Jennifer Rosdail | San Francisco Real Estate

Market Statistics


Weekly Charts

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Saturday, 28 January, 2012

These charts show activity by week for the six months ending January 23, 2012 for San Francisco houses, condos, co-ops and TICs.

Units for Sale: Starting to creep up in January, but still an incredibly low level of inventory. As a point of reference, even before the plunge at the end of the year (which is more or less typical during the holidays), inventory was running 25% – 35% below the levels of 2010. So it’s been very low, and it has gotten even lower.

New Listings: New listings typically tail off in late October in preparation for the holidays and then start to climb again in the new year. New listings are indeed starting to come on market in increasing numbers, but they are still far below that needed to meet current buyer demand.

Listings Accepting Offers: The number of active listings going under contract (accepting offers) is climbing as the market wakes up. Considering the low level of inventory, the number of listings accepting offers in the week ending 1/23/12 is very high.

Percentage of Listings Accepting Offers: The 3 earlier charts are summed up below. Very low inventory + very strong demand = a very high percentage of listings accepting offers. In fact, the highest percentage we remember ever seeing. Again as a point of reference, this percentage was much higher in 2011 than in previous years – and now it is going even higher still (though there will be some adjustment down for deals that end up falling through).

Months Supply of Inventory (MSI): This chart won’t be updated for January for another week or two, but it still paints a sharp picture of supply vs. demand as currently exists in the SF homes market. 2 months is very, very low, but in some neighborhoods, we are seeing MSI numbers of 1 month and below – almost unbelievably low.

Case-Shiller Index for October

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Thursday, 29 December, 2011

The new Case-Shiller Index report for October was just released. Many news articles are trumpeting that prices declined in “19 out of 20 US Metro Areas,” however while the aggregate Index for the 5-County San Francisco Metro Statistical Area did indeed decline very slightly in October (by about half of one percent), the Case-Shiller High Tier Price Index for the SF Metro Area, which is the Index which best applies to the city of San Francisco itself actually ticked up a little in October.
 
The Case-Shiller High Tier Index applies to house sales of about $600,000 and above. In the 8 northern and central districts of the city, the median house sales price for non-distress houses is well over $800,000. Indeed, if there was an “Upper High Tier Index” for SF alone, I suspect we would see an even larger uptick in prices. It’s been very consistent in the city, Bay Area, state and country that lower price homes have been affected much more negatively than higher price homes.
 
As always, our full article on Case-Shiller is here: http://www.paragon-re.com/postings/Case_Shiller_San_Francisco_MSA.html
 
For the record, tiny monthly fluctuations must be considered within any reasonable margin of error and are essentially meaningless. What is important is the consistent, longer-term trend.

Weekly Market Charts – The SF Home Market Remains Active

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Saturday, 10 December, 2011

These are weekly market activity charts for the past 6 months through the week ending December 4, 2011, for houses, condos, co-ops, TICs and 2-4 unit buildings.

Listings Accepting Offers: Accepted offer activity is staying surprisingly strong, picking up after the short, slow Thanksgiving week. Buyers are clearly still engaged in the market.


click to enlarge

Listings for Sale: inventory, which has been low all year, is now very, very low.


click to enlarge

Percentage of Listings Accepting Offers: Strong buyer demand + very low inventory = very high percentage of listings accepting offers, the highest in a long time.


click to enlarge

New Listings Coming on Market: As is typical for December, the number of new listings coming on market is very low, but considering the demand, sellers and agents might want to rethink the usual dynamic of waiting for the new year.


click to enlarge

Closed Sales: The week ending 12/4 had the highest number of closings since early summer. Closed sales now reflect accepted-offer activity in October and early November.


click to enlarge

Expired & Withdrawn Listings: As is common for December, the number of listings expiring or being withdrawn from the market is rapidly climbing. Many of these will be re-listed in mid-January, often at a lower price.


click to enlarge

Weekly Charts

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Saturday, 19 November, 2011

Sales Snapshot: about 45% of listings selling are going for over asking price; for houses, the percentage is almost 55%; for condos and TICs, the percentage selling for over asking is about 31%.

Over Asking

Houses – 41

Condos/TICs – 21
2
4 Unit Bldgs – 6
Total 68

Under Asking

Houses – 31

Condos/TICs – 33
2
4 Unit Bldgs – 5
Total 69

At Asking

Houses – 3

Condos/TICs – 13
2
4 Unit Bldgs – 0
Total 16

The following are weekly market activity charts for the past 6 months through the week ending November 13, 2011. They reflect activity reported to MLS for houses, condos, TICs and 2-4 unit buildings.

