Thursday, December 12th, 2013
6a00e54ee9620b8834019b029cac33970c-800wiThe 13-county Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area housing market continued to settle itself in November. While some measures of housing demand may suggest a slowdown, most deceleration is the result of a healing lender-mediated (foreclosures and short sales) segment, which made up a smaller share of the residential pie compared to last year.

For the first time in seven months, new listings were lower year over year, declining 5.3 percent to 3,900, but traditional new listings rose 11.1 percent over the same time comparison. Buyers closed on 3,760 homes, a 5.9 percent decrease from last November, even though traditional sales were up 13.6 percent. Twin Citizens have 14,126 properties to choose from – or 5.8 percent fewer than last November.

The market-wide median sales price held steady at $195,000 for a third straight month and up 13.4 percent compared to November 2012. Last year, foreclosures and short sales comprised 35.6 percent of all closed sales. In November 2013, these segments made up only 22.1 percent of all sales.

“We are seeing exactly what we want to be seeing,” said Andy Fazendin, President of the Minneapolis Area Association of REALTORS® (MAAR). “Lender-mediated activity once commanded heavy market share, and residential real estate is going to be stronger with fewer foreclosure and short sale properties in the system.”

Traditional new listings rose 11.1 percent, but foreclosure and short sale new listings fell 36.2 and 42.1 percent, respectively. Traditional closed sales rose 13.6 percent; foreclosure and short sale closings fell 34.7 and 57.6 percent. Traditional homes are selling at a median price of $217,000; foreclosures for $133,851; short sales for $150,000.

On average, homes are spending 75 days on the market – quite brisk relative to the past several years. Sellers are receiving an average of 95.4 percent of their original list price – the highest November ratio since 2005. The Twin Cities metro now has 3.2 months’ supply of inventory, which suggests sellers have regained their leverage.

“Some might claim that the recovery is stalling, but the reality is that job growth is gaining momentum and there are fewer distressed properties being listed and sold than at any point in the past five years.” said Emily Green, MAAR President-Elect. “We could stand to see this trend continue into 2014.”

Posted in The Skinny |
Monday, December 9th, 2013

The calendar can sometimes have just as profound an effect on housing data as
supply and demand. The 2013 Thanksgiving holiday was a week later than in
2012, causing some peculiar shifts in activity. This serves as a good reminder to
watch for calendar oddities just as much as you do economic indicators. Even so,
aside from family time and tryptophan, buyers and sellers had a lot to be grateful
for this Thanksgiving. Buyers still live in a time of great affordability, and sellers
should be thankful for shorter market times, higher prices and less competition.

In the Twin Cities region, for the week ending November 30:

  • New Listings decreased 47.0% to 540
  • Pending Sales decreased 38.5% to 579
  • Inventory decreased 4.5% to 14,582

For the month of November:

  • Median Sales Price increased 13.4% to $195,000
  • Days on Market decreased 26.5% to 75
  • Percent of Original List Price Received increased 1.3% to 95.4%
  • Months Supply of Inventory decreased 11.1% to 3.2

All comparisons are to 2012

Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report.From The Skinny.

Posted in Weekly Report |
Monday, December 2nd, 2013

As the end of the year approaches, market futurists will either put on their overly cheery, poinsettia-colored glasses or turn into a bunch of dreary Nostradamus Nellys. The wise analyst will tune out extremes and embrace seasonally appropriate slowdowns as a sign of normal market activity while looking with anticipation to what will likely be continued moderate recovery in 2014. Watch for light gains in inventory, quieter pending sales activity and more sedate market times.

In the Twin Cities region, for the week ending November 23:

  • New Listings increased 46.6% to 893
  • Pending Sales increased 42.8% to 841
  • Inventory decreased 3.6% to 15,008

For the month of October:

  • Median Sales Price increased 11.4% to $194,900
  • Days on Market decreased 27.2% to 75
  • Percent of Original List Price Received increased 1.4% to 95.8%
  • Months Supply of Inventory decreased 10.0% to 3.6

All comparisons are to 2012

Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report.From The Skinny.

Posted in Weekly Report |
Monday, November 25th, 2013

Where has the Twin Cities real estate market been and where is it heading? This monthly summary provides an overview of current trends and projections for future activity. Video produced by Chelsie Lopez.

Posted in Monthly Skinny Video |
Monday, November 25th, 2013

This week, and through the end of the year, you might be watching for much-needed inventory gains that will not arrive due to traditional end-of-year lulls in the marketplace related to holidays and/or colder weather. Nobody wants to sell at the bottom. In general, inventory pools are up in year-over-year comparisons in many areas, suggestive of seller confidence with recent price gains. Overall recovery is unlikely to stall. The pace of price gains and bidding wars may ease, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Just ask any prospective home buyer.

In the Twin Cities region, for the week ending November 16:

  • New Listings decreased 4.2% to 1,003
  • Pending Sales decreased 7.3% to 758
  • Inventory decreased 3.2% to 15,318

For the month of October:

  • Median Sales Price increased 11.4% to $194,900
  • Days on Market decreased 27.2% to 75
  • Percent of Original List Price Received increased 1.4% to 95.8%
  • Months Supply of Inventory decreased 12.5% to 3.5

All comparisons are to 2012

Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report.From The Skinny.

Posted in Weekly Report |