Lancaster County Association of Realtors came out yesterday with their review of January's sales. While I agree in general with the commentary offered in the press release, my thoughts go more to the national real estate market and how Lancaster County needs to see the way forward to an improving local market.  Here's how:

Lancaster PA Real Estate

My take on the market situation is easy - list prices need to come down.   The average new listing price isn't reported so you wouldn't know this, but Lancaster County continues to resist a price correction, although January's data is encouraging. 

It's all about the gap between what homes are listed for vs. what they actually sell for.  That gap was growing through last fall and winter, and peaked in Feb 07 at over $58,000! (that's the blue arrow between the lines on the left).  We're talking averages, of course, for residential/farm properties in the County.  That's when Realtors started getting the message that they had to be less "enthusiastic" about willy-nilly pricing over the last comparable sale.  2007 saw a steady narrowing of the gap, meaning that sellers were coming around to more realistic prices for buyers.  The gap reached a low of about $14,000 in August (small blue arrow).
 
But what happened in August? 
 
The subprime mess hit the airwaves.  Right away the average sale price started falling, but the average list price...did it correct?  No, in fact the price climbed for 2 months and then the holidays hit.  Sales prices have been falling since November, but list prices have bounced between $220,000 and $230,000.  January's data is encouraging because we see the list price correcting downwards.  My opinion is that sellers and most agents are confused about how to price their homes right now, and who can blame them?  
 
Now the "so what?"...when the two lines meet, the Lancaster Real Estate market takes off again - that's what!  Buyers have the ability to buy and are just waiting for the flash in the pan, the "bottom" of the market they've been hearing about.
 
Nationally, the banks have done their part by holding the mortgage rates down, the goverment has done it's part by passing a stimulus that includes aggressive improvements to FHA programs.  Now it's our part - the real estate community has to intelligently asses these price trends and advise their clients from a position of expertise.  Lancaster County is already in a great spot nationally - a stable economy and low unemployment with many immigrants feeding the housing market.
 
No seller wants to stay on the market for 3-4 months in Lancaster, but without expert price advice (among other things) that's what's going to happen.  If the gap can be narrowed this spring in Lancaster County, I believe we'll see the market move forward.
 
 

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For Lancaster PA homes for sale click here. Jeff Geoghan is a top real estate expert in Lancaster County, PA, and an involved community member. Jeff's work has been featured in the Lancaster Newspapers, WGAL Channel 8, PA Business Journal and Wall Street Journal. Jeff's blog on Lancaster County and its homes is nationally-featured. Contact Jeff for more help with your Lancaster PA Real Estate needs. Jeff is also a photographer - view some of his portfolio. Comments are welcome!

 



 

11 Comments on Lancaster PA Real Estate Market - Why List Prices Must Come Down

FEB
08
2008
277,700 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog
Excellent chart and analysis, Jeff.  It's hard to convince sellers of this phenomenon, but the motivated sellers should take heed.
4:41pm • #1
427,969 Points 81 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router
Great looking graph, Jeff.   Are you willing to share the tool you used to create it?
9:22pm • #2
FEB
09
2008
655,815 Points 104 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router
Jeff- What a great post and right on with pricing. Lancaster can take a hard lesson from us here in Florida. For nearly a year sellers would not budge and buyers would not buy. It had huge implications. We are starting to see prices drop and buyers start buying. We are now getting action on our listings and sales, at the end of the day, that is what counts. 
2:34am • #3
422,334 Points 3 Featured Posts Outside Blog
Great post. It is easy to convince sellers if you show them something like this.
5:27am • #4
FEB
11
2008
257,978 Points 7 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Margaret Woda, Maryland REALTOR

Sure, Margaret - I used excel, powerpoint and photoshop, in that order.  Send me an email if you want more specifics or give me a buzz! 

9:23am • #6
FEB
18
2008

Jeff,

I like the graph a lot.  It's a shame that every government body and real estate association feels the need to spin and/or censor the numbers.  Every aspect of money surrounding residential real estate went berserk and unchecked for years.  Home values.  Land prices.  Construction materials.  Mortgages (not just sub-prime).

TAXES (my personal favorite).  I can't believe average citizens, real estate agents, and builders are not rioting in the streets!  Real estate taxes on a new $250,000 home will run around $5,000 per year in Lancaster County.  That's right!  $5,000/year for the right to own property.  At 6% interest, $420/month in taxes = $70,000 in mortgage debt.  Buyers focus on affordability, so as taxes rise a buyers "borrowing power decreases by $1,000 for every $6/month that taxes increase.  This is insane.  No one is asking where all of the extra money has gone.

Consider these tidbits - Homes have escalated in value for the past 7 - 10 years... The county's 1% of the transfer tax has been a boon as we had high volume and high prices.

We have had 2 county-wide re-assessments in the past 12 or 13 years.

Taxes at the county, school, and municipal levels have all risen significantly while we've had new assessments, per capita taxes, and record new construction, not to mention that the municipalities and the county squeezed every developer for road improvements, impact fees, and parks along the way. 

Lancaster County, we have a problem.  I woke up the other day and realized that taxes have outpaced appreciation and while prices set stagnant or maybe even go a little backwards, our track record indicates that taxes will continue to climb at a very brisk pace.  No amount of gambling taxes, financial wizardry, or wishful thinking will stop the storm we're in.  Only fiscal responsibility.

Irresponsible lending, over-enthused buyers, and a super hyper market got us to where we are now...unfortunately, we can never pay off or refinance our taxes.

Keep up the honesty.

Ryan Hess, Realty Select
7:45pm • #9
FEB
19
2008
257,978 Points 7 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Ryan, thanks for your comment.  Taxes really are a "black hole" we as homeowner pour money into, with little hope of seeing value returned to us.  With homes sales off by double digits, those who had gotten used to receiving the tax-revenue "boon" from the run-up must be feeling a pinch.

 

10:10am • #10
AUG
11
2008

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Jeff Geoghan MBA - Lancaster PA Real Estate Expert

Lancaster, PA

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The Jeff Geoghan Realty Group, Coldwell Banker Lancaster PA

Address: 1000 North Prince Street, Lancaster, PA, 17603

Office Phone: (717) 735-8400

Cell Phone: (717) 799-0851

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