The Housing Slowdown Is Here—and These 10 Cities Are Getting Hit Hardest – San Antonio Express


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Is the party really over?

Over the last decade, the seemingly unstoppable growth of the American housing market has created a bonanza for sellers, a cutthroat environment for buyers, and an endless source of fascination for just about everyone else.


It seemed to be an economic perpetual-motion machine. Could home prices in top markets really just keep going up and up … and up?

Well, no, actually. In the last few months, the real estate market has actually begun slowing down—including in some of the big cities that have been leading the go-go post-recession housing boom.

What does it all mean?

We decided to explore beyond the alarmist headlines to find the 10 metropolitan areas* that are seeing the biggest shifts—and why.

To be clear, prices aren’t always dropping in these places, which are predominantly located on the West Coast. Mostly, they’re decelerating, coming back down to earth. So bargain hunters can put their wallets away.


But in addition to a substantial increase in the number of home listings with price reductions, we found other potentially game-changing signs of market adjustments, including a surge in the amount of inventory for sale and the number of days on the market.

Here are the brass tacks: List prices only rose 7.3% nationally year-over-year in October.

While that’s certainly higher than most raises in compensation, inflation, and buyers’ comfort levels, it’s still less than the 10% annual hike the year before and the 8.2% jump the year before that.

Focus on the small victories, buyers! These markdowns can lead to more choices for those looking to purchase a home. And sellers, you’re still making bank.

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Metros seeing the biggest slowdowns

Tony Frenzel

“There’s a rebalancing that needs to happen,” says Len Kiefer, deputy chief economist at Freddie Mac. “Prices have risen so high in some of these markets that it’s very tough from an affordability perspective [for buyers]. … It’s not surprising to me that we’re seeing a little bit of a leveling off.”

So stash the B-word, at least for now: The dreaded Housing Bubble isn’t poised to pop. There are simply more homes for sale now and fewer buyers vying for them. In other words, the market is returning to some semblance of reality.

“Are we going off the cliff?” says Honolulu-area real estate broker George Krischke of Hawaii Living. “I don’t have a crystal ball, but I don’t think so. … It’s a temporary slowdown and may be a plateau.”


To come up with our rankings of the real estate markets that are slowing down the most, we looked at annual price, inventory, days on market, and price reduction changes from October 2017 to 2018 in our realtor.com® listings in the 100 largest metros.

Let’s take a look:


So why are these housing markets slowing down?

1. Mortgage rate increases are sidelining buyers

Unless buyers are paying all cash for their digs—not a likely scenario for most of us ordinary humans—they are probably smarting from rising mortgage interest rates. That’s because even the smallest rate hikes of just fractions of a percentage point can add hundreds of dollars to monthly mortgage payments. Over the life of a 30-year loan, it can add tens of thousands of dollars.

Here’s what’s going on: Mortgage interest rates went up from 3.90% a year ago to 4.81% as of last week. That seemingly small 0.91% increase made mortgage payments $127 a month more expensive on median-priced homes of $295,000. It adds extra payments totaling $45,540 over the life of a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, assuming that the buyers put 20% down. And of course, the more expensive the property, the more new homeowners will be forking over.

This is having an impact, real estate experts say. These increases are forcing some buyers to purchase cheaper, smaller homes and fixer-uppers in less sought-after locales. And it’s led many aspiring homeowners to go into standby mode—waiting to see whether prices will drop to make the whole thing more financially viable. With less competition come fewer bidding wars, and more inventory that isn’t being snatched up within an hour of the “For Sale” sign going up in the front yard.

Borrowers are facing a little “sticker shock,” says Julie Aragon, a mortgage broker at Julie Aragon Lending Team in Santa Monica, CA, who works with buyers from San Diego, No. 5 on our list, and Oxnard, CA, No. 6. “They just don’t realize how much [rates] went up. Even an eighth to a quarter of a percentage point increase is going to make a big impact.”

