Real Estate is local...even in NH it is local to whatever area you
reside in. Pockets of the market are very very busy but it has been a
harsh winter...weather wise and real estate wise. Monika and I have had
the busiest December and January that we can remember. They are usually
very slow months, they were busy for us. February slowed down a bit and
now that March is here...we're busy again. That's our take on our local
real estate market!
This months NH Association of REALTORS market trend report just came
out and Peter Francese offers up some very interesting reading.
Reprinted below is the report in it's entirety.
The darkest time is just before the dawn ...
-by Peter FranceseThere's no lipstick big enough to put on this ugly
bear market. During the past two months we've had the most miserable
weather, darkest economic news and an awful real estate market. The
stock market swoon, massive credit market problems, and falling
consumer confidence have produced a truly extraordinary decline in real
estate transactions throughout our state as well as the nation.
Sales volume during the first two months of this year for all New
Hampshire properties was down 30 percent, residential was off 28
percent and condominium sales volume was 34 percent below the same
period last year. It doesn't get much worse than that. Median
residential home prices dropped just 7.5 percent despite a 24 percent
drop in units sold while condominium median selling price edged down
only 2.4 percent, even though units sold were off 24 percent.
We are just now beginning to see articles in investment publications suggesting that this is the
time to consider buying a home ..
There is no doubt
that New Hampshire Realtors®, right along with many of the home owners
they serve, are feeling a great deal of financial pain because of this
unforeseen convergence of bad news and events. During January and
February, the dollar volume of real estate transactions in our state
was $187.5 million below the same period last year. That's a drop of
over $3 million a day.
At the same time, the nation's largest
financial institutions have experienced home mortgage related
securities losses in excess of $150 billion, according to the Wall
Street Journal. And they will soon be writing off billions more in bad
home equity loans. Clearly something had to be done at the national
level, and that's exactly what's happening.
First, the Federal Reserve Bank is buying $200
billion worth of mortgage backed securities, and the stock averages
temporarily jumped in celebration. Second, the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) that guarantees home loans is greatly expanding
its role and is signing up ailing mortgage lenders who would have been
unable to make any new loans without such guarantees.
This will enable a great many homeowners to
refinance their adjustable rate mortgages and avoid foreclosure,
something that was unavailable to them just a couple of months ago. It
also comes at a time when Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, previously the
big buyers of home mortgages, are becoming a lot more risk-averse.
Third, and I
think most important, is we are just now beginning to see articles in
investment publications suggesting that this is the time to consider
buying a home.
The best example of this is Jonathan Clements March 12 column in The Wall Street Journal: www.wsj.com. I urge every Realtor® to get a copy.
Mr. Clements column, "Getting Going," is
widely read and highly respected. In that March 12 column, he talks
about three reasons to buy a house this spring: to trade up, to buy a
second home, or to buy one for your adult children. Each of those
reasons has relevance here in New Hampshire, where there are so many
second homes, and a huge number of older couples with adult children
who may have been unable to afford a home here.
There has been an incredible amount of bad
news of late, and there is no doubt that consumers are feeling at least
as poorly and risk-averse as the mortgage lenders. But the Federal
Reserve Bank, FHA and other federal agencies are pulling out all the
stops to improve financial market conditions as well as consumer
confidence and increase the ability of average Americans to buy a home.
When those efforts start to pay off, things
will likely improve in the New Hampshire real estate market and
elsewhere. But we now have a new element to think about. Given the
amazing rapidity with which news and information travels on the web, I
think the turnaround will happen a lot faster this time than in the
pre-internet era of the late 1980s.
While it's not a good idea to drive a car just
by looking in the rearview mirror, an occasional glance backwards at
least tells you where you have been. Looking back at the past two
months in the chart below is, for the most part, just a sad reminder of
how bad things have been. But given the relatively greater strength of
the New Hampshire economy and the New Hampshire Advantage, we have a
better-than-even chance of seeing more positive numbers in future
months.
| County |
Units sold
|
% change 2007-08
|
Median
price
|
% change 2007-08
|
Average price
|
% change 2007-08 |
| Belknap |
59
|
-37%
|
$220,000
|
6%
|
$340,000
|
-6%
|
|
Carroll
|
70
|
-18%
|
$199,950
|
-18%
|
$287,000 |
-25%
|
|
Cheshire
|
55
|
-28%
|
$150,000
|
-22%
|
$170,600
|
-20%
|
|
Coos
|
30
|
-30%
|
$125,000
|
47%
|
$169,100
|
55%
|
|
Grafton
|
76
|
-22%
|
$198,000
|
4%
|
$262,900
|
7%
|
|
Hillsborough
|
272
|
-30%
|
$252,000
|
-9%
|
$287,400
|
-7%
|
|
Merrimack
|
138
|
-16%
|
$220,850
|
-10%
|
$283,700
|
7%
|
|
Rockingham
|
270
|
-14%
|
$284,950
|
-7%
|
$326,700
|
-6%
|
|
Strafford
|
92
|
-38%
|
$215,250
|
-11%
|
$243,000
|
-10%
|
|
Sullivan
|
50
|
-4%
|
$157,500
|
-15%
|
$205,600
|
-3%
|
|
Statewide
|
1,112
|
-24%
|
$235,000
|
-7%
|
$281,300
|
-5%
|
Source: Northern New England Real Estate Network (NNEREN).
Statistics are based on information from NNEREN for the respective
periods shown for the respective regions in the State of New Hampshire
or all towns in the State of New Hampshire. All analysis and commentary
related to the statistics is that of the New Hampshire Association of
REALTORS® and not that of NNEREN. |