Posts Tagged ‘California Assocation of Realtors’ Projections’

Not as bad as it seems?

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Real estate news is coming fast and furious! I take a weekend off from blogging for Barb’s birthday, & suddenly I’m hammered.

Several interesting items popped up over the last few days I found fascinating. In this post we’ll focus on the our own beloved California Association of Realtor’s headline-grabbing announcement that median prices are expected to drop 24% this year.  (Later, a look at remarks by the Fed’s Bernanke last night.)

It happened at the Disneyland hotel where our own Pacific West Board of Realtors was holding it’s spring “expo” and pep rally on Friday. Sadly, and ironically, as we local Realtors were meeting, a businessman decided to end it all by jumping from one of the hotel’s towers. Shades of the Great Depression. It is my understanding he was not a Realtor, surprisingly.

But some Realtors probably thought about joining him after they heard from CAR’s Deputy Chief Economist, Robert Kleinhenz, who revised the Association’s 2008 forecast for median home prices statewide. In March, CAR predicted a 9.5% drop for the year. Kleinhenz almost tripled that 9.5%, to a 24% drop. No wonder his boss, California Association of Realtor’s Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young, asked him to give the speech. (Leslie was the one out with 9.5% for the year in March, doubling her 4.5% October figure, which we thought was too conservative. Looks like when she ran the numbers again late in April, she just handed the sheet to poor Bob Kleinhenz on her way out the door to advise some poor businessman staying elsewhere in the hotel.)

But wait a minute–that may not be as bad as it seems. Dataquick’s most recent statewide median prices showed a 26% price drop for March 2008 from March 2007, which was when Dataquick’s price median peaked. Dataquick indicated “about half” of that drop was due to a shift in the market to more sales of lower priced homes. (For a detailed post on the problems with Dataquick’s median numbers, check out “Two big problems with DataQuick’s median prices.”)

So if you read between the lines, Kleinhenz, who apparently is playing “bad cop” to the missing Leslie Appleton-Young’s “good cop,” is implying that the worst is behind us. 2007 ended with CAR reporting a statewide median for Single Family homes of $476,000, and their latest number, for March 2008 is down to $414,000! (Click here for CAR’s press release on their March numbers) . That’s actually lower than the $424,000 median average for the year they’re now predicting.

As a 28 year CAR member, I picked up the phone to talk to old Bob himself, but discovered he was in Sacramento giving another speech today. Something about a statewide tour sponsored by Pierce Brothers Mortuary.

In any case, his capable associate, Oscar Wei was available to assist me, and he confirmed my suspicion that CAR now thinks the worst is behind us: “Hopefully, and that’s a lot of hope, things should be bottoming out soon in terms of price,” he told me.

That agrees with Oscar’s bosses comments last Friday at the resort formerly known as “The Happiest Place on Earth: “We do think this is the year we’re going to see our low point for sales. … Monthly sales have already bottomed out.” Also “All these numbers are going to stabilize and slightly improve. … We’re basically climbing above the liquidity crunch to pre-liquidity numbers.

Well, I may be paying Bob & Oscar’s salaries, but I’m not quite ready to eat their breadsticks. With homes entering foreclosure still increasing (see “So Cal defaults up again“), and the liquidity problem far from solved, Blair and I are still expecting additional declines in values and sales as we move through fall and winter (See “Predictions 101: Our 2 market cycles“).

That doesn’t mean now may not be a good time to buy if you’re in a position to do so.  Shoot, Bob & Oscar could well be right, and Dave & Blair wrong.  Well, Blair anyway.  In fact, we continue to believe that if you find a home you love at a payment you can live with on a 30 year fixed loan, and you don’t intend to move any time soon, at least write an offer on it.

But if you’re not yet in a position to buy, there’s no need to panic.  While sellers may be less motivated as prices firm, we’re not going to see double digit appreciation any time soon.  And there’s a good chance the bottom may still be a year or two away.

But nobody knows for sure, as we keep saying, much to the annoyance of some of our gentle readers.  (See “How low will prices go?

That’s what makes So Cal Real Estate so interesting.

What do you think’s next?

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