L.A. Land

The rapidly changing landscape of the real estate market in Los Angeles and beyond

Category: Inventory

Slicing and dicing L.A. listings

March 2, 2009 |  6:48 pm

HousingTracker's weekly listing prices and numbers are up, but some new functions at Realtor.com now provide additional details about local markets.

From HousingTracker.net, for Los Angeles:

        2009-03-02Month/Month   Year/Year
Median Listing Price $369,900 0.2% -20.3%
Number of Listings 36,910 -2.4% -23.2%

From Realtor.com, a wider view of the Los Angeles metro market:

Average Days On Market: 144
Active Listings: 265,519
Median Listing Price: $286,500
Average Sale Price: $370,895

From the main page, click on Find Home Values in the upper right and then click on the map. Or use the search field to find a specific city. For example, for Culver City:

Average Days On Market: 100
Active Listings: 140
Median Listing Price: $580,000
Average Sale Price: $552,870

Days on the market, while interesting to know, is often misleading because properties taken off the market and relisted start counting all over again. But Trulia is looking at coming up with a more complete listing history. Stay tuned for that.

-- Lauren Beale

Thoughts? Comments?


Tracking L.A. County listing prices

February 27, 2009 |  9:00 am

Housing Tracker reports that as of Feb. 23 the median listing price in Los Angeles County was $369,000 -- the same level as last month and down 21.9% from a year ago. That's a far cry from the April 2006 asking price of $579,666.

Although that's the highest median asking price they have listed for now, there's no way to tell if that was the bubble peak. A note titled "to do" on the site indicates that they'll be extending the data back to August 2005 at some point.

The inventory of for-sale homes continued to drop, falling 22.5% year over year to 37,418 -- down 1.1% from the previous month.

Here's the weekly tracking:

Last 5 Weeks for Los Angeles

Week ofSFH+Condo
Inventory
25th
Percentile
Median75th
Percentile
2009-02-23 37,418 $250,000 $369,000 $629,000
2009-02-16 37,103 $250,000 $369,500 $625,000
2009-02-09 37,266 $250,000 $369,000 $622,110
2009-02-02 37,112 $254,900 $369,000 $614,900
2009-01-31 37,816 $254,900 $369,000 $615,000

Nice to have you back after a several months break, HousingTracker.

-- Lauren Beale

Thoughts? Comments?


Bank sees huge "shadow inventory" of foreclosed houses

August 13, 2008 |  9:50 pm

An update to my earlier post about inventory issues, which briefly discussed the concept of "shadow inventory." In that post, I wrote of "a theory floating around various blogs that listed inventory is deceptive because banks and lenders are quietly sitting on large and growing piles of foreclosed houses -- so-called shadow inventory."

It's a bit more than a theory floating around a few blogs, as Sacramento Real Estate Statistics reports in this excellent post, which quotes extensively from a Deutsche Bank report on the subject of shadow inventory. Highlights of the Deutsche Bank report:    

"MLS listings are missing large amounts of distressed inventory 

... Based on our analysis, MLS based listing inventory is significantly understating the extent of foreclosure inventory in many markets."

The Deutsche Bank report is the source of a shocking number you may have seen in the comment section. Based on the bank's research and estimates, the inventory of foreclosed homes in Greater Los Angeles stands at 88,843 units; that is far higher than the entire MLS-listed inventory for the metro area, 62,379. The bank's estimates are based on various sources that include pre-foreclosure filings as tabulated by RealtyTrac. My analysis is that it is likely the 88,843 estimate is higher than the actual number of foreclosed houses in Los Angeles, but it still a staggeringly high estimate.

--Peter Viles

Your thoughts? Comments? E-mail story tips to peter.viles@latimes.com

Hat tip: Patrick.net


Could this be a trend? Home sales up in Riverside County*

July 25, 2008 | 11:42 am

A report today by the California Assn. of Realtors says sales of existing homes were up 17.5% statewide in June from a year ago: 420,550 single-family homes were sold in June at a seasonally adjusted Sold_2 rate, versus 357,890 in June 2007. A big reason for the increase: bargain hunting at the lower end of the price range.

"Sales were driven in part by larges shares of deeply discounted distressed sales in many parts of the state," said CAR president William E. Brown.

The counties showing the most sales strength were, not surprisingly, those hardest hit by foreclosures. Sales in Sacramento County nearly doubled, according to CAR's seasonally unadjusted data; in Riverside County, sales jumped 75%.

This is more or less in keeping with data released last week by research firm DataQuick Information Systems. For the month of June, DataQuick reported, sales were in positive territory in the Inland Empire.

Nonetheless, by all measures prices continue to decline -- according to the Realtors, the statewide median home price declined 37.7% to $368,250 -- no doubt because all these resurgent home buyers are driving hard bargains.

*Update and clarification:

The reason the C.A.R. numbers differ from the DataQuick numbers is because C.A.R. uses seasonally adjusted data. From its report today:

The statewide sales figures represents what the total number of homes sold during 2008 would be if sales maintained the June pace throughout the year. It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

Posted by Annette Haddad

Photo: Associated Press

Question? Comments? Email: annette.haddad@latimes.com


A market overview: 'It's pretty ugly out there'

April 18, 2008 |  3:21 pm

Jyo7xnncThis wide-ranging market overview, to be published in Sunday's L.A. Times, but now available online, is worth checking out. Headline: "The Muted Market."

Highlights:

--"It's pretty ugly out there," says longtime Coldwell Banker broker David Toyama.  He says business is down 50% from last year.

--Inventory, expressed in months to sell, is running nearly three times greater than historical averages. In February, inventory in L.A. County stood at 21.2 months' worth of sales -- up from 10.6 months a year ago.

--One seller learned the hard (expensive) way how not to sell into a declining market: She listed her West Covina house for $600,000 in February 2007, reduced it to $550,000, then $480,000, then $460,000. She finally sold it after 11 months on the market, for $440,000.

Your thoughts? Comments? E-mail story tips to peter.viles@latimes.com.
Photo Credit: L.A. Times



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