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Monday, June 16, 2008

Market Update for the week of June 16th, 2008

Bringing our market back to balance involves a two-step process: supply needs to draw down, demand needs to bounce back up. It's as simple as that. So far, 2008 is proving to be the year that we can confidently check the first item off this list, as the number of homes for sale continues to dwindle relative to one year ago. There are currently 33,219 homes for sale in the Twin Cities region, down a hearty 4.9 percent from one year ago, a year-over-year figure which should continue to drop in the months ahead. New listings for the week ending June 7 were down 13.9 percent from a year ago, while pending sales declined by a smaller 5.3 percent for the same time period comparison.

All in all, we're halfway there: supply is coming down, but demand is only flattening, not coming back up just yet. Regardless, the signs are encouraging.

This week's edition of the MAAR Weekly Market Activity Report features updated figures for our Housing Affordability Index (HAI) and Months Supply of Inventory. The HAI dropped slightly to 149 due to another increase in interest rates, while inventory increased to 10.4 months of supply. This means that it will take 10.4 months to sell through our current inventory, should buyer activity remain constant and no homes new to the market are listed for sale.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Market Report for the week of May 11th, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report
In Minnesota, warmer weather typically equates to listing increases. But compared to previous years, the run-up to the 2008 summer selling season in the Twin Cities housing market has been meek. The number of new listings for the week ending May 3 was 16.6 percent behind the same time last year—the ninth consecutive week of decline relative to a year ago. Buyer activity is also slower. Over the last three months, pending sales are hovering around a 16 percent year-over-year decline.

This week's edition of the MAAR Weekly Market Activity Report features updated figures for several important metrics. As the spring season begins, the Average Days on Market Until Sale decreased to 154 while the Percent of Original List Price Received at Sale increased slightly to 91.7. The Housing Affordability Index decreased to 151, due to slight seasonal increases in sales price and interest rates. Finally, the Months Supply of Inventory increased to 10.2 months; a 5- to 6-month supply rate is considered indicative of a balanced market.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Market Report for the week of May 5th, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report
Ring the bell, sound the alarms, shout from the mountaintops: the number of homes for sale in the Twin Cities region as of today is less than the number for sale at this point last year, a new benchmark which marks an encouraging sign that the market is in an early stage of recovery.

This is the first time since MAAR began tracking inventory figures that we have been able to show a year-over-year decline in listing supply. There are currently 32,448 residential properties for sale, a decline of 134 units from this time in 2007. With sellers still holding back on putting their homes on the market (new listings are down 11.4 percent from last year over the last three months), this downward year-over-year trend in inventory should continue into the summer.

This week's edition of the MAAR Weekly Market Activity Report features a new figure for our Supply-Demand Ratio of 7.53, which means there are approximately 7.53 homes on the market for each buyer in May— up 12.9 percent from May 2007 when the figure was 6.67.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Market Report for the week of April 21st, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report
The signs are early and nascent, but there are some promising early indicators that the Twin Cities housing market is beginning to correct and pull back from its two year-beeline in the buyer's favor. While affordability, interest rates and overall supply are still attractive, home sellers are cutting back on new listings substantially in 2008.

For the week ending April 12, there were 2,156 new listings, down a full 20.1 percent from the same week last year. That's the fifth week in the last six that we've seen double-digit percentage drops from 2007 activity. Newly signed purchase agreements (pending sales) are still behind last year also, posting a 3.8 percent decline.

While our market still faces a long road ahead to full recovery, the recent reduction in new supply is a positive beacon on the horizon and undoubtedly welcome news for home sellers.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

MJarket Rerport for the week of April 14th, 2008

Spring inventory growth remains staid in the Twin Cities housing market as the annual influx of new properties for sale has not been as rambunctious as the levels seen over the last few springs. The total number of homes for sale in the metro area currently sits at 31,615 up only 3.0 percent from the same time last year—the lowest such year-over-year increase for some years. Home sales remain relatively slow as well, with newly signed purchase agreements (pending sales) from the last three months trailing the same period last year by 16.6 percent.

This week's edition of the MAAR Weekly Market Activity Report features an updated Housing Affordability Index (HAI) for April. The HAI fell slightly to 155 due to a seasonal increase in home prices in March but remains a healthy 16.6 percent above where it was two years ago. Softening prices, motivated sellers and a continuation of historically low interest rates have dramatically improved the affordability picture in recent months.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Market report for the week of April 7th, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report
The Twin Cities housing market is showing early signs of entering a positive phase of correction. The number of new listings entering the market for the week ending March 29 was 14.8 percent behind the same week last year, the fourth consecutive week of double-digit declines relative to last year. Unfortunately, pending sales remain lackadaisical (down 15.9 percent for the same time period comparison), so the total inventory of homes for sale continues to exhibit decelerating growth this spring season—an encouraging momentum change in our shifting supply-demand balance.

