asking prices up, inventory down

Here we go again. The drop in inventory is causing a surge in asking prices.

From Housing Tracker.

Asking Prices and Inventory for Homes in Riverside California

As of July 09 2012 there were about 20,724 single family and condo homes listed for sale in Riverside California. The median asking price of these homes was approximately $255,000. Since this time last year, the inventory of homes for sale has decreased by 32.3% and the median price has increased by 10.9%.

July 09, 2012 Month/Month Year/Year
Median Asking Price $255,000 +2.0% +10.9%
Home Listings/Inventory 20,724 -5.2% -32.3%

Recent Asking Price and Inventory History for Riverside

Date Single Family & Condo
Inventory
25th Percentile
Asking Price
Median
Asking Price
75th Percentile
Asking Price
07/09/2012          20,724 $159,000 $255,000 $444,900
07/02/2012          21,216 $159,000 $250,000 $439,000
06/25/2012          21,498 $158,100 $250,000 $439,000
06/18/2012          21,738 $155,000 $249,900 $434,000
06/11/2012          21,859 $155,000 $249,900 $429,000

Listing data, been a while

It's been a long time since I posted any listing data from housingtracker.com.  You can see the lack of inventory is having an effect on median listing prices.  Not surprising, but what is surprising is the drop in inventory. The inventory levels are very low which is causing the "pearls" to go quick. Nice homes are selling like it was 2005 again (well except for the price).  Who knows what will happen to these numbers but right now it's not a good time to be a buyer!

Asking Prices and Inventory for Homes in Riverside California

As of June 18 2012 there were about 21,738 single family and condo homes listed for sale in Riverside California. The median asking price of these homes was approximately $249,900. Since this time last year, the inventory of homes for sale has decreased by 30.6% and the median price has increased by 8.7%.

June 18, 2012 Month/Month Year/Year
Median Asking Price $249,900 +2.0% +8.7%
Home Listings/Inventory 21,738 -3.6% -30.6%

Recent Asking Price and Inventory History for Riverside

Date Single Family & Condo
Inventory
25th Percentile
Asking Price
Median
Asking Price
75th Percentile
Asking Price
06/18/2012 21,738 $155,000 $249,900 $434,000
06/11/2012 21,859 $155,000 $249,900 $429,000
06/04/2012 22,014 $154,900 $249,000 $425,000
05/28/2012 22,342 $152,000 $245,900 $419,000
05/21/2012 22,541 $152,000 $245,000 $419,000

More bounce, May numbers

Sales are up and so are prices.  Median prices crept up a few thou in the IE and sales numbers were up quite a bit.  With the low inventory numbers it's hard to imagine sales going too much higher but it could certainly affect prices. I know around here I am seeing listing prices creep up. Good homes are selling very fast and the dogs are being left to rot. The inventory is around 22K for riverside making for about a 6 month supply. However about a third of those have no hope of selling (priced too high, next to the railroad tracks, total dumps etc). So the actual sell-able inventory is probably about a 4 month supply. That's pretty low and under normal circumstances would tend do drive up prices. Not holding my breath for that to happen. Certainly not in a big way. Hopefully we are seeing a return to a more normal, stable market.

The DQnews report.

The Southland housing market continued its long, step-by-tiny-step trek back toward normalcy in May, when the median sale price rose year-over-year for the second consecutive month, reaching a 20-month high. Home sales increased across the region but the gains were highest in coastal areas, where move-up markets have picked up steam, a real estate information service reported.
The median price paid for a home in the six-county Southland rose last month to $295,000, up 1.7 percent from $290,000 in April and up 5.4 percent from $280,000 in May 2011, according to San Diego-based DataQuick.
Last month’s median was the highest since the median was $295,500 in September 2010. The year-over-year gain in the May median followed a 3.6 percent annual increase in April. Before then, the median had fallen year-over-year for 13 straight months.
The rise in the median price is the result of higher demand and two other trends. First, there’s been a significant drop in the share of transactions that are foreclosed properties, which tend to sell at a discount and be concentrated in lower-cost areas. Second, a greater portion of sales are occurring in the higher-cost coastal markets. Last month, for example, sales in San Diego, Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties represented about 70 percent of all activity, up from 67.6 percent a year ago.
Last month’s total Southland sales rose nearly 21 percent compared with a year ago, and activity increased across the home-price spectrum. But the gains were strongest above $300,000. The volume of transactions in lower-cost markets has been restrained by, among other things, the dwindling inventories of homes for sale, especially foreclosures.
The typical monthly mortgage payment Southland buyers committed themselves to paying last month was $1,100, compared with $1,096 the month before and $1,154 a year earlier. Adjusted for inflation, last month’s typical payment was 53.6 percent below the typical payment in the spring of 1989, the peak of the prior real estate cycle. It was 62.0 percent below the current cycle’s peak in July 2007. 



