Written by Jim the Realtor

May 10, 2012

The San Diego Monthly Report, authored by Rick Campbell, is in the right column >>>>>>

Here is the latest version:

Low inventory and high demand are pushing the real estate market in San Diego County off the bottom, slowly.

Multiple offers on the best properties in the entry-level market are being fueled by investors. Interestingly, the investors are not flipping these properties, rather, they are renting them out.

Low inventory is here to stay for the next year or two. We don’t see that changing much in the near future for several reasons.

First, there is no new home building going on, which is necessary to relieve the pressure.

Second, many existing homeowners aren’t going anywhere. If they have good jobs here, where would they go? Plus, too many are still underwater and can’t sell.

Lastly, forget about phantom inventory. As of March, the banks owned about 5,000 properties in the county. That number includes homes AND condos. In April, there were about 3,100 properties sold. Even if the banks put all their inventory on the market at once, it’s only seven weeks worth!

So, there it is. The market has reached bottom, but there probably won’t be a major move to the upside until employment starts rising.

Sales of single-family, re-sale homes were up 7.9% year-over-year in April. This is the tenth month in a row home sales have been higher than the year before. The median price for homes was flat year-over-year, which is a nice change from the previous fourteen months of prices being lower year-over-year.

Much of this weakness in price is coming from the move-up and high-end markets. In the entry-level market, prices are firming.

 

5 Comments

  1. James D

    Thanks for sharing this JtR. I know several potential buyers looking for first time homes in the South Bay below the 300k mark and have been just having a miserable time dealing with the lack of quality inventory.

    From what I know, the prices are getting to the point where flippers are taking a loss if they try to flip, so as the report says, they are just renting instead.

  2. kompeitou

    Looking at the graph, it looks like San Diego was at the bottom every spring for the last 4 years.

  3. Jiji

    What they are not going to walk away and move to Austin, I mean everyone wants to move to Austin TX these days,
    *Hot humid & Sweaty (check)
    *Mostly flat in the middle of nowhere (check)
    *5 hours to the nearest ocean (check) (and really were talking Huston TX)

  4. Thaylor Harmor

    Just bought a home…mortgage is $2100…rent was $1800.

  5. Jim the Realtor

    Note on this graph that pendings have really took off.

    With banks and servicers pushing more short sales than foreclosures, MLS sales should be on the rise for the next few months.

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