New Listings Coming on Market: as is typical as we get closer to the holidays, the number of new listings hitting the market went into significant decline. This situation will probably not turn around until mid-January. However, considering the number of active buyers out there looking right now, it might not be a bad time to bring new listings on the market.


click to enlarge

Listings For Sale: as has been the case for most of this year, inventory is very low. At this time last year, there were about 700 – a whopping 42% — more listings.


click to enlarge

Listings For Sale: as has been the case for most of this year, inventory is very low. At this time last year, there were about 700 – a whopping 42% — more listings.


click to enlarge

Listings For Sale: as has been the case for most of this year, inventory is very low. At this time last year, there were about 700 – a whopping 42% — more listings.


click to enlarge

Listings Expiring or Withdrawn: the numbers of expired and withdrawn listings will typically continue to increase as we enter the holiday season. The higher end of the market in particular tends to check out for the holidays. Many of the listings expiring or being withdrawn will come back on the market in January.


click to enlarge

Homes Sold: low inventory affects the number of closed sales. The surge of new listings that the market usually sees in September and early October was much lower than last year, but the number of closed sales is almost the exactly the same as in 2010. Considering the level of demand, more inventory would almost certainly have led to much higher sales numbers.


click to enlarge

Market Charts

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Monday, 14 November, 2011


click to enlarge


click to enlarge


click to enlarge


click to enlarge


click to enlarge

Weekly Market Charts

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Monday, 31 October, 2011

Market Dynamics by week for the past 6 months through October 23, 2011 for San Francisco houses, condos, TICs and 2-4 unit buildings.

Listings Accepting Offers: The week ending 10/23/11 had 155 listings accepting offers, but that number will go down as some of these deals fall through – probably to the low 140’s. Still, that is well above the 100 listings that accepted offers in the corresponding week in 2010.


click to enlarge

New Listings Coming on Market: The number of new listings since Labor Day has been well below the number last year. Insufficient new inventory is not meeting buyer demand.


click to enlarge

Listings for Sale: Inventory continues to decline and still reflects the situation for much of this year. Inventory is very low. At this time last year, there were almost 700 more listings on the market. On a percentage basis there were over 35% more listings on the market.


click to enlarge

Percentage of Listings Accepting Offers (going under contract): the percentage for the week ending 10/23/11 will probably decline to somewhere in the 7.7% range from the 8.4% showing today as it is adjusted for deals that fall through. Still, that would be among the highest rates we’ve seen in many years – last year at this time, the percentage was about 4%. Strong demand + very low inventory = very high percentage of listings accepting offers.


click to enlarge

Median House Sales Price: Weekly fluctuations in median price are not particularly meaningful, but for what it’s worth, the last 3 weeks have been above and sometime far above the average median for the past 6 months ($712,000). The week ending 10/23/11 saw a median house price of $749,000; the week before saw $841,000. (But frankly, we prefer to look at median prices for entire quarters or longer periods, as opposed to individual weeks.)


click to enlarge

Units Sold: Last year, reflecting the huge burst of new inventory in mid-September, the week corresponding to last week saw a huge burst of closed sales (150 closings). That compares to a number for the week ending 10/23/11 that will probably end up in the mid-nineties when all sales are entered into the system. Low inventory is certainly constraining the number of sales, and appraisal issues are probably increasing the number of deals that fall through now.


click to enlarge

Expired/ Withdrawn Listings: For about every 2 listings that sell, another listing expires or is withdrawn without selling, usually due to being perceived as overpriced. Many of these expired listings will be eventually re-listed at a lower price and ultimately sold – though they probably would have sold for more money if more aggressively priced to begin with.


click to enlarge

Hanley Wood Market Forecast

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Saturday, 29 October, 2011

National forecast of recovery in jobs and income:

click to enlarge

Jobs/Income forecast for multi-county San Francisco MSA projecting a recovery in employment to gain traction in 2012:

click to enlarge

Forecast of national home price recovery puts us at bottom right about now:

click to enlarge

Buyer profile for San Francisco multi-county metro area (the East Bay affects the median prices dramatically):

click to enlarge

Increase in cash buyers by property type, especially in the REO market, for greater Bay Area:

click to enlarge

Forecast of household aging for greater Bay Area:

click to enlarge

Recovery of new-home sales in greater Bay Area – this chart puts us at bottom right about now:

click to enlarge


click to enlarge

Note that when they refer to “San Francisco” they mean a multi-county metro area.

New Case-Shiller Report for August

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Wednesday, 26 October, 2011

S&P Case-Shiller publishes 4 main home price indices for the 5-county San Francisco Metro Statistical Area: the low price tier, the middle price tier, high price tier and an aggregate index. The new report for August 2011 was released today: For the SF MSA, the low and middle price tiers showed small declines in values, while the aggregate and the high price tier pretty much stayed the same. (Actually, the high price tier went up the tiniest bit, but not enough to change the rounded-off reading from 144.3.)

