Once again building the Phoenix real estate market report first thing on the first of the month produced some surprising results. The number of closings looks too high, especially the number and percentage of short sale closings. Even though I think these numbers will change, I’ll report them as I see them on 7/1/11.
June 2011 had 10,509 closed transactions; highest number of home sales from any June. In fact, it happens to be the highest number of home sales from any single month ever, previous high 10,250. The Arizona Regional MLS (ARMLS) has reported +10,000 sales only 3 other times: 6/04, 6/05, and 8/05. This is the first time over 10,000 in almost 6 years.
Looking at recent Phoenix market trends, June 2011 sales volume increased 7% over May 2011 and by 13% over June 2010.
Fortunately in early July, we have good news on the price front as well. Both the average and median home sales price increased month over month 2% and 3% respectively – $161,000 and $111,000.
Since we have 6 months in the books, I looked at the year to date comparisons 2011 vs. 2010 and 2011 vs. all-time. Remember 2010’s number of transactions were approximately 92,000 which ranked fourth highest home sales all time. Greater Phoenix’s highest year with 104,700 came in 2005. Well, 2011 is off to a very strong start with 53,501 closings YTD. That’s 11% higher than 2010′s numbers and 1% off of the record setting 2005.
Once again when I ran my initial numbers for May, I was pleasantly surprised. Initial closings for the Greater Phoenix real estate market in May 2011 are 9802, which is within 88 sales of the highest May on record (2005). May 2011 is 5% over April 2011 and 7% above May 2010, which continues 2011’s improvement over 2010’s numbers.
Now the reality check: Prices fell slightly
These price numbers are all down from April, which can be attributed again to the ‘mix or make-up’ of the sales figures. REO sales were 44% of the total and Short Sales came in at 22% of all sales. So ‘distress sales’ bumped up slightly, which dropped prices accordingly.
I like the Price Analysis that the Cromford Report published at the end of May. It compared prices a number of ways: such as greater Phoenix vs. outside greater Phoenix; single family vs. condos; various price range points from under $25,000 to over $3 million; and finally a breakdown by city showing today’s price per square foot and comparing it to 90 days ago and last year. Yes all cities are down year over year, but the results are mixed comparing the last 90 days. This is valuable information to provide to clients buying a house, REO sellers, appraisers and anyone else trying to evaluate prices for the Phoenix area.
Besides the number of sales in May, probably the biggest news is number of Active Listings. Current number of Actives stands at 23,624 which is only 2.4 month supply of homes. A balanced market has a 4 to 6 month supply, so we are in a ‘seller’s market’, but prices are the last piece to feel the impact of the short supply. It’s a 5 year low for number of Active Listings and if you factor out the AWC’s, you have to go even further back to reach a 2.4 month supply. Within the Active Listing numbers bank-owned properties have a greater shortage with a 1 month supply of inventory and only a 3 week supply of HUD homes. I guess the shortage of supply explains the return of the multiple offer situations and the dreaded multiple counter offers to explain to frustrated buyers.
The market doesn’t really show any signs of cooling off with 13,254 Pending Listings; the same number as the start of May.
There are a few warning signs on the horizon as the Federal government considers how to deal with Fannie and Freddie, maximum loan amounts, and minimum down payment requirements.
Stay tuned by subscribing to our market reports via email.
April’s initial numbers show another strong month in the greater Phoenix real estate market. We had 9314 closings, # 2 April of all time, with #1 April/05 possibly in reach. The number of closings was down 7% from March/11, but up 1% from 4/10. Prices moved in a positive direction with the Average Sales Price up $4000/2% to $161,100 and the Median Sales Price moving up $1000 to $111,000.
Bank owned sales dropped 2.5% to 44% of closings (4118) and Short Sales moved up 1% to 20% of closed sales (1845).
With Active listings below 27,000 and sales over 9000 for the month, there is less than a 3 month supply of homes, which by definition is a seller’s market. This should indicate an upward movement for prices on the horizon. On the REO front, there are 5253 Active listings and 4118 sales, or a 1.3 month supply. Short Sales have more AWC listings (6727) than Active (6484), and another 3849 in Pending status-will they ever close?