That’s particularly true in high-priced areas like the Southern California city of San Diego, where the median price of $659,400 is more than double the national figure.

“I’ve seen people lose $50,000 in purchasing power,” Aragon says. And that’s giving buyers pause.

Higher rates are also stymieing move-up buyers who want to trade their starter homes for larger, nicer homes, but are reluctant to give up their existing low mortgage rates to do so, says Ted Wilson of Residential Strategies, a housing consultant based in the Dallas area.

The reality is that rates are still low compared to previous decades, when double-digit rates weren’t uncommon.

“Folks have been used to a world of dirt-cheap mortgage rates,” says Freddie Mac’s Kiefer. “We’re moving to a world where rates are more in line with what we’d expect to see over the long term.”

2. Prices just got too damn high

Fact is, prices can’t increase at record levels forever. And we may have finally hit an inflection point in many bellwether markets.   

“To some degree, the markets that went up the most and the fastest just pushed too hard [in prices],” says Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst for Silicon Valley and the Bay Area at the real estate company Compass. “Over the summer, it was like something cracked, and people said ‘I can’t do this anymore.’”

In Silicon Valley’s San Jose metro area, No. 2 in our rankings, prices shot up a whopping 22.2% from 2016 to 2017. And this was already one of the nation’s most expensive places to live. But even hefty tech salaries can only stretch so far.

Add in those higher mortgage rates, and “that’s a whole lot more money that someone is going to have to spend to pay their monthly mortgage on a 1,500-square-foot, three-bedroom, two-bathroom ranch house that suddenly costs $2 million,” says Carlisle.

So is it any big surprise that about 36.8% of San Jose-area sellers have had to slash prices on their homes in the last year?

President Donald Trump‘s tax changes have also hit Silicon Valley and the Bay Area hard. (San Francisco comes in at No. 3 on our list.) Homeowners can now only deduct from their taxes mortgage interest on loans of up to $750,000, down from $1 million. This isn’t just a rich person’s problem—it’s hard to find even a modest starter home for less than $1 million in this region.

Then add in a new $10,000 cap on property and either sales or income taxes. Suddenly, owning a home is a whole lot more expensive.

The entire West Coast, long the growth capital of the United States, is showing signs of being overheated. “For everyone, there’s a maximum to what they can pay,” says Annie Radecki, senior manager at John Burns Real Estate Consulting, who covers Seattle and Portland.

3. Sellers want to cash in while they can—leading to more homes for sale

More and more homeowners, fearing that the real estate market has reached its peak, are champing at the bit to sell. And that has led to a relative glut of available homes—more than even the hottest markets can easily absorb.

“There’s a perception [among owners] that the market has had a good run and maybe it’s time to cash in,” says Honolulu broker Krischke. “The good times have to end.”

In Stockton, CA, which came in first in our slowdown rankings, price drops are common because sellers shot too high, says local agent Jerry Patterson of Cornerstone Real Estate Group. This is a city that has long been plagued by crime and poverty. But its location, about an hour and a half northeast of Silicon Valley and close to the vineyards in Lodi, CA, gave it a boost in recent years, with annual prices rising 8.2% last year and 14.3% in the prior year.

But with more homes for sale and less competition for them, “buyers are now in a bit more of a power position,” Patterson says. “[They're] able to flex their muscles a little bit more.”

And sellers are learning the hard way that the danger of pricing their homes too high is that they can wind up stagnating on the market. “They’re entering what we call the ‘sludge,’” says Nashville real estate broker Brian Copeland, of Doorbell Real Estate. “There’s nothing wrong with their house. But that price becomes a stigma.”

4. New construction booms benefit buyers—but slow down sales

New construction in certain markets has given buyers more options—but developers may have overshot their goals, often to accommodate corporate growth. Just look at Nashville, TN, No. 4 on our list, where a new Amazon center is slated for location, and Dallas, No. 8, which has added more than 500,000 jobs in the last decade. About a third of Nashville-area home listings on realtor.com® and a quarter of Dallas-area listings are for brand-new homes.

