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Housing Market Shows Signs of Rebounding from Shutdowns

June 20, 2020,

Previously, nothing, anything nor everything combined could not slow down the red hot San Francisco housing market.

Until the Coronavirus strangled the world and so many markets within it.

A chilling effect.

As reported at kqed.org, “Overnight, as shelter-in-place orders were issued, the Bay Area’s roaring housing machine ground to a halt. More than 10% of renters haven’t paid rent, and the number of homes for sale has fallen in every Bay Area market.”

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No one saw the after effects of the global pandemic coming. Few could have prepared.

The informative Bay Area news source sfgate.com adds, “Before the coronavirus, the bullish economy showed an equally bullish real estate market across the country. Nationally, home prices rose 3.9% annually, up from 3.7% in December, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices.

Cities that have been hard hit by the virus were enjoying huge year-over-year gains. In January, prices in Phoenix, Ariz., were up 6.9% year-over-year, while Seattle and Tampa, Fla., each saw prices up 5.1%.”

News reports of a national housing market in reverse reverberate across the country. The Wall Street Journal shared, “Rents in San Francisco, the most expensive apartment market in the U.S., are tumbling as the city’s vaunted tech sector sheds jobs and more tenants leave the city.”

Having said all of that, there is a feeling that the trend is temporary but in the new world of the global pandemic crisis, define temporary?

One year?

Who knows?

Developing a vaccine is the key to virtually everything economy related.

In the meantime, we continue to study the trends.

Housing Market Shows Signs of Rebounding from Coronavirus Shutdowns

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Reports that home prices nearly flattened as pending sales were up 33% and new listings increased 36% from April to May

SEATTLE, June 19, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- (NASDAQ: RDFN) — The housing market showed some early signs of recovery in May as the addition of homes for sale and contracts to buy homes both increased dramatically from April levels, according to a new report from Redfin (www.redfin.com), the technology-powered real estate brokerage.

The market remains overall very competitive thanks to a continuing shortage of homes for sale. U.S. home-sale prices increased just 0.5% year over year in May to a median of $299,400 across the 217 metros Redfin tracks. This was the smallest annual increase since home prices bottomed out in February 2012. However, the fact that this increase was so much smaller than the 4.7% gain in April was largely due to fewer homes being sold in the most expensive metro areas.

Overall home sales in May fell 30.8% from a year ago, but the most expensive metro areas all saw more dramatic decreases in home sales than the national drop. The 12 metro areas with median prices above $450,000 (seven of which are in California) all saw home sales decline between 38% and 58% from a year earlier. San Francisco and San Jose, which both have median prices above $1 million, each saw home sales drop more than 55%.

"Although the housing market was still mostly stalled in May, it's worth noting that homes under contract to be sold jumped 33% between April and May after two consecutive months of decline," said Redfin lead economist Taylor Marr. "This is a key leading indicator for home sales in June and July. New listings of homes for sale have also likely passed their bottom, but are still about 20% below February's level, so there's still a ways to go before the housing market has recouped the lost activity of the past few months during the shutdowns."

Market Summary May 2020 Month-Over-Month Year-Over-Year
Median sale price $299,400 -1.4% 0.5%
Homes sold, seasonally-adjusted 369,300 -11.7% -30.8%
New listings, seasonally-adjusted 503,600 35.6% -21.5%
All Homes for sale, seasonally-adjusted 1,740,900 0.5% -21.2%
Median days on market 37 2 1
Months of supply 3 0 0.4
Sold above list 25.2% -2.8 pts -0.6 pts
Median Off-Market Redfin Estimate $303,700 2.7% 2.6%
Average Sale-to-list 98.5% -0.3 pts -0.1 pts

† - "pts" = percentage point change

Home sales fell 11.7% nationwide from April on a seasonally-adjusted basis. That's a big drop, but a marked improvement from the March to April drop of 21.5%, which was the largest decline on record (our data for this statistic goes back to January 2012).

The national count of active listings of homes for sale fell 21.2% year over year in May, just shy of the April decline, which was the largest on record. This is the ninth straight month of declines. The 0.5% increase in the nationwide number of homes for sale between April and May represents a gain of fewer than 9,000 homes for sale during the month. None of the 85 largest metros tracked by Redfin posted a year-over-year increase in the count of seasonally-adjusted active listings of homes for sale.

The number of new listings fell 21.5% compared with a year earlier, but surged 35.6% from the all-time low seen in April. This is a good sign that some balance may be returning to the market after the past few months of declining homes for sale and increasing homebuyer demand led to intense competition and bidding wars in some places.

An even more encouraging sign is the bounce back in the number of newly-constructed homes that were listed for sale in May, which was down half as much as the overall market—just 9.9% from a year earlier.

Other measures of competition in the market such as days on market and the share of homes sold above list price have remained relatively steady throughout the shutdowns and stay-at-home orders across the nation.

Trends from the beginning of the year—intense bidding wars and a strong seller's market—have continued unabated throughout the pandemic.

"Buyers have been out in droves, but the number of homes for sale is still super low," explained Pittsburgh Redfin agent Sara Minshull. "We are seeing more homes listed for sale recently, but of course there were just so few before this that the new listings aren't keeping up. There is just so much competition."

Homes that sold in May spent 37 days on market, unchanged from the same month a year earlier.

"The market still feels really crazy," said Redfin agent Amber Allin, who serves Tacoma, Washington—the nation's fastest market with half of all homes going under contract in just eight days. "There are so few homes for sale right now, and those that are in good condition are selling incredibly fast."

The share of homes that sold above list price decreased just slightly, falling 0.6 percentage points year over year in May to 25.2%.

To view the full report, including charts and methodology, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/blog/housing-market-news-may-2020/

About Redfin
Redfin (www.redfin.com) is a technology-powered residential real estate company, including brokerage, iBuying, mortgage, and title services. Founded by software engineers, we run the country's #1 most-visited brokerage website and offer a host of online tools to consumers, including the Redfin Estimate. We represent people buying and selling homes in over 90 markets in the United States and Canada. In a commission-driven industry, our mission is to redefine real estate in the consumer's favor. We do this by pairing our own agents with our own technology to create a service that is faster, better, and costs less. Since our launch in 2006, we have helped customers buy or sell more than 235,000 homes worth more than $115 billion.

For more information or to contact a local Redfin real estate agent, visit www.redfin.com. To learn about housing market trends and download data, visit the Redfin Data Center. To be added to Redfin's press release distribution list, email press@redfin.com. To view Redfin's press center, click here.

SOURCE Redfin

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www.redfin.com

https://www.kqed.org/news/11818184/bay-area-housing-post-pandemic-whats-in-store

https://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/coronavirus-hurts-San-Francisco-real-estate-market-15178318.php

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