ARE HOME PRICES UP OR DOWN?

Today the Federal Housing finance Agency released their property on Dallas area housing prices. The report said that housing prices in the Dallas area were up by 0.08%. You could easily call that flat.

Yesterday Standard & Poors/Case-Shiller report, the darlings of the press, came out and it said that prices were down in March by 5.6%.

Information from the Texas A&M Real Estate Center showed that the average price of a single family home was down by 8% in March.

Well is it down by 8%, or by 5.6% or up by 0.08%? the truth is that all of these reports are right and wrong. how can that be? If you want a detailed explanation take a look at my blog of May 2.

The truth of the matter is that the real estate market is very localized and by that I mean by neighborhood. there are areas that are down a little, areas that are flat, and there are even some areas that are up.

Please do not use Zillow to get an idea of prices. They really do not know. This afternoon I got a phone call from a lady in another city in Texas. She was considering moving to Dallas and had been looking up properties on Zillow. The house she called about is listed for $287,900 but Zillow said it was worth $500,000 and she could not understand why I was offering it so cheap! I had to explain to her the many problems with Zillow and why their methodology does not work in Texas. 

If you really want to know what is happening to prices in the neighborhood you live in or are interested in buying in, you need to talk to a Realtor that is very familiar with that area. Otherwise you are just guessing!

April sales Activity Report for Plano

Sales continued be be soft in Plano. The Average Sales price was down by 13% and the Median Sales Price was off by 9%. Pending Sales were down by 29% which does not bode well for May. The number of New Listings and Active Listings declined helping to keep the number of Months of Inventory at a low level of 5.1 months.

Sales: 215

Average Sales Price: $258,939

Median Sales Price: $214,250

Pending Sales: 212

New Listings: 459

Active Listings: 1,301

Days on Market of Sales: 63

North Dallas Sales Activity Report for April

North Dallas north of Northwest Hwy. and South of LBJ.

April saw sales continue to be weak and both the Average and Median Sales Prices declined. To compound the problem there was a huge increase in the number of Active Listings sending the Months of Inventory to 19 months. This is a very large over supply.

Sales: 38

Average Price: $740,621

Median Price: $537,750

Pending Sales: 38

New Listings:174

Active Listings: 751

Days on Market: 86

North Dallas North of LBJ.

This area of North Dallas also experienced a continuation of declining Sales along with a decline in the Average and Median Sales Price. The number of New and Active listings declined creating a Months of Inventory number of 7 months. While this number is high, it's not as bad as some other areas of Dallas.

Sales: 69

Average Sales Price: $291,112

Median Sales Price: $252,750

Pending Sales: 59

New Listings: 166

Active Listings: 523

Days on Market: 62

 

 

Foreclosure Sales Drag Prices Down

In my blog of yesterday I stated that foreclosures were not impacting values in Richardson.

This morning I opened up the business section of the Dallas Morning News  to find the headline FORECLOSURE SALES DRAG PRICES DOWN. The first paragraph of the article said" An increase in foreclosure sales helped pull down Dallas-Fort Worth home prices in the first quarter".

If you took the time to read the article your would find deep down on page 5 of the paper "Along with foreclosures, median home prices in the Dallas-Fort Worth area have been pushed lower because of a plunge in the sale of high-end homes."

An example of what they are talking about is:

In April of 2008 there were 3 sales in a City. One sold for $100,000, one for $200,000, and one for $300,000. The average sales price was $200,000. Now let's jump forward to April 2009. We had one house sell for $100,000 and one sell for $200,000. The April 2009 average sales price is $150,000. The average sale price dropped 25%. Did prices really drop or did we just not have a sale at the top end of the market?

Granted this is a very simple example, but it does serve to demonstrate how sometimes statistics can be deceiving and reminds me of a quotation I believe came from Mark Twain " There are lies, damn lies, and then there are statistics."

Too many people get caught up in the headlines, don't read the whole story, and think it's about the local market when the story is really talking about what is happening in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Florida.

Yes, if you are looking in the south part of Dallas County you will find some neighborhoods impacted by foreclosures but, in general, not in North Dallas, Richardson, or Plano. What is impacting sales is the belief by buyers that there is this great pool of foreclosures on the market and that homes that are not foreclosures should sell for greatly reduced prices.

Richardson, TX Sales Activity For April

Sales continue to be weak in Richardson. For the month of April there were 56 properties sold. This represents a 52% decline over last April's sales. The average sales price declined to $155,997, a 9% decrease, and the median sales price declined to $149,500, an 8% dropoff.

The number of pending contracts fell 29% to 72. The number of new listings fell 16% to 126. At the end of April there were 299 homes for sale. This represents a 21% decline.

 Richardson only has a 3.9 months supply of homes for sale. This is an extreamly low number and if you are a Buyer you have very few homes to chose from.

