Seattle Bubble

News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Seattle Bubble - News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Entries Tagged as 'Kearsley'

October Reporting Roundup: Happy Fun Tax Credit Party Time!

By The Tim on November 6th, 2009 at 8:00 AM · 56 Comments

Time for the monthly reporting roundup, where I read all the local paper rehashes of the NWMLS press release so you don’t have to.

Here’s a link to this month’s NWMLS press release: Tax credit spurs big surge in Western Washington home sales

Before we get into the roundup, I’d like to take a moment to quote an excerpt from the monthly NWMLS data post from May, which was titled Huge Gap Opening Between Pending and Closed Sales (a subject that I first brought to your attention in August of last year).

The disconnect between pending sales and closed sales grows ever larger. … Something is becoming extremely fishy about the pending sales data.

…it is good to keep in mind when you start reading news reports in the coming weeks about the market supposedly picking back up. It’s an illusion.

Here’s a graphical representation of the 2009 sales illusion:

2009 Pending and Closed King Co. SFH Sales

Pending sales peaked at 2,447 in June, while so far closed sales have not made it higher than 1,758—a nearly 30% discrepancy. So far this year there have been at total of 20,025 pending SFH sales in King County, but only 12,986 actual closed sales. In other words, more than a third (35%) of pending sales have yet to materialize into closed sales. That difference is typically well under 10%.

Find me a newspaper that reported this growing issue last August.

Click below for this month’s roundup of gawking at the tax credit.

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August Reporting Roundup: Recovery Party Time!

By The Tim on September 7th, 2009 at 6:00 AM · 48 Comments

Thanks to PAX and the holiday weekend, our regular schedule is all messed up. So here’s the reporting roundup a couple days late.

First up, an excerpt from the NWMLS press release: Northwest MLS brokers report brisk activity, multiple offers, "irrational delays" by lenders

Pending sales around Western Washington during August jumped nearly 21 percent from a year ago and inventory dropped more than 18 percent, according to new figures from Northwest Multiple Listing Service. MLS member-brokers say those indicators, along with signs of stabilizing prices, set the stage for brisk activity in the next few months as first-time buyers try to take advantage of the Nov. 30 deadline for tax credits.

“The typical August cool down in the market did not happen this year,” observed NWMLS director Kathy Estey, managing broker at John L. Scott’s office in downtown Bellevue. She said agents are busy with both first-time and move-up buyers and they’re reporting multiple offers on homes priced up to $700,000.

Brokers reported 7,539 pending sales (offers made and accepted but not yet closed) for August, up 20.7 percent from a year ago. That volume outgained July’s total by 260 transactions.

In the four-county Puget Sound region, pending sales of single family homes and condominiums (combined) surged 25.7 percent from a year ago.

I’m only going to say this once in this post, since I get tired of repeating myself. The “pending sales” statistic published by the NWMLS has become virtually useless. It has of little to no use in reliably predicting actual closed sales volume this year.

That said, given that the NWMLS led off their press release with the big headline pending sales nonsense, it is (sadly) no surprise that a number of lazy local media outlets dutifuly repeated their breathless claims.

Read on to find out which local press outlets were basically just press release rehash factories this month, and which ones spent some time to do some actual reporting.

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July Reporting Roundup: Sales are Up, Up, UP!

By The Tim on August 6th, 2009 at 2:45 PM · 31 Comments

For some reason, the NWMLS press release still has not been posted to their public site yet.

[Update: Here's a link to the press release on NWMLS.com: Northwest MLS brokers say housing market is recovering, but still "spongy". My favorite part is "July's unseasonably hot weather curtailed activity for several showings and open houses, as brokers and agents said buyers and sellers postponed tours, saying it was just too hot." "Several" people may have delayed their home shopping by a few days, and that's even worth mentioning? Wow.]

Before we get into this month’s news reports crowing about the increase in sales, here’s a little chart that shows the time between when pending sales went negative year-over-year and when the median price went negative year-over-year.

King County SFH Pending Sales and Median Price YOY Changes

Pending sales had been negative for over two years before prices began to fall. Keep that in mind when you hear claims that a few months of year-over-year positive sales data is allegedly a sign that prices will stabilize in the short term. Not likely.

Here’s another chart, this one showing the year-to-date change in the median price, both in 2008 and 2009:

King Co. Year-to-Date SFH Price Change

Does the fact that prices have risen from their March low indicate price drops are over? Probably not.

Read on for this month’s reporting roundup from the Times, P-I, Herald, News-Tribune, and Olympian.

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June Reporting Roundup: Muted Enthusiasm for Increasing Sales

By The Tim on July 7th, 2009 at 10:49 AM · 37 Comments

With sales skyrocketing to a massive four percent gain over last year and median prices shooting through the roof, the housing market recovery is on, and it’s a race to report it. Let’s check in with the local news outlets to see who had the most sensational write-up this month.

First up, the NWMLS press release that accompanied yesterday’s numbers: "Aware and prepared buyers" help boost Western Washington home sales during June

“Encouraging” seemed to be a common response from brokers upon reviewing the June activity summaries from Northwest Multiple Listing Service. The report shows inventory continues to shrink, pending sales increased more than 19.5 percent from a year ago, and median prices system-wide are up 4.4 percent since January.

“The positive movement in our real estate market year over year is really very encouraging,” remarked Ron G. Sparks, managing vice president of Coldwell Banker Bain. Compared to 12 months ago, the Puget Sound region has nearly 7,000 fewer homes listed for sale, and nearly 1,200 more homes under contract, he noted, adding, “In anyone’s book, that’s substantial improvement.”

