Archives July 2020

Weekly Housing Trends View — Data Week July 18, 2020

Our research team releases regular monthly housing trends reports. These reports break down inventory metrics like the number of active listings and the pace of the market. In light of the developing COVID-19 situation affecting the industry, we want to give readers more timely weekly updates. You can look forward to a Weekly Housing Trends View near the end of each week along with weekly coverage from our Housing Market Recovery Index and a weekly video update from our economists. Here’s what the housing market looked like last week.

Weekly Housing Trends Key Findings

  • New listings were down 15 percent. The gradual improvement in the number of homes for sale continues, but it’s not happening fast enough for hungry buyers. The next few weeks will be critical to see if more sellers jump back into the market and stop inventory from eroding further.
  • Total inventory was down 33 percent. The improving new listings trend is still not enough to offset buyer demand as more home buyers aim to take advantage of record-low mortgage rates.
  • Median listing prices are now growing at 9.1 percent over last year, faster than the pre-COVID pace and the fastest pace since January 2018.
  • Time on market is now 1 day faster than last year as buyers out-number sellers and confidence is growing for both and the peak of the season extends into the summer.

Data Summary

Week ending July 18Week ending July 11Week ending July 4First Two Weeks March
Total Listings -33% YOY-32% YOY-31% YOY-16% YOY
Time on Market1 day faster YOY1 day slower YOY3 days slower YOY4 days faster YOY
Median Listing Prices+9.1% YOY+7.9% YOY+6.2% YOY+4.5% YOY
New Listings -15% YOY-19% YOY-4% YOY+5% YOY

The New, Old Real Estate: Capturing Value, Sustainability, and Community Impact by Repositioning Older Buildings

In dense urban markets, repurposing existing buildings offers a sometimes-hidden opportunity to unlock enormous value while drastically reducing the environmental impact of construction.

In the recent ULI webinar titled Breathing New Life into Old Bones, part of the 2020 ULI Spring Meeting Webinar Series, four experts in design, development, and sustainability explored the opportunities and challenges inherent in repositioning buildings.

This webinar is available on demand to ULI Full members and for purchase as part of the 2020 ULI Spring Meeting Webinar Series.

Working creatively with zoning, floor/area ratios, public incentives, and financing is key to making these projects possible. Making them successful often requires finding the design elements within the project that tell a story, creating a strong narrative for brand authenticity and reflecting the community character and history of the building.

“We often find [that older buildings] have inherent structural flexibility to adapt to multiple use types, and there is a historic narrative that establishes sense of place and character that creates value. There’s also an embedded sustainability to using existing buildings and shells,” says Matt Stephenson, associate principal with Woods Bagot Architects.

The design, planning, and construction challenges to renovating older buildings can be complex, but value can be created by upgrading buildings from lower-income-generating uses (light industrial, manufacturing, storage, shipping) to higher-income-generating uses like residential, office, retail, or hospitality, according to Jeremy Plofker, vice president of Madison Realty Capital. “Often, the most value that can be created from an asset [comes from] combining higher-income uses with each other or with lower-income uses,” Plofker says.

The panelists presented four case studies of projects that had transformed older office, hospitality, industrial, or storage buildings to mixed-use, residential, or commercial uses with high-value amenities, rents, and energy cost savings that provided the returns needed to make the projects work.

A 1912 Manhattan office building originally inhabited by the Emigrant National Savings Bank and then by New York City government offices, 49 Chambers was converted into luxury residential apartments. New lot-line windows were added to make up for the deep floor plate, and mechanical systems in the basement and roof were consolidated to make room for a large swimming pool and roof deck. The building’s large windows and unique grand hall on the ground floor encouraged the preservation of features that would create a strong building identity.

Another project went even further in reshaping building footprints for new purposes. At Gramercy Square, a former medical center also being converted into housing, the design team noted that several buildings of the complex would block light and air for other buildings, and decided to demolish them.

“We found built areas that didn’t make sense, removed those, and moved them to where they made more sense,” Stephenson says. They relocated the resulting extra floor area atop other buildings in the complex and were even able to create an entirely new building as well, which “made the whole project commercially feasible,” he adds.

Balancing sustainability with the historical aesthetic was an important consideration on this project—since each building needed facade adjustments, the redesign included energy modeling on the building envelope to determine how to reduce energy use and expenses while keeping occupants comfortable. “We added new cladding to create light and air, with character and texture for the neighborhood, but it also performed well,” says Ben Shepherd, consultant on the project and director at Atelier Ten.

Shepherd also notes the broader opportunities for sustainability on repositioning projects. “You can look at more than just lighting retrofits; you can look at passive shading, or alternative ventilation and conditioning strategies, to dramatically lower the energy intensity of these projects and make sure things like rooftop solar systems have more bang for your buck.”

