Best of Tour 2.10.2015

BEST OF TOUR

Not to be confused with the Board of REALTORS “Best of Tour” award whereby agents try and coax or pressure their colleagues into signing a petition proclaiming their home the “Best of Tour”, our’s is based upon our personal impression after seeing all of the homes on tour and reporting back to you.

Today’s Best of Tour there were three stand outs:

Belmont:

Belmont’s inventory is still low but this one perked us up. A home on Belmont’s west side under $1,000,000? Ready to move in, this home is great for a first-time buyer tired of renting.

2014 Monroe Avenue , Belmont 94002   Status:  Active  Monroe

County:                San Mateo

Area:     362 – Belmont Country Club Etc. List Price:             $899,000

Beds:     2

Baths (F/P):        1

Apprx.Sqft:         1,150 SqFt (Tax)

Apprx Lot:           4,000 SqFt (Tax)

 

San Mateo:

904 Murphy Drive, San Mateo 94402       Status:  Active      Murphy Drive

County:                San Mateo                          Price:     $2,488,000           List:        02/06/2015

Class:     Res. Single Family

Beds:     5

Baths (F/P):        4 (3/1)

Apprx. Sqft:        3,910 SqFt

Apprx Lot:           11,970 SqFt

This home underscores why looks can be deceiving. From the outside it looks like just another track home but once inside it is anything but ordinary. From the open floor plan and expansive rooms to the wonderful rear yard. Truly a great find!

If that one is above your comfort zone there’s a home on the water in San Mateo which has been recently upgraded. Best part—you can water ski right from your back yard.

1765 Lake Street , San Mateo 94403         Status:  Active            Lake

County:                San Mateo          Orig Price:           $1,288,000           Original:               02/05/2015

Area:     413 – Parkside    List Price:             $1,288,000 MLS #:            ML81449598

Beds:     4

Baths (F/P):        3

Apprx.Sqft:         1,960 SqFt (Tax)

Apprx Lot:           8,280 SqFt (Tax)

 

Drew & Christine Morgan are REALTORS/NOTARY PUBLIC in Belmont, CA. with more than 20 years experience in helping sellers and buyers in their community. They may be reached at (650) 508.1441 or emailed at info@morganhomes.com.

You can find them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Morganhomes and also find them on Twitter @ https://twitter.com/morganhomes

The information contained in this article is educational and intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute real estate, tax or legal advice, nor does it substitute for advice specific to your situation. Always consult an appropriate professional familiar with your scenario.

Are Belmont Home Values Near The TOP–August 2013

Are home values near the top? Thus far this year the media focus has been to highlight the hot local housing market. Now it seems they are looking for any signs of it faltering to present a new angle. And in deed you may have already heard the recent reports from Case-Shiller and others indicating that the market is showings signs of cooling off.

When will it begin to cool? Has it already?

Remember—real estate is local yet media reports often are not. What you might be hearing in the news may not apply to the neighborhood where you live.

With the biggest housing crash since the great depression* still front and center in our memories, it’s no wonder that potential purchasers might be wary of how fast the market has rebounded.

We recently released an article discussing those very points—“What’s in store in Q4”. In it, we delve into why we believe if recent changes in market forces continue, the once rapid rise in home values will begin to wane.

AUGUST 2013—For now, the numbers are in for Belmont for August 2013 (Septembers will be out soon), and there’s no sign of a let up in our fervent housing activity—at least according to the numbers for August.

Belmont Home Values Aug 2013

[click on the graphic for a larger picture]

MEDIAN HOME PRICE

Most notably is the pace of the median home price in Belmont. It stands at $1,105,000 which is a 20% increase over last year during the same time. We’re the first to look at the size of homes selling in the two periods to see if perhaps larger or smaller homes sold and skewed the median home price. But what we found was that in August of this year the homes that comprised the sales mix were 16% smaller and yet cost 20% more. Also interesting to note was that the median home price in Belmont has been over the million dollar mark for the last four consecutive months—in fact had the median home price not dipped just below that threshold in April of this year, it would have been over the million dollar mark every month so far this year. Contrast that to the historical median price trend in Belmont which has never had consecutive months over the million dollar mark.

Summary—Belmont homes values have hit a new high.

SALES

August of 2013 saw a 55% increase in home sales and paradoxically a 70% decrease in new listings.

MONTHS OF INVENTORY†

That brings us to the inventory which was down 131% from August of 2012 resulting in a record low “Months of Inventory” factor of .73, down from 2.6 months in 2012.

DOM [Days on Market]

The average time it took to sell a home which closed in August was 17 days, down from 31 in 2012.

PERCENT RECEIVED OF ASKING

This August 80% of the sellers received on average $130,000 or 9% over their asking price as compared to 44% of sellers receiving $60,000 or on average 2% more than asking in 2012.

