to make the region more livable for those who are not Tech Elites. Haven't seen it yet, but we can be hopeful.

I paste here some remarks I put on the thread by "BayArea" about the police pensions. (yes, the topics are related):

About a month ago I drove past a sh*tbox with a for sale sign in front. Yes indeed it was a pocket listing, already sold before the sign appeared.
at $1.025 M. You can look at the link if you like. If you don't like to look at the link, I will share some details about it:

- About 200 ft from one of "worst three" public HS in our city (out of about 50 high schools in the city). About 60 ft from a major throughfare (crime, noise, traffic). A few weeks ago a motorist ran over and killed two pedestrians who were in the crosswalk, about a half mile down the throughfare from this property.

- Built in 1959. If you look on the ®eal Estate website linked, you'll see a bit of lipstick applied to this pig. Note the sealed up former garage door. Is that former garage part of the listed 1120 sq ft living space?

- The ®eal Estate website linked says the "estimated refi payment" will be about $5300 per month. I did the arithmetic. That'd be for the monthly tax bill of over $900 plus a mortgage payment of about $4300 to service an $800k mortgage.

I suppose their $5300 includes mortgage and property tax, and little else. (like, maintenance or earthquake insurance for that pig). Using a conservative 25% housing cost $5300 per month will be an income of $22,000 per month or about $260k per year, - not allowing any money at all for maintenance or repairs or earthquake insurance. And of course there'd be the small matter of a $200,000 down payment for the buyer. Would a young cop starting out have that bit of Silicon Valley Chump Change to put down? Remember, s/he won't be getting RSUs like you and me. What do you think?

This is not an expansive McMansion for a young cop to grow a family. It is a 63 year old sh*tbox that includes a sealed off garage as living space. It is not a home in a leafy quiet neighborhood with "good schools". If s/he don't want to send kids to the worst schools in the city (see the ®eal Estate link for that property about the schools), it means Private School Tuition, easily another $20k per kid per year.

https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1785-Hopkins-Dr-San-Jose-CA-95122/19727040_zpid/
2   pudil   2022 May 29, 5:58pm  

What’s the yoy price decline? There isn’t one? What!!!
3   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 May 29, 6:08pm  

pudil says
What’s the yoy price decline? There isn’t one? What!!!

The sh*tbox I linked to above is about 8% per year appreciation from the sale in 2006
4   Booger   2022 May 29, 6:34pm  

Nearly 1 in 5 Sellers is Dropping Their Price

ERECTION INTENSIFYING!!!
5   Blue   2022 May 29, 10:02pm  

An anecdotal evidence that sellers are willing to negotiate with buyers in South Bay Area finally at least for now. I know someone trying to buy SFH, says some sellers are willing to give him good discounts if he could buy as is. In one case, ready for 2.1 from published 2.5m.
He has already dumped his stock options and moved to cash a while ago. If there are enough people like him around, I’d think there wouldn’t a crash but there could be a “correction” and slow down in expense areas. I don’t know enough, again I could be wrong. Can someone explain how this ongoing inflation built in into RE.
6   mell   2022 May 29, 10:04pm  

We have seen price drops of around 5% when a house has trouble selling, but then it literally sells within days. Hardly any type of crash, but def a slowdown.
7   Patrick   2022 May 29, 11:12pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
The sh*tbox I linked to above is about 8% per year appreciation from the sale in 2006






Wow, it is indeed a shitbox:


8   BayArea   2022 May 30, 6:27am  

Not appreciation I wanted to miss out on
9   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 May 30, 9:08am  

Patrick says
Wow, it is indeed a shitbox:

BayArea says

Not appreciation I wanted to miss out on

ie, FOMO

The ®eal Estate website I linked to that says "est refi payment $5280/mo" also says "rent estimate $3499/mo"

I think $5280 is only a mortgage payment and property tax bill. So I think it does not include any maintenance and repairs for this 63 year old sh*tbox, nor earthquake insurance. I've lived in a now-52-year-old-sh*tbox about a mile away. I tracked the maintenance and repair for decades, it's averaged about $6500/yr or a bit more than $500 per month. That's maintenance and repair. No remodeling, no additions.

So let's say the FOMO buyer will never-ever spend a cent on maintenance and repair, and that the property tax bill is frozen (it's not, - per the Constitution Of The State Of California, can go up 2% per year, - and 2% of a big number is a big number). It means the FOMO buyer, after a Silicon Valley Chump Change down payment of about $200,000 (can you say, Sunk Capital?), continues to pay on a monthly basis a ($5280-$3500) $ 1780 FOMO-ownership-premium. That's more than $21k per year of Sunk FOMO Capital.