In addition, reusing old building shells is a major advantage from an emissions perspective. “Repurposing projects takes advantage of the carbon already locked up,” in existing buildings, Shepherd says. “By reusing existing foundations, structures, and enclosures, it saves carbon from being emitted to create new materials,” like concrete or steel, for new construction. The carbon emissions released to produce, transport, and install building materials are known as embodied carbonFor more on this topic, see ULI Greenprint’s Embodied Carbon in Building Materials for Real Estate report.

Repositioning projects can also respond to changing market conditions. On Union Crossing, an industrial-to-commercial conversion in the South Bronx neighborhood of New York City, Plofker notes that “there was no existing market for commercial use, especially flexible commercial use like this, so it took a little bit of a leap of faith” to embark on the project. However, based on trends in nearby neighborhoods, Madison Realty bet that the project “could meet a need that wasn’t being met.” To ensure the project would be resilient to unforeseen market shifts, the design expanded the already-large floor plates so that the space could remain as flexible as possible, and “any number of uses and types of tenants could be accommodated in the future.”

Besides using efficient windows to keep energy use and HVAC costs down, Union Crossing also made sure to use sustainable and healthy materials throughout the building, and to specify the same for tenant finishes. “It’s getting easier to do, as tenants are looking for these aspects in base building spaces, and thankfully they can be achieved with minimal price point,” Shepherd says.

These redevelopment projects are also opportunities to blend value creation and sustainability with community impact. Ponce City Market, an Atlanta warehouse converted into office, retail, and residential uses in 2015 by Jamestown Properties, achieved three separate Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold certifications and also incorporated a neighborhood employment program and workforce housing, which was a key part of “becoming integrated into the fabric of the community,” according to Becca Rushin, vice president of sustainability and social responsibility at Jamestown.

Successful projects like Ponce can even stimulate neighborhood-wide redevelopment. “This was the first project in what was essentially an abandoned block, and [since then] we’ve seen a huge boom in the neighborhood—lots of residential construction—and as we’ve proven the market for class A office space, we’ve seen a lot more office products being constructed as well,” Rushin says.

Overall, building repositioning may take on even greater importance in the post-coronavirus city, as doubt may be sown about the value inherent in dense cities. “As urbanists, we still believe cities serve a really important function as places to gather and share ideas,” Stephenson says. “The quality of these buildings and spaces will continue to play an essential role in framing public and private moments in the future.”


https://urbanland.uli.org/sustainability/the-new-old-real-estate-capturing-value-sustainability-and-community-impact-by-repositioning-older-buildings/

New residential home sales soar in June

Even in the midst of rising coronavirus infections, the U.S. housing market is on its path to recovery as post-lockdown buyers race to take advantage of historic low interest rates while addressing changing housing preferences.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s monthly new residential sales data, sales of new single-family homes rose 13.8% month over month in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 776,000.

That number is not only 6.9% higher than sales data from June 2019, it is the strongest seasonally adjusted annual rate since the Great Recession.

Driving sales are pandemic-era shoppers looking for more space, increasingly in the suburbs and exurbs.

“Builders’ sales are being pumped up by demand coming from people who were formerly in multifamily apartments and who now want to have the social-distancing benefits that come along with living in a detached home,” said RCLCO Real Estate Advisors Managing Director Brad Hunter in a statement.

According to the National Association of Home Builders, the gains for new-home sales are consistent with the NAHB/Wells Fargo HMI, which jumped 14 points to 72 in July to pre-recession levels, demonstrating that housing will be a leading sector in the emerging economic recovery.

“Consider that despite double-digit unemployment, new-home sales are estimated to be 3.2% higher through for the first half of 2020, compared to the first half of 2019,” the NAHB said in a recent Eye on Housing blog post.

New-home sales were higher in almost all regions of the country in June.

In the South, where coronavirus infections continue to rise, new-home sales were up 7.2% in June from the previous month. Compared to June 2019, however, sales in the South were down 1.8%.

The median price of new homes sold in June was $329,200, up from $317,900 in May and $310,400 in June 2019, while inventory levels fell again. Currently, inventory in the U.S. stands at a 4.7-months’ supply, the lowest level since 2016.

“The inventory of new homes remains extremely low relative to demand, which has held back sales to some degree from fully realizing the true level of demand, and kept home prices high,” added Hunter.

While a number of headwinds remain, including surging coronavirus cases and elevated unemployment numbers, the housing market has remained relatively unscathed, along with higher-income workers who are more likely to become homebuyers. Most industry experts expect that trend to continue, as the coronavirus-induced recession so far has not had the same impact on workers who are able to do their work remotely and are less vResidentialulnerable to layoffs and furloughs.

“There is almost universal optimism among homebuilders,” said Hunter. “We are finding that builders nationwide are still experiencing robust new-home demand, and we are also finding in our own surveys that sentiment in the residential sector is solidly positive.”

What will the rest of the year spell for the housing market?

Mending from the sudden sharp drop in activity due to the coronavirus crisis, real estate across the United States is heating up, rekindled by growing demand and insufficient supply.

The National Association of Realtors’ (NAR) pending home sales index, a future-looking indicator of completed sales based on signed contracts, posted a staggering comeback in May, the latest month for which data is available. The index spiked 44.3 percent, registering the highest month-over-month increase since its inception in 2001.

