0
0

Fairfax VA Sept. #s R Disturbing


 invite response                
2005 Oct 12, 3:58am   20,372 views  83 comments

by Escaped from DC   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

These numbers are for the 1 million person county/suburb to the west of DC . . .

2005 2004
sales (sept.) 2,377 2,760 [DOWN 13.88%]

sales price 543k 440k [up 23.41%]

active listings 6,693 3,540 [UP 89.07%]

If anybody out in Cali can find year over year inventory numbers for a city/county please post in this thread. It will be interesting to see where Cali is relative to NY and DC.

For everybody else, and especially Randy H, Prat, and Peter P, when does the steady 23% rate of increase (yoy) top out? Generically, then, what is the lag between balooning inventory and flattening/declining prices? Further, how "sticky" are prices going to be this time around? Whereas realty is conventionally sticky on the way down, I don't think that convention is going to apply this time - there are too many new elements, such as 30% speculative/2nd home saturation in the market, high indebtedness with short burn times in many households, and so on.

Drew (Escaped from DC)

« First        Comments 9 - 48 of 83       Last »     Search these comments

9   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 7:14am  

That strategy actually works quite well in Monopoly. Too bad it won't in the real world.

There will be many who will be forced to sell at the buyers price.

I still think house prices will be sticky in this down cycle. Sellers will attempt to hold out, and some will indeed do so if they have enough wealth and/or equity. I know quite a few folks who can easily afford their McMansions, have over 50% equity in their 1M+ homes, have ample savings, and are sitting on ARMs for the rates. They would have no trouble refi'ing into a 15year fixed, even at a much higher rate. These people won't sell for a loss because they don't have to. They'll instead reorganize their lives a bit.

This will probably hold up prices for a short while, until those on the lower end--those who really can't afford their homes--get caught by the waves of forclosures and panic selling. Remember: in a herd you don't have to be the fastest runner to avoid being the lion's dinner, only faster than the slowest in the herd. (ok, not sure how that fits, but I wanted to use the metaphore anyway cause I like it so much)

10   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 7:21am  

Just curious, but how does this work in the seller’s favor? Are they trying to imply exclusivity with a “private listing”, and somehow justify a higher price? Doesn’t that also limit the pool of potential buyer traffic?

It seems counter intuitive, because one would think the house would sell faster with more traffic. Best I can guess is that the prices are so out of whack that the owner would rather sit on an empty house for 6+ months and get their price rather than sell earlier at a discount. Actually, at current rates, a quick calculation supports this theory; the price premium wouldn't need to be much to clear the lost TVM. I get the feeling that these homes are 100% owned or investment properties. One I saw was just completely remodelled and updated--quite extravogant inside. The agent said it was a rental previously, and the owners had decided to finally sell it (but they would only sell to a "special buyer" who they thought would appreciate it).

11   KurtS   2005 Oct 12, 7:21am  

Perhaps this is why the “days on market” listings are being hidden more often lately. The stigma.

Hidden--unless you happen to live down the street and know full well what's going on!

12   Escaped from DC   2005 Oct 12, 7:23am  

The problem with the measure "average time on market" is that it is a lagging indicator by many months, at best.

The problem with "months of inventory," is it has to be based on the instaneous rate of sales. Consequently, if sales are dropping at a precipitous rate, then "months of inventory" at any given time may be a very deceptive number. Further, if sales hit a particular high or low, then the "months of inventory" is going to ramp up or down in response.

In the end, the best measure would be one that indicates the direction of the market at a given moment in time.

I've offered the rate of change of inventory as a good measure. Any other thoughts on other measures?

13   KurtS   2005 Oct 12, 7:30am  

Best I can guess is that the prices are so out of whack that the owner would rather sit on an empty house for 6+ months and get their price rather than sell earlier at a discount.

While it's been true in the past, it will be interesting to see whether sitting for 6 more months will get the "right buyer, right price." Of course, nobody in Marin needs to panic sell, do they? At least not yet...

14   Escaped from DC   2005 Oct 12, 7:36am  

"Sounds good, if set against seasonal norms, and seen in the context of recent past AND distant past."

