The Phoenix real estate market is hard for a lot of people to figure out. Tom Ruff and Michael Orr are not 2 of them. Armed with the most accurate data available, an advanced understanding of statistics, and a humorous tone – they are shining the Phoenix real estate light on the rest of the world. Please allow them the opportunity to shine by reading their latest housing report and sharing it with those you care about.
Subject: April’s Housing Report and Opinion
“Stuff is getting better, stuff is getting better everyday.”
Kevin Costner, from the movie The Postman
I found it refreshing this week; if only for a brief moment, to shift my focus from economic worries to a more relaxing reflection, a pandemic. I was happy to see the virus renamed; it really wasn’t fair to pigs.
Cromford calls the bottom
On April 2nd an article on Azcentral.com basically stated anyone calling the bottom of the housing market anytime soon would be a fool. On April 6th, Mike Orr of The Cromford Report called the bottom, does 4 days translate into soon? How does Mike know this, the answer, he’s got better stuff. A licensing agreement with ARMLS allows him to analyze daily MLS listings, sales and pending contracts. He also has access to daily publicly recorded sales and foreclosure data as well as the very best property address and zip code files available. With the most current and precise data in hand he puts it through a rigid cleansing process. From there, the data goes into his disciplined and insightful model and voila. So you see, stuff is getting better every day. Now I know what you’re thinking, how do I get the good stuff? If you are an ARMLS subscriber, you can immediately go to www.cromfordreport.com, and sign up for your FREE subscription, the cost for non-ARMLS subscribers is $300 per year. Here’s Mike’s take.
Preliminary April 2009 Report
April 6, 2009 established a bottom for $/SF sales pricing across the Greater Phoenix area. This does not mean that prices will not go lower in certain areas – they will. But the overall average price per square foot put in a convincing low on April 6th and has been moving sideways to slightly up ever since. The increasing sales volume tends to reinforce the significance of this pattern. I would claim that the cities of Phoenix, Avondale, Gilbert, Mesa, Peoria and Queen Creek are making the best cases for establishing a bottom, while Chandler, Goodyear, Scottsdale, Tempe, Glendale and Surprise still have some work to do. Of course we need to continue to watch to see if the pattern strengthens or fades. The current readings for Pending $/SF suggest more sideways movement in the near term. Every city showed improvement in April over March with supply falling and demand rising. In some areas the fall in supply was breathtakingly swift. Pending sales rose yet again, actual sales continued their strong advance, and listing success rates climbed. To illustrate the change in the market since January, let’s look at Months Supply for May 1st vs. Jan 1st:
Avondale 4.4 (was 8.9)
Chandler 5.7 (was 9.1)
Gilbert 5.2 (was 7.9)
Glendale 3.2 (was 9.1)
Goodyear 3.8 (was 8.6)
Mesa 4.4 (was 8.9)
Peoria 4.9 (was 10.3)
Phoenix 3.4 (was 9.0)
Queen Creek 2.9 (was 6.1)
Scottsdale 14.3 (was 19.4)
Surprise 3.3 (was 7.2)
Tempe 6.7 (was 8.7)
I would consider an inventory level of 4.5 months as “normal” so we can see 7 out of the 12 major cities now have a “below normal” inventory judging by months supply. Let’s look at some basic sales numbers:
April sales (all types and areas) – 8,500 (includes 44 out of territory ARMLS sales, e.g. Payson, Prescott, Flagstaff)
Greater Phoenix Lender-owned Property sales – 5,629
Greater Phoenix Pre-foreclosure & Short Sales – 846
Greater Phoenix Normal Sales – 1981
So REOs still dominated the sales figures, but they are not as dominant as they once were. Among the active listings, REOs are declining quite fast – they now comprise about 17% of all listings whereas in early January they comprised 28% of a much bigger number. In fact, considered as a market segment, Greater Phoenix REO listings on ARMLS represent only a 1.3 month supply at their current monthly sales rate. Pre-foreclosures and short sales are becoming an increasing percentage of both listings and sales, although their listing success rate, having improved from 21% in February to 34% in April, still has a ways to go to rival REOs with their phenomenal listing success rate in April of 86%. As before, the majority of the sales action is concentrated at the affordable end of the market, but it has to be said that improvement in demand is clearly visible at almost all price ranges.