The high-tier price index – houses over $608,000 – is the one that most applies to the city and county of San Francisco itself: About 62% of the city’s house sales are over $608,000. If we exclude the 2 less affluent southern districts, running from Bayview to Oceanside, which have been hard hit by distress sales, the percentage of SFD sales in the city’s 8 central and northern districts that is in the high tier is over 84%. If we exclude distress sales (bank-owned and short sales), that percentage goes to 90%.

The values indicated on the charts reflect today’s values compared to the values in January 2000. Thus, August’s reading of 144.3 indicates a value 44.3% above that of January 2000, and 22% below that of January 2006. August is typically one of the slower months of the year for sales activity.


click to enlarge


click to enlarge

The San Francisco Luxury Home Market

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Tuesday, 18 October, 2011

A market trends overview by the Paragon Real Estate Group
for San Francisco Home Sales of $1,500,000 & Above

October 2011 Update

It’s not unusual for the high-end home market to slow down during the summer months, just as it does to a greater degree during the holiday season from mid-November to mid-January. However, this year, though 3rd quarter activity was generally comparable to last year’s, considering how hot the second quarter of 2011 had been, the luxury house and condo market slowed down more than expected. This is probably due to the extreme volatility in the financial markets and the huge concerns regarding the European debt crisis experienced over the summer. More than other market segments, the buyers and sellers of luxury homes are keenly attuned to such events and have a tendency to put large, new financial endeavors on hold while waiting for things to shake out or stabilize.

It is also true that in the spring, it appeared that high-tech IPOs would continue to create large amounts of new wealth in the Bay Area, and many of these IPOs have since been put on hold. Presumably, this is a temporary situation.

Even with the cooling off from the very hot second quarter, strong demand remains for the best properties — best location, pride of ownership, well prepared for showing and well priced. Activity did pick up in the latter part of September, which may signal the beginning of a strong fourth quarter.

******************************

Sales Price to List Price Percentage, Days on Market,
Price Reductions & Expired Listings

Most of the luxury homes that do sell, sell quickly at very close to asking price. Those going through price reductions spend a much longer time on market and sell at an average discount of 18% off original list price. And many listings still expire without selling, usually because the market deems them overpriced.


click to enlarge

Luxury House & Condo Sales

Sales in the third quarter fell substantially from the second quarter — a not uncommon drop from spring to summer sales seasons. The number of sales was comparable to third quarter results in recent years. Sales close 4-8 weeks after offers are accepted.


click to enlarge

Listings Accepting Offers

While comparable to the 3rd quarters of 2010 and 2009, there was a large drop in both the number and percentage of luxury home listings accepting offers when compared to the second quarter of 2011, when we hit the highest points since 2008. Activity did pick up in the three weeks ending October 9th — those were the most active three weeks for luxury homes accepting offers since May.

This chart shows accepted offers by quarter.


click to enlarge

This chart shows the percentage of listings accepting offers by quarter.


click to enlarge

And this chart shows listings accepting offers by WEEK, from May through October 9th. One can see the pick up in activity that started in mid-September after a very slow August. This is the most current information we have regarding the heat of the market.


click to enlarge

Average Dollar per Square Foot

Dollar per square foot values, even in the high-end, vary widely from neighborhood to neighborhood. The absolute highest are typically paid for luxury condos in prestige buildings with staggering views. Remember that short-term fluctuations are relatively meaningless — they occur naturally since the “basket” of homes sold varies from month to month, quarter to quarter.


click to enlarge


click to enlarge

Luxury Home Sales by San Francisco Realtor District

The older prestige neighborhoods running across the north of the city from Sea Cliff through Pacific Heights to Russian & Telegraph Hills still dominate sales, but high-end sales in the greater Noe Valley/ Castro/ Haight Ashbury district have soared since the late nineties, and luxury condos in new developments in South Beach, SOMA and Yerba Buena are also a major part of this market now. St. Francis Woods has been an enclave for sales of big houses for quite some time.


click to enlarge

Inventory of Luxury Homes for Sale

The number of new luxury home listings ticked up in September from the summer months, but was still well below that of September 2010. The same was true for overall inventory of high-end homes for sale.


click to enlarge


click to enlarge

Months’ Supply of Inventory (MSI)

While not historically high at over 4 months of inventory, the MSI for luxury homes is running higher than that for all SF houses and condos, which in September was under 3 months (which is considered very low). Still luxury home MSI this past September dropped from the summer months and was well below that of September 2010. We expect it to drop further in October.


click to enlarge

Average Days on Market (DOM) Before Acceptance of Offer

Average DOM is about as low as it has been since 2008. Those luxury homes that are selling are selling relatively quickly.


