Special offer

It ain't over 'til it's over...

By
Real Estate Agent with Real Estate One

That is a very famous piece of advice/philosophy from the master - Yogi Berra.  He also coined the phrase "If you don't know where you're going, you might not get there." Both are useful to describe things in the real estate market these days. In many ways we don't know where we're going, because we're in uncharted waters in the current recession. And I'll be darned if I can tell if we're at the bottom of the market locally or may have already bottomed out and have started back.

A part of the confusion in the Michigan real estate market is caused by our horrendous unemployment situation - 13+%. There seems to be no end in sight for that, even though the local automakers have been through their rightsizing efforts. Most of the shakeout in the tier-one supplier base is also over, but the ripple effect through the entire supplier base is on-going. Basically, uncertainty reigns and no good can come out of uncertainty.

As I look at the data that I track, things don't seem all that bad. Houses are selling and more and more of them are houses above $200K, with fewer of them being foreclosures and short-sales. However, there is this impending sense of doom out there, too; because there is as big pool of homes that are delinquent but not yet foreclosed. I'm not sure if the banks are just holding back on foreclosures to try to stabilize the market or perhaps to keep more red ink off their books; but, it sure seems that they are going longer before pulling the trigger on the Sheriff's Sale these days. Perhaps some of the government's loan modification programs are working; but, my sense is that the banks are just holding back for purely selfish reasons.

I my little patch the percentage of sales that involve foreclosures and short sales slipped below 50% again last week - now down to 41% for September in the 6 market areas that I track. That's good news. The percentage of asked vs. sold prices in these markets has also crept up to about the historic norm of 97%. That means that homes are being priced properly and that buyers perceive that the asking prices correctly reflect the values. To see all of the local statistics for my market area, go to http://www.movetomilford.com/ and click on the Local Real Estate Statistics choice.

So, if it ain't over until it's over; how will we know when it's over? We likely won't know. We'll look back on some point in time and reflect that this is when things changes and the market started back. It's sort of like the economic numbers that economists use. They are always a quarter or two behind and they are almost always "adjusted" after the fact. Since Realtors are always using past sales to predict the future for new listings, we will undoubtedly miss the change by anywhere from a month to a quarter. We'll keep an eye on it for you, since Yogi also said, "You can observe a lot by watching."

Posted by

 

 Norm Werner

Real Estate One

 

                                       Visit my web sites

 

 

 

 

                                              Find me on...

                                      linked in logo                                    

Norm Werner 2009-2011 All rights reserved

Michele Miller ~ REALTOR®, LMC, HSE, CHS, SRES, CMRS
ERA Key Realty~Worcester County Realty Group - Worcester, MA
'Helping You Make the Best Move"

Norm,

I think with unemployment still on the rise, it's going to stay like this. Thanks for your post.

Sep 20, 2010 12:11 AM
Don Spera
CR Property Group, LLC - East York, PA
Serving York and Adams County, PA

Let us just hope that the bank doesn't release them all at one time or it will kill the market even more.  They need to trickle them out.

Sep 20, 2010 12:59 AM
Norm Werner
Real Estate One - Milford, MI
Helping the first time and every time

Don (Spera), I'm of the opinion that they should just dump them and get the agony over with. They have been trickling them out all year and it just keeps the market depressed. Sure it would be even more distressful if a Million more foreclosed homes hit the market all at once, but we could then set our gaol to sell off that inventory and get on with things. As it is, many would be sellers are holding back until they see that the market has changed and would-be buyers keep thinking that if they just wait (or look at enough houses) they'll find that ultimate foreclosed house that needs nothing and is selling for nothing. Let's get this mess behind us! 

Sep 20, 2010 01:19 AM
Lorraine Sayer
Monument, Black Forest, Falcon, Fountain homes - Colorado Springs, CO
Realtor ABR,CDPE,GRI - Colorado Springs,CO RE/MAX

Norm: I'm cautious in my area to quote the list price to sale price percentage.  In my community it  would look like sellers are getting about 96-97% of asking price per the data but the real story is that they have been dropping the price significantly until they hit that bench mark price that gets an offer.  So the REAL data would be original list price to sales price which is a much more interesting number. 

You make a great point that the "impending sense of doom" has an affect on the market.  With current rates what they are buyers should be banging down the doors to get 30 year fixed rates but they are not and that has to do with one ultimate factor.....fear. 

Sep 20, 2010 02:22 AM
Jason Channell
Diadem Property Inspections - Serving Southeast Michigan - Troy, MI
The House Sleuth

I guess Yogi was right about this one. And one good quote deserves another:

It's a recession when your neighbor loses his job; it's a depression when you lose your own. -- Harry Truman

I've noticed a big slowdown in people losing their jobs here in SE Michigan, but so many people I know are still VERY underemployed.

Although everyone I've talked to recently at Chrysler and some of the Tier 1s are staying very busy.

Sep 20, 2010 02:23 PM