In Dallas, “There’s more inventory than there is demand,” says Dallas-area Realtor Dee Evans of Ebby Halliday Realtors. But she’s beginning to see the pace of new construction slowing, and those extra units are being absorbed by buyers. “Hopefully, the builders will be smart about putting less new stuff up.”

A metropolitan statistical area is a designation that includes the urban core of a city and the surrounding smaller towns and cities.

Lance Lambert ran the data analysis on which this story is based.

The post The Housing Slowdown Is Here—and These 10 Cities Are Getting Hit Hardest appeared first on Real Estate News Insights | realtor.com®.


Article source: https://www.mysanantonio.com/realestate/article/The-Housing-Slowdown-Is-Here-and-These-10-13438791.php

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Bay Area home prices climb despite jump in inventory

Despite a surge in inventory and price cuts, the median price paid for a Bay Area home in October was $845,000, up 3.7 percent from September and up 9.3 percent from October of last year, research firm CoreLogic said in a report Friday.

The number of homes sold last month totaled 7,158, up almost 20 percent from September but down 6.5 percent from October 2017. CoreLogic’s report includes new and existing homes and condos in all nine Bay Area counties.

The price increase over last year represents somewhat of a slowdown for the Bay Area’s frenetic real estate market. On a year-over-year basis, prices have risen for 79 consecutive months, and had been rising in the double digits for 13 consecutive months until September, when the median price also rose 9.3 percent, CoreLogic said.

But that’s still a healthy increase considering that new listings, active listings and price reductions in September and October were way up on a year-over-year basis throughout the Bay Area, according to data from Patrick Carlisle of the Compass real estate brokerage.

 Bay Area home prices climb despite jump in inventory

Part of that is seasonal, said D.J. Grubb, president of Grubb Co. Realtors in the East Bay.

“The jet takes off in February, levels off in spring, and we sit at that level through the year. Sellers don’t realize that,” Grubb said. “They think they can get the trajectory in October and November (that they got in the spring). They can’t.”

He added that the surge in price cuts “is not value reduction, that’s overambitious seller reduction.”

That may be, and October is always a big month for price cuts as sellers try to close deals before the market slows down from Thanksgiving until Super Bowl Sunday. But the number and percentage of homes with a price cut in October was the highest for the month of October in the Bay Area since at least 2012.

Karen Yang, a Coldwell Banker agent in Los Altos, said the market “is a little more buyer-friendly” than the CoreLogic numbers would indicate.

One of her clients, Lisa Smith, is about to close on a condo in San Mateo. Smith said she is buying the condo to rent out to her daughter, who is paying “exorbitant rent” in Redwood City. “Real estate is something I keep my fingers on,” Smith said. “In September, what we saw was a lot more inventory and less buyers.”

Smith was hoping to be the only bidder on the two-bedroom, two-bathroom condo — and she was. She offered less than the $950,000 asking price and got it for $922,000. “In July (the seller) she would have had multiple offers. She probably would have gotten slightly over asking price,” Smith said.

Yang said the price Smith is paying is what comparable condos in that complex were selling for in early 2017.

She has another client who purchased a home in Sunnyvale (with a different agent) in March for about $2.35 million. It was the 16th offer they had made, Yang said. The home was intended for multigenerational use, but turned out to be not right for anyone in the family so they put it on the market. After getting only one serious offer they sold it for about $2.1 million in July. “We were worried if they didn’t take that $2.1 million the market was going to slip further. I believe it did,” Yang said.

So why are median prices still going up? Because the median is the point at which half of homes sold for more and half sold for less, it can be skewed by changes in the mix of homes — higher or lower end — that sell each month, Carlisle said.

In San Francisco, luxury-home sales tend to go up between September and October every year, Carlisle said.

