Today’s data will be specific to the Portland Metro area. However, what is happening in Portland is likely to be a mirror of what is happening in Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles & San Diego. We just tend to be a half-step slower and a bit less volatile.
The first chart shows months of inventory going back to 2007. Months of inventory is defined by our local Multiple Listing Service as the number of active listings at the end of the month divided by the number of closed sales logged that month. Low numbers are bullish for housing prices and high numbers are bearish. BUT (isn’t there always a “But”?) keep your eye on the arithmetic: there are two ways to get low numbers. One can see an increase in demand, that is sales, which takes houses off the market faster than owners choose to put them on. Or, one can see owners decline to put houses on the market because the prices aren’t high enough or because the economy is too putrid for them to want to move — which are generally the same event.
How nice! We are nearly down to the lows of 2007 which were about 4 months of supply. This is not so bullish as one would hope: there were 1,700 new listings in December of 2011 compared to 1,925 in December of 2010, a drop of nearly 12%. But wait! The number of sales pending increased from 1,210 in 2010 to 1,443 in 2011, a whopping 19%, while the number of sales closed increased from 1,462 to 1,612, a strong 10%. This is the sort of action we need to see to staunch the bleeding in prices. To complete the numerical mixed bag, prices were down a very bearish 5%, year over year, but time on the market decreased by 2.6%, which is bullish. The Case-Shiller numbers for December will appear in February, so then we will see the seasonally adjusted price series. Perhaps 2012 is the year the economy and the housing market (or is it the housing market, thus the economy?) turn up.
The biggest winners & losers, by MLS zone were:
West Side winners were Area 149, Northwest Washington County, losing 1.7% in value, and Area 147, Lake Oswego & West Linn, losing 1.4%.
West Side losers were Area 150, Beaverton & Aloha, losing 9.7% and Area 152, Hillsboro & Forest Grove, losing 9.2%.
On the East side, the winner Was Area 141, North Portland, losing only 3.6%. The hardest hit were Areas 143, SE Portland, losing 9.7%; 144, Gresham & Troutdale which lost 8.4%; and 146,Oregon City-Canby which lost 8.0%
Across the Columbia River is Vancouver/Clark County which is part of the Portland Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area. Those numbers should be rolled into the Case-Shiller numbers, and if they are, tend to skew the results downward from the perspective of Portlanders. Those numbers are:
Number of new listings down 11%, in line with Portland’s; sales pending, up 7.6%; sales closed up 4.6%; and prices down 10.5%. As you can see, Clark County numbers are significantly weaker than Portland’s.
I am back for the new year; you can expect to see regular posts — at least twice weekly, though it seems unlikely that I will manage daily posts.
I hope all of you have a healthy, happy and prosperous 2012. Please touch me if you need real estate representation in the Portland Metro area. ron@rondavishomes.com.