Friday, January 28, 2011
2010 Year in Review
Overall 2010 was an improvement over the previous year. the townhome market continued to improve through the spring and the single family sector Saw a bump up in pricing for the first time since this whole mess started. The number of foreclosures and short sales in the market ebbed and flowed but overall the numbers were slightly lower than in 2009. Rates stayed pretty steady at rock bottom levels for most of the year but jumped rather significantly, almost a full percentage point in rate, in December. Overall lending requirements became more stringent and it is tougher to get a loan today without question. The new home market has cranked up again and some of the deals that once were are no longer. A pivotal point in the rear was April when the stimulus program ended. Sellers rushed to get on the market and buyers moved their buying decisions up to catch this benefit. In other words, we robbed Peter to pay Paul in some respects. The most noticeable was in the townhome sector where we saw the number of contracts written in May fall off dramatically going from 123 in April to just 53 in May. June was more of the same but this was to be expected. It was a little disturbing too when you compared May of '09 to May of 2010 in that in '09 we has 102 contracts written and in '10 just the 53. It is also disturbing to see that it has continued like this for the rest of the year, inventory growing and number of contracts written dropping form the previous year's levels. This is the reverse of what we had seen since mid 2008. The single family sector has been more stable and, as I mentioned earlier, for the first time since 2005 we saw a bump up in pricing. I attribute this directly to the activity in the townhome market and the appreciation that townhomes had enjoyed for the last year. The number of sales was substantially higher in March and April over the previous years because finally the move-up market was back. Following those months, though, demand(# of contracts written) dropped back to the same levels as the previous 4 years. he good news is that single family demand is very consistent month after month. The concern, though, is that the townhome market will slow as supply (# of listings) continues to grow and demand stays at the lower levels as this will affect both categories. Looking at the numbers overall though, 2010 was the turnaround year and 2009 was the bottom. First the townhome sector: Average Days on the Market dropped to 30 from 44 in '09 and 83 in '08, Average number available in any given month was 73; just one unit higher than 72 in '09 and down from 255 in '08! (Consistent with when we believe the TH's started their turnaround) If you took the first 6 months of '10 and the last 6 months of '09, the number would be much lower. The average list price of the townhomes that came under contract jumped up to 273,962 from 258,578 in '09 lower than the 288,239 in '08 but that is because the market was continuing its downhill slide from the high of 403,017 in '05. The disappointing number was the number of contracts written which was 814 down over 20% from 1,057 in '09. Again, the first half of the year was stronger than the last half. The overall high was 1503 in '04. The good news is that the number of new listings dropped slightly to 779 from 838 in '09 and 1,196 in '08. It has consistently dropped from the high of 1,672 in '05. The single family sector showed similar numbers. The average list price of the homes that came under contract was 506,175 up from 477,894 in '09, although a long way from the high of 669,321 in '05. Good news though is this the first year that number has risen since '05! The average days on the market was 47 down from last year's 69 and '08's 103. The number of contracts written increased slightly to 366 from 339 last year and 338 in '08. That again is consistent with the "move up" bump that we saw in Mar-Apr and shows how consistent the single family sector is. The average number of active listings did increase a bit from 55 last year to 60 this year but still much better than the 128 of '08. The number of new listings coming on the market jumped almost 25% from the low of 345 last year to 428 this year. While there has been a little increase each month the lion's share of them came in Mar-Apr as they tried to catch the stimulus. The good news is that in both categories most of the new inventory was regular, healthy sales and not foreclosures. As this year's market unfolds I will, as usual, keep you informed.
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