Austin Inventory Continues to Decline

September sales numbers & statistics are in for Austin housing and it’s official, our back-log of inventory is shaking out.  We now have fewer months of inventory (calculated based on how long it is predicted to take to sell all of the homes currently for sale in Austin) than we had in 2003 after the tech-bust and are closing in on the momentum from 2007.

See updated Austin Housing Statistics Here
Choose: Housing Data – Months of Inventory
(This post & chart are dated 5th Nov, 2009)

Lower M.O.I. figures show a seller's market, higher show a buyer's market.  Current levels represent a neutral market.

Lower M.O.I. figures show a seller's market, higher show a buyer's market. Current levels represent a neutral market.

To put this in perspective, I’d like to share a chart from another Realtor in Tucson, Arizona.  This should help show how stable our market here in Austin is compared to other parts of the country.  From The House Chick in Tuscon:

Screen shot 2009-11-05 at 2.05.25 PM

Tucson, for example, has seen fluxuations from 6.1 to 16.6 months of inventory in the past two years while Austin has remained between 4.5 to 7.4 in the same time period.

In the News: Pending home sales hit 6th straight increase

Index jumps by 3.2% in July, beating estimates and marking its longest streak on monthly increases on record.

We’re hearing more and more good news lately, and it’s backed up by hard numbers.  When our real estate market has recovered before, particularly in Austin, it recovers quickly and suddenly.  Will we see this recovery soon?  Will the scramble for good, decent, or even okay deals hit us after Labor Day as experts have predicted?  The recovery does seem imminent and close.  Do you think that a time will come when buyers scramble off the fence?

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — More Americans signed sales contracts to buy homes in July than in June, marking the longest streak of monthly increases on record, said a report released Tuesday.

The pending home sales index from the National Association of Realtors rose 3.2% in July after rising by 3.6% in June. That’s 12% higher than July 2008, and it marks the sixth straight increase since record-keeping began in 2001.

The reading far exceeded forecasts of economists surveyed by Briefing.com, who predicted a 1.5% increase.

Signed real estate contracts often take many weeks or months to complete, so they are considered a forward-looking indicator.

A new direction

Momentum in the housing market has clearly turned for the better, said NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun, in a written statement.

“The recovery is broad-based across many parts of the country,” Yun said. “Housing affordability has been at record highs this year with the added stimulus of a first-time buyer tax credit.”

The first-time home buyers tax credit, passed earlier this year as part of the economic stimulus package, is worth 10% of the home purchase price up to $8,000. People who have not owned a home in the previous three years are eligible for the credit.

However, the tax credit expires on Nov. 30 and it usually takes about 90 days to close on a house after a contract is signed. As of Sept. 1, there were only 90 days left before the credit ends.

[...Continue reading at CNN.com]

What do you think?  Will a time will come when buyers scramble off the fence in Austin?

New Record Set for Most Expensive Home Sale for 2009

It’s in Aspen, not Austin, and recently sold for $43,000,000.  Colorado’s real estate market is weathering the financial storm much like Texas’s is, and this could help boost confidence for the luxury home market.

bildeASPEN — Aspen’s anemic real estate industry got a boost Friday from the $43 million sale of a Red Mountain mansion.

Cheek Subdivision LLC of Addison, Texas, sold the home to 421 Willoughby Investors in a deal that closed Friday and was recorded with the Pitkin County Clerk’s office on Monday.

“It was a straight, cash deal,” said Newton Bartley, a real estate agent with Joshua & Co. who represented the buyer. Joshua Saslove, president and founder of the firm, represented the seller.

The big transaction reinforces the claim of many real estate agents that Aspen is the type of market that will continue to attract wealthy buyers capable of pulling off expensive cash deals despite the recession.

To read this entire article in the Aspen Times, visit:
http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20090714/NEWS/907139975/1077&ParentProfile=1058

We have some big money homes in central Texas and Austin as well.  Celebrities and other high profile people choose Austin because it offers privacy in great home sites, a steady market they can put their money in with confidence, a great climate, and everything that makes Austin Austin.  Although I only share information about their homes when they decide to make it public, some faces you might see around town and in some of Austin’s finest homes are:  Lance Armstrong (currently has his ranch listed for sale in Dripping Springs), Sara Bird, Sandra Bullock, Matthew McConaughey, Luke Wilson, The Dixie Chicks, Andy Roddick, Bob Scheider, Dennis Quaid, and that’s just naming a few.  Other money in Austin comes from investors and businessmen, often with international recognition.  These deals are often hush, hush, complete with confidentiality or non-disclosure agreements.  So while you won’t find their Broker’s bragging about the sales, the big ones often still make the news.

What is a ‘normal’ market?

What is a ‘normal’ market? Where are the screaming deals?

roadblockThe number 1 road block to home sales that we are seeing right now is fear that leads to the conviction that you can only buy something half price.  Here’s the trouble with this mind-set:  If you are buying in Austin, there are no half price homes!   If there were, trust me, they would be sold in a matter of hours to those of us watching like hawks for new listings.

