July 8, 2024
Someday, perhaps, the history of the 2020 Global Pandemic could encapsulate an entire decade – to 2030, and appropriately start by featuring the health crisis and widespread fear that the human race faced on every continent. Then the pages will shift to the more enduring consequences on people’s lives economically. Among other things, the pandemic spurred hyperactive government spending (not just in the U.S.) which later turned into significantly higher inflation. That, subsequently, increased housing costs (of all kinds), and for a few muddling years, placed residential real estate into a benign form of purgatory, and noteworthy for its limited trading activity. If this theory holds, we are talking about late 2023-to-early 2027, the literal “Middle Ages” of this so-called Pandemic Decade. And then optimistically, only to emerge – in 2030, more or less unscathed and back to ‘normal.’
This is the delusional part of this theory: there never is a normal. Rather, there are cycles, variations on previous conditions. For example, in some ways the current market we are experiencing reminds many real estate veterans of 2009-2012, but not because of a Great Financial Crisis in the preceding years, but rather because of the aforementioned hyperinflation in the latest go around. Similarly, the jacked-up sales cycle, albeit brief, immediately following the onset of the pandemic reminds these same real estate Pros of the early 2000s. Remember, the ‘fog-a-mirror-get-a-giant, non-recourse loan-and-buy-a-house’ era? That was as crazy as 25% to 40% price increases in the second half of 2020 until early 2022, when the Fed started increasing rates considerably.
The latest sobering news, which led us to think of this Pandemic Decade theory and the Middle Ages, is from Bank of America. One of its economists, Michael Gapen, recently told CNN that “the U.S. housing market is stuck and we are not convinced it will become unstuck until 2026, or later.” Mr. Gapen continued: “This will take many years to work itself out. There isn’t a magic fix.”
Everyone remotely paying attention has heard that a big reason for the reduced levels of transaction activity is because so many people refinanced their homes when rates were around 3%, and these folks are not selling. The situation is compounded, however, by the ongoing push in home prices. The National Association of Realtors just reported that national median existing-home price in May reached $419,300, a record going back to 2019. The Bay Area’s median home price, by comparison, was $1.3 million in the same month while California’s was $836,110. Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal ran a story June 28 with the headline: “Overvalued Houses are a Warning Sign,” and noted that prices jumped 1.2% in April from March and are now almost 50% higher than in 2019. We can’t say that prices increased that much in Sonoma County in the last five years, but it’s not far off.
All this isn’t to say that the housing market is frozen. It’s not. For example, BAREIS reported in May that 431 Sonoma County homes sold, or 5% fewer than the same month a year earlier. Sonoma County Properties was involved in one of those sales, which is a short story unto itself (another time), and with a pretty good outcome for the seller, as we closed for nearly $400,000 above the asking price.
The pace of sales may be off for the time being and that probably isn’t going to change anytime soon, yet the four primary drivers in the housing market are and will continue to be present, particularly with the rise of Gen Z. They are the primary group in the first driver, household formation/starting a family, while immigration, divorce and death are the other constants associated with an active housing market.
Serving Cloverdale, Graton, Healdsburg, Rohnert Park, Santa Rosa, Sebastopol, Tomales, Windsor and surrounding Sonoma County, CA areas.
The First step when selling your home is to set the right price for the current market conditions in your area.
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