Regarding MARS disclosures, we are entering our second month waiting for ‘clarification’ from NAR and the FTC regarding which disclosures need to be made by real estate agents. We’re still hearing it’s “coming soon”. Not everyone doing Short Sales are ‘up to speed’ on the state and national requirements. Some agents think their fees were ‘grandfathered’ and Short Sale Negotiator fees are now being called any thing but a Short Sale negotiator fee.
That’s my report for the Phoenix real estate market. Stay tuned, we’ll post about any MARS development once it’s announced.
Qwiki = WOW. Watch this video introduction or jump to an example below…
Qwiki at TechCrunch Disrupt from Qwiki on Vimeo.
Qwiki quickly blends public information (like you would find on wikipedia) with a robotic voice to create an interactive, multimedia presentation of information.
Think about how this can be used on your real estate web site. Do you have city pages?
Pretty cool, huh!?! Go to qwiki.com to do a search. At the end of the presentation is where you’ll find the embed code add to your site. Since it’s still in alpha testing, they are looking for your help to improve the info.
Phoenix Arizona Real Estate – Market Report
So what happened in October? If I told you NOTHING unusual, would that be good or bad?
As of today 11/1, the number of Closed listings stands at 6488, which is down 274 from September or 4%, which is certainly in line with the Phoenix area’s ‘seasonal’ adjustments. The number of Pendings are also steady at 9655, which will probably bounce back over 10,000 later this week.
The best news is on the price front where our recent decline was reversed with a 2% INCREASE for the Average Sales Price for the month (+$3500 to $163,800) and the Median Price was up 1% (+$900 to $120,000).
The main ‘news maker’ for the month involves the distressed properties with REO’s making up 46% of all sales (2890) and Short Sales accounting for 22% of October’s closings (1450).
So what are the ‘takeaways’ for this month’s analysis? Prices have steadied, distressed properties are maintaining their percent of the market with the number of REO’s increasing in order to make up for the decrease in closed Short Sales, and overall October numbers were historically ‘average’.
I’m still waiting to see what impact the foreclosure ‘moratorium’ will have on the market. We’ll report the numbers when they are available.
Jim Sexton
Phoenix Real Estate Broker
John Hall & Associates, Inc.
602-953-4043
So I was checking out a great post by Arizona Real Estate Agent Elizabeth Newlin on the AAR Blog yesterday. In it she referred to Zillow as a jolly green giant toe sucker. Hilarious.
Along comes the newly named CEO of Zillow Spencer Rascoff to comment on Elizabeth’s impressive insult which opened a quick back and forth between the two.
In the dialog, Spencer acknowledges “Agents and Appraisals will always be more accurate than a computer model.” and he shared a link to the Zestimate Accuracy Reports.
Phoenix Metro Area received an accuracy rating of 2 out of 4 stars. Here are the numbers…
| Within 5% of Sales Price | Within 10% of Sales Price | Within 20% of Sales Price |
|---|---|---|
| 20% | 38% | 61% |
Pretty cool response from the CEO if you ask me.
For those of us that survived July’s real estate market, we need to know how August treated us. August showed a 7% increase in number of sales (7525 vs. 7021). But what’s happening to prices…? They did continue their decline. Mike Orr wrote a couple of nice articles on prices in August. Check them out @ www.cromfordreport.com.