First-time home buyers Stuyve Pierrepont and his wife said they have seen this shift occur almost overnight.

The Pierreponts, who work in the District and previously rented in Northern Virginia, renewed their 18-month home search in early 2020. Prior to the viral outbreak, the couple looked at roughly a dozen homes. During the pandemic, they only saw four residences in person. But the couple wasn’t ready for the speed with which fellow home shoppers were scooping those houses off the market.

The couple toured a house in Annapolis, Md., for example, which went under contract later the same day. “There were a couple of times when we saw places we really wanted, and they sold before we could act,” Pierrepont said. “We were really discouraged by that fact.”

Their real estate agent, Shane Hall of the Shane Hall Group, newly associated with Compass and formerly with TTR Sotheby’s, said in late June that Annapolis, which lies less than an hour east of the District, had a single month of supply, meaning that if no new listings were to come on the market, all existing stock would be purchased in 30 days.


“That’s incredibly rare,” Hall said. “We just don’t have a ton of inventory. And we have a lot of demand.”

Impact of mortgage rates 

With the country’s economy tentatively reopening and shelter-in-place restrictions easing, housing experts forecast that home sales will rise through the summer. The biggest constraint is the number of listings, which are returning to the market only gingerly compared to the appetite for them.

The latter is in part whetted by historically low mortgage rates that are now hovering at 3.03 percent, about 2 percentage points below their level about a mere 18 months ago and where they are expected to remain this year. Annualized new mortgage applications have trended up for weeks.

“Today’s low mortgage rates are a true game changer,” said Ali Wolf, chief economist at Meyers Research, a new-home data and consulting firm. “As the economy reopens, it comes down to four words: fear of missing out.”

Home buyers’ vigor has powered the national housing market, despite declines in mostly all economic indicators. For the most part, home showings — enhanced with hand sanitizer and face masks — have continued throughout the pandemic. The various services supporting the industry, from inspections to closings, have shifted to alternative modes such as the Internet, staying operational. And with the start of summer, home shoppers’ desire to make what is probably the largest financial commitment in their lives — in such an uncharted time — hasn’t seemed to slacken.

Home financing ‘hit a perfect storm’ with virus and the economic downturn

“If anything, that seems to be a ray of sunlight: We’re seeing buyers more active than expected,” said George Ratiu, senior economist with listing website Realtor.com. “Looking at our weekly inventory statistics, we’re seeing that total listings are down partly because new listings are down. But [also because] those homes that are on the market are clearly finding buyers quickly and that’s key.”

For instance, in the Tampa area in Florida, which has seen an influx of buyers from the Northeast because of the pandemic, active upscale inventory through June 23 was 26 percent lower than a year ago, said Jennifer Zales, luxury real estate agent with Coldwell Banker. At the same time, however, completed sales of homes above $1 million totaled 109, or three more than for the whole of June 2019, Zales said. Meanwhile, a little over 230 residences asking $1 million and up, including condos, townhouses and single-family houses, were under contract.

“We have a lot of pent-up demand from the spring season that did not happen,” Zales said. “I feel like somebody took my regular summer season, which is usually very regular, but dumps the whole spring season on top of the summer season. We’re extremely busy.”

This appears to be the latest recurring theme across the United States, even if the summer months traditionally are calmer with vacations and family activities stealing the focus from buying or selling a house. Beyond the next couple of months, angst about the fall, when the uncertainty of the presidential election mixes with a still-wobbly economic outlook and fears of a second wave of coronavirus infections, still permeates forecasts.

Sellers remain cautious 

When the pandemic seized the country, sellers retreated faster and in larger numbers than buyers, prompting the nationwide inventory of homes to dip precipitously. After somewhat recovering from an all-time low in April, new listings remained about 22 percent below their level from a year ago in May, according to real estate brokerage Redfin.

This has not only exacerbated the chronic shortage of homes for sale, it has done so during the months when sellers are typically most engaged. A forecast by Realtor.com indicated the loss of spring inventory would translate to 15 percent fewer sales of existing homes in 2020.

“I think people are prepared to stay in their houses longer,” said Hall. “That was already a trend that’s been going on for the last five to 10 years.”

Despite a market tipped in their favor, sellers, especially those who still live in their residences, remain reluctant about letting strangers in. Increasing coronavirus infection rates in some states might strengthen this disinclination.

Moreover, home sellers are often also shoppers. Those not pressed to move might be loath to search for their next home amid tight inventory and rising competition. “It is now amazing to sell,” said Hall. “It is not amazing to buy.”

Yet Katie Day, a Houston-based real estate agent with Coldwell Banker, said she expects more homeowners to enter the market later this year to finally chase the housing aesthetics the pandemic has advanced as priorities.

“Probably toward the latter part of this year and into 2021, we will see more preference changes with people wanting to have a bigger home or wanting additional amenities in their house,” Day said.