There are half price homes available, just not in Austin.  Here’s why:  where there’s a boom, there’s a bust to follow.  Where was the boom?  Los Angeles, Palm Beach, Phoenix, Las Vegas… not Austin.  So where is the bust?  Los Angeles, Palm Beach, Phoenix, Las Vegas… not Austin.  The exception to this rule is places like Detroit where, just like in the old days, a town dependent on a factory goes bust when that factory goes bust.  Unlike Detroit, Austin is dependent not only on one industry, but several.  Our market no longer busts when Dell has major layoffs because there are other growing industries that can pick up the slack.

This is why our growth rate remains strong and why Austin consistently ranks strongest among all of the Nation’s cities in top ten lists and other rankings for financial, economic, and market strength.

So does Austin compare, really?  Let’s take a major indicator for the health of Austin’s real estate market, months of inventory – the amount of time that it will take to sell off our current inventory of homes.  With our strong, consistent job and growth rates, Austin usually has an average months of inventory figure around 3-4, representing a seller’s market.  In Austin, we are used to the security of this seller’s market.  When our inventory dips lower, homes are harder to find, you are likely to need to put an offer in on a home the day it is listed and for top dollar (like we saw in 2006).  Over 2007, 2007, and 2009, our months of inventory figure has been climbing.  This means that, compared to our local average, it is more of a buyer’s market as homes sit and some sellers are under pressure to negotiate low.  But…

march 2009 austin market health chartTo see an updated, interactive version of this chart, visit http://AustinHome.Pro/Statistics

Let me explain why things aren’t really as bad as they seem.  “Housing researchers consider a 6 to 6.5 months supply of homes for sale to represent a balanced housing market”*, or a neutral market — neither a buyer’s or seller’s market.  Last month, March of 2009, Austin just reached 6.5 months of housing inventory, up from 6.1 in Feburary 2009 and 5.7 in January 2009.  In March of 2008, we had 6.1 months of inventory and in March of 2007 we had 3.4.

So the real story is that we are still FAR below the national figures for months of inventory that can be as high as 10 (a real Buyer’s market!) and most importantly, they are steady even during this time of uncertianty — because of Austin’s (still) very strong economic and job growth rates.

As far as pricing goes, see the chart above.  The orange lines represent the median home sales price in the Austin-Round Rock mentro area and the blue line reprsents teh Average home sales price.  Both figures are still holding very steady.  In fact, take a look at how our median home salse price is stacking up next to the national and state figures over the past year:

march 2009 national state local median home salsea priceTo see an updated, interactive version of this chart, visit http://AustinHome.Pro/Statistics

The moral of the story is, as Douglas Adams put it best, “DON’T PANIC!”.  Go about your lives, buy or sell a home if you need or want to, and don’t over-think or out-smart yourself based on the pessimism and drama the news is selling you.  Be informed, I highly recommend my charts and figures over those you may find on other sites like Zillow because my data comes from a far greater and more accurate pool of information compiled by experts in our area, not in a far away state.  We are in a neutral market, not a buyer’s or seller’s market.  The only trouble is, we in Austin have grown very accustomed to living in an agressive seller’s market.

*This quote is from the April 2009 issue of Tierra Granda, Journal of the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University

In the News: Avg Travis county home appraisals on the rise

A positive article in the Statesman this week…

travis county home appraisal values chart statisticsAfter years of double-digit increases, though, some school disticts see valuations drop.


AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Residential property appraisals rose by an average 3.8 percent in Travis County this year, less than a third of last year’s increase and the smallest jump in five years, the Travis Central Appraisal District reported Wednesday.

Countywide, the average home value was $295,744, the district said. In 2008, the average valuation rose 12.2 percent.

In the City of Austin, the average valuation rose 4.5 percent this year to $278,027, compared with a 12.8 percent increase last year.

Click to read the full story

Austin gains home sales momentum while national sales decline

Austin is bucking the national trends again as March 2009 official numbers come in. Nationally, 4,570,000 homes were sold in March, down from 4,940,000 home sold in March of 2008 and down from February 2009′s 4,720,000 homes sold in the US. Austin saw 1,511 homes sold in March of this year, down from last March’s 2,049, but gaining momentum from February 2009′s 1,174 homes sold. In short, while US numbers continue to decline, Austin’s numbers are gaining as our strong job and growth rate help to keep our local market stable. Watch for a post coming later this week on the stability of Austin’s market.

National Figures:
March 2008 – 4,940,000
February 2009 – 4,720,000
March 2009 – 4,570,000

Local Figures:
March 2008 – 2,049
February 2009 – 1,174
March 2009 – 1,511

National vs Austin Home Sales Volume

As always, Austin Real Estate Housing Statistics and Data are permanently available at Austin Home Pro as well on the Statistics page as well as our new data site.