April Foreclosure Numbers
April numbers came in as we expected, with the exception of cancellation notices, we had thought they would be slightly higher. The thing that makes cancellation notices hard to project is they are the step child of recordings, they get recorded when they get recorded. Unless someone protests, they kind of get tossed into the when it’s time to clean off my desk category. April’s notices were down from March, 10,689 to 9,092: trustees deeds down from 3,377 to 3,103: and cancellations down from 3,168 to 2,668. The number of active notices continues to increase totaling 43,171. Of the 3,103 properties sold at auction 331 were purchased by third party buyers. For the past year, nearly 95% of all properties foreclosed upon have reverted to the bank, this month, only 89.3% returned to the beneficiary, with 10.7% purchased by investors. Foreclosure numbers are funny, and if there is anyone who knows exactly what happens next they’re sharing adult beverages with Michael J. Williams, Kenneth Lewis or Richard Kovacevich. Our interpretations the last few months have been based on what we’re hearing from experts in the field, and working off the presumption, if I were King. Charts and graphs can’t presently paint a picture of what comes next, not when it comes to the new filings of notice of trustee sales and trustees deeds; that went out the window in October. I do believe if we are to get a glimpse as to what happens next our focus should not be on how the notices and trustee’s deeds are currently trending, but by revisiting the attributes of homes purchased or refinanced between September 2005 and April 2 007, this is the time frame from which the vast majority of foreclosures originated. We have begun to take a look and will be making this part of my new weekly commentary within The Cromford Report.
Foreclose when you have to, negotiate when you can
It never made sense to me to flood the market with new foreclosures while existing REO levels were extremely high. I think the banks learned this lesson, most likely the hard way. As king, with REO inventory dropping rapidly it would now make sense to step up the tone of my negotiations with those currently in foreclosure. I now have a pretty good idea what to expect from the market regardless of what decision I make, and I can now make an educated decision that is best for me, the bank. We’ve been in this market of high foreclosures and declining values for sometime now, and everyone is getting smarter. As king, I can now make decisions from a broader knowledge base, and I can now translate these decisions back into dollars and sense. That said; don’t be surprised if Trustee’s Deeds increase in May, and if not in May, then June.
A tip of the Hat
Much of what you read in the national media regarding foreclosure data comes from Realty Trac, the purveyors’ of the shadow inventory theory. I remember Art Bell talking about shadow people on his radio show back in 2003, so when I first heard the term shadow inventory I naturally thought it was an imaginary count of imaginary homes where imaginary people lived. If you go to Realty Trac’s home page you will see an area called the Best of Realty Trac where they talk about shadow inventory, an interesting concept, but like the imaginary people above, no basis in fact. It was great to see Rick Kross, Town Manager of Queen Creek fight back and set the record straight. I think this will be the beginning of Arizona governments distancing themselves from national data sources when making local decisions. Thank you Rick Kross, I tip my hat.
A closer look at Realty Trac
http://www.dsnews.com/index.php/home/news_story/2885
“The RealtyTrac U.S. Foreclosure Market Report provides a count of the total number of properties with at least one foreclosure filing reported during the quarter. Data is also available at the individual county level and MSA level for both Q1 2009 and March 2009. Data is collected from more than 2,200 counties nationwide, and those counties account for more than 90 percent of the U.S. population. RealtyTrac’s report incorporates documents filed in all three phases of foreclosure: Default — Notice of Default (NOD) and Lis Pendens (LIS); Auction — Notice of Trustee Sale and Notice of Foreclosure Sale (NTS and NFS); and Real Estate Owned, or REO properties (that have been foreclosed on and repurchased by a bank). If more than one foreclosure document is filed against a property during the month or quarter, only the most recent filing is counted in the report.”
After reading the above article I learned several things I never knew, I didn’t know the three phases of foreclosure were, Default, Auction and Real Estate Owned. I didn’t know a Notice of Trustee Sale was an auction, I didn’t know an REO was where a bank repurchased a property; of course I’m being derisive. How do I foreclose upon thee, let me count the ways, and even though I say I count them once let me count many of them twice. Whenever I look at real estate statistics I always try to look inside the numbers and try and ascertain the methodology. When a company reports data or statistics without definition as to how they arrived, their numbers become meaningless. I would advise anyone giving stats to abide by this simple rule, let it be known how and why you drew your conclusions, clearly state your methodologies. In the case of Realty Trac, if the above paragraph does indeed define their methodology, I wouldn’t tell anyone, nada, zip. I’d just keep um guessing, nod my head and smile. God bless you Realty Trac, but Rick Kross got it right, your data is “patently false.”