J. Lennox Scott, chairman and CEO of John L. Scott Real Estate, echoed those comments. “It’s encouraging to see that pending sales are at their highest since the credit bubble burst nearly two years ago,” he stated. While the median home price is down approximately 10 percent from a year ago, median prices have flattened over the past seven to nine months, he noted. “This is an indication that the $8,000 tax credit is working and the market has reactivated itself in the more affordable and mid price ranges,” Scott believes.

“There is a definite upsurge in sales activity, from a pending sales perspective and a “lookers becoming buyers” perspective,” observed NWMLS director Dick Beeson. Agents are reinvigorated that buyers can and will make decisions more today than any other time over the past 12 months, according to Beeson, the broker at Windermere Real Estate/Commencement Associates in Tacoma.

Beeson believes mortgage rates remaining low, declining inventories, and the recent stretch of warm, dry weather helped spur some buyers to act.

This month’s release is conspicuously lacking in the bottom calls and “buy now or you’ll be sorry” sentiment that has permeated previous NWMLS publications. They almost seem to have become less certain of immenent recovery, even as the sales finally begin to pick up. Could they perhaps be looking at the bigger picture and realizing that even once the bottom is in, the market is likely to roll along the bottom for years?

Or maybe I’m just reading too much into it.

Before we get into this month’s news reports, here’s a quick graphical representation of how far off closed sales are from pending sales so far this year:

King County SFH Pending & Closed Sales

The April to June rise in closed sales actually looks rather similar to the February to April rise in pendings. Pendings rose 67% from February to April, and closed sales rose 65% from April to June. Interesting, for sure.

If the pattern holds for the next two months with the 16% pending rise from April to June carrying over into closed sales from June to August, August will see roughly 1,900 closed sales (a 25% YOY increase). That feels a little higher than I’d expect to see, but I certainly wouldn’t put it outside the realm of possibility.

Read on for this month’s reporting roundup from the Times, P-I, Herald, News-Tribune, and Olympian.

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April Reporting Roundup: Pending, Pending, PENDING!

By The Tim on May 6th, 2009 at 10:40 AM · 32 Comments

Time for our monthly check on the local papers (or digital former papers, as the case may be) to see how creatively this month’s NWMLS press release is rehashed.

First up, here’s the source material: the NWMLS press release that accompanied yesterday’s numbers: Pending sales in Western Washington rise with improved affordability, buyer incentives

Northwest Multiple Listing Service members reported pending sales for April surged 11.4 percent compared to twelve months ago – and rose 21.3 percent from March.

Brokers reported 6,918 pending sales during April across the 19 counties that make up the Northwest MLS market area. That’s up from the year-ago total of 6,208, and the March figure of 5,701 pending sales (offers made and accepted, but not yet closed).

For the four-county Puget Sound area (King, Kitsap, Pierce and Snohomish), brokers notched 5,372 pending sales, the highest total since August 2007 and a jump of 26 percent from March.

Lower prices, record low mortgage interest rates, improving consumer confidence, the $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit and other incentives for buyers are credited with spurring activity.

Another MLS director reported a “terrific increase” in first-time buyer activity in Seattle’s close-in neighborhoods, calling it the best it’s been in almost two years.

It’s all about the “pendings” this month. Forget the fact that recent trends show over a third of “pendings” never seem to actually become a closed sale. If we just repeat the phrase “pendings were up” enough times, the housing bubble will return, and we’ll all be rich!

So, will the local press ignore the growing story of pendings that never materialize in the closed sales statistics, or will they actually branch out and do more than repeat the positive spin fed to them in the NWMLS press release? Read on to find out…

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March Reporting Roundup: Spring Fever Edition

By The Tim on April 7th, 2009 at 12:51 PM · 23 Comments

Let’s check in on the local papers (or digital former papers, as the case may be) to see how this month’s NWMLS stats are being spun to the populace.

First up, here’s the source material: the NWMLS press release that accompanied yesterday’s numbers: Brokers report signs of improvement in “real-time” housing market

NWMLS director Dick Beeson believes continued reduction in inventory will spur buyer activity. “Well priced and well conditioned properties will generally be the first ones purchased,” Beeson, the broker/owner of Windermere Commencement Associates in Tacoma, predicts.

Beeson said open house traffic and calls from “for sale” signs have increased twofold in recent weeks. Buyers are scouring the Internet before calling or visiting open houses so they tend to be knowledgeable about options in their price range, he remarked, while noting they’re still seeking assistance from Realtors® in navigating the negotiation and closing process.

“As expected, the numbers reflected in the March report continue to show year over year declines. However, these historical comparisons fail to tell the story of the real-time market, which is beginning to show true signs of improvement in many areas,” said Ron Sparks, managing vice president of Coldwell Banker Bain.

Encouraged by some of the positive indicators in the latest MLS report, Sparks acknowledged “we’re not out of the woods quite yet, but market improvement must begin somewhere.” NWMLS director Dick Beeson agreed. “All in all, we are seeing generally increased interest at all levels of the market, high and low end. We may not soon see 2005 or 2006 levels of sales numbers, but we’re holding our own and progressing steadily in the right direction.”

I will say that the two stand-out statistics in this month’s numbers are the record-setting drop in median prices and the slightly-larger than usual spring increase in pending sales. As prices continue to fall, we can expect to see sales continue to recover.

However, if other markets across the country are any indication, the return of buyers will not stop prices from falling further. Prices will stop falling only once they reach levels that can be supported by the fundamentals. Of course, don’t expect to read that in any of these press reports.

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