Day’s remarks align with Realtor.com’s projection of a gradual increase of new listings through August before their numbers again hit the “historical trend” from September through December, when fewer homeowners generally decide to sell.

Appeal of new construction 

Because of the restricted supply of existing homes for sale, some buyers have flocked to new construction, especially single-family houses that, unlike their pre-owned counterparts that have been occupied, pose less risk associated with the coronavirus — and are more customizable.

Sales of newly built houses rose nearly 13 percent year-over-year in May, growing at a rate for that month not seen in more than a decade, according to the Census Bureau.

“There are just so few homes on the market today compared to last year, and last year already had historically low inventory levels,” said Wolf. “So, builders have been capturing market share left and right, selling homes at record May levels.”

Homebuilding in the pandemic

This positive dynamic, though, might not alleviate the overall shortage of inventory. For years, builders have strained to build homes fast enough to meet demand. And, Wolf said, many of them have already sold their standing inventory in 2020. The Census Bureau’s data shows that most contracts in May were inked for houses under construction.

Meanwhile, new permits and housing starts in May continued to lag year-over-year, which could reflect builders’ sustained struggles in filling construction jobs and acquiring materials.

“The home supply shortage as the economy opens up is going to be even more severe,” Wolf said, “unless we all of a sudden see more existing homeowners put their homes on the market.”

Prices are rising 

The pronounced seller’s market has buoyed home values, contrary to early expectations of deflated prices resulting from a coronavirus-chilled real estate industry.

“We’re going to have this really surprising situation where, even though demand has certainly been impacted by the much weaker job market, supply has fallen even more,” said Mike Fratantoni, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association. “Prices, as a result, are going up at the time that we’re in, in this very deep crisis.”

In May, the median price for all existing home types notched up 2.3 percent to $284,600, marking 99 straight months of yearly gains, the NAR reported. According to Realtor.com, in the third week of June, median asking prices grew at an annual rate of 5.6 percent, surpassing their pre-coronavirus pace.

“The increase in prices is fairly universal across most markets,” said Ratiu.

But not all cities have experienced price spikes.

A viral hot spot for months, New York City, for instance, saw the median sale price in its spiffiest borough, Manhattan, decrease about 18 percent  in the second quarter, the largest annual slump in a decade, according to a joint report by real estate brokerage Douglas Elliman and real estate appraisal and consulting firm Miller Samuel.

In fact, median asking prices in May fell in all five boroughs, with the highest drop approximately 5 percent in Manhattan, according to Realtor.com.

The deflated home values rest on the backdrop of record low sales, which were a mere half of their year-ago number of 2,730. This is the most pronounced decline in 30 years of record-keeping.

The real estate industry in the city, though, only formally reopened in the second half of June with agents optimistic about a slow but steady recovery and even a silver lining for some home shoppers.

“For people who have been trying to move to Manhattan for a while and felt it’s so expensive, there’s some opportunity now for them to buy something they can afford,” said broker Lisa K. Lippman with Brown Harris Stevens.

Pace of sales quickens 

Betsey Rider, who works in luxury goods sales and lives in Annapolis, and her husband, who is retiring this December, readied to sell their four-bedroom house, rebuilt a decade ago, later this year so they could move to a warmer climate.

But in the early days of the pandemic outbreak, three homes in their neighborhood of about 250 residences came on the market — and didn’t stay long.

“They sold within days,” Rider said. “I was shocked by that. At first, I found it really interesting that people were still house hunting.”

To tap the current demand and to evade any uncertainties down the road, the Riders decided to list the property. In early May they met with Hall, the Annapolis-based real estate agent, on a Saturday to discuss selling. The next day, having already tapped his industry network, Hall called to say that there were buyers from Texas interested in the home. That Monday, after a day of cleaning, the Riders showed their still-unlisted residence via a video phone call.

The offer followed quickly, a little under the $850,000 the Riders were going to ask. They accepted.

“We were happy with the price and the fact that we never had to list the house and go through all of [that process],” Betsey Rider said. “There were a few things that we were going to do prior to putting the house on the market that we ended up not having to do.”

Housing market shifts to the cyber side amid the pandemic

The sale was completed in late June, after the Riders had already settled in a temporary rental before moving South.

According to the NAR, nearly 60 percent of the homes sold in May found new owners in less than a month. While Realtor.com reported slightly longer lead times, the company anticipates those spans to shrink as home buyers pick up the pace of making offers in competitive markets.

The Pierreponts, the first-time house hunters in the Washington area, experienced that quick tempo first-hand. After several homes they liked vanished to other fast-to-act shoppers, the couple in early June made a successful offer on a house in Deale, Md., about 30 miles east of the District, that had been for sale for a week. Asking $610,000, the residence sits on 1.7 acres and features a chicken coop, enough for the micro garden and farm the couple had dreamed of. The Pierreponts planned to close on the property on Saturday.

“We will still be able to work in Washington, D.C., and follow a career path,” Pierrepont said. “It gave us the best of both worlds in that sense. A longer commute is a small price to pay for having more usable land.”