Cromford vs Housing Doom
http://www.azcentral.com/12news/news/articles/2009/05/04/20090504housingbottom05042009-CR.html
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Thank you,
Tom Ruff
Just when I thought Tom Ruff ended his excellent email series, yesterday afternoon the next chapter of brilliance came across. I don’t know anyone that puts the current Phoenix housing market in easier to understand terms than Tom. Anyone who is interested in or works in real estate should read this email in entirety. Thanks Tom! (we’re glad your still in business
Maricopa County Foreclosure Numbers
Subject: March’s Housing Opinion
“I expect January foreclosure numbers to increase, and I think this increase will have more to do with November and particularly December than January itself. A period of grace took place over the holidays leaving December numbers lower than expected, with actual foreclosures coming in well below our quarterly projections. I would not be alarmed by an increase in January numbers anymore than being encouraged by December numbers.”
Tom Ruff, The Information Market
Often times I start my monthly newsletter with a quote from someone rich or famous, this month I elected to quote someone who is neither. I wanted to direct your attention to our December newsletter as to what we saw coming in the first two months of 2009. The one thing that continues to amaze me is how quickly the foreclosure numbers are impacted by the actions of a few key lenders and government entities. Reading Azcentral today there was an article headlined Valley home resales, foreclosures jump, this is exactly what we said you would be reading when February numbers were reported. Now, let me give you next month’s headlines, March resales higher than expected, foreclosures drop. I can’t tell you how March’s numbers will be explained; I can only tell you the headline. Let me give you my explanation on both February and March’s numbers. February foreclosure numbers were higher because of the moratorium in late December and early January pushing properties that normally would have been foreclosed during this period into mid January and early February. Add in the fact that recorded Trustee’s Deeds lag behind the court house auction by 10 to 14 days and you have heavy numbers reported in February. By the same formula a temporary hold on repossessions in February will result in much lower numbers in March. That being said, the other side of the coin tells us that the drop in March will mean an increase in recorded Trustee’s Deeds in April and/or May, with further government intervention our standard disclaimer. The pattern can best be described as a bumpy road. A note to the analysts in our listening audience, keep your shocks in good working order and don’t jump to any dramatic conclusions based on any one month of foreclosure data, or you’ll probably be embarrassed. Excuse me while I write a personal note to myself, “Self, only draw dramatic attention to singular monthly data when in need of instant media attention.” Noted.
Recession vs Recession
I was reading an article comparing our current recession to where we were in the early 1980′s, the similarities and differences. No one has mentioned one big difference between now and then, the internet. It is alarming the velocity and volume with which we are bombarded with negative news. In 1980 we had TV news, the local newspaper and our car radio to let us know how bad things were, and our radio was probably tuned to KUPD. Today, everywhere we turn, the news is miserable. I think we can agree the news hasn’t been good, but we should also know, it ain’t all bad. In the next few months, we will make a concerted effort to point out the silver lining within our local housing market, someone has to.
The goose and the gander
As you are aware from time to time I challenge the numbers of others, I was going to say other experts, but they’re the experts and I’m the other. Speaking of which, in my next commentary I will be giving my opinion of Realty Trac and First American’s Core Logic and their local and national press releases. I can feel my keyboard heating up just mentioning the thought.
Anyway, what’s good for the goose is good for the gander, if you think I’m wrong, challenge me, I’ll make you my opening quote next month. You too can join the ranks of Warren Buffet, David R Kotoc, Franklin D Roosevelt and Tom Ruff. The only way you learn anything new is to be attached to nothing and open to everything, I welcome any and all responses.
My Sister
I remember my sister once saying, “Isn’t it amazing that whenever you start a conversation about someone you know and like with God bless in front of their name you can say just about say anything and it doesn’t sound mean.” The previously mentioned Azcentral article contained this statement, “The median foreclosed home value of $164,470 was higher than the median resale price, which ASU Realty Director Jay Butler said was due to higher-end homes going into foreclosure while the resale market focused mainly on less expensive homes.” God bless Jay Butler, but that statement is absurd. There are no rules for determining what the opening bid will be at auction; it is completely the discretion of the lender. With approximately 95% of all properties at auction returning to the beneficiary, they can only truly be described for what they are, a failed cash auction. You could say a Trustee’s Sale is tied to market value only when purchased by a third party and, it should be duly noted only cash buyers need apply. Let me give you an example, a bungalow I tried to purchase downtown. The property sold for $232,000 in March of 2005. A notice of trustee’s sale was filed in September of 2008 with the Trustee stating the unpaid balance to be $188,000, which traditionally would have been the opening bid amount set by the lender. On February 3rd 2009 the property was auctioned on the court house steps with an opening bid of $124,000, which in turn became the sales price listed on the Trustee’s Deed. The property returned to the beneficiary and the bank listed the property for $45,900.