Sales Volume Median Price
All homes May-11 May-12 %Chng May-11 May-12 %Chng
Los Angeles    5,983 7,496 25.30% $320k $315k -1.60%
Orange         2,664 3,279 23.10% $425k $435k 2.40%
Riverside      3,644 3,972 9.00% $197k $205k 4.10%
San Bernardino 2,323 2,702 16.30% $150k $158k 5.70%
San Diego      3,087 3,750 21.50% $324k $335k 3.20%
Ventura        693 993 43.30% $360k $360k -0.10%
SoCal          18,394 22,192 20.60% $280k $295k 5.40%

Here comes the Spring Bounce

It's a bit late but the spring bounce in prices seems to finally be upon us. Riverside median price stayed the same as last month and was up slightly from last year. San Berdu had a decent month to month rise..

Here's what DQnews has to say...

Southern California’s median sale price rose year-over-year in April for the first time in 16 months, reflecting stronger, affordability-driven demand and a slimmer inventory of homes for sale – especially low-cost foreclosures. Last month’s sales were modestly higher than a year ago, thanks to significant gains in the coastal counties, but remained well below average, a real estate information service reported.
The median price paid for a Southland home last month was $290,000, up 3.6 percent from $280,000 in both March this year as well as April 2011, according to San Diego-based DataQuick.
Last month’s median was the highest since the median was also $290,000 in December 2010. The year-over-year gain in the April median was also the first since December 2010, when the median rose a scant 0.3 percent.
Although price pressures have no doubt formed in some areas, the year-over-year increase in the April median price also reflects two other trends: the decline in the share of sales that are foreclosed properties, which tend to sell at a discount and be concentrated in lower-cost areas, and a shift toward a greater portion of sales this April in the higher-cost coastal markets. In April last year, for example, sales in San Diego, Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties represented 68.0 percent of the region’s sales, compared with 71.5 percent last month.
April’s $290,000 Southland median was 17.4 percent above the low point for the current real estate cycle – $247,000 in April 2009 – and 42.6 percent below the $505,000 peak in mid 2007. The peak-to-trough drop was due to a decline in home values as well as a shift in sales toward lower-cost homes, especially inland foreclosures.
The number of homes that sold for less than $200,000 in April fell 4.7 percent from a year earlier, while the number that sold for between $200,000 and $400,000 rose 5.5 percent. Sales between $300,000 and $800,000 – a range that would include many move-up buyers – increased 3.5 percent year-over-year. The number of sales above $800,000 fell 3.0 percent from a year ago.

Distressed sales – the combination of foreclosure resales and “short” sales – made up about 47 percent of last month’s resale market. That was the lowest level since the figure was 45.1 percent in April 2008.
Foreclosure resales – properties foreclosed on in the prior 12 months – accounted for 28.6 percent of the resale market last month, down from 31.5 percent in March and down from 33.8 percent a year earlier. Last month’s figure was the lowest since foreclosure resales were also 28.6 percent of the resale market in January 2008. In the current cycle, the figure hit a high of 56.7 percent in February 2009.
Short sales – transactions where the sale price fell short of what was owed on the property – made up an estimated 18.4 percent of Southland resales last month. That compares with 18.9 percent the month before and 17.3 percent a year earlier.



Sales Volume Median Price
All homes Apr-11 Apr-12 %Chng Apr-11 Apr-12 %Chng
Los Angeles    6,025 6,510 8.00% $320,000 $310,000 -3.10%
Orange         2,485 2,920 17.50% $430,000 $420,000 -2.30%
Riverside      3,470 3,199 -7.80% $190,000 $200,000 5.30%
San Bernardino 2,403 2,292 -4.60% $147,500 $156,250 5.90%
San Diego      3,277 3,559 8.60% $321,750 $329,500 2.40%
Ventura        684 804 17.50% $357,500 $360,000 0.70%
SoCal          18,344 19,284 5.10% $280,000 $290,000 3.60%