Article Courtesy of Michael Orr The Cromford Report |
To start with, let us look at the ARMLS data across all areas and types:
Sales per Month: 7,230 in November - down 5% from October but up 8% from this time last year.
Active Listings (including AWC): 26,655 on December 1 - down 1.5% from November 1 and down 41% from this time last year.
Active Listings (excluding AWC): 19,377 on December 1 - down 1% from November 1 and down 50% from this time last year.
Pending Sales: 10,171 on December 1, down 3% from November 1, but up 2% compared with this time last year.
Listing Success Rate: 75.3% on December 1 - down slightly from 76.0% on November 1 but up significantly from 60.4% on December 1, 2010.
Contract Ratio: 90.1 on December 1, down slightly from 91.9 on November 1 but up strongly from 40.1 last year at this time.
Days Inventory: 96 on December 1, down from 98 on November 1 but dramatically down from 184 at this time last year.
Cromford Market Index™: 155.8 on December 1, the same as on November 1 but far above the 91.0 we saw on December 1, 2010.
Sales Price as a Percentage of List: 96.67% on December 1, exactly the same as on November 1 but up from 95.59% on December 1, 2010.
Thus we see evidence of a huge improvement in the market balance compared with December 2010 but little if any change between last month and now. The Cromford Demand Index™ and Cromford Supply Index™ are both flat-lining, meaning that supply remains low and steady and demand remains high and steady.
So let us look at where the action is:
Monthly Average Sales Price per Sq. Ft. - $83.58 in November - up 3.1% over the month before and up 0.9% over last year at this time. It is also up 6.5% compared with the extreme low point measured on September 15.
Monthly Median Sales Price - $115,000 in November, up from $112,199 in October and the same as we saw in November 2010.
3.1% in a single month is a pretty strong bounce for $/SF so it is worth looking into exactly how and why this happened. If we look at the details we find:
- Greater Phoenix REOs are up 2.2%
- Greater Phoenix Short sales & Pre-foreclosures are down 4.1%
- Greater Phoenix Normal listings are up 3.1%
We can say on balance that sales pricing is back to where it was last year at this time and we can also reasonably expect to see positive appreciation rates for the market as a whole for at least the next 4 months. This is easy to predict because last year we had a gently declining pending listing $/SF whereas now pending $/SF figures are headed upwards.
This positive appreciation is not spread evenly around. The following cities currently show higher prices than at this time last year (measured by average monthly sales $/SF):
- Fountain Hills (14.8%)
- Paradise valley (11.9%)
- Casa Grande (7.6%)
- Sun City (7.1%)
- Buckeye (5.3%)
- Maricopa (3.2%)
- Gold Canyon (2.7%)
- Arizona City (1.9%)
- Phoenix (1.3%)
- Queen Creek / San Tan Valley (1.2%)
- El Mirage (0.8%)
- Cave Creek (0.4%)
- Sun Lakes (-14.3%)
- Litchfield Park (-8.5%)
- Goodyear (-7.7%)
- Tolleson (6.8%)
- Avondale (-6.3%)
- Surprise (5.6%)
- Peoria (-5.6%)
- Sun City West (5.3%)
- Mesa (-4.2%)
- Anthem (-4.1%)
- Glendale (-3.8%)
- Apache Junction (-3.4%)
- Laveen (-3.0%)
- Gilbert (-2.8%)
- Chandler (-2.6%)
- Tempe (-0.9%)
- Scottsdale (-0.1%)
For the months of July through October, we saw trustee sales volumes fall while new notices stayed fairly flat. The opposite occurred in November. Foreclosure notice started to fall off again while trustee sales popped up slightly, due to the large batch of Recontrust (Bank of America) notices that were issued in August against Countrywide originated loans. These became ripe for trustees to sell during November. The longer term trend for both is still downward and the pending foreclosure count has started to fall fast again having stabilized for several months. We believe that there will be relatively few REOs generated from now on. Most of the foreclosure tsunami is past us, perhaps 80%. Those foreclosure notice still to come will generate a lot of short sales and third party purchases at the foreclosure auction, but relatively few homes will revert to the beneficiaries. We have probably already seen over 90% of the REOs that are to be created by the 2004-2006 real estate bubble and fewer than 10% are yet to come.
No comments:
Post a Comment