I'd suggest YOY %change in inventory. It accounts for the 12 month market and removes seasonality as an issue.

This, IMO, yields a nice weather vane.

15   KurtS   2005 Oct 12, 7:39am  

Perhaps the buyers fall for the price more often when there is no obvious way for the buyer to see that nobody else is interested. Keeping the house a seceret, removes the chance for buyers to see how long it has been on the market also. Then a buyer might be more easily led to believe that he or she better snap it up “before anybody else sees it” when in reality they have no way of knowing if anybody else HAS.

Interesting theory...If true, perhaps they're hoping for some out-of-town buyer who isn't clued into the local market? (the greatest fool) That's my only explanation for someone buying a condo down the street for $950K.
OTOH, I'm sure more savvy buyers have come to similar conclusions as Randy H, you or yours truly. Despite whatever tricks realtors can muster, it will be increasingly hard to fool people on the realities of the market.

16   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 8:01am  

I dont see why it would be illegal to sell your house privately, as opposed to openly

I'm not sure about how fair housing laws work either. I'd guess that private sales wouldn't be a problem so long as you were fair about considering buyers. But, how would this be verifiable if the listing was never public in the first place?

Regardless of the legality, can't the agents lose their licenses over this? It's not that these are actually private owners selling and buying in private contracts; they are using agents. It's just that the agents are choosing to privately solicit buyers. I'd think the CAR would frown upon this for a variety of reasons. Then again, even if you went around getting every agent you found doing this kicked out of the association, it would only serve to waste a lot of your time and it wouldn't correct the market so long as there's an ample supply of similarly minded agents.

17   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 9:12am  

I’ve both sold and purchased numerous “pocket listings” before, and probably will again. There are various reasons why one would not wish to list ones property on the MLS.

What legitimate reason(s) besides trying to get a better price or discriminating against potential buyers? I'm not saying there aren't legit reasons; I just don't know what they might be. As to pocket listings, I know we had a Coldwell agent back in 96 who said she wasn't allowed to do such a transaction for a home we wanted to buy on the Peninsula. Was this just company policy perhaps?

18   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 9:27am  

...pocket listings, not as clear as Mr. Sideways would have it...:

Apparently they _are_ illegal in CA unless there is a written, retained record from the seller requesting/demanding that the property not be listed on MLS. This record is subject to inspection resultant from any discrimination claims, and must be retained by the realtor and the seller. Further, failure to list on MLS is explicity a violation of CA MLS Board rules, and theoretically can result in an agent's suspension from MLS access. (I love FindLaw and the Columbia University integrated online library system)

19   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 9:39am  

Aw, your name calling really hurts my feelings. I take back my offer.

Sorry, I can't keep track of all your aliases. No offense intended, Mr. ____

20   KurtS   2005 Oct 12, 12:01pm  

How far do people think houses will drop in the bay area? 25%? More!?

Another way to approach the issue: how far do prices need to drop until they're supported by local economics? I would daresay we've diverged from those fundamentals since '99. But since I think prices are so far out of control it's hard to how much % drop without sounding a little foolish.

Personally, I think we'll know more about inventory (and the inevitable correction) when the investors get scared. And frankly, judging from the Bay Area stats I've seen sofar, I don't think most of them are breaking a sweat.

21   Jamie   2005 Oct 12, 12:35pm  

"But since I think prices are so far out of control it’s hard to how much % drop without sounding a little foolish."

I will risk sounding foolish (I do every time I open my mouth ;-)) and guess that prices in the BA in general will drop 30-40% in the next five years. But given how long the market has defied all common sense, I also wouldn't be surprised if there were no significant drop at all. That's not very helpful though...

22   Jamie   2005 Oct 12, 1:09pm  

"excluding Novato) perhaps only 10 per cent over 4 years"

Total ignorance here: what about Novato makes it less desireable? Is it just that it's further from SF, or something else?

"I wouldnt be surprisd to see Godzilla come over Mt. Tam at this point either…."

LOL. I'm thinking that might negatively impact Marin's many PIB's. ;-)

23   praetorian   2005 Oct 12, 1:18pm  

"Look inflation has even hit playboy! lol."

One wonders if pornography is considered a contributer to core-inflation...

