The market went to sleep for the holidays and it’s just starting to wake up. Let’s talk about that along with pulling stats like a boss. Then I have a huge market update and review for those interested.

No sales to support higher values: In a normal January the market is in a weird spot. It’s coming out of hibernation from the holidays, and even though buyers eventually start offering higher prices, the most recent sales might not support higher contracts. In other words, sales from November and December might actually be much lower than what buyers are willing to pay in later January and February because the market has begun to awaken out of a lull. The reality is we might not see any upward value movement in sales stats until March, but the upward trend will begin to happen in January and February before we see it in the stats. Data lags the trend. I remind myself of this every year.
Getting practical: In coming time as the market presumably heats up I recommend looking for a pattern of pending sales (probably higher), watching for properties spending less time on the market, and study what prices normally do this time of year in your area. In many locations prices tend to pick up where they left off in the late summer before they faded during the fall.
Game-changing stats: Paying attention to numbers has literally changed my career, so I wanted to give some tips for how to begin pulling stats for a city, county, neighborhood… Here’s a chart you can use to track price changes and a few other key elements (DOWNLOAD here). I highly recommend carving out a few minutes each month to track some of these basics. Then of course find relevant ways to share the numbers with your clients and contacts.

Here’s a video where I talk through how to use the chart as well as mistakes to avoid. It’s about 10 minutes. Click below (or here) and watch in FULL screen:
–——-——- Big monthly market update (it’s long on purpose) ———–——-

Prices have been softening in Sacramento, but it hasn’t been painfully dull like some fall seasons. Overall prices in the region sloughed last month (not a surprise), it took six days longer to sell, and the year closed out with price metrics being about 8-10% higher than December 2016. The number of listings really took a nosedive last month, but that’s what happens since people don’t list in November and December unless they really have to sell. Listings should increase over the next couple months as the market heats up for the spring. I know hungry buyers feel like inventory won’t be coming, but it’ll happen.
Quick insight: Housing inventory is sparse, but one good thing is inventory seems like it went a little more sideways last year instead of declining sharply. On a positive note, the market ended with the lowest number of foreclosures and short sales in the past decade. This isn’t a shocker, but it’s still a sign of healing after the “bubble” burst more than ten years ago. Prices in 2017 increased about the same as they did the past couple years. Lastly, sales volume has been steady for a few years, and that shows the market has found a rhythm.
Recap of 2017 in Sacramento:



I could write more, but let’s get visual instead.
DOWNLOAD 75 graphs HERE: Please download all graphs in this post and more here as a zip file (includes a stat sheet too). See my sharing policy for 5 ways to share (please don’t copy verbatim).
SACRAMENTO COUNTY (more graphs & stats here):










Sacramento County Stats:
- The median price is currently $350,000. It’s about the same as last month & down 0.5% from summer.
- The median price is 11.1% higher than the same time last year.
- Sales volume in December was 5.6% lower this year than 2016. There were 1392 single family detached sales last month.
- It took an average of 36 days to sell a home last month (one year ago it was taking 3 days longer).
- The median days on market last month was 21 days.
- It took 3 more days to sell in Dec. compared to November (median days).
- FHA sales were 20.5% of all sales last month in the county.
- Only 0.7% of sales last month were bank-owned & 0.2% were short sales.
- The avg price per sq ft was about $221, which declined last month (9.6% higher than last year).
- The avg sales price softened about 1.5% last month and is $379,962. This is 10.5% higher than last year.
- Cash sales were 13% of all sales last month.
SACRAMENTO REGION (more graphs & stats here):







Sacramento Region Stats:
- The median price is $385,000. It softened nearly 1% last month.
- The median price is 10% higher than the same time last year.
- Sales volume in December was down 4.7% this year. There were 2202 single family detached sales last month.
- It took an average of 42 days to sell a home last month (one year ago it was taking 2 days longer).
- The median days on market last month was 24 days, which means properties are selling really quickly.
- The median days on market increased by 5 days last month, which shows a slowing in the market.
- FHA sales were 17.5% of all sales last month.
- Only 1.6% of sales last month were bank-owned & 0.9% were short sales.
- The avg price per sq ft was about $225, which decreased 2% last month (8.4% higher than last year).
- The avg sales price decreased 2.5% last month and is 9.1% higher than last year.
- Cash sales were 14% of all sales last month.
PLACER COUNTY (more graphs & stats here):







Placer County Stats
- The median price is $450,000 and decreased slightly last month.
- The median price is 6.1% higher than the same time last year.
- Sales volume in December was 3.6% lower than 2016. There were 450 single family detached sales.
- It took an average of 48 days to sell a home last month (one year ago it was taking 1 less day to sell).
- The median days on market last month was 28 days, which means properties are selling really quickly.
- The median days on market increased 9 days last month (don’t read too much into that).
- FHA sales were 12.6% of all sales.
- There were only 4 bank-owned sales last month and only 7 short sales.
- The avg price per sq ft was $228, which softened about 3% last month (5.7% higher than last year).
- The avg sales price is currently $510,174. This is 8% higher than last year.
- Cash sales were 14.9% of all sales last month.
DOWNLOAD 75 graphs HERE: Please download all graphs in this post and more here as a zip file (includes a stat sheet too). See my sharing policy for 5 ways to share (please don’t copy verbatim).
Questions: What are you seeing out there in the market? Anything I missed? I’d love to hear your take.
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The market has continued to soften, though it’s not really all that soft. Inventory is up, price reductions have increased, sales volume has been dropping, it took three days longer to sell last month in the region, and price metrics are down about 1% from the height of summer. Overall the market is clearly slowing down for the season, though it’s not painfully dull like it was in 2013 or 2014 during the fall. This is a key to understand because when saying values are “softening” some interpret that to mean the market is really slow or crashing. But that’s not what I’m saying.




















Glowing and slowing. That’s a good way to sum up the market. The stats are generally glowing, but we’re starting to see subtle signs of a seasonal slowing. Price stats in Sacramento County increased by about 1% last month and they’re up 8-10% from last year (that doesn’t mean actual values are up that much in every neighborhood and price range). Though if we look closely, especially in the region as a whole, prices dipped by 1% last month, inventory is up slightly, and sales volume sloughed off last month (which isn’t a surprise). Properties have been selling very quickly still in only 9 median days in Sacramento County and 11 in the region. For perspective, on average it was taking about a week longer to sell a home last year. The market actually tends to normally show a slowness in days on market between June and July, but we didn’t see that this year, which is a reminder the market feels a bit more aggressive right now compared to last year. Overall housing inventory increased last month, but the bigger story is it’s down about 14% in the region from last year. Despite all the glorious stats, the market is still price sensitive, which means buyers aren’t willing to pull the trigger at any price (did you hear that sellers?). Oh, and by the way, the median price in Sacramento County is now 10% from the peak in 2005. I could go on and on with words, but let me share some graphs to show the market visually.



















At times it’s not very popular in the real estate community to publicly talk about the market slowing, but it’s something that happens nearly every single year. I realize we have big headlines about the market being “hot”, and it really is in many way, but catching the symptoms of a slowing market is key for valuing properties (and it’s good for clients). I suggest starting to watch price reductions more closely because they’ve been increasing lately in Sacramento and this is one of the first signs of a slowing market. Also pay attention to days on market increasing in coming time along with some of the other factors above (including the sales to list price ratio). I highly recommend asking other real estate professionals the question, “What are you seeing out there?” It’s amazing the type of insight you can glean from title reps, loan officers, appraisers, agents, escrow officers, etc…



















