Home Prices Drop As Housing Market Cools In NorCal

Three California metro areas are among the housing markets “cooling off most,” according to a recent study from SmartAsset.

SmartAsset, a financial advice resource, analyzed the 100 largest metro areas to determine the housing markets that have cooled down the most. The company compared 2021 and 2022 data across eight metrics, split into two categories: price reduction and decreased demand.

Boise, Idaho, has cooled the fastest, according to the report. However, three California metro areas, including the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara area, rank among the top 10 places where the housing market has cooled off the most.

“In these areas, homes are staying on the market longer relative to a year ago — nearly double the amount of time,” the report said. “Moreover, all three areas have seen over a 33 percent decrease in the number of houses sold monthly from August 2021 to August 2022.”

The San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara metro area came in fourth, according to the report. The San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad metro area ranked eighth, and the Stockton metro area ranked 10th.

Article source: https://patch.com/california/san-francisco/home-prices-drop-housing-market-cools-norcal

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High mortgage rates are changing the Bay Area housing market in two key ways

In San Francisco, where the typical home sells for $1.7 million, current listings are staying on the market longer compared to 2021, and yielding fewer offers.

Kevin Birmingham, founder of Park North Real Estate and a past president of the San Francisco Association of Realtors, said sellers could expect to see up to a dozen offers on a home before mortgage rates started climbing in January. And, last year, it was common to see bidding wars between top buyers quickly drive up the sale prices — sometimes by upward of $100,000.

“Now, what you’re seeing is one or two offers on a property and nobody willing to really compete against each other,” Birmingham said. “If you’re trying to stretch (buyers) up in price, they’re out. So it’s a very different mentality. And you’re seeing a lot of offer dates come and go… and no offers even show up.”

In the San Francisco metro area, which includes Oakland and Berkeley, about 60% of homes sold above asking price in August, according to data from real estate listings site Zillow. That figure represents a year-over-year drop of about 20 percentage points and a decline that tracks with the rise in mortgage rates.

Roughly 38% of home listings in the San Jose metro area went above asking price in August, compared to nearly 70% of homes the same month last year. Every other large California metro saw declines in monthly above-asking-price home sales, according to Zillow data.

The percentage of listings with price cuts in metro San Francisco has also increased notably in recent months. As of August, the most recent data available, one in four home listings saw a price cut, compared to about 12% in August 2021. Sacramento, a popular migration destination for Bay Area residents during the pandemic, had the highest percentage of price-cut listings of any California metro area, at 37%

Year-over-year price-cut percentages about doubled in metros such as San Jose (25%), Los Angeles (25%) and San Diego (33%) as competition softens.

While surging mortgage rates have cooled demand from last year’s astronomical levels, the Bay Area remains home to some of the most competitive housing markets in the country, partly because of low inventory.

About 53% of metro San Francisco home listings on Redfin attracted a competing bid in August, according to a new report by the real estate listings site. That figure dropped about 20 percentage points from August 2021, when bidding wars ruled the market, though it kept San Francisco in the top 10 most competitive U.S. metros, according to Redfin.

The fast climb in mortgage rates has put many would-be homebuyers on the sidelines, thinning competition and giving active buyers more leverage in negotiations. Monthly mortgage payments have gone up by about 33% since the start of the year, making the cost of owning a home even less affordable for prospective buyers.

The Bay Area saw a 29% drop in year-over-year home sales in August, according to the California Association of Realtors. The drop in demand has translated to some price declines.

The region’s sale-to-list ratio has dropped to about 98%, meaning that Bay Area homes on average are selling slightly below asking price, according to Selma Hepp, an economist at the CoreLogic real estate firm.

Though that figure might not appear much different than the Bay Area’s 102% sale-to-list ratio at the start of 2022, “it’s still a significant switch in dynamics from what we saw coming into the first quarter of this year,” Hepp said.

Ricardo Cano is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: ricardo.cano@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @ByRicardoCano

Article source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/mortgage-rates-17500383.php

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This cabin-style home is in a rare ‘affordable’ part of the Bay Area. Can you guess the sale price?