Rise of smaller markets 

The Pierreponts are among the many buyers who are leaving cities for the suburbs, secondary metropolitan and rural areas. While this exodus underlines Americans’ search for privacy amid the health crisis, it is in large part enabled by the rapid adoption of work-from-home arrangements that a number of companies have said would last beyond the pandemic.

“I believe that this is a permanent change,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist with the NAR, about the movement to the suburbs and away from densely populated hubs.

Redfin found that a record 27 percent of searchers on its website in April and May looked to relocate, mainly to small towns from large cities.

For instance, New Yorkers have flocked to Florida and Southern California, where properties are generally larger and cheaper. Yet even local buyers in these states are searching for bigger, more remote homes.

Rental market reacts to coronavirus but stays active

“Even though Los Angeles is not a dense city compared to the vertical city that is New York, our local wealthy people are trying to get out to Laguna, Santa Barbara, Malibu, even Palm Springs,” said Ernie Carswell, luxury real estate agent with Douglas Elliman. “They’re buying beach homes. They’re moving farther from our populated areas.”

Cities such as Austin, Indianapolis and Des Moines are welcoming out-of-state home shoppers. Even second-home enclaves and resort towns like Aspen, Colo., are experiencing heightened demand.

“What we are seeing now is a huge uptick [in interest] in properties that are more rural and away from Aspen,” said Raifie Bass, real estate agent with Douglas Elliman. “So a farm or a ranch or a gentleman’s ranch properties that have a little bit more space. That market is stronger than it’s ever been. We’re seeing full-price offers on properties that have been on the market for a long time.”

Suburban and small-town markets are typically cheaper, but Ratiu said the ballooning interest in them would likely push prices up.

Future caveats 

While the U.S. housing market is entering an invigorated summer season, characterized by low mortgage rates, rising home values and steep competition among home shoppers, uncertainty still shrouds the outlook for late 2020.

Even if some predictions point to a V-shaped coronavirus recovery, some forecasts, including Realtor.com’s, say the rebound would actually look like a W. Home selling and purchasing naturally slow down during the colder months, but factors such as a rise in new coronavirus cases and prolonged unemployment would exacerbate any seasonal declines — and soften home values.

“One of my biggest concerns is a second outbreak of the coronavirus and a second lockdown, which will be completely demoralizing, create more economic damage and people will remain unemployed for much longer,” said Yun.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/uncertainty-shrouds-the-housing-market-through-2020/2020/07/08/1030e93e-bba4-11ea-bdaf-a129f921026f_story.html

Weekly Housing Trends View — Data Week July 11, 2020

Our research team releases regular monthly housing trends reports. These reports break down inventory metrics like the number of active listings and the pace of the market. In light of the developing COVID-19 situation affecting the industry, we want to give readers more timely weekly updates. You can look forward to a Weekly Housing Trends View near the end of each week along with weekly coverage from our Housing Market Recovery Index and a weekly video update from our economists. Here’s what the housing market looked like last week.

Housing market economics remain tipped in favor of sellers as would-be spring buyers are shopping well into what would normally be summer vacation season. Home buyers, trying to take advantage of record-low mortgage rates and make up for lost time, are finding limited and more expensive options. Sellers are slowly acclimating to this unexpected trend, but homes for sale still lag buyer demand which is leading to time on market nearly on pace with last year and asking price growth on par with this time last summer.

Weekly Housing Trends Key Findings

  • New listings were down 19 percent. The new listings trend appeared to worsen for the week ending July 11, showing a larger decline than we saw the previous week (week ending July 4). This can be partly attributed to the timing of the 4th of July holiday this year. Looking at the last three weeks combined (holiday week plus the week before and the week after), new listings are down an average of 14 percent from a year ago. While new listings have not recovered to their pre-COVID trend, they are moving in the right direction, despite occasional setbacks.
  • Total inventory was down 32 percent. The improving new listings trend is still not enough to offset buyer demand as more home buyers aim to take advantage of record-low mortgage rates. 
  • Median listing prices continue growing at 7.9 percent over last year, faster than the pre-COVID pace and on par with this time last year.
  • Time on market is now just 1 day slower than last year as buyers out-number sellers and confidence is growing for both.

Data Summary

Week ending July 11Week ending July 4Week ending June 27First Two Weeks March
Total Listings -32% YOY-31% YOY-30% YOY-16% YOY
Time on Market1 day slower YOY3 days slower YOY7 days slower YOY4 days faster YOY
Median Listing Prices+7.9% YOY+6.2% YOY+6.2% YOY+4.5% YOY
New Listings -19% YOY-4% YOY-17% YOY+5% YOY

You can download weekly housing market data from our data page.

Home Sales Exceed Pre-Pandemic Levels for the First Time

SEATTLE, July 15, 2020 /PRNewswire/ — (NASDAQ: RDFN) — Home sales surpassed pre-pandemic levels for the first time the week ending July 5, up 2% on a seasonally adjusted basis compared to January and February levels, according to a new report from Redfin (www.redfin.com), the technology-powered real estate brokerage.  

