One segment of the market that brokers are watching closely is the $300,000 and below single-family home market, which saw pending sales decrease 24 percent, closed sales decrease 19 percent, and inventory decrease 2 percent in July. In fact, the entire single-family home market is getting stretched thin as inventory tightens. In July, inventory rose just 3 percent overall, but single family home inventory decreased 1 percent.
Bill Coffey, Broker Manager of Amerivest Realty Naples, pointed out, “The July report showed the median closed price for homes under $300,000 was the highest since 2008. However, the median closed price for homes over $300,000 was the lowest reported in 9 years!”
According to the report, overall median closed prices in July increased 6 percent to $319,000 from $300,000 in July 2016. For homes in the $300,000 and below price category, the median closed price increased only 3 percent to $225,000 from $219,000 in July 2016. And for homes above $300,000, the median closed price decreased 7 percent to $485,000 from $524,000 in July 2016.
Many broker analysts reviewing the July report agreed that an increase in conventional sales (homes purchased with financing) is a good sign that first-time homebuyers are gaining a foothold in the market. As such, the July Market Report showed total closed sales were split almost equally between cash sales and conventional sales.
Kathy Zorn, broker/owner, Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Pristine, said she is optimistic that the third quarter closed sales will finish ahead of the second quarter, and pointed to activity in the $500,000 to $1 million price category, which saw the overall pending sales increase 44 percent in July from July 2016. “The median closed price went down 16 percent for condos in this $500,000 to $1 million price category. I believe this is a reflection of smart pricing strategies finally taking hold.”
For months, broker analysts and NABOR® have warned against setting unrealistic pricing, a strategy that Dominic Pallini, NABOR® President and Broker at Vanderbilt Realty, said can “hurt a homebuyer because a home is often overlooked if it’s overpriced.”
High prices are a strategy that can work in an accelerating market, but it’s risky. A home might sit for months without an offer and sellers typically end up marking the price down, perhaps lower than it should have sold for in the first place. A licensed REALTOR® uses real-time MLS data that can help a seller hit the sweet spot when setting the listing price: a price that’s high enough to reflect the home’s value, but attractive enough to gain buyer attention and get it sold quickly.
Another segment that brokers are watching closely is the number of days on the market it takes for a property to sell, which is on the rise and hit 105 days in July. One reason for this could be cosmetic. According to Brenda Fioretti, Managing Broker at Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Florida Realty, “Many homebuyers are looking for a coastal, contemporary look, not the Mediterranean or Tuscan look that dominates much of the existing home market and appears dated. Sellers must either consider making renovations to meet the light, coastal look buyers want or reducing the home’s price in order to stay competitive with the new construction product that reflects this new coastal, contemporary style.”
The NABOR® July 2017 Market Report provides comparisons of single-family home and condominium sales (via the Southwest Florida MLS), price ranges, and geographic segmentation and includes an overall market summary. The NABOR® July 2017 sales statistics are presented in chart format, including these overall (single-family and condominium) findings: