January Inventory – how low can you go?
After increasing somewhat – albeit from a very low base – in the first several months of 2021, the seasonal drop-off after October after was just as sharp as in prior years – and again this is a reduction from a low level. 2022 is starting off at a seemingly impossible even lower level.
Single Family Homes
The % decline is almost irrelevant. More relevant is the months of supply shown.
Inventory now has less than 1 months’ supply overall and is only over 1 month – but still far below the 6 months deemed to reflect a market in equilibrium – at prices over $1.5 million.
Condos (more…)
New Listings and Latest Inventory Update
Still only a handful of New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article, as is a link to my annual guide to property tax rates).
Click these links for details: (more…)
Essex County 2022 Property Tax Rates: Town by Town guide
Property tax rates for FY 2022 for all 34 cities and towns in Essex County have been certified. Below is a map, so that you can compare tax rates in neighboring towns, followed by the tax rates for each town the last 5 years. The first table shows the tax rates in alphabetical order, while the second lists them from low to high.
Tax rates for each town
Alphabetically (download a copy of this table by clicking here. (more…)
Essex County 2022 Commercial Property Tax Rates: Town by Town guide
While most of us look at residential tax rates (read Essex County 2022 Property Tax Rates: Town by Town guide ) fewer consider commercial tax rates. Yet a healthy commercial business environment can contribute significantly to the attractiveness of a town. The map below shows commercial rates in each of Essex County’s 34 cities and towns, followed by a table showing commercial rates for each town.
Commercial rates for each town: (more…)
Just 0.15% of Essex County Housing Units For Sale
According to the 2019 US Census, Essex County has some 202,000 owner-occupied housing units. There are currently a grand total of 300 for sale – 178 SFHs and 122 Condos – representing just 0.15% of that number. Here are the very few new listings this week:
Click these links for details: (more…)
Would you like free money for the holidays?
I usually listen to WGB 1030 on my morning walk and this week I have heard Billy Costa’s ads for Unclaimed Property in Massachusetts. This rang a bell for me a as I have found unclaimed property at least twice and received checks.
Click on FindMassMoney and you will find this statement:
“The Unclaimed Property Division is holding over $3 billion in unclaimed funds for the citizens and businesses of the Commonwealth. The Division holds these lost funds until they are claimed by either the original owner or their heirs. Claiming property is fast, easy and free.”
It sure is.
And encouraged by my successes in Massachusetts I have received unclaimed property from Connecticut, where I lived in the 1980s, and today have filed a claim in California for my wife, also from the 1980s. And you can search in other States where you have connections – just type in XState Unclaimed Property and Mr.Google will do the rest.
So, if it is actually my property, is it really free? I leave you to contemplate this as you bank your check.
Happy Holidays.
Andrew Oliver, M.B.E.,M.B.A.
Market Analyst | Team Harborside | teamharborside.com
REALTOR®
Sagan Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty
One Essex Street | Marblehead, MA 01945
m 617.834.8205
www.OliverReportsMA.com
[email protected]
Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
“If you’re interested in Marblehead, you have to visit the blog of Mr. Andrew Oliver, author and curator of OliverReports.com. He’s assembled the most comprehensive analysis of Essex County we know of with market data and trends going back decades. It’s a great starting point for those looking in the towns of Marblehead, Salem, Beverly, Lynn and Swampscott.”
__________________
Andrew Oliver
REALTOR® | Market Analyst | DomainRealty.com
Naples, Bonita Springs and Fort Myers
[email protected]
m. 617.834.8205
www.AndrewOliverRealtor.com
www.OliverReportsFL.com
New Listings and Inventory Update
Very few New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article).
Click these links for details: (more…)
New Listings and Latest Inventory Report
Just a handful of New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article).
Click these links for details: (more…)
New Listings and Inventory Update
A small number of New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article).
Click these links for details: (more…)
Big Jump in 2022 Conforming Mortgage Limits
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are restricted by law to purchasing single-family mortgages with origination balances below a specific amount, known as the “conforming loan limit.” Loans above this amount are known as jumbo loans.