This week's edition of the MAAR Weekly Market Activity Report features updated figures for several key metrics. In March, the Days on Market Until Sale held steady at 165 and the Percent of Original List Price Received at Sale dipped slightly to 91.0—both indicators of the continued advantage the buyer holds in this market. The April Months Supply of Inventory increased to 9.6 months, up 23.9 percent from this time last year. A market that's balanced between buyers and sellers would have roughly a 5- to 6-month supply of homes for sale. We haven't been there since 2005.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Market report for the week of March 31st, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report
Vamoosh! Home sellers in the Twin Cities are continuing their great disappearing act, with new listings on the market in 2008 sitting far below last year's rate. Over the last three months, there have been almost 2,500 fewer listings put on the market than there were a year ago—a drop of 9.5 percent.

Inventory is still more plentiful than ever. Despite the pullback, we still have a record high number of houses on the market for this time of year. So what's the takeaway here? Well, if we look closer, we can see that the inventory gap between now and one year ago is closing, and closing hard. We've gone from being up 12.6 percent from a year ago to only 5.5 percent up in the last 12 weeks.

Gut check: We must keep perspective on the challenging environment that sellers still face, despite the softening competition. The number of signed purchase agreements (pending sales) for the last three months is 17.7 percent behind the same period a year ago. There's fewer of everything.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Market Report for the week of March 24th, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report
Potential home buyers waiting for even more new inventory to hit the market may be waiting a long time. For the week ending March 15, there were almost 300 fewer properties put on the market in the Twin Cities than during the same week in 2007—a decline of 12.0 percent. And the number of new listings on the market in the last three months is 6.9 percent behind the same time one year ago. So while total inventory remains high, the frenzied peak of seller activity appears to be behind us.

The number of newly signed purchase agreements jumped significantly from the previous week; and for the same time period comparison last year was down only 8.9 percent. While this is a positive indication that buyers may be beginning to recognize the tremendous opportunities available, we are by no means out of the woods yet. Let's at least hope we're out of the snow.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Weekly market review for the week of March 17th, 2008

Weekly Market Activity Report.

Still waiting! Buyer activity remains relatively lethargic in the Twin Cities housing market. For the week ending March 8, the number of new purchase agreements signed was 682, behind the same time last year by 18.7 percent. Despite the deluge of properties available, rapidly improving affordability, attractive interest rates and motivated sellers, buyers appear to be unwilling or unable to take advantage of this incredibly attractive buyer's market.

This conundrum begs a question: Do buyers remain on the sidelines because they so choose or because they have no choice? In other words, is it tightening lending rules or a sincere lack of consumer interest that is keeping buyers in stasis? What do you think?

Weekly Market Activity Report features an updated figure for Months Supply of Inventory, which jumped in March to 9.2. This means that it will take the current supply of properties for sale roughly 9.2 months to sell through completely.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Market update for the week of March 3rd, 2008

New listings for the week ending February 23 posted 1,832 units, down 10.1 percent from the same week in 2007. Signed purchase agreements (pending sales) declined from last year by 15.9 percent for the same timeframe comparison, posting 635 units. Despite the general decline in seller activity, the total number of homes for sale is ahead of this time last year by 9.8 percent. Also, this week's Weekly Market Activity Report features a new March Supply-Demand Ratio of 8.72 houses per buyer, up 38.4 percent from March 2007.

Looking for a silver lining to the weekly litany of grimacing news? Well, the seemingly endless swell in the growth of homes for sale has steadily declined. The Supply-Demand Ratio is the lowest it's been since June 2007. Housing affordability is at its highest point since 2004. And we're receiving anecdotal evidence of increased buyer traffic beyond seasonal norms over the past few weeks.

It ain't all bad news, folks. The word on the sheet may not yet match the work on the sheet, specifically pending sales, but ample supply, lower interest rates, weakening median prices and healthy affordability are all historical buyer opt-ins.

Buyers are out there. They may be uncertain of the market's bottom or current appreciation rates, but unless everyone moves away or decides to rent or does absolutely nothing, pent up buyer demand has the inevitable feel of unfurl. Whether it has already begun or starts a year from today is still in question.