The ever elusive bubble that the media discusses has pretty much
yet to evolve. I did some research and found the first mention of
over-inflated properties back in 2001 when RealtyTimes.com columnist
Broderick Perkins interviewed several real estate bubble watchers to
find out their definition of a sellers versus a buyers market.
Simply put, you know you're in a sellers market when the buyers
have little or no power in the negotiating arena during the sales
process. These bubble watchers were defining a buyers market as a
market where there was a certain amount of inventory on the market
-- generally upwards to nine months of homes. Some brought it down
to as low as three months and others pegged it right in the middle
at six months.
I would default to the lower end at three to six months of
inventory. At this level, while buyers are not in absolute control
of the market, if sellers prepare the house well and price it right,
they'll find multiple buyers at the door; however, all things being
equal, it will linger on the market and sellers are more willing to
provide subsidies and drop prices.
The way you determine this supply of inventory is by dividing the
number of homes on the market in a given month by the number of
houses sold that same month. Example: 5,000 houses on the market;
2,500 of them sell. This equals a 2 months' supply of homes, meaning
that if no other houses come on the market, all the houses will be
sold within 2 months.
Generally, here are the characteristics of a sellers' market:
- Booming local economy. Local businesses are hiring at a brisk
pace. New companies are opening up shop.
- Low existing housing inventory. More jobs are coming into a
market where there's not enough inventory to house all the
workers, thus creating financial pressure on local resale units.
- Builders are not producing enough homes to fill the job base.
In the Washington, D.C. market, for instance, the local economy is
pumping out more than 80,000 jobs in 2005, yet only about 35,000
houses are coming on line during the same period of time.
- Home sales prices are escalating. Over the last several years,
the national increase has been in the five to seven percent range.
In a seller's market, it's not unusual to experience double digit
increases. Some communities could double in price in just a year
or two.
- Buyer contracts begin to come in non-contingent. Buyers want
to purchase a house, period. They no longer offer under list
price, ask to sell their house first before settlement, or try to
buy without financing already approved. There is no negotiating
for the "perfect" terms. Getting the house, is the perfect term.
- Seller subsidies disappear. While buyers used to ask for some
sort of assistance -- lower price, points paid, closing costs --
the buyers must come to the table without any help from the
seller.
- High down payments become the norm. Buyers benefit from high
appreciation and begin bringing down payments such as 25-plus
percent to the transaction.
- Appraisals are no longer needed to qualify for the purchase
price. With down payments of $100,000-plus, there's plenty of
equity coming to the table to ease the risk factor for most
lenders so that the appraised value is not as important as the
actual purchasing price. If the appraisal comes in $20,000 less
than asking price -- that's okay, because the buyer has enough
cash to compensate for the lower value.
When you're looking at the other end of the spectrum, the buyers'
market would look like this:
- Job growth eases or turns into job losses. Local companies are
closing, a particular sector goes bust (telecom, manufacturing,
etc.) and there are no longer enough people in town to support the
local housing inventory.
- The above situation creates a higher standing inventory, thus
more houses appear on the market as people move out of town to
find jobs elsewhere. Builders, who may have been building homes in
the tail end of a seller's market, may find that they are now
stuck with speculation homes they can't sell.
- Foreclosures increase as the local job market softens. This
creates a new venue of market with investors moving in to find
good deals.
- Home prices begin to depreciate and some homeowners will find
themselves "upside down" in their property -- owing more on the
house than what it's worth.
- Some sellers may have to come to the table with money to sell
the house instead of reaping a large amount of equity. Meanwhile,
other sellers will option for a short sale where they take action
to return the property back to the lender instead of filing
foreclosure.
- A first-time buyer market emerges as the once high prices drop
to a level where some can afford to purchase now. This will bring
about the use of low- to no-down payment mortgages in a market
where they can negotiate the use of such mortgages.
- Seller subsidies increase. Whereby the buyers once had to turn
over first-born children to the sellers, now it's the other way
around. Price drops, closing costs assistance, and other seller
subsidies become the norm.
If you noticed, interest rates and the prices of houses did not
determine a sellers' or buyers' market. Some of the hottest markets
in the past existed in high priced and high interest rate
environments.
Published: September 23, 2005
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