Putting our money where our mouth is
We are currently trying to buy a second home, we think the deals are too good to say no. I live in downtown Phoenix and have seen two houses within the past two weeks I have wanted to purchase. Both properties were sold within minutes of being listed, both had multiple offers, both were about $65,000 below what I believed the real value to be, both were bank owned, both we’re below $100,000, I never even had a chance to get ink on the offer sheet, they were already gone. Anyone who is waiting for the bottom to purchase a home, what are you waiting for? If you don’t get out there now you’ll be kicking yourself later. I don’t ask you to believe what I write; I simply suggest you look at homes for sale in your desired neighborhood. Some areas have not hit bottom, some are just hitting bottom, and others are already on their way up. Listen to me now, believe me later.
Further incentive
If the Federal Stimulus housing package didn’t offer enough incentive, here’s what will soon be available from the city of Phoenix.
You Could be Eligible for $15,000 in Down Payment Assistance
through the City of Phoenix Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP)!
You are invited to meet with City of Phoenix Housing and Neighborhood Services staff and housing counseling partners to learn about a new down payment assistance program that helps homebuyers purchase foreclosed single family homes and condominiums (no condo conversions) in the City of Phoenix.
You … or someone you know … may qualify for $15,000 in down payment and closing cost assistance to help buy an affordable foreclosed home anywhere in the City of Phoenix. Plan to attend one of the Homeownership Assistance Information Sessions listed below to see if you and your family can participate.
Parking is available at the 305 West Washington Street Garage. Please enter the garage on 4th Avenue between Washington and Jefferson streets or ride the new light rail to the 1st Avenue and Washington Street stop or the Central Avenue and Adams Street stop.
Date: Monday, March 16, 2009
Time: Choose from one of two scheduled information sessions:
2:00 p.m. or 5:30 p.m.
Place: Phoenix City Council Chambers
200 West Jefferson Street
Phoenix, Arizona 85003
For more information on the NSP Homeownership Assistance program:
For more information on upcoming NSP Homeownership Assistance Information Sessions:
Where you been
I’d like to thank our many readers who took the time to contact us asking about our monthly commentary over the past two months when nothing arrived in their mailbox. One reader even stated she was afraid we were no longer in business; imagine that type of thinking in this economy. Special thanks to the Federal Reserve Board member, you know who you are, who’s colorful language was more inspiring than any muse I’ve encountered, your extraordinary words brought me to the keyboard this evening. The reports normally attached to this email as well as my editorial comment can be found at www.cromfordreport.com If there is a monthly report you have been tracking and you do not see it within The Cromford Report let me know and I will see that it is added. As always, please feel free to share this with whom you wish. If anyone reading this would like to be added to our mailing list I would be happy to do so, by the same token, if you would like to be removed, just say so. I expect to hear from many of you, and I expect your correspondence to begin, God bless you Tom Ruff ………
http://www.azcentral.com/business/articles/2009/03/13/20090313biz-resales0316.html
Thanks,
Tom
This last week I did my best to read an overview of the new Stimulus Plan rolled out by Congress, I’d like to say I understood it but the truth is there is just too much information (did you know there is an actual psychological condition call “Information Fatigue Syndrome”, I think I have it!) Anyway, I decided the best way to approach this was to just review the portion of the bill that has the most impact on housing. It was unbelievably difficult to find a source that wasn’t tainted with partisan rhetoric. I finally just went after the answers to some specific questions.
Bob Bemis, CEO for ARMLS had the pleasure of speaking with Channel 12 news this morning at 5:40 and 6:40. They stopped by to ask how the Phoenix housing market is doing. Bemis commented on the declining prices, high pending sales, and shrinking inventory. He also talked about the highest priced listing in ARMLS – any guesses of the price?
Here’s the video. (Update: Video has been removed.)