Let me give you the numbers and then some thoughts on where they are going. The month to month Average Sales Price (ASP) is down 6% to $164,900; Median Sales Price (MSP) is down 4% to $120,000; and Price per Square Foot ($/SF) is down 6% to $85. These are significant drops for a 1 month period. Distress properties (REO’s and Short Sales “SS”) make up 69% of the sale numbers, with SS making up 32%. But the majority of the price decrease is attributable to Normal Sales, i.e. not Distress. Here are the comparisons from The Cromford Report.
| Greater Phoenix / All Dwelling Types | $/SF July 29 | $/SF August 29 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| REOs | $67.11 | $68.07 | +1.4% |
| Short Sales & Pre-foreclosures | $84.35 | $81.86 | -3.0% |
| Normal | $119.77 | $108.19 | -9.7% |
| Overall | $90.20 | $85.43 | -6.3% |
So why did this happen? According to Mike, “the overall price decline is primarily caused by two main factors: a steep fall in the sales prices of Normal listings over $300,000 and the relative scarcity of Normal sales in August, particularly higher end homes. We saw only 91 Normal sales priced over $600,000 compared with 142 sales the month before.”
So don’t expect to hear many ‘rosy news stories’ this month. Also remember that we will start to hear about the market’s dismal performance in July. Here we go with the Consumer confidence factor again.
The foreclosure numbers should be out in a few days and I’ll update you on the market when I receive them.
Have a great month!
Jim Sexton
Will you please vote for JohnHall.com/blog? (click here to vote)
Last week Zillow started a people’s choice blog contest. They put 10 blogs up against each other in a most-votes-wins contest. Voting is now open and closes August 11th at noon Pacific time. The competition is stiff!
You’re allowed to vote once every 24 hour period, so please stop reading this plea and click the image above to Vote for Pedro John Hall & Associates, today, and tomorrow, and everyday until August 11th. Thanks for your help!
There’s a lot being written about the Phoenix Real Estate market as analysts and practitioners try to describe or predict what’s happening.
In my opinion, the market is sputtering on the price front but continues a brisk pace on a volume basis. To me any month with greater than 9000 closings is an outstanding month. May of 2010 was only the 15th month with over 9000 closings in the last 9 ½ years-that’s 113 months if you’re counting. June will probably be the 16th month with a chance of being the 4th month over 10,000 and possibly the highest month on record (The current #1 is June of 2005 with 10,252). All those ‘beat the tax deadline’ closings will motivate buyers and lenders to “get’em closed” this month.
Pendings and AWC’s continue high with 12,400 and 7700 respectively; that’s over 20,000 properties currently in escrow. Life without a tax credit won’t start until next month and then we’ll see how an unsubsidized real estate market reacts.
So to review May: 9100 closings-with only 20 business days in the month; 37% or 3350 were Bank Owned (REO’s); Short Sales (SS) accounted for 22% or 2000 closings. The real story with SS’s is the 4100 in Pending status and the 7100 in AWC status. When these 11,000 properties currently in escrow close, the percentages will have changed dramatically. Go to our blog for a Mike Orr report on Short Sales courtesy of Old Republic Title. Mike does a great job providing details on SS’s by analyzing them from both a supply and demand point of view, breaking them down by zip code. Also he compares SS’s to REO’s by price range. It’s a good report to refer to, if you have an appraiser or bank that needs information about SS’s specific to a zip code.
Another new statistical report came out this month called STAT. ARMLS provides the report and they have an advanced predictor of prices. You can get this report from your flexmls dashboard or click right here.
Also in our Real Estate Market section you will find our chart tracking Tom Ruff’s foreclosure numbers. The chart shows that New Notices of Trustee Sales are down 21% for the first 5 months of 2010 compared to 2009; Completed foreclosures are up 16% ; Pending Foreclosures are down 13% since the first of the year; and the biggest change is 70% more Cancelled in 2010 than the first 5 months last year. The current number of Bank Owned properties in Maricopa County is 16,301, which is made up of 5200 Active listings; 3850 are Pending; and the balance of 7250 are waiting to be marketed.
For last week’s short sale seminar Old Republic Title commissioned Michael Orr to create a special report explaining the state of the short sale market in greater Phoenix. The report has been posted to Old Republic’s NewLeading EdgeUcation.com website. Here’s a direct link to the 10 page pdf.
Have a safe Memorial Day weekend.
| ![]() |
Copyright © 2012 John Hall & Associates | Phoenix AZ Real Estate Agency | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Comment Policy