Square feet

1,694 sq foot

Article source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/projects/2022/real-estate-el-sobrante/

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San Francisco Home Prices Fall 7% Amid Signs of a Slowdown

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A continuing rise in mortgage rates along with declining interest from homebuyers led the median San Francisco home price to drop 7% year-over-year to $1.38 million in August, according to a report from real estate company Redfin. 

The San Francisco metro—along with neighboring Oakland where prices dropped 1.4%—were the only two metro areas that saw median sales prices decline during the last four weeks. By contrast, nationwide median home prices rose 6% over the same time period. 

“Home prices in San Francisco are quickly approaching 2019 levels as they contract in reaction to higher mortgage rates,” said Taylor Marr, Redfin’s deputy chief economist. “Tech jobs fueled the boom in SF, making it unaffordable, and the exodus of tech workers is also driving a bust right now.”

The federal government’s efforts to fight inflation have pushed 30-year mortgage rates to 5.89%, the highest since November 2009. In August, fewer homes sold above their listing price than at any time since February 2021 and the typical home went for 0.3% below its final list price. 

Laila Salma, a real estate agent with Salma Company, said the drop in home values is notable but placed the decline in context of a larger cooldown in the city’s residential real estate market. 

An August market report from real estate brokerage Compass noted other signs of a real estate cooldown, including a rise in the number of days a typical listing spends on the market, the number of overall listings and the number of price reductions for properties (up 117% year over year). Home sales were down 32% in August from the same period last year. 

“Overall, values are down and have been for the last few months. Many buyers are caught up in the headlines but there is some great opportunity out there if you feel comfortable acting,” Salma said.  

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She also pointed to the seasonality in San Francisco’s home buying market, which typically slows in the summer before picking up again in the fall. But she’s picked up on a real lack of urgency among buyers who are waiting for the best deals they can get before pulling the trigger.  

Patrick Carlisle, chief Bay Area market analyst for Compass, wrote that this year’s fall home buying season will be one to watch as a sign of how buyers and sellers are navigating the slowdown. 

“As of early September, interest rates have increased again and stock markets declined once more,” wrote Carlisle. “The next major indicator of buyer and seller psychology and market dynamics will be what occurs during the autumn selling season.”

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Article source: https://sfstandard.com/housing-development/san-francisco-home-prices-fall-amid-signs-of-a-slowdown/

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San Francisco’s real estate market is cooling down


472e5 1665077045835 San Franciscos real estate market is cooling down
Photo: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

San Francisco’s real estate market is slowing down, according to the latest data from Redfin.

Why it matters: After two-plus years of plummeting inventory and sky-high home prices, Bay Area buyers can finally get some relief.

What’s happening: Homes sales prices are decreasing and inventory is increasing.

  • Now buyers can take their time and negotiate, said Amanda Jones, who serves on the board of directors of the San Francisco Realtors Association.
  • A year ago, five to 10 offers on a house wasn’t unusual, Jones said. Now, because the market is less frenzied, homes typically get two or three offers.
  • “I think for so many years, we’ve just been competing and competing, and now’s the time to come in and find good value,” Jones said.

Yes, but: Mortgage rates are above 6% for 30-year loans which makes monthly payments drastically higher than they would’ve been a year ago, or even six months ago.

  • Even as housing prices fall, the monthly payments might put ownership out of reach for many.
  • For example, a $600,000, 30-year loan costs $1,142 more a month than it did in 2021.

August was the fourth consecutive month of inventory increases. It’s up 5.3% year over year, per Redfin.

  • Closed sales are down 6.3% compared to this time last year.
  • Median home prices are down 7.3% year over year, and they’re falling monthly.
  • In June, the median sales price was $1,582,000 and in August, it was $1,400,000.

Homes are sitting on the market a little longer than usual, too. In August 2022, homes sold in 28 days on average, compared to 15 days in August 2021.

  • Buyers have gotten pickier, Jones said. They want to do inspections and negotiate, and when that happens, sales take longer to close.

Bottom line: Home prices are coming down, and monthly mortgage payments are going up.

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Article source: https://www.axios.com/local/san-francisco/2022/10/08/real-estate-market-cools-san-francisco

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