Cheers,
prat

24   KurtS   2005 Oct 12, 1:19pm  

Total ignorance here: what about Novato makes it less desireable? Is it just that it’s further from SF, or something else?

I hear the town often mentioned in disparaging terms; I'm sure we could suspect why (mixed ethnicity perhaps?)

Marin County (excluding Novato) perhaps only 10 per cent over 4 years.
Do you mean across the board, or specific properties? If S. of Novato drops only 10% in 2 years, the beer's on me.

25   praetorian   2005 Oct 12, 1:21pm  

"The first cut of the sword can be so painful…"

It's a bit frightening that they talk about grandfathering in existing tax structures however. Then, indeed, those of us who were unlucky enough to have not bought in the late 90's early 00's will have missed the boat. Or, at least, a boat.

26   praetorian   2005 Oct 12, 1:30pm  

For what its worth, I think prices will be less sticky in this housing bear market simply because there is so much speculation. People can sit on houses when they own them, or are renting them at something approaching break-even. But if they are sitting empty houses/condos or renting at a large loss, people are eventually going to just sell, damn the torpedos. This will be especially true when the reality of declining prices hits and when banks tighten lending practices right as people start refi-ing the teaser loans they took in the early 00's. All of this is fairly standard bubble head boilerplate.

So... 50% DROP BY JANUARY! Or, more realistically, I think prices will be down 10-15% by next summer, and will continue downwards over the next few years until historical averages are reached. Peak to trough, I would guess 30% inflation-adjusted corrections on average. In about six months I think will be able to definitively look back at summer 05 as the peak, with Peter the sage having called October correctly.

Now, on the other hand, please bear in mind that I'm a moron.

Cheers,
prat

27   surfer-x   2005 Oct 12, 1:40pm  

Science is concerned with trying to make sense of the physical world. Understanding the world, trying to make sense of it. In the America's for instance we know that the cultures are young, why?, because there are over 1000 psycho active plants in use by the natives (Jack, book your tickets now :) I kid I kid), why?, because they need them to talk to the gods. In the Western world we long ago abandoned these things, (well not the 1947-1960 crowd) in favor of mathematics. Science is still however based on trying to understand, now through math, the physical world. Ok, let me ask you this, what is more difficult, climbing the mountain or coming back down? So why the fuck would real estate not have an amazing plunge after it climbed such a large mountain?

I am thinking of setting up "headventure tourism" outfits to the Amazon, complete with porters toting 75lb sacks of Doritos, to take advantage of all the psycho active compounds.

28   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 2:08pm  

Do you mean across the board, or specific properties? If S. of Novato drops only 10% in 2 years, the beer’s on me.

If South Marin drops that much, then I'll move to Novato (since it will drop by twice that and there will be a lot less gridlock in San Rafael 101), and the Congac's on me.

29   Randy H   2005 Oct 12, 2:12pm  

For what its worth, I think prices will be less sticky in this housing bear market simply because there is so much speculation.

Just for reference, I think we are in the "sticky" phase right now. If house prices weren't sticky, then they would already be pricing in alot more of the expected downturn.

Now, on the other hand, please bear in mind that I’m a moron.

Not a chance. You're one of my favorite posters, so that would mean that I must be an idiot; which objectively cannot be (lol).

30   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 2:36pm  

"Just for reference, I think we are in the “sticky” phase right now. If house prices weren’t sticky, then they would already be pricing in alot more of the expected downturn."

Good point! Indeed, it would difficult to recognize the sticky when you're in it. It's funny, looking at RE data plots in 6 mos, we might look back to jul-october timeframe & say: "Ahhh, back then we were in the sticky; now we're in the freefall."

31   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 2:50pm  

Further, regarding The Sticky: PERHAPS something keeping it sticky, & continuing to keep it sticky for (?) months, is the relative spotlight on rising interest rates. Although the Fed has been tightening for quite a while, I think Katrina really served to publicize this a bit more...since there was some controversy regarding the move to continue rate hikes. Since then, there has been nothing but hawkish remarks (from the Fed et al) regarding the need to control inflation aka rising rates.

