Now... where were we?
Oh yes. The R/E industry puts the full court press on home owners starting in November who do not HAVE to sell and encourages them to let their listings expire ("relist in spirng" they are told). This will, hopefully, create an artificial reduction in inventory.
The plan... reduce inventory, create demand, increase sales, halt the decline in housing prices.
January is the first month to really test the results.
And what will we see in the newspapers next week?
Sales should come in at about 764 v. 1,819 from January 2008. That's a 58% drop in sales from this time last year.
Inventory reached 15,066 listings, resulting in a 51% increase in inventory from this time last year.
A 60% drop in sales and a 50% increase in inventory.
The best stat to watch is Months of Inventory (MOI). This figure illustrates the strength (or lack thereof) of the market best of all. Last January (2008) the MOI sat at 5.5 months (your house, on average, would take 5.5 months to sell if priced like other comparable homes).
This month? The MOI is sitting at 20 months, almost two years.
Unless the market dramatically explodes in February and March, you will see the number of listings (and thus the amount of available inventory) explode in April.
And tons of product combined with few sales will produce only one result.
Let's face it... 764 properties sold last month. Buyers are out there... but they will only buy if there is a screaming deal (read minimum of 30% below comparable properties).
And there are a whole raft of condos coming on the market this year (from those developments who have not halted construction).
Inventory is going to explode upwards.
With the economy and these conditions on the horizon, would you buy a house right now?
Oh yes. The R/E industry puts the full court press on home owners starting in November who do not HAVE to sell and encourages them to let their listings expire ("relist in spirng" they are told). This will, hopefully, create an artificial reduction in inventory.
The plan... reduce inventory, create demand, increase sales, halt the decline in housing prices.
January is the first month to really test the results.
And what will we see in the newspapers next week?
Sales should come in at about 764 v. 1,819 from January 2008. That's a 58% drop in sales from this time last year.
Inventory reached 15,066 listings, resulting in a 51% increase in inventory from this time last year.
A 60% drop in sales and a 50% increase in inventory.
The best stat to watch is Months of Inventory (MOI). This figure illustrates the strength (or lack thereof) of the market best of all. Last January (2008) the MOI sat at 5.5 months (your house, on average, would take 5.5 months to sell if priced like other comparable homes).
This month? The MOI is sitting at 20 months, almost two years.
Unless the market dramatically explodes in February and March, you will see the number of listings (and thus the amount of available inventory) explode in April.
And tons of product combined with few sales will produce only one result.
Let's face it... 764 properties sold last month. Buyers are out there... but they will only buy if there is a screaming deal (read minimum of 30% below comparable properties).
And there are a whole raft of condos coming on the market this year (from those developments who have not halted construction).
Inventory is going to explode upwards.
With the economy and these conditions on the horizon, would you buy a house right now?