In Silicon Valley, which had been one of the nation’s hottest housing markets this year, high-end homes are still selling briskly. Yang said a newly built home on a quarter acre in Los Altos “that we thought was going to be really shaky” just sold for $4.6 million without ever hitting the market.

But lower-end homes are selling much more slowly. In Santa Clara County, “our inventory is about three times what we had available this week last year,” Yang said. “Our single-family homes are up about double, our condos and town houses are up 400 percent. I think the absolute cost of getting into housing has gone up so dramatically here that first-time home buyers may be getting priced out of the market.”

In the East Bay, however, the opposite seems to be true. “In my market,” Grubb said, “under $2 million is more active.”

Jarod Johnson, a mortgage market manager for Wells Fargo in San Mateo through Santa Cruz counties, said the market for purchase loans “remains strong” although “activity has slowed down a bit.” He said the slowdown is partly seasonal, “but there are also signs that this could be, what we are calling, a pause in the market. I wouldn’t say we are at the point where this is a leading indicator of a recession” in housing.

The agency that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced this week that they can guarantee bigger loans next year, which could help some buyers at the lower end of the Bay Area market. Next year, the limit will rise 6.9 percent to $484,350 in most of the country and to $726,525 in high-cost areas including all Bay Area counties except Solano and Sonoma, where it will be lower.

Conforming loans, those that Fannie and Freddie can guarantee, are not necessarily cheaper than bigger loans, called jumbos. But they are easier to get. Jumbo loans typically require a larger down payment, higher credit score, lower debt-to-income ratio and higher “reserves,” or savings left after closing.

Kathleen Pender is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: kpender@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @kathpender

Article source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/business/networth/article/Bay-Area-home-prices-climb-despite-jump-in-13435074.php

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Sound Off: What are you most thankful for in the Bay Area real estate market?


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    Allison Fortini-Crawford

    Allison Fortini-Crawford

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Allison Fortini-Crawford

Allison Fortini-Crawford



A: This question is impactful given the recent firestorms and the devastation it left behind. Let me talk about how I’m most appreciative for being in the real estate industry.

The brokerage that I work with, Paragon Real Estate (now Compass), started a community fund at its inception to support local non-profit organizations. Agents within the company contribute a portion of their commissions, which is then donated to diverse non-profits. I’m incredibly grateful that through this fund, we were able to donate $10,000 toward helping victims of fires in northern California.


Additionally, a colleague and I personally donated 18 pies to Fraternite Norte dame. These are the infamous French nuns that feed almost 300 people in the Tenderloin.

We have worked on Habitat for Humanity building projects. California Association of Realtors collected donations, and provided grants to agents who lost their homes recently. Time and time again my colleagues have raised funds to help other agents in time of need. We are not salaried, so it’s dire if we’re not working.


Through the Paragon Community Fund, we have donated close to $1 million dollars since the program started in 2002.

I’m grateful that I not only get to run my own business, but I’m most gratified that the generosity and kindness of my industry always shows up for the community.

Par Hanji, Compass, 415-307-5110, par@parhanji.com.

A: Homeownership is the way Americans build wealth and I get to help people do that.

I love the variety of homes: Victorians, Eichlers, and Art Deco that we have here. Our clients buy property that grow in value quickly, and I’m grateful to help them with that. Competition is stiff, but it’s created a market that’s hard working and professional.

The hills and views that come with them are wonderful! Our cities and neighborhoods are distinct and no two neighborhoods are the same. The Bay Area market is at once competitive, but also collaborative because we all want to help our clients get what they want.

I love visiting houses that are traditional on the outside, and discovering that they’ve been completely renovated inside! I’m part of a real estate ecosystem that gives tilers, painters. contractors, designers, etc. work.

Lastly, I love being the ambassador for San Francisco to the many people who move here from other places. I couldn’t have a better profession.


Maitri Ratanasene, Haven Group/Compass, 415-215-5505, maitri@havengroupsf.com.

A: I am most thankful for the powerful sense of community that we share here in the Bay Area.