The housing market continued its recovery in the week ending July 5despite the rise in COVID-19 cases. Demand is being propelled primarily by record low mortgage rates; the average 30-year fixed rate was down to 3.03% for the week ending July 9. 

“The industry is responding to an avalanche of applications for refinances and purchases,” said Rob Foos, a mortgage advisor with Redfin Mortgage in Boston. “A combination of rock-bottom rates plus pent-up purchase demand has resulted in the highest levels of purchase applications in about a decade.”

Several leading indicators suggest that home sales will continue to increase in the coming weeks; pending sales grew 10% from pre-pandemic levels on a seasonally adjusted basis and the Redfin home-buying demand index has hovered around 20% above the pre-pandemic levels for seven straight weeks. Mortgage purchase applications were also about 15% above pre-pandemic levels. 

Potential sellers worry about finding their next home

New listings were at their pre-pandemic levels for three straight weeks, up 1% on average on a seasonally adjusted basis. But there aren’t enough new listings to satisfy the strong homebuying demand. As a result, the total number of homes for sale was down 29% from a year ago. Redfin agents report that sellers are now rarely citing coronavirus concerns as a reason not to list, but more often cite the lack of homes for sale itself as the thing that’s holding them back. 

“Some of my clients are considering selling, but it’s a matter of finding a home they can buy,” said Redfin agent Thomas Wiederstein in Phoenix. “Even if they do find a home that checks all the boxes, many move-up buyers can’t buy a new home before they sell their current one. With bidding wars so common, it’s very hard to get an offer accepted that’s contingent on the sale of the buyer’s current home.”

Lack of homes for sale fuels competition

Buyers face competition more often than not, as more than half of Redfin offers faced a bidding war in June for the second month in a row, and homes are going off-market quickly. The share of listings that went off market within two weeks stood at 45% this week, up from 35% a year ago. Shoshana Godwin, a Redfin agent in Seattle, is seeing a return to bidding wars and buyers waiving contingencies to make their offers more attractive. 

“We’re back to buyers waiving their rights to cancel the contract if something pops up during the inspection or they can’t get their loan approved. Buyers used to try to inspect the home before writing an offer, but now sellers are providing an inspection report upfront. That brings in even more bidders because they don’t need to spend $500 on an inspection just to make an offer,” Godwin said.

Redfin San Francisco agent Chad Eng describes a housing market that feels “chaotic” in the absence of pre-pandemic norms.

“Due to COVID-19, agents are scheduling back-to-back 15-minute in-person home tours instead of holding traditional open houses. If you miss your appointment, you’re out of luck. Sellers often set a deadline for buyers to submit offers so they can review all of their options at once, but now that there’s so much uncertainty, sellers who receive one strong offer are less willing to wait around to see what else trickles in. I’ve seen multiple sellers accept an offer before the deadline, meaning buyers who wait miss out on their shot at buying the home.”

With competition come rising home prices. The average sale price for the week ending July 5 was $310,000, up 7% from a year ago. Asking prices for newly listed homes continue to accelerate as well, rising 16% over the same week last year to $324,900. 

To view the full report, including charts, outlook and methodology, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/blog/home-sales-above-pre-coronavirus-levels/

East Coast And Illinois Have Highest Concentratons Of Housing Markets Vulnerable To Coronavirus Impact

IRVINE, Calif., July 10, 2020 /PRNewswire/ — ATTOM Data Solutions, curator of the nation’s premier property database and first property data provider of Data-as-a-Service (DaaS), today released its second-quarter 2020 Special Report spotlighting county-level housing markets around the United Statesthat are more or less vulnerable to the impact of the Coronavirus pandemic. The report shows that areas most at risk in the second quarter sat on the East Coast and in northern Illinois – with clusters in the New York City, Chicago, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., areas – while the West had the fewest.

The report reveals that a stretch of states running from Connecticutthrough Florida, plus Illinois, had 43 of the 50 counties most vulnerable to the economic impact of the pandemic. They included 11 suburban counties around New York City, seven in the Chicago, IL area, five around Washington, D.C. and four around Baltimore, MD. The only four western counties were in California, with none in other West Coast or southwestern states.

The East Coast pattern continued a trend identified in the first-quarter 2020 report, with variations from state to state. The previous report found that New Jersey and Florida had 24 of the top 50 most at-risk counties, Maryland had two, Illinois five and California only one.

Markets are considered more or less at risk based on the percentage of homes currently facing possible foreclosure, the portion of homes with mortgage balances that exceed the estimated property value, and the percentage of local wages required to pay for major home ownership expenses.

The conclusions are drawn from an analysis of the most recent home affordability, home equity and foreclosure reports prepared by ATTOM. Rankings are based on a combination of those three categories in 406 counties around the United States with sufficient data to analyze. Counties were ranked in each category, from lowest to highest, with the overall conclusion based on a combination of the three ranks. See below for the full methodology.