I know the media says that the price decline is due to the high number of foreclosures on the market, but this is not the case in Richardson. The truth is there just are not that many foreclosures in Richardson. The foreclosures that do exist are scattered throughout the City and are not impacting any neighborhood values.

Election Day in Texas

Saturday is election day across the State of Texas for City Councils and School boards. In the City of Dallas there will also be several proposed changes to the City Charter.

I know! These are only local elections. It's not the same as voting for President or Governor. 

SO WHO CARES?

Well you might!

Presidents, Governors, Congress Persons and Senators get their start somewhere and it's usually in some local election for City Council, School Board or some other local office.

If you take a few minutes to find out about the candidates and the issues they are running on, you might decide that you really like someone and your vote can help the person on their way to future higher office. Maybe even President in 20 or 25 years. Or you might find someone you really do not like, vote against the person and end a career now so you do not have to worry about the person in 20 or 25 years.

1 commentMarie Walton, ABR, CRS, GRI, SRES • May 07 2009 06:52PM

Plano Sales Activity Report 4/27 to 5/3

For the week of 4/27 through 5/3 the follow was reported through MLS:

New Listings: 105

Average List Price: $326,452

Sales Pending: 20

Average Price: $232,524

Solds: 56

Average Sales Price: $240,536

Average Days on Market: 56

North Dallas Sales Activity Report 4/27 to 5/3

North Dallas covers a large area and for purposes of this report it is broken down into 2 areas.

North Dallas north of Northwest Hwy. and South of LBJ.

New Listings: 36

Average List Price: $1,185,772 This price is abnormally high due to the listing this week of 14 properties over $1,000,000.

Pending Sales: 6

Average Pending Price: $867,950

Solds: 12

Average Sales Price: $679,458

Average Days on Market: 97

North Dallas North of LBJ

New Listings: 36

Average List Price: $438,941

Pending Sales: 3

Average Pending Price: $282,367

Solds: 15

Average Sales Price: $341,120

Average Days on Market: 74

 

 

Richardson, TX Area Market Report for the week of 4/27 through 5/3

For the week covering 4/27 through 5/3 the following statistics were reported by MLS.

New Listings: 27

Average List Price: $236,620

Pending Sales: 5

Average Pending Price: 234,580

Solds: 17

Average Sales Price: 156,985

Average Days on Market: 62

There are currently 256 single family homes on the market with an average asking price of $224,432.

This report only covers single family homes.

Housing Price Reports

 

These are confusing times. You probably read in the newspaper or heard on the radio or TV that housing prices are down sharply.  You may have seen or heard at least 3 different reports about DFW housing prices and, in addition, you have probably heard about the huge number of foreclosures on the market.

It's all true and also wrong!

"How can this be?" you may ask.

Well the national reports are true if you are talking about all sales nationwide. The 3 different reports on the local DFW market that are parts of the national reports are true but they use different data sets. That's why they do not have the same answers.

The financial press is enamored with the Case-Shillered Home Price Index. This report covers only 20 markets in the U. S. and appears to be heavily weighted to the Pacific coast. It is a proprietary report that was created and is used to trade futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. The exact makeup of the data and its weighting is not disclosed. It's not transparent. Heard that before?

The report from the Office of the Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight's data comes from FANNIE MAE and FREDDIE MAC. This data includes condos and townhouses but does not include non-conforming loans.

The data from the National Association of Realtors is compiled from sales reported by all of the local MLS systems across the country.

Foreclosures are a serious problem if you are trying to sell a house in California, Florida, Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, Ohio, and a couple of other states, but if you are looking in most of the DFW area foreclosures represent only a very small part of the inventory and are heavily concentrated in the southern part of Dallas County. In the vast majority of neighborhoods, foreclosures are not a problem.

The data I use in my reports comes from the Real Estate Research Center of Texas

A & M University. They compile the data from our local MLS. The average sales prices in the monthly data can also not truly represent what is happening in the market because from one month to the next you may have more sales in the higher price ranges than normal and this can pull up the average sales price for that month. Conversely the next month you could have more sales in the lower price ranges that would pull the averages down. The year-to-date data probably represents the closest to the market.

What does all this mean to you as a Buyer or a Seller?

 It means you should not pay much attention to what you hear or read about the market. All real estate is local and that means down to the neighborhood level. Every neighborhood is different and what's happening to the market in each neighborhood is different.

If you are a Buyer, you need a real estate agent who is familiar with the area you are interested in and can help you find the right house at the right price. In some areas there is actually a shortage of homes on the market and the best homes sell quickly.

If you are a Seller, you also need an agent who is familiar with the area and can help you price your property correctly. If you overprice your property in this market your house will just sit there and you will not get offers.

Whatever you do, please do not use one of the online sites that claim they can tell you what the value of a home is. They use computer models that have no idea of the condition of the property and in most cases(especially in Texas) do not have a large enough data set of sales in a given neighborhood to work properly.