The reality is that there will be maintenance and repair costs. So the Sunk FOMO Capital amount will be greater.

I drive past this area fairly often. I drove by yesterday. I am curious to see who the FOMOs are. It looked like the house was still vacant, 24 days after the supposed sale date. $5300 per month (not counting a $200k downpayment) for 24 days is about $4500 of Sunk FOMO Capital for an empty house.
10   clambo   2022 May 30, 11:33am  

The problem with expensive houses isn’t just paying it off, it’s the never ending property taxes.

We know a rich guy who was paying $50,000/ year to Santa Cruz county.

No matter how rich you are, that’s going to piss you off.

Edit:
During the recent forest fires the house burned down; his neighbor stole the water in his storage tank to save his own house.
11   Blue   2022 May 30, 11:45am  

clambo says

The problem with expensive houses isn’t just paying it off, it’s the never ending property taxes.

We know a rich guy who was paying $50,000/ year to Santa Cruz county.

No matter how rich you are, that’s going to piss you off.

He must be a 1978 prop 13 victim.
12   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 May 30, 11:55am  

clambo says
The problem with expensive houses isn’t just paying it off, it’s the never ending property taxes.


Yes. The savvy FOMO buyers of that sh*tbox I linked to will be privileged to pay the 1% base rate of $10,250 per year not including Junk Fee Assessments which will add another .2 to .4% (extra $2000 - $4000).

Per Proposition-13 guarantees that are in the Constitution Of The State Of California, the base assessment (and so, tax) cannot rise more than 2% per year. I think there's about 10 Junk Fees added to my assessment in that section of the city. A few are parcel taxes but most are based on the assessment, which means that most of the Junk Fees will rise with the base rate.

Don't forget, the recent Republican Tax Reform laws limit the deductibility of FOMO-size mortgage interest and local property taxes. The current Democrats in power have no plans to change this. Not really a problem in sane parts of the US, just in FOMO- ®eal Estate areas like the Cool And Hip (and Smug) Bay Area.

clambo says
No matter how rich you are, that’s going to piss you off.


Who should he be pissed off at? Himself?

Nobody put a gun to his head and coerced him into making that financial commitment. He chose to. And every day he owns that place he continues to choose to.
13   HeadSet   2022 May 30, 12:06pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
Don't forget, the recent Republican Tax Reform laws limit the deductibility of FOMO-size mortgage interest and local property taxes.

And that is a good law.
14   clambo   2022 May 30, 12:58pm  

On the subject of property taxes, today I was chatting with a local “subdelegado” of a La Paz neighborhood, how low housing costs in Baja is attracting expats.
He almost couldn’t believe me.
The property taxes he considered normal are a few hundred bucks per year in Mexico.
Of course you don’t get many great services and no satisfaction of knowing you are putting a fireman’s kids through college.
15   mell   2022 May 30, 1:00pm  

clambo says

On the subject of property taxes, today I was chatting with a local “subdelegado” of a La Paz neighborhood, how low housing costs in Baja is attracting expats.
He almost couldn’t believe me.
The property taxes he considered normal are a few hundred bucks per year in Mexico.
Of course you don’t get many great services and no satisfaction of knowing you are putting a fireman’s kids through college.

I enjoyed traveling the Baja. Many untouched areas by the sea of Cortez. Seemed pretty safe back then as well but today may very different
16   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 May 30, 1:06pm  

clambo says
you don’t get many great services

Nor do we.

clambo says
and no satisfaction of knowing you are putting a fireman’s kids through college.

Nor do we get satisfaction from that.
17   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 May 30, 1:13pm  

HeadSet says
And that is a good law.


I am one of those Californians in the (Smug) Cool And Hip Bay Area who is affected by that law who thinks it is a good law, also. Apparently Biden and the Democrat leadership think so too.

The 25,000 exemption amount more than covers the Gaming-The-System- deduction of super high state income taxes for all but Tech Elite type folks. State government (income taxes), local government (property taxes), ®ealtors (mortgage deduction limited) high earners all gaming the system to bring down their nominal tax rate with perks not accessible to most people.

It was a limousine-liberal elitist snob f*ck you gaming of the system laid bare by the recent changes. Bless their hearts.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   users   suggestions   gaiste