In most of the US the 2022 limit will increase 18 % from $548,250 to $647,200, but in Essex County the limit will rise to $770,500, meaning that the buyer of a Single Family Home, with 20% down, can purchase a house up to $963,125 with a conventional mortgage.
The national conforming loan limit for mortgages that finance single-family one-unit properties increased from $33,000 in the early 1970s to $417,000 for 2006-2008, with limits 50 percent higher for four statutorily-designated high cost areas: Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Since 2008, various legislative acts increased the conforming loan limits in certain high-cost areas in the United States. While some of the legislative initiatives established temporary limits for loans originated in select time periods, a permanent formula was established under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA). The 2022 conforming loan limits have been set under the HERA formula.
Andrew Oliver, M.B.E.,M.B.A.
Market Analyst | Team Harborside | teamharborside.com
REALTOR®
Sagan Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty
One Essex Street | Marblehead, MA 01945
m 617.834.8205
www.OliverReportsMA.com
[email protected]
Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
“If you’re interested in Marblehead, you have to visit the blog of Mr. Andrew Oliver, author and curator of OliverReportsMA.com. He’s assembled the most comprehensive analysis of Essex County we know of with market data and trends going back decades. It’s a great starting point for those looking in the towns of Marblehead, Salem, Beverly, Lynn and Swampscott.”
__________________
Andrew Oliver
REALTOR® | Market Analyst | DomainRealty.com
Naples, Bonita Springs and Fort Myers
[email protected]
m. 617.834.8205
www.AndrewOliverRealtor.com
www.OliverReportsFL.com
Are Houses taking Longer to Sell?
Real estate commentary has two parts: data analysis and current market feedback.
The first is definitive: what has actually sold and at what price. The problem is that the sales price is not known until the sale closes – and that is usually about 2 months after the sale is agreed. So by definition, sales data is a rear-view mirror on the market.
Current market feedback is much, much more subjective. When asked “how is the market?”, in addition to the tendency for real estate agents to be cheerful and positive and optimistic (you think!) their opinion is also extremely likely to be influenced by their personal experience. Just had a listing get an offer in 24 hours? “The market is great.” Listing been on the market for 2 weeks with no offers? “The market has really slowed down.”
And then there is seasonality. Traditionally, sales slow after July 4th because parents want to be in place for the next school year, which seems to start earlier and earlier each year.
And slow again after mid-October as people don’t want to be moving over the holidays.
And in New England there is that thing called the weather. Snow doesn’t put people off, but a howling nor’easter keeps most people – other than those going to the Barnacle to watch the storm – indoors.
So, how is the market?
I think the second quarter this year saw panic buying: we thought we were coming out of the pandemic and that the future looked bright; we had high savings; investment portfolios were buoyant – all contributed to a buying frenzy, which cooled as the summer wore one – well that was the feedback at the time.
While in general I dislike monthly numbers, it is also true that the larger the set of data the more reliable that data is. So here is a chart showing the monthly Single Family Home (SFH) median prices for all 34 cities and towns in Essex County since 2019. The median price reached $652,000 in June and then declined to $600,000 in September and October, seeming therefore to corroborate the feedback.
How quickly are houses selling?
If the time it takes for a house to receive an accepted offer (Days to Offer – DTO) moves from say 7 to 9 I do not regard that as significant. What I monitor is the percentage of sales where the DTO is 15 or less. That is somewhat arbitrary but it allows for Open Houses, holidays, weather, multiple offers, etc. In that time period the property has been fully exposed to the market.
First I looked at sales by month – the numbers show the percentage of sales recorded in the month – but agreed some time earlier. The year started slowly after the holidays but the share of accepted offers received in 15 days or less reached 88% in the spring and remained over 80% until dropping to 74% in October and 69% in the first 18 days of November. Interestingly, the share of currently pending sales which received offers in 15 days or less is also 69%.
How long have houses been on the market?
This table shows the Days on Market (DOM) of the SFH currently available in Essex County:
6 out of 10 houses have been on the market for more than 15 days. Or just 40% have been on the market for less than 16 days, a much smaller share than for those which have sold. Which might mean that this is an unrepresentative sample, or it might mean that the holiday slowdown has begun….. or it might mean that sales are slowing.