click to enlarge

Luxury Home Sales vs. Listings Expired or Withdrawn

It’s not unusual for the number of expired listings to jump during the summer months and that is what happened in the third quarter. Still the third quarter 2011 had a much lower percentage of expired listings than the third quarters of 2010 and 2009.


click to enlarge

Unit Sales of Homes of $2,000,000 and Above

The second quarter saw a big jump to sales levels not seen since 2008, but in the third quarter sales dropped back to a more normal number. Paragon’s percentage market share in the $2m+ home segment increased by 50% year over year, and after 7 years in business, Paragon is now 1 of the 4 top brokerages for luxury home sales in the city.


click to enlarge

******************************

MEDIAN SALES PRICE is that price at which half the sales occur for more and half for less. It can be, and often is, affected by other factors besides changes in market values, such as short-term or seasonal changes in inventory or buying trends. Though often quoted in the media as such, the median sales price is NOT like the price for a share of stock, i.e. a definitive reflection of value and changes in value, and monthly fluctuations are generally meaningless. If market values are truly changing, the median price will consistently rise or sink over a longer term than just 2 or 3 months, and also be supported by other supply and demand statistical trends.

DAYS ON MARKET (DOM) are the number of days between a listing going on market and accepting an offer. The lower the average days on market figure, typically the stronger the buyer demand and the hotter the market.

MONTHS SUPPLY OF INVENTORY (MSI) reflects the number of months it would take to sell the existing inventory of homes for sale at current market conditions. The lower the MSI, the stronger the demand as compared to the supply and the hotter the market. Typically, below 3-4 months of inventory is considered a “Seller’s market”, 4-6 months a relatively balanced market, and 7 months and above, a “Buyer’s market.”

DOLLAR PER SQUARE FOOT ($/sqft) is based upon the home’s interior living space and does not include garages, unfinished attics and basements, rooms built without permit, lot size, or patios and decks — though all these can still add value to a home. These figures are usually derived from appraisals or tax records, but are sometimes unreliable or unreported altogether. All things being equal, a house will sell for a higher dollar per square foot than a condo (due to land value), a condo higher than a TIC (quality of title), and a TIC higher than a multi-unit building (quality of use). Everything being equal, a smaller home will sell for a higher $/sqft than a larger one. (However, things are rarely equal in real estate.) There are often surprisingly wide variations of value within neighborhoods and averages may be distorted by one or two sales substantially higher or lower than the norm, especially when the total number of sales is small. Location, condition, amenities, parking, views, lot size & outdoor space all affect $/sqft home values. Typically, the highest dollar per square foot figures in San Francisco are achieved by penthouse condos with utterly spectacular views in prestige buildings.

Median and average statistics are generalities subject to fluctuation due to a variety of reasons (besides changes in value): how they apply to any specific property is unknown. Averages may be distorted by one or two sales substantially higher or lower than the norm, especially when sample size is small. Sales not reported to MLS – such as many new-development condo sales — are not included in this analysis. All figures should be considered approximate and are derived from sources deemed reliable, but may contain errors and omissions, and not warranted. We are happy to provide or direct you to the original data upon which each chart is based.

Weekly Charts

by Market News, Conditions, & Statistics | Saturday, 15 October, 2011

Paragon YTD sales: Comparing MLS sales YTD 2011 with those of the same period in 2010, Paragon’s total dollar volume is up 32%, and our increase in percent market share is 27%. For houses, condos, co-ops and 2-4 unit buildings selling for $2,000,000 and above, our dollar volume is up 62% and our percent market share is up 46%.

Below are weekly market condition charts for sales reported to MLS for houses, condos, TICs and 2-4 unit buildings, for 6 months, through the week ending 10-9-11.

Home Listings Accepting Offers: Last week saw a big surge of listings going under contract, to the highest level since the height of the spring sales season. It will be interesting to see if this continues or is simply one of those big weekly fluctuations that occur every now and then for no apparent reason. As a comparison, in the corresponding week in 2010, the number of listings accepting offers was 104.

Homes for Sale: low inventory levels already decreasing after barely rising in September. Last year at this time there were 2525 listings vs. this year’s 1852 listings for sale in the week ending October 9th – over 650 fewer homes on the market.

New Listings: Many fewer new listings so far this autumn selling season than last year.

Percentage of Listings Accepting Offers: a very high number of offers being accepted + very low inventory = a very, very high percentage of listings going under contract in the week ending October 9th.

Note that the number of listings accepting offers and the percentage accepting offers will be revised downward somewhat as some existing deals fall through. But it is unlikely that enough deals will fall through to change the fact of the significant surge in both statistics.