In short, the inevitable slowdown in the RATE of appreciation is news but it hasn’t appeared in the statistics yet. If you talk with a Belmont REALTOR® you’ll no doubt hear they think the market has cooled off a bit. We’ll look at September’s sales to see if that’s true, because July sales, (which resulted in August statistics), didn’t bear that out and neither did our first-hand experience.

Sellers of homes in Belmont should know that the majority of the rebound in equity has already occurred. The rate of appreciation will slow as the market forces we discuss on our blog begin to kick in. If we’re right and they do, the housing market will become much more sustainable—we have our fingers crossed.

*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_housing_bubble

Months of inventory is the time as measured in months that it would take to sell all of the homes currently listed for sale, assuming no more new homes were listed.

Disclaimer:

Drew & Christine Morgan are REALTORS with RE/MAX and a NOTARY PUBLIC in Belmont, CA. with more than 20 years of experience helping sellers and buyers in their community. They may be reached at (650) 508-1441.

The information contained in this article is educational and intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute real estate, tax or legal advice, nor does it substitute for advice specific to your situation. Always consult an appropriate professional familiar with your scenario.

Drew & Christine Morgan did not necessarily participate in these sales.

Belmont Home Values Break New Records – Home Sales Report for May 2013

It’s time to do the numbers, and I can hear the jingle playing in my head “We’re in the Money”–a little ditty from NPR’s Market Report segment which they play when the stock market is up. As each month goes by it seems Belmont home values keep setting new high water marks–not that we’re insensitive to the woes of buyers. We represent Buyers too and we know how frustrating it can be to secure a home in today’s market. The inherent problem for buyers when timing the market is that when housing prices are down, typically so is the overall economy and nobody feels much like taking on an enormous mortgage when coworkers are being laid off and empty cubicles are selling for pennies on the dollar on Craig’s list. Finally, when the economy picks up and everyone feels happy again they all starts to buy at the same time and drive up prices with overbidding. Add to that the sense of interest rate lock urgency and you have a market running full speed ahead. It’s no longer how much a home will sell for, it’s how far over asking will it go.

Belmont Home Values
Can You Save Fast Enough?

This month just about every positive indicator for sellers was up. In fact they were all up except the days on the market [DOM] or the time it took a seller to sell their home—that statistic was down which really means it was up for sellers—another positive sign.

So let’s begin by dispensing with any question of where the market is today—it’s clearly rebounding and doing so at a pace like we’ve never seen—and we’ve seen a lot of ups and down in our 20+ years of selling homes.

What’s driving this rebound at a clearly unsustainable level? Ironically, the good news may be is it’s a temporary influx which may soon be abating. The days of government intervention in the market by keeping interest rates artificially low with bond purchases may be numbered—at least that’s what Wall Street thinks. When we wrote this the stock market was singing “Stormy Weather” as news of an impending slow down in bond purchases sent the stock market into a bit of a humble tumble.

Looking at Belmont home sales for May 2013, we see that there’s no more debate about how the market is doing. The only question is, how long will this corybantic pace continue?

Belmont Home Values
Click on the picture for a larger size.

SALES

Home sales, after being down past month, rebounded with a 23% increase over May of 2013 were 32 homes traded hands as compared to 26 last May. The last time Belmont had that many homes sell in one month was in August of 2005 when 35 homes sold—well before the market correction which began in April of 2006 [it took well into another year for the national housing dilemma to begin to affect Belmont’s more insulated economy].

MEDIAN PRICE

Belmont home values reflected the median price topping out at $1,100,000 this May which has only been eclipsed twice in the history of Belmont home values—once in 2007, and most recently in January this year. One cannot not escape noticing that the median home price in Belmont has been over a million dollars four out of the last five months—a pinnacle in Belmont’s housing values trends as never before have we seen a sustained median home price over the million dollar mark.

So did larger homes sell this year? Each month we’re sure to look and see if that’s the cause and each month the answer has been yes, but only nominally. Certainly not enough to account for the year over year gains.

The median size home which sold in May of 2012 was 1,790 square feet. This May that increased 6.4% to 1,905 while the median home price increased 33%–from $825,000 last May to $1,100,000 in 2013.

What does this all mean? It means that a home 6.4% larger cost you 33% more this year. It means that Belmont home values are rising faster than most buyers can save money.

DOM [Days on the Market]

Statistically speaking, if you are going to get more for your home than you are asking, in Belmont that means you’ll be on the market less than 14 days. Between 14 and 21 you are considered lucky to get your asking price and rarely does a seller get their asking price after 21 days on the market.