In times of need, it is remarkable to see my colleagues, clients and businesses come together and unite for a greater purpose. We rely heavily on our neighbors to foster a safe and welcoming atmosphere in which to live. It is this strong sense of community and investment in each other that makes living here better than almost anywhere else in the world.

I am also honored and grateful to work with extraordinary clients from many different backgrounds who are drawn to our unique and vibrant local culture. The Bay Area offers an incredible variety of neighborhoods and architectures to choose from, which makes buying and selling real estate here an exciting and intimate experience.

Allison Fortini-Crawford, 415-297-9596, allison@fortini-crawford.com.


Article source: https://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/Sound-Off-What-are-you-most-thankful-for-in-the-13422687.php

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Bay Area home prices climb despite jump in inventory – SFChronicle …

Despite a surge in inventory and price cuts, the median price paid for a Bay Area home in October was $845,000, up 3.7 percent from September and up 9.3 percent from October of last year, research firm CoreLogic said in a report Friday.

The number of homes sold last month totaled 7,158, up almost 20 percent from September but down 6.5 percent from October 2017. CoreLogic’s report includes new and existing homes and condos in all nine Bay Area counties.

The price increase over last year represents somewhat of a slowdown for the Bay Area’s frenetic real estate market. On a year-over-year basis, prices have risen for 79 consecutive months, and had been rising in the double digits for 13 consecutive months until September, when the median price also rose 9.3 percent, CoreLogic said.

But that’s still a healthy increase considering that new listings, active listings and price reductions in September and October were way up on a year-over-year basis throughout the Bay Area, according to data from Patrick Carlisle of the Compass real estate brokerage.

 Bay Area home prices climb despite jump in inventory   SFChronicle ...

Part of that is seasonal, said D.J. Grubb, president of Grubb Co. Realtors in the East Bay.

“The jet takes off in February, levels off in spring, and we sit at that level through the year. Sellers don’t realize that,” Grubb said. “They think they can get the trajectory in October and November (that they got in the spring). They can’t.”

He added that the surge in price cuts “is not value reduction, that’s overambitious seller reduction.”

That may be, and October is always a big month for price cuts as sellers try to close deals before the market slows down from Thanksgiving until Super Bowl Sunday. But the number and percentage of homes with a price cut in October was the highest for the month of October in the Bay Area since at least 2012.

Karen Yang, a Coldwell Banker agent in Los Altos, said the market “is a little more buyer-friendly” than the CoreLogic numbers would indicate.

One of her clients, Lisa Smith, is about to close on a condo in San Mateo. Smith said she is buying the condo to rent out to her daughter, who is paying “exorbitant rent” in Redwood City. “Real estate is something I keep my fingers on,” Smith said. “In September, what we saw was a lot more inventory and less buyers.”

Smith was hoping to be the only bidder on the two-bedroom, two-bathroom condo — and she was. She offered less than the $950,000 asking price and got it for $922,000. “In July (the seller) she would have had multiple offers. She probably would have gotten slightly over asking price,” Smith said.

Yang said the price Smith is paying is what comparable condos in that complex were selling for in early 2017.

She has another client who purchased a home in Sunnyvale (with a different agent) in March for about $2.35 million. It was the 16th offer they had made, Yang said. The home was intended for multigenerational use, but turned out to be not right for anyone in the family so they put it on the market. After getting only one serious offer they sold it for about $2.1 million in July. “We were worried if they didn’t take that $2.1 million the market was going to slip further. I believe it did,” Yang said.

So why are median prices still going up? Because the median is the point at which half of homes sold for more and half sold for less, it can be skewed by changes in the mix of homes — higher or lower end — that sell each month, Carlisle said.

In San Francisco, luxury-home sales tend to go up between September and October every year, Carlisle said.

In Silicon Valley, which had been one of the nation’s hottest housing markets this year, high-end homes are still selling briskly. Yang said a newly built home on a quarter acre in Los Altos “that we thought was going to be really shaky” just sold for $4.6 million without ever hitting the market.

