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California Home Sales Jump 33.1% From February
Median Price Gains 4.8 Percent

PropertyRadar - March 2015 California single-family home and condominium sales were 31,989, a 33.1 percent jump from 24,031 in February, the biggest March increase in three years. Driving the increase in sales was the 36.7 percent increase in non-distressed property sales for the month. Non-distressed property sales in March represented 82.8 percent of total sales, up from 79.7 percent a year earlier and a low of 24.3 percent in January 2009.

On a year-over-year basis, sales were up 8.8 percent from 29,617 in March 2014. Regionally, March sales gained 27.2 percent across the nine Bay Area counties, 41.9 percent in Southern California, and 17.7 percent in Central California.

“For the first time in 16 months, sales were higher than a year earlier,” said Madeline Schnapp, Director of Economic Research for PropertyRadar. “Pent-up demand, mild winter weather and attractive interest rates have created a wellspring of California housing market sales. Despite the California drought dominating headlines, we aren’t seeing data that suggests the drought is having a negative impact on the market. Obviously we’ll continue to monitor that closely.”

The median price of a California home was 393,000 dollars in March, a gain of 18,000 dollars, or 4.8 percent, from 375,000 dollars in February. For the month, median prices rose in 17 of California’s largest 26 counties. On a year-over-year basis, the median price of a California home was up 4.9 percent.

“After eight months of flat to declining prices, the surge in March sales was enough to push prices significantly higher,” said Schnapp. “Affordability, particularly in California’s sought after coastal areas, has become a big problem. The median income homebuyer in these areas can no longer afford to buy the median priced home. While inventory indicators seem generally favorable, you’d be hard pressed to find buyers who are not complaining of a lack of available homes for sale.”

March Foreclosure Starts, Notices of Default (NODs), were nearly unchanged from February but were down 15.5 percent in the past 12 months. Meanwhile, Notices of Trustee Sale jumped 17.5 percent from February to its highest level since October 2014. Foreclosure Sales fell 6.8 percent for the month and were down 21.3 percent in the past 12 months.

“The surge in Notices of Trustee Sale may be indicative of renewed interest by financial institutions to liquidate foreclosure inventory in order to take advantage of prices nearing pre-crisis levels,” said Schnapp.

In other California housing news:

  • Cash sales totaled 7,657 in March, up 23.5 percent from February and represented 23.9 percent of total sales. Despite the increase in sales this past month, cash sales as a percentage of total sales have been steadily declining since reaching a peak of 40.0 percent of total sales in August 2011. Since then, cash sales are down 46.0 percent. Cash sales were highest in San Francisco and San Mateo counties and lowest in San Diego and Solano counties.
  • Flip sales totaled 1,057 in March, up 26.7 percent for the month but down 18.0 percent for the year. Flip sales are defined as properties that have been resold within six months. Flip sales comprised 3.3 percent of total sales in March, down 0.2 percent from February. Flip sales peaked in June 2013 at 4.7 percent of total sales and have declined 45.7 percent since then.
  • March Institutional Investor LLC and LP purchases totaled 1,190, up 14.5 percent for the month and 0.8 percent from March 2014. Over the longer term, institutional investor demand has retreated due to the lower return on investment and dwindling supply of distressed properties for sale. Institutional purchases were down 46.4 percent since peaking in December 2012. Similarly, Trustee Sale purchases by LLC and LPs were down 82.9 percent from their October 2012 peak.

“As much as we would like to think otherwise, the March surge in sales is likely transitory,” said Schnapp. “High prices, lack of inventory, and uncertainty over water and snow are not going away anytime soon and will likely keep a lid on sales.”

Home Sales

Home Sales – Single-family residence and condominium sales by month from 2007 to current divided into distressed and non-distressed sales. Distressed sales are the sum of short sales, where the home is sold for less than the amount owed, and REO sales, where banks resell homes that they took ownership of after foreclosure. All other sales are considered non-distressed.

Year-over-Year Home Sales

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