This month’s numbers bear that out in spades as all of the homes which received more than their asking price did so in only 13 days. No home sold right at the seller’s asking price but of the few homes which were overpriced, they languished on the market for on average 22 days and received 98% of their initial asking price as compared to everyone else who netted on average 110%. Can you imagine being one of the few sellers who received 12% less for their home than everyone else? Clearly not all agents are created equal.

Of course getting too much for a home is usually the result of the same root cause—an agent who has no idea how to price a home—just that in the latter case the seller is much happier and probably never the wiser.

We’ll leave you with this one watercooler statistic. Did you know that in May the average Belmont home sold for $100,000 more than the asking price!

Drew & Christine Morgan are REALTORS/NOTARY PUBLIC in Belmont, CA with more than 20 years of experience. They may be reached at (650) 508.1441 or info@morganhomes.com

Disclaimer:

The information contained in this article is educational and intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute real estate, tax or legal advice, nor does it substitute for advice specific to your situation. Always consult an appropriate professional familiar with your scenario.

Drew & Christine Morgan did not necessarily participate in these sales.

Belmont Home Values Rise Again in April But Sales Cool Off – Housing Report for April 2013

We’ll do a quick re-cap of the Belmont housing market for April 2013, since by now unless you’ve been living under a rock you’ve heard that the Peninsula housing market is back in full swing; and some would argue the swing is becoming dangerous to ride.

We’re probably a few years away from that precipice and we seriously doubt that the current run up of home values will continue at the frenetic pace we’ve seen in the last year. If the rate of appreciation settles down to sub double digit increases year-over-year the market will be more sustainable.

If you are some place where you can hear our audio accompaniment, we’ve recorded a short piece which helps explain some of the perplexing numbers for Belmont home values in April of 2013.

That’s a long way of saying we’ll be brief in our analysis this month. We’ll start with the big news which is probably not what you’d expect to hear…

[click on the sales for a full size chart]

Belmont Home Sales April 2013

SALES

Sales year-over-year dropped 30% in the month of April. In April of 2012 24 homes traded hands while in 2013 only 17 homes closed escrow.

 

New Listings

New listings were up 40% in 2013 over 2012 for the month of April.

Current Inventory

The inventory of homes available for sale in April of 2013 dropped 27% over last year at the same time.

Months of Inventory

The time it would take to sell off the entire current inventory of homes at the current rate of sales was virtually unchanged from 1.78 months of inventory last April to 1.76 months this year.

Do some of these numbers seem paradoxical? More new listings and fewer sales—is the market cooling off? If you’d like a more detailed discussion you may visit our blog page for a short podcast where we explain the correlation these numbers have to each other.

MEDIAN PRICE

The median home price in Belmont increased around 12% to $955,000 over last April when the median price was $849,500.

Reading between the lines—we see that the size home that sold in 2012 though was also 2,070 square feet as opposed to the homes which sold this April which were only 1,520 square feet. Effectively this means in 2013 you get a home in Belmont that is 26% smaller but cost you 12% more. That’s a serious increase in prices in just one year which we discuss more in the audio portion.

PRICE REDUCTIONS

Another indication of the hot Belmont housing market is reflected in the number of price reductions—or lack thereof. There were no price reductions in April for any Belmont home which sold.

In April of 2012, out of the 24 sales 10 homes sold above the asking price, 4 sold at the asking price and 10 sold below. In 2013 all but one home sold over the asking price.

PERCENT RECEIVED

Sellers in Belmont received on average 111% of their asking price in April of 2013 as compared to 99.6% last April.

If you are a seller who has been waiting for the market to rebound, it just did.

Data from the Multiple Listing Service for San Mateo County – MLS Listings, Inc.

Disclaimer:

The information contained in this article is educational and intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute real estate, tax or legal advice, nor does it substitute for advice specific to your situation. Always consult an appropriate professional familiar with your scenario. Drew & Christine did not participate in all of these sales.

Case-Shiller Posts Higher Home Prices in the Bay Area

New York, April 30, 2013 – Data through February 2013, released today by S&P Dow Jones Indices for its
S&P/ Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, the leading measure of U.S. home prices, showed average home prices increased 8.6% and 9.3% for the 10- and 20-City Composites in the 12 months ending in February 2013. The 10 and 20 City Composites rose 0.4% and 0.3% from January to February.

“Home prices continue to show solid increases across all 20 cities,” says David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices. “The 10- and 20-City Composites recorded their highest annual growth rates since May 2006; seasonally adjusted monthly data show all 20 cities saw higher prices for two months in a row – the last time that happened was in early 2005.

“Phoenix, San Francisco, Las Vegas and Atlanta were the four cities with the highest year-over-year price
increases. Atlanta recovered from a wave of foreclosures in 2012 while the other three were among the hardest hit in the housing collapse. At the other end of the rankings, three older cities – New York, Boston and Chicago– saw the smallest year-over-year price improvements.