But lower-end homes are selling much more slowly. In Santa Clara County, “our inventory is about three times what we had available this week last year,” Yang said. “Our single-family homes are up about double, our condos and town houses are up 400 percent. I think the absolute cost of getting into housing has gone up so dramatically here that first-time home buyers may be getting priced out of the market.”

In the East Bay, however, the opposite seems to be true. “In my market,” Grubb said, “under $2 million is more active.”

Jarod Johnson, a mortgage market manager for Wells Fargo in San Mateo through Santa Cruz counties, said the market for purchase loans “remains strong” although “activity has slowed down a bit.” He said the slowdown is partly seasonal, “but there are also signs that this could be, what we are calling, a pause in the market. I wouldn’t say we are at the point where this is a leading indicator of a recession” in housing.

The agency that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced this week that they can guarantee bigger loans next year, which could help some buyers at the lower end of the Bay Area market. Next year, the limit will rise 6.9 percent to $484,350 in most of the country and to $726,525 in high-cost areas including all Bay Area counties except Solano and Sonoma, where it will be lower.

Conforming loans, those that Fannie and Freddie can guarantee, are not necessarily cheaper than bigger loans, called jumbos. But they are easier to get. Jumbo loans typically require a larger down payment, higher credit score, lower debt-to-income ratio and higher “reserves,” or savings left after closing.

Kathleen Pender is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: kpender@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @kathpender

Article source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/business/networth/article/Bay-Area-home-prices-climb-despite-jump-in-13435074.php

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Nearly half of 100 priciest US zip codes are in the Bay Area, including #1


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Of the 100 most expensive zip codes in the nation, 43 are located in the Bay Area, a new report from PropertyShark finds.

The real estate listing site compiled the median home sale prices of zip codes across the nation in 2018. The Bay Area — and California at-large — dominate the ranking.


To determine the ranking, PropertyShark looked at all residential transactions closed in 2018, including condos, co-ops, and single- and two-family homes. Due to ties, their full top-100 ranking includes a total of 117 zip codes. The Bay Area is actually home to 47 of the top 117.

If that’s not startling enough, wrap your head around these numbers:

  • Of the top 117 ranked zip codes, California contributed 82
  • Santa Clara County is home to 16 of the country’s most expensive zip codes, 3 of which made the top-10
  • San Francisco has 9 of the priciest zip codes, tying with New York City
  • 11 of the 117 most expensive zip codes are located in San Mateo County



To put this all in perspective, New York state boasts the second highest concentration of pricy zip codes behind California. It has 19. Massachusetts and Connecticut followed with six and four zip codes respectively.






San Mateo and Santa Clara counties dominate the top of the list, with Atherton ranking first thanks to its outrageous median sale price of $6.7 million — nearly $1 million more than the next zip code on the list in Sagponack, New York. Palo Alto, Los Altos, Portola Valley and Los Altos rounded out the top 10 by snagging spots #6 through #9. Home prices in these zip codes ranged between $3.25 and $3.75 million this year.

San Francisco doesn’t make an appearance on the list until #40, with the Marina District’s median sale price in 2018 coming in at $2.1 million. The Presidio Heights zip area trailed four spots behind. The average home in the seaside community costs $1.97 million, the study found.

The Bay Area has only gotten more expensive over the last year, according to PropertyShark‘s ranking. In 2017, California laid claim to 77 of the top-100 priciest zip codes, 25 of which were in Silicon Valley, which the real estate site define as Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties combined. The Bay Area added five new communities to the list this year. (Note: The 2017 ranking includes 100 zip codes, compared to this year’s 117.)


You can see the top 15 most expensive Bay Area zip codes in the above gallery. Read the full ranking here.

Read Michelle Robertson’s latest stories and send her news tips at mrobertson@sfchronicle.com.

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Article source: https://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/priciest-expensive-zip-codes-bay-area-california-13425607.php

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