Does List Price matter again?
It seemed for a while earlier this year that the List Price was almost irrelevant, since a swarm of buyers – many bearing cash – pursued whatever was available. But there is evidence that properties that are listed significantly higher than agents recommend (” we can always come down,” says the seller) are no longer seeing that fierce demand. And by the time the price reduction comes, the property seems to be stale to the market.
In fact, just as it has always been.
In a recent transaction in which I represented the buyer, the seller insisted on listing at $749,000 despite her agent suggesting $675,000. By the time the seller agreed to drop the price to $675,000, the listing was stale and my buyer bought the house for $619,000. We all felt that had it been listed at a more realistic price it would have sold at a higher price. Not that my buyer complained.
Holidays
The US has opened its borders to (vaccinated) visitors from Europe and elsewhere after being closed for 600 days; Canadians can travel more easily to the US this year; and many people feel they want to celebrate the holidays – including Thanksgiving, Hannukah, Kwanzaa and Christmas – with family. There is a growing concern – and growing evidence – that COVID cases will rise again as people gather, but that fear seems unlikely to keep people home in the way they were forced to a year ago.
The Outlook
One of the top agents on the North Shore said to me recently that in her 35 years in the market she could not remember a time when she felt less confident about where the market was headed. There are so many uncertainties, none of which seems to be putting off investors in the stock market. As for the housing market, mortgage rates remain close to historical lows, as does supply. It seems quite plausible that we are seeing a typical winter slowdown coupled with the desire by millions of people to focus on the holidays.
And read these recent articles:
Marblehead Q3 2021 Market Report
Swampscott Q3 2021 Market Report
Salem Q3 2021 Market Report
Essex County Fall Market Report
Are Mortgage Rates really under 3%?
Essex County 2021 Residential Property Tax Rates: a Town by Town guide
Guide to Buying and Selling in Southwest Florida
Naples Q3 Market Reports
If you – or somebody you know – are considering buying or selling a home and have questions about the market and/or current home prices, please contact me on 617.834.8205 or [email protected].
“If you’re interested in Marblehead, you have to visit the blog of Mr. Andrew Oliver, author and curator of Oliver Reports . He’s assembled the most comprehensive analysis of Essex County we know of with market data and trends going back decades. It’s a great starting point for those looking in the towns of Marblehead, Sale, Beverly, Lynn and Swampscott.”
Andrew Oliver
Market Analyst | Team Harborside | teamharborside.com
REALTOR®
Sagan Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty
One Essex Street | Marblehead, MA 01945
m 617.834.8205
www.OliverReportsMA.com
[email protected]
Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
Andrew Oliver
Sales Associate | Market Analyst | DomainRealty.com
REALTOR®
Naples, Bonita Springs and Fort Myers
[email protected]
m. 617.834.8205
www.MarbleheadSouth.com
New Listings and Inventory Update
Here are the latest New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article).
Click these links for details: (more…)
Latest New Listings and Inventory Update
Here are the latest New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article). Note the post-Halloween surge in Salem:
Click these links for details: (more…)
How accurate are Zillow’s Zestimates?
During the pandemic-spurred housing boom, Zillow Offers emerged as a particularly aggressive iBuyer, or instant buyer, of homes in Sun Belt markets, offering homeowners more than the market value of their properties, with no catch. Zillow has now conceded that it has been paying too much for properties, even in a market characterized by soaring home values. Saying it had lost $1 billion on iBuying, Zillow has shut down its Zillow Offers unit.
“We’ve determined the unpredictability in forecasting home prices far exceeds what we anticipated and continuing to scale Zillow Offers would result in too much earnings and balance-sheet volatility,” Chief Executive Rich Barton said.
Zillow used an algorithm to make home price estimates, called the “Zestimate,” and determine what it would pay home sellers.
Are Zestimates accurate?
Zestimates are somewhat like the National Hurricane Center’s projection for a hurricane’s path: both provide a single price or point, but those prices and points are actually the median of a range.
Here’s an example for a house: (more…)
Latest New Listings and Inventory Update
Here are the latest New Listings (the state of inventory is shown later in this article):
Click these links for details: (more…)
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