The findings surface amid signs that home-price growth stalled across significant parts of the country in May 2020, with more expensive areas of the West among those getting hit hardest.

“Home-sales data from around the country is starting to show that eight years of price gains may be coming to an end amid the economic damage flowing from the virus pandemic. It’s still too early to make any definitive calls, but the latest numbers show storm clouds gathering over the market,” said Todd Teta, chief product officer with ATTOM Data Solutions. “With this second special report on the potential impact of the pandemic, we see pockets around the country that appear more or less poised to withstand downward pressure on prices and other market conditions. Over the next few months, enough data should come in to tell us how things will most likely pan out.”

Most vulnerable counties clustered around New York City, Chicago, Baltimore and Washington, D.C.
A majority of the 50 U.S. counties most at-risk in the second quarter of 2020 from housing-market troubles connected to the pandemic (from among the 406 counties included in the report) were in the metropolitan statistical areas around New York, NY, Chicago, IL, Baltimore, MD, and Washington, D.C.

They included 11 in the New York City suburbs: Bergen, Essex, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Sussex and Union counties in New Jersey, plus Nassau, Orange, Rockland, Suffolk and Westchester counties in New York. Another seven – Cook, De Kalb, Du Page, Kendall, Lake, McHenry and Will counties – were in and around Chicago. 

Five counties in and around the Washington, D.C. metro ranked in the top 50 most at-risk, including Charles, Prince George’s and Frederick in Maryland, and Spotsylvania and Stafford in Virginia. Four were in the northeastern part of Maryland: Baltimore, Carroll, Cecil and Harfordcounties. 

Among others in the top 50 were five of Connecticut’s eight counties, including Litchfield, Middlesex, New Haven, Tolland and Windham counties. 

The only western counties among the top 50 most at risk from problems connected to the Coronavirus outbreak were Humboldt County, CA, in the Eureka metropolitan statistical area, Madera County, CA (outside Merced), Riverside County, CA (outside Los Angeles) and Shasta County (Redding), CA.

Higher levels of unaffordable housing, underwater mortgages and foreclosure activity found in most-at-risk counties

Major home ownership costs (mortgage, property taxes and insurance) consumed more than 30 percent of average local wages in 43 of the 50 counties most vulnerable to market problems connected to the virus pandemic in the second quarter of 2020. They included Westchester County, NY (outside New York City) (77.1 percent of average local wage required for major ownership costs), Rockland County, NY (outside New York City) (71.1 percent of wages); Nassau County, NY (outside New York City) (63.4 percent); Riverside, CA (outside Los Angeles) (62.5 percent) and Bergen County, NJ (outside New York City) (58.5 percent).

In 36 of the 50 most at risk counties, at least 15 percent of mortgages were underwater in the first quarter of 2020 (with owners owing more than their properties are worth). Those with the highest underwater rates within those top 50 counties included Sussex County, NJ (outside New York City) (39.2 percent); Monroe County, PA (outside Wilkes-Barre) (36.3 percent); Cumberland County (Vineland), NJ (35.7 percent); Livingston County, LA (outside Baton Rouge) (34.3 percent) and Saint Clair County, IL (outside St. Louis, MO) (34.2 percent). 

More than one in 750 residential properties faced a foreclosure action in the first quarter of 2020 in 47 of the 50 most at-risk counties. Those with the highest rates included Cumberland County (Vineland), NJ (one in every 180 properties facing possible foreclosure); Sussex County, NJ (outside New York City) (one in every 210); Camden County, NJ (outside Philadelphia, PA) (one in every 231); Atlantic County (Atlantic City), NJ (one in every 293) and Will County, IL (outside Chicago) (one in every 294).

Counties least at-risk concentrated in Colorado, Oregon, Texas and Wisconsin

Twenty-six of the 50 least-vulnerable counties from among the 406 included in the report in the second quarter of 2020 were in Colorado, Oregon, Texas and Wisconsin. The largest included Harris County (Houston), TX; Dallas, Tarrant and Collin counties, all in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, and Travis County (Austin), TX.

Lower levels of unaffordable housing, underwater mortgages and foreclosure activity found in less-vulnerable counties

Major home ownership costs (mortgage, property taxes and insurance) consumed less than 30 percent of average local wages in 19 of the 50 counties least at-risk from market problems connected to the virus pandemic in the second quarter of 2020. They included Winnebago County(Oshkosh), WI (18.6 percent of average local wage required for major ownership costs), Benton County (Rogers), AR (21.1 percent of wages); Racine County, WI (outside Milwaukee) (21.4 percent); Sheboygan County, WI (21.6 percent), and Monroe County, MI (outside Detroit) (22.7 percent).

Less than 15 percent of mortgages were underwater in the first quarter of 2020 in all but one of the 50 least at-risk counties. Those with the lowest underwater rates included San Mateo County, CA (outside San Francisco) (2 percent); Chittenden County (Burlington), VT (3.6 percent); King County(Seattle), WA (4.5 percent); Dallas County, TX (4.7 percent) and Washington County, OR (outside Portland) (4.9 percent). 