My point? In light of this spotlight on rising rates, more people who've been considering buying are looking seriously at buying now...especially with long term rates rising at a higher rate lately. So I think these buyers will continue to propagate The Sticky for a little while...but we all know with high ownership levels (60% in Cali, 70% nationwide), and with tightening lending standards, there is not an endless supply of said buyers.
Oh, and by the way, The Economy's Not Making Any More Buyers (R).

32   KurtS   2005 Oct 12, 2:56pm  

Nothing WRONG with Novato ,it just gets a bit of the snob treatment from the rest of Marin, thats all. (And I am not aware of any “ethnicity” issue whatsoever)

For the record, I would agree. Conversely, I find some places like Tiburon or Ross a bit of a turnoff. Just passing on some comments I heard about "ethnicity" (struck me as rascist), as a possible explanation when some turn their noses up at Novato.

I’ll take you up on that Kurt, just for fun.
Cool...it's all in fun, right? (Just in case I sound too serious in my predictions).
If Marin never drops, I suppose it means we'll have more equity when we finally move.
Cheers either way!

33   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 2:58pm  

"Actually, a realtor, who is an agent of the seller, is not at liberty to disclose how many days a house has been on the market, as this might lead a buyer to believe that the seller would accept an offer below the listed price."

ScottC, given your adamant insistence that the price is determined solely by a buyer and a seller agreeing on a price, and that both parties have the prerogative to NOT buy, or to NOT sell, if they don't think the price is fair, I would think that you would think this "rule" is complete & utter bull$hit. Do you think differently? It would not seem consistent to me, but I may not be thinking about it right (?).

34   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 3:30pm  

OX, that's an interesting read; thanks for the link!

Excerpt:
"What is not debatable is whether the rate of home equity extraction will revert to the mean rate of about zero, from the current rate of more than $250 billion annually. It will. "

35   Jamie   2005 Oct 12, 3:57pm  

Jack and KurtS, thank you for the explanations. I've had Novato on my radar screen recently because of the warmer weather and more "affordable" (heh) houses. Nice to hear a little more from a local's perspective.

36   surfer-x   2005 Oct 12, 4:01pm  

Jack is a bear that lives in Marin. Not a housing bear, but an actual bear, a honey loving, bee hating bear. Don't trust him, as he's about to go underground until spring, at which time he'll venture out an proclaim, INTANGIBLE.

37   SQT15   2005 Oct 12, 4:03pm  

One wonders if pornography is considered a contributer to core-inflation…

Grooooooooooan. I can't believe this passed without comment. Goofball.

Interesting timing btw. Aren't vice businesses like porn/booze etc. supposed to do well in a lagging economy? Seems Playboy is maybe planning on doing more business soom.

38   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 4:24pm  

SQT, funny you should mention.
Just the other day I was at 7-11. The guy in front of me, middle aged w/sagging "say-no-to-crack" jeans & wifebeater tank top, plops down a porno magazine...$9.59 (had no idea it would've cost that much...honestly!).
The guy behind me, elderly--probably around 70'ish--requests one each of the whole front lineup of lotto tickets...you know, the rolled up tickets under the glass window on the checkout counter. Made me a little sad.
Oh, what about me, the guy in the middle--what did I buy? 6-pack of beer.
So there you have it: vice-vice-vice...Trifecta!
I just thought it was an odd sequence...but maybe I don't frequent 7-11 enough to know.
Perhaps vice sales should be a leading economic indicator. :)

39   surfer-x   2005 Oct 12, 4:28pm  

SJ_Jim, sorry but I'm losing a bit of respect for you, living in San Hosebag and you go to the 7-y and don't buy a fotay (note: this means a 40oz screw top bottle of malt liquor, it gets your jimmy quicker) and nachos? Jim, Jim, Jim, where did it all go wrong?

40   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 4:39pm  

surfer-x, long gone are the days when I indulged in the fotay...probably not since I spent a hellish year in beautiful riverside california (one positive about riverside is that the receding smog on occasion provides for very nice sunsets... kind of like after a volcano eruption). But don't get me started on riverside.
Just so you'll respect me less...the 6-pack was [gasp] Newcastle. Alas, not to be found in a fotay; a 22, maybe. [ponders: what does it mean when 7-11 carries Newcastle?]

