Last week I was in three sales meetings that continued to beat the negative drum about real estate and the business climate in Reno. I then was in three more meetings that could not have been more upbeat. As I said last month, if you wish to believe that the market has yet to turn around, well then you are right. For the rest of you willing to be open to new information please read on.
As I stated last month we have a tricky and rocky road ahead of us but we must never forget that our market is also very finite and we will sooner than later run out of foreclosed homes and short sales. Again, some 50% of all homes are either free & clear or have very low loan balances. Let’s jump to the numbers and see what story the market is telling us.
January-March 2005 the market closed 780 homes in the first 60 days of the New Year. Now fast forward to the first quarter of 2008 and we closed a mighty 372 homes! Q1 2009 and we saw 558 homes close escrow. Q1 2010 and we see 769 homes close escrow with the help of the buyer assistance program executed in 2009 pushing traffic. So what about 2011 with no government help to push sales? January-March 2011 we saw 775 closed sales. ONLY 5 LESS THAN 2005!
Pardon my sense of sarcasm but seriously, I am told every day by moneyed and knowledgeable people that we are hopelessly mired in our own manure. I beg to differ with such knowledgeable people.
As of this writing there are 1,854 homes in the Reno/Sparks market for sale, which used to be nearly 3,000 when the “market adjustment” started. But wait, how many homes are in escrow right now? 1,408 homes are pending sales. Now before I go on I said we have a tricky and rocky road ahead of us, and we do. Nowhere are prices stabilizing or even having a hint of growth but real estate is a long term product and never was and is not now going to show short term results. Today’s buyers must buy for the long term (i.e. five years or more) and that should be the rule forever more, but sooner than later the tough lessons learned will be forgotten and we will see another day of runaway prices but not in this decade we can be certain of that.
Our inventory is no longer the hulking monster it once was. Today when I show homes, my real issue is that the good homes are now really hard to find. If a buyer wants to just buy a house and not a home, we have inventory but if you want a home, well get ready for a surprise. I could have said the exact same thing in 1990 or 1995, good homes are always in short supply.
Buyers are starting to find that if they want value, location, amenities and good condition they need to be more realistic about what they want as the number of great cheap homes is dropping. Short sales and foreclosures are alive and well, don’t fret, and we are not going to run out of either so if you have your heart set on a foreclosure or a short sale we have plenty.
We have agents scrambling to find rentals in the better areas today, 18 months ago that was easy, but not today. Before I go any further if the home is overpriced it is still overpriced. Our market has zero tolerance for anything but priced on the money. Have great value, location and amenities or the buyers will not even seriously look. I need to say that before sellers start saying “how come no one is looking at my home if the numbers are getting better?” Just a quick guesstimate but probably 70% of the non-distressed homes listed for sale today are overpriced and have about a 5% chance to sell at the sellers’ price. Those are pretty awful numbers but that is not because of the market that is because sellers five years later do not want to give up on what once was.
If the trends continue, and it appears they will, 2011 can be our pivotal year. 2011 can be the year we turn the corner and opening the door to stabilize our market so in 2013 we can rack up an average growth of .05%-1.5% and possible by 2014 a possible 2+% growth. Ok, ok, yes I know about the phantom inventory the banks have, I know about the current default numbers, yes I know about our short sales and yes, if you still believe that we are going to sit in the basement and the manure is going to get deeper, you are probably right.
I like the numbers we are seeing. Most people will not even read about these positive changes for six more months due to the lag in national real estate reporting. And face it, bad news sells better than good news. I like the real numbers we are seeing of people moving to our area, I like the offers flowing into my office that say buyers are buying. That I can work with, and so can you.
The next 60 days are going to be very important to all of us. Sales need to keep pace with inventory or we will slide backwards. Let’s keep up the good work!
Have a great spring!



