August Sales Activity Report for North Dallas

For purposes of this report north Dallas is broken into two section:. North of Northwest Hwy and south of LBJ and North of LBJ.

North of Northwest Hwy and South of LBJ:

Sales in this area in August continued to be weak. The upper price ranges are not moving. Sales were of by12% compared to a year ago. The average sales price continued to decline along with the median sales price. Pending sales showed a strong increase being up by 33%. The number of active listings was flat and we say a decrease in the months of inventory which continues to remain very high at 17.2 month.

Sales: 43

Average Sales Price: $914,178

Median Sales Price: $639,900

Pending Sales: 40

Active Listings: 614

Months of Inventory: 17.2

North of LBJ:

Sales were off again in this area of North Dallas, but we did see an increase in the average sales price of 13% and a smaller increase in the median sales price of 2%. There was a 6% decrease in the number of pending sales. The number of active listings declined by 12% helping to keep supply/demand closer to a balance. The months of inventory in this area is only 6.5 months.

Sales: 73

Average Sales Price: $349,303

Median Sales Price: $272,000

Pending Sales: 59

Active Listings: 478

Months of Inventory:6.5

0 commentsMarie Walton, ABR, CRS, GRI, SRES • September 10 2009 02:16PM

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

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.