Less than one in 750 residential properties faced a foreclosure action in the first quarter of 2020 in all 50 of the least at-risk counties. Those with the lowest foreclosure rates included San Mateo County, CA (outside San Francisco) (one in 12,566 properties facing possible foreclosure); Washington County, WI (outside Milwaukee) (one in 6,259); Chittenden County (Burlington), VT (one in 5,755); Eau Claire County, WI (one in 5,471) and Yolo County (Sacramento), CA (one in 4,306).

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/east-coast-and-illinois-have-highest-concentratons-of-housing-markets-vulnerable-to-coronavirus-impact-301091317.html

Homes continue to sell at fastest pace in 2 years

It means that potential buyers should be prepared to strike quickly, and sellers who have been on the fence through the onset of the coronavirus pandemic might now want to list.

Though many sellers have taken a wait-and-see approach through the pandemic, homes that have made it onto the market have been snatched up relatively quickly by eager buyers. In mid-June, the typical home sold in the U.S. had an offer accepted 22 days after it was listed for sale. That’s as fast as homes have sold since early June 2018, when they typically sold in 21 days. Even at the slowest point of the spring – in late May – that number only climbed to 31 days, just six days slower than late May last year.

The same limited-inventory dynamic – with sellers pulling back from the market more than buyers – has kept home prices relatively steady during the pandemic, though signs point to a modest decline in the coming months.

More homes are coming onto the market – new listings are up 14% month over month – showing sellers appear to be gaining confidence in that buyer demand. Many who listed their homes during the past few weeks were rewarded with a quick sale. Inventory remains incredibly tight and sales are happening quickly, so buyers should be prepared to move fast when they find a home they’re interested in.

“Buyers shopping today might expect to be welcomed by desperate sellers, but they’ll instead discover houses selling like hotcakes in the speediest market in recent memory,” said Zillow economist Jeff Tucker. “The market did slow down in April, but anyone shopping this summer needs to be prepared to keep up with the lightning-quick pace of sales today. The question is whether the tempo will slow after buyers finish playing catch-up from planned spring moves, or if this fast-paced market will stay hot thanks to continued low interest rates and buyers scrambling over record-low summer inventory.”

In 29 of the 35 largest U.S. metros, homes are typically seeing offers accepted faster than a year ago. Homes are selling the fastest – in only five days – in Columbus. Cincinnati (six days), Kansas City (six days), Seattle (seven days) and Indianapolis (seven days) are just behind. Pittsburgh has seen the most dramatic acceleration of late, with sellers typically accepting an offer 17 days sooner than at this time last year and 40 days sooner than a month ago.

The slowest market by some margin is New York, where homes are typically spending 70 days on the market before an offer is accepted, more than three weeks longer than at this time last year. Miami (55 days) and Atlanta (38 days) are the next slowest.

New York and Miami have typically been among the slowest-moving for-sale markets, so the recent slowdown may not be fully attributable to the pandemic. Still, the year-over-year slowdown of 23 days in New York is the biggest in the country, and the six-day slowdown in Miami is the third-biggest behind New York and Atlanta.

Investors have a rare window to make high returns on 1031 exchanges, experts say.

The 1031 exchange sector is recovering from COVID-19 as small investors seek to grow their portfolios via the tax tool, experts say. In June, IPX 1031, a platform that facilitates 1031 deals, saw an 18 percent decline in number of orders from last June, when orders had hit a recent record high, said, executive vice president and western regional manager Jennifer Keen.

Orders rose 30 percent year over year in January but plunged 30 percent in April and 50 percent in May, she said on a Marcus & Millichap webinar called Maximizing 1031 Exchanges. “2019 was an incredible year for IPX,” she said. “That gives me a lot of confidence — that we’re only down 18 percent.”

1031 exchange investors are motivated by a rare window of opportunity to make high returns, said Marcus & Millichap senior vice president and research services national director John Chang. That window exists because the cost of capital has decreased while capitalization rates have remained stable. “The 10-year Treasury has fallen significantly. It’s around 70 basis points right now, which is the lowest we’ve seen ever. Interest rates are dramatically lower than in the past, and that signals that the yield premium on the asset versus the cost of capital has opened back up and created another investment window.”

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Many small investors are trading multifamily properties for triple-net-lease retail properties, said Marcus & Millichap senior vice president and retail division national director Scott Holmes. “When people go into net lease investments through a 1031 exchange, 47 percent of the time, they’re coming out of apartments; 12 percent are coming out of multitenant retail.”

The federal government also is offering the 1031 exchange sector relief by extending certain deadlines that govern when a property has to trade in order to qualify for the tax deferral. The deadline was pushed from April 1 to July 15 and could push further, Keen said. “During this pandemic, many times you couldn’t see a property and lending became a challenge, and that slowed things down. We’re still not quite up to speed.”

https://www.icsc.com/news-and-views/icsc-exchange/investors-have-a-rare-window-to-make-high-returns-on-1031-exchanges-experts