Monday, July 27, 2009

Orange County Housing Report: Foreclosures and Short Sales are Still Dropping

July 23, 2009
The active distressed inventory, both foreclosures and short sales, has dropped by 56% since reaching its peak last summer. Based upon reports of the “next wave” of foreclosures, I have been expecting the distressed inventory to increase for the past couple of months. But, the wave just has not materialized yet. The distressed inventory dropped by another 150 homes in the past two weeks, bringing the total to 2,616 active on the market today. It now represents 29% of the overall active inventory versus 40% one year ago. It is 3,334 less than the peak of 5,950 on August 7, 2008. Back then there were 1,249 foreclosures within the active listing inventory. Today, that number has dropped to 331. Demand, the number of new pendings sales within the last month, for foreclosures is currently at 614, compared to 861 last year. The problem right now is that there is tremendous demand for foreclosures, just not enough new foreclosures hitting the market. The expected market time currently is .54 months, about two weeks, compared to 1.42 months last year. The rumor mill is rampant with reasons for the shortage of foreclosures: from lenders purposefully holding back their inventory to “it’s just a matter of time” to all of the new tenant foreclosure laws. The fact remains that the “next wave” just has not materialized. Another answer could lie in the fact that there are more short sales that are resulting in a pending sale. The active short sale inventory peaked in May of last year at 4,810. Today, there are 2,285 short sales within the active listing inventory, a 52% drop from its peak. The word on the street is that lenders are “just starting to get it.” That does not mean that all short sales result in a sale and that the process has been simplified. It indicates that a bit of the reluctance to put together a short sale, on the lender’s part, has been lifted. Demand for short sales is now at 1,139 pending sales compared to 549 one year ago. Expected market time has dropped from 8.52 one year ago to 2.01 months today. Clearly the market has changed considerably over the past year for both foreclosures and short sales.
How do the rest of the numbers look? Demand, the number of new pending sales over the past month, dropped by only 53 homes over the past two weeks to 3,306, a 2% drop. Last year demand totaled 2,743 pending sales, 563 fewer than today. Two years ago there were 1,822, 1,484 fewer than today. The active inventory dropped slightly by 51 homes in the past two weeks to 8,895, a 1% drop. Last year the active inventory totaled 14,746 homes, 5,851 additional homes on the market compared to today. Two years ago the active inventory reached 17,596 homes, 8,701 additional homes compared to today. The expected market time for all homes in Orange County increased slightly over the past two weeks from 2.66 to 2.69 months. Last year the expected market time was 5.38 months and two years ago the expected market time was at 9.66 months. The total pending count, different than demand in that demand only tracks new pending sales over the past month, increased by 116 homes over the past two weeks to 6,519, its highest level since I began tracking the statistic back in 2007. Last year at this time the total pending count was at 4,192, 2,211 fewer than today. Two years ago there were 2,575, 3,944 fewer than today.
If you are considering buying or selling a home in South Orange County, call on the experts! Dianna and Brian McGarvin 949-370-2652 or visit our website at http://www.pierbowl.com/

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