41   SJ_jim   2005 Oct 12, 5:07pm  

Never heard that; too much newcastle in newcastle?

42   praetorian   2005 Oct 12, 5:11pm  

Grooooooooooan. I can’t believe this passed without comment. Goofball.

_laugh_ It was an innocent comment. Pinky swear.

Chewbacca,
prat

43   brightc   2005 Oct 12, 7:38pm  

>Things are much uglier than the general public realize.

Could things turn out much worse than anyone of us could anticipate? Do you sense another recession coming?

If a recession is afoot, none of us could possibly buy a house even if the bubble pops. Rising unemployment, inflation, growing and growing federal deficits... could they happen within the next year or am I too pessimistic? BTW, I'm totally clueless. It's just my worry (and guess).

One thing for sure, I'm going to relocate my 401(k) more into International funds (Dodge & Cox, etc.) I'm not a financial expert. Just hope that could help (somewhat).

44   Escaped from DC   2005 Oct 12, 11:07pm  

ScottS, what are you, a Realtor(TM)?

you wrote . . .
And it states clearly in the listing agreement that the realtor will not disclose that the seller will accept an offer below the listed price.

And if it stated clearly in the listing agreement that my thingy was giant, that wouldn't be true either, would it?

I've found Realtors, in the aggregate, to be among the lowest of the low. While true that liars and scoundrels can be found in every walk, the job of Realtor(TM) seems to attract a greater than average share.

Let me assure you that what happens in many of these transactions is similar to mediation, where the weak sister is quickly identified and subjugated.

The selling whore and the buying whore both only make money if the buying john pulls the trigger.

The sw and the bw therefore have an almost equivalent motive to get the buyer to buy. I'm sure both Realtors(TM) are very excited upon learning that the buying John is interested in the property. The conversation very quickly turns to what it's going to take to seal the deal.

Perhaps the bw does not come out and say, "my John will spend up to 20k more for this house," but through the proper wording and signalling, like a finely honed bridge pairing, the information will be sent.

ScottC, if you deny this, then you're either a fool or a Realtor(TM).

45   Escaped from DC   2005 Oct 12, 11:18pm  

brightc, I confirm your suspicion that you are, in fact clueless.

If you are just now coming to the realization that we may be looking into the black double barrel of a recession, then I suggest you read like a fiend on this site and places like prudentbear.com.

As for your question, "Could things turn out much worse than anyone of us could anticipate?"

Well, I'm probably on the very severe end of the "how bad can it get" spectrum for this site. In essence, I think it's going to be worse than the great depression - by a lot. If this turn out "much worse" than I anticipate, then we're all dead or living underground like in 12 monkeys or Dr. Strangelove.

46   Escaped from DC   2005 Oct 12, 11:54pm  

ScottC =
"Since the listing agreement is a fully binding legal contract, any violation of it by the broker, who is an agent of the seller, or any of the broker’s associates, who are subagents of the seller, is an actionable offense. The broker and all associates would lose their licenses and render themselves subject to a serious lawsuit for a lot of money. And that is not bullshit."

It is bs.

How about you find me the last 10 cases in Texas that were litigated where the plaintiff was a buyer/seller suing his/her agent for breach. Find out what the final settlement was. Also, find out how many have lost their licenses.

A "serious" lawsuit for "a lot" of money? Please. No breach of a listing agreement is going to result in a judgement for "a lot" of money. Moreso, no lawyer is going to take the case on a contingency basis, so the cost of pursuing a suit against a Realtor(TM) will be prohibitive.

47   KurtS   2005 Oct 13, 1:19am  

he’s about to go underground until spring, at which time he’ll venture out an proclaim, INTANGIBLE…”

That could be true for those sellers, who have dropped off the MLS, hoping to find a resurge in demand come spring (to find that "right" buyer), and slowly waking up to see everyone else is doing the same thing...

48   SQT15   2005 Oct 13, 1:22am  

brightc, I confirm your suspicion that you are, in fact clueless.

Escaped, are you always this ornery? You need to master the subtlety of the rant without insults. Lighten up man!

« First        Comments 9 - 48 of 83       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste