1,984 Boulder County Buyers and Sellers Successful so far in 2009

So far this year (at the tone it will be March 30th 4:13 pm) there have been 520 sales in Boulder County listed through the MLS.  Currently there are 472 properties with contracts in place.  So far 1,984 buyers or sellers have gotten the good news that they are moving forward on their goal.  While we may not be setting any records so far this year, there is activity and when you get caught up in the statistics you can lose site that each time a property closes it allows one owner to move on and another to start a new life in a new home.  This business is about putting the two together.  Actually, we are seeing more activity in the market, buyers are out buying and sellers are listing their homes.  In order for either to be successful they must be realistic, flexible and go into negotiation with a win-win attitude.

By the end of the week I will be able to report on the first quarter sales activity.  I have a feeling that we will be down both in volume and price.  Not that values are falling so much, it’s that lower priced homes are selling.  Below is a rare scene this winter – sledding at Scott Carpenter Park.

How Buyers and Sellers Should be Viewing Boulder Area Real Estate

How Buyers and Sellers Should be Viewing Boulder Area Real Estate

The real estate market in Boulder County is very interesting to study.  On one hand we are doing great when compared to many markets, in its latest report FHFA ranked Boulder 17th in the nation in annual appreciation.  I am very grateful!  On the other hand sales are down to levels we haven’t seen since 2001.  What’s up and what can you do about it.  Here is a quick snapshot on how buyers and sellers should be thinking if they are looking to buy or sell a home in or around Boulder.  I write a monthly statistics column in the Boulder Area Realtor Association newspaper The Realtor Review.  Here is my lest entry.  Let’s take a look.

 

Now is a great time to buy a house*. So why are sales in February down 24% from last year? The answer can be found in the asterisk. It is a great time to buy if:

1. You can buy a house and stay within the conventional or FHA limits.

2. You have a job, great credit, plenty of reserves and a letter from your 6th grade teacher.

3. You have confidence that your job is stable and that eventually everything is going to be okay.

4. You haven’t been scared to the point of inactivity by the images in the media; “Lost Trillions in Equity”, “Modesto Neighborhoods Decimated by Foreclosure”, etc.

5. You haven’t lost all of you savings in the stock market. It is easier to ignore and cope for some people than realize and act.

6. You don’t have a house to sell. See #4.

 

There are many thoughts running through the minds of our would-be clients and not many are positive. The six scenarios above are just a few of the variables in today’s market. Most of these challenges lead to one answer. Good homes in the lower price ranges are still selling!

 

There are many reasons why people buy and sell. Many of the reasons don’t wait for a better market. What the public needs now is accurate local information.

For Buyers:

· There are opportunities out there but our market is holding up very well. Sales price to list price ratio is still above 95% so offers at 60% of list price probably are not going to fly.

· Prices are holding steady. If you’re waiting for a big drop in our market you probably won’t see it.

· Take advantage of interest rates while they are low because all indications point toward our area being on the leading edge of the nation wide recovery.

 

For Sellers:

· Buyer’s have choices so your house needs to be both the best priced and best looking house in its price range. Many homes right now are not selling if they don’t get both just right.

· Now is not the time to put your house on the market at too high a price and wait and see. Be realistic now and save both time and money in the long run.

· Be ready to deal on inspection items. Buyers expect the roof to be in good shape and if there is a puddle under the water heater, replace it – it’s not going to get any better.

· Be patient and vigilant. There may not be many showings, so make each showing count.

The advice here becomes exponentially important as the price range increases. Right now 15% of homes under $500,000 in Boulder County are under contract while only 3% of homes over $1.5 million are under contract. Similarly, the absorption rate for properties under $250K is 4.25 months, between $250 – $500K is 5.71 months, $500 – $750K is 10 months, $750 – $1MM is 14.41 months, $1MM – $1.25MM is 22.73 months and above $1.5MM is 48 months of inventory.

What’s Hot in Boulder County Real Estate – Part 1

There seems to be some increased activity in the Boulder Colorado real estate market.  Spring is coming and March is usually a month when we see more listings and more sales.  A gradual lead-up to April and May which are traditionally our top months for activity.  ‘More activity’ is a very vague term so I will try to bring some clarity by providing some statistics.

I measure market activity by using both absorption rate (also called inventory) and under contract ratio.  Today in part one we will look at under contract ratio.  Simply put, this is the percentage of homes active on the market that are under contract.  The higher the percentage the more activity there is in any given area or price range.  The chart below shows the percentage across different areas in our market.  The levels have decreased in all areas when compared to last year.

This next chart shows the under contract percentage by price range.  This is very interesting because from my chair it seems like the lower priced homes are moving.  The statistics confirm this; 15% of homes under $250,000 are under contract while just 3% of homes above $1.5 Million are under contract.

Homes are selling but we are not up to a normal level in most price ranges.  Spring activity may bring us back to where we would expect but it would certainly take increased volume at all price levels, not just the lower levels.

In part 2 I will discuss the inventory levels in all areas and price ranges.

Boulder Real Estate From Three Perspectives

I had the honor of participating in an article for the Boulder County Business Report. The article reports on the current market conditions from the perspective of Ken Hotard of the Boulder Area Realtor Association, Carolyn Hoyt of McStain Neighborhoods, (a local home builder) and myself. The article by Monique Cole is below.

 

Homes sales slow; somewhat stable
By Monique Cole

December 12, 2008 —
The mortgage crisis, falling stock values and declining market confidence have created a perfect storm in home sales nationwide.

Local experts said Boulder Valley’s market is stable compared to the rest of the country, however, and they don’t expect the situation to get much worse in 2009.

“We are certainly not feeling the pain of Michigan, Chicago and many parts of California,” said Ken Hotard, senior vice president of public affairs for the Boulder Area Realtors Association.

When asked where he sees the region’s home sales market headed in 2009, he said there will be “very little change but maybe some softening.”

Hotard pointed to single-digit changes year-to-year in median sales prices as proof that the local markets are relatively stable. He said the national regions that are being hit the hardest right now are those that saw enormous spikes in sales prices during the past four years. “That never happened here,” he said.

Still, sales volume is slowing throughout the Boulder Valley due in part to economic uncertainty and a tightening in the credit markets.

“People are just like deer in the headlights, just frozen because of the uncertainty,” Hotard said. “How soon that can change is anybody’s guess.”

National experts have named the Denver metro area as one of the first areas that will come out of the current market slide, according to Neil Kearney, a Realtor and owner of Kearney Realty Co.

“As soon as we start seeing some good news in the media we will start seeing a turnaround. I can’t predict when this will happen,” he said. “Right now it seems like people are hunkering down.”

Home sales volume has slowed in the third quarter in the greater Boulder area by about 13 percent, compared with last year.

“This continues a downward trend that began in 2006,” Kearney said. “I see a lot of pent-up demand – people who have wanted to move but have decided to delay a move until the ‘market gets better.'”

Normally lower demand will drive prices down, but supply has also declined to help stabilize prices in 2008.

“Median prices have been mostly flat, increasing in some areas and decreasing in others,” Kearney said. “Inventory is down roughly 17 percent when compared with last year. The lack of inventory has allowed prices to remain stable.”

Superior’s market has been stable, Kearney said, because it is mostly built-out, so there is little competition with new construction. Commuting convenience and reasonable prices have helped it compete with Boulder. Mountain sales have been weak for the past five years, with longer times on the market and more inventory, according to Kearney. Longmont’s high rate of foreclosures and large inventory continue to affect prices there.

According to MLS statistics, compared with last year median sales prices for the third quarter dropped in Boulder, Lafayette and Longmont by 5.1 percent, 14.1 percent and 11 percent, respectively. Meanwhile median prices climbed significantly in Broomfield, Erie and Superior by 11.9 percent, 6.1 percent, and 15.2 percent, respectively. As of October, the highest median price is $573,000 in Boulder, and the lowest median price in the Boulder Valley is $225,000 in Longmont, according to Information Real Estate Services.

The low end in all local markets continues to move, Kearney said. “Boulder’s high end is seeing softening while the prices below $600,000 in the city are still selling fairly well.

“It is no coincidence that the years with the most sales were the same years that credit was easy. This tightening in credit has been affecting us for a year or so,” Kearney said. “Much of the upper end of our market is not affected by the credit crunch.”

However, the high end has been hit by recent panics on Wall Street. “Much of Boulder is wealth based, not income based. This has allowed the Boulder area to have a larger than normal high-end market,” Kearney said. “As the stock market has dropped this year the wealth-based buyer has felt … well, less wealthy. This has slowed high-end sales.”

In the housing crisis, perhaps no one has been harder hit than builders. McStain Neighborhoods recently said it would lay off more employees and shut down its Louisville headquarters, switching to “virtual offices” based in model homes or the residences of remaining staff.

“The extroverts will be in the model homes and the introverts will be working in their homes, and everyone’s happy,” said Caroline Hoyt, co-owner of McStain. Financial pressures have also forced McStain to layoff about 80 percent of its staff during the past two years.

McStain has shelved its West Grange project at Nelson Road and 75th Avenue in Longmont – at least for now. “There just isn’t enough market to spend millions and millions to develop the property,” Hoyt said.

Construction will continue at Indian Peaks South in Lafayette. “Sales are tracking along OK. We’re building half as much as we wanted to, but that beats a quarter.” Hoyt said she does not foresee any price reductions in 2009 but said they might be more flexible on the cost of upgrades.

New housing starts have decreased dramatically in the Denver metro area, Hoyt said, quoting Metrostudy statistics. In the third quarter of 2008, there were 5,671 new housing starts compared with about 10,500 in 2007 and 18,000 in 2006.

“It’s as negative as I’ve ever seen it, and we’ve been in business for 45 years,” Hoyt said.

McStain survived the recession of the ’80s, which put many other builders out of business. Hoyt hopes her company can survive this one, too.

“We plan to muddle along here. It’s not going to be easy, but there you go.”

Boulder Real Estate – Current Market Conditions

Current Market Conditions

I will present three recent statistics to give a snapshot of the market conditions in Boulder County. For simplicity, the I will only present data for single family homes.

 

Total Number of Sales:
During the month of April there were 276 residential closings. This was down just one unit from the same month last year. Year-to-Date we are down 6.3% when compared to last year.

 

 

Median Price:
A snapshot of median prices does not always tell the full story. However, it seems like we are having more sales in the lower end of the market than the upper end. Perhaps this is a result of tighter credit for larger loans. We have not seen a drop in prices across the board but many buyers are driving a very hard bargain, especially for homes that have been on the market for awhile.

 

 

Percentage of Homes Under Contract:
As of the end of April roughly 24% of residential homes that were on the market were under contract. this is a healthy number but it does not quite match the 30% at this time last year.

 

Overall, I think we are in a stable market with a healthy amount of inventory and activity.