San Francisco Bay Area Sales Up!

Posted in Foreclosures, Real Estate, Short Sales by Jake on April 25, 2012 No Comments yet

March home sales in California’s Bay Area reached their highest level for the month in five years, the result of lower prices, low interest rates and an improving economy.  About 7,700 new and resale houses and condos sold in the nine-county Bay Area in March, up 34.9% from 5,702 in February, and up 9.1% from 7,051 a year earlier, according to San Diego-based DataQuick.  The February to March sales jump is normal for the season, but the latter’s sales count was the highest for the month since 8,317 homes were sold in 2007. Since 1988, March sales have ranged from 4,898 in 2008 to 12,645 in 2004, with an average of 8,812.

Median Price Is Up

“This is the time of year when buying patterns usually start to normalize,” said DataQuick President John Walsh. “And while the changes we’re seeing are incremental, they’re incremental in a positive direction. That said, there’s a long way to go.”  The median price paid for all new and resale houses and condos sold in the Bay Area in March totaled $358,000, a 10.2% increase from $325,000 in February, but down 0.6% from $360,000 in March 2011. 

 What’s The Take Away?

To put these figures in perspective, the low point of the current real estate cycle fell to $290,000 in March 2009, while the peak rose to $665,000 in June/July 2007.  Statewide median home prices posted their first year-over-year increase in 16 months. The California Association of Realtors members said tight inventory (4.1 months) throughout the state and particularly robust sales in the San Francisco Bay area helped fuel the price increase.

“Two of the big issues to watch closely are how fast distressed properties are being put on the market, and the availability of, or lack of availability of, mortgage financing,” DataQuick’s Walsh said.  Distressed property sales, according to the firm, made up 44.3% of the resale market, down from 48.8% in February and 48.2% a year earlier.  Foreclosure resales accounted for 24.9% of resales in March, falling from 26.4% in February, and down from 31.5% in the year-ago period. Foreclosure resales averaged about 10% over the past 17 years.  Short sales made up 19.4% of Bay Area resales in the month, down from 22.4% in the previous month and up from 16.7% a year earlier.

Short Sale Are Up…But Prices Are Down?

Posted in Short Sales by Jake on April 25, 2012 No Comments yet

“Buyer traffic is strong, supply of homes for sale is low, and yet home prices continue to defy the usual formula, falling again in March. Prices usually rise as supply shrinks, but demand is still too low to make those historical ‘norms’ compute, not to mention that the type of supply available is largely distressed.  Foreclosures and short sales accounted for 47.7% of sales, in a three month running average measured by Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance. That’s the 25th month in a row that distressed sales have topped 40% of the market.  ‘With nearly half of the market being distressed, we’re a long way from a return to a normal market,’ said Thomas Popik, research director at Campbell Surveys. ‘Agents responding to our survey say that homeowners with well-maintained properties in good locations are very reluctant to list at today’s prices. That’s why inventory is low–and also why forced REO and short sales are such a big proportion of the remaining market.’  Home prices for non-distressed properties fell 5.7% in March year-over-year, according to the survey. Prices for ‘damaged’ REO (bank-owned properties) fell 5.7% and for move-in ready REO fell 2.5% during the same period. The real sticker shock is in short sales. Prices of those homes fell 14.3% from March of 2011.

 Robo Signing Impetus

Short sales have been ramping up of late, as banks attempt to comply with the so-called ‘robo-signing’ mortgage settlement. Those are part of the losses the banks are required to take in the $25 billion deal. Over the past six months, short sales have moved from 17.8% of all sales to 19.9%, according to the Campbell/IMF survey. They now represent the number one segment for distressed properties.

That share is likely to grow, as the conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), last week announced it was directing the two mortgage giants to ‘develop enhanced and aligned strategies for facilitating short sales, deeds-in-lieu and deeds-for-lease in order to help more homeowners avoid foreclosure.’ It includes a requirement that mortgage servicers review and respond to short sale requests within thirty days.  Lengthy timelines have long been the biggest complaint in the short sale sector.

Quicker  Short Sale Decisions

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac hold hundreds of thousands of distressed loans, and accelerating the process will surely move the numbers up quickly, although the rules don’t go into effect until June 1. The FHFA is requiring the two make final decisions on these sales within 60 days. Previously, short sales could take up to a year and even beyond, with buyers often dropping out in frustration.  ‘This could put short-term downward pressure on home prices, as short sales by their nature occur more quickly than foreclosures,’

writes Jaret Seiberg, analyst at Guggenheim Partners. ‘That could raise questions about the status of the housing recovery, which could be negative for those with housing exposure. That would include homebuilders, mortgage lenders and mortgage insurers.’  On the plus side, short sales tend to sell at higher prices than foreclosures. It appears, however, that regardless of the FHFA edict, banks are already ramping up the short sales. Some began doing so in the aftermath of the robo-signing scandal, as foreclosures stalled. Even now, foreclosures falling as short sales rise.

The good news is that sales of distressed properties are rising, but the headlines will likely focus more on the falling prices, than the much-needed clearing of these homes.”

courtesy: Diana Olick