Real Estate News & Updates from the Monadnock Region
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According to several industry sources the average value of bank owned, REO Properties, has actually increased in the last years while the value of non-bank owned real estate has dropped on average! There are several reasons in the realm of conventional wisdom as to why this is happening; the most common reason given is that REO properties are being bought up by investment groups and turned into rentals thus driving up the price of REO’s on average. While this certainly is a factor there are other factors that are probably more important to the change in real estate values that I see happening as a “boots on the ground REALTOR”.

Here’s how I see it. The initial wave of foreclosures was for the most part badly maintained and marginal properties: no real surprise that the most marginal home owners were the least able to maintain and upgrade their homes and least able to hang on through tough, tougher and tougher economic times. These homes languished off the market as so called “shadow inventory” for months and in many cases years due to a hostile regulatory and legal environment in which mortgage holders found themselves, thus slowing up the process of foreclosure, resale and return of these residential assets to productive use. No news there really. What the facts recently made public noted about rising REO prices and declining price on non-bank owned real estate indicates is not that we are “moving toward the middle” but in-fact indicate that we are continuing to crater the housing market in slow motion.

This pattern of rising REO value reflects exactly what many experienced REO REALTORS have noted over the last six to nine months: we are getting better quality inventory. The better quality inventory is the result of the economic damage moving up the food chain from the economic bottom into the middle and above. The middle class buyer that bought his house at a fair market price in 2009 is likely to find that when he goes to sell his home today it’s worth the same or a little less and that any improvements he made have added little or no value. So, if they can’t hang on and they can’t sell they let it go. Thus leading to a better class REO property and putting further and continuing pressure on the middle of the market.

What does it all mean? It means that there is no foreseeable improvement coming for non-REO properties and that REO properties will continue to dominate the residential real estate market. Warren Buffet is right: single family homes are likely to continue to be an excellent investment for those who can“buy and hold” but only for those who can buy and hold either as owner occupants or as investors looking at increasingly higher and higher rents over the foreseeable future.

 

By Dick Thackston CRB, ABR, ABRM

Broker NH, MA & VT

The National Association of Home Builders maintains indices that measure conditions for the home building industry. There are three basic measures that the NAHB looks at as measure of were the home building industry is at: traffic visiting model homes, current sales conditions and the most subjective of the three expectations for the next six months. When you look at these numbers 50 is the benchmark number anything under 50 is poor any thing over 50 is good.

Conditions have shown improvement over the last four months.

Last month’s traffic visiting model homes increased from 18 to 21; an increase of about 20% and similar to what we have seen in the “re-sale” home market. (Keep in mind its still winter in the northeast and this is not prime home selling season- really very dramatic news!) Last month’s number for current sales conditions moved from 22 to 25 which measures factors such as availability of financing, terms, interest rates and available inventory among other things and expectations for the next six months moved from 26 to 29.

The NAHB also looks at these number by census regions rather than state by state or just the nation in aggregate. The Northeast moved the most from 14 to 23 and the Mid West moved the least from 23 to 24. It’s probably worth noting that the mid-West has been one of the least impacted regions of the country in our now five + year old real estate downturn.

The South is considered the most important number for the nation and the association because it by far the largest region for population and business in the country. The South moved from 25 to 27. The West moved from 16 to 21.

Obviously, our primary/only concern is the Northeast which includes New England, (New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, Rhode Island and Maine). Prospects remain positive and cautious on all fronts in the real estate world and the “all clear” is by no means appropriate at this time. These are not great numbers but they are significantly less bad than the numbers of the recent past and may/hopefully reflect an upward trend that will be unfolding over the next several months as weather improves and the situation becomes clearer to all on employment and other investments besides real estate.

By Dick Thackston CRB, ABR, ABRM

Broker NH, MA & VT