What's Really Happening in the San Mateo & Santa Clara County Housing Market?

 Higher interest rates, Low unemployment, Help Wanted signs, Empty store fronts, are all indicating to the passer by that the economy is confusing.  " Residential sales are down substantially on a year-over-year basis, inventory is on the rise, and price reductions are becoming more common."

The reader should keep in mind that our real estate market moves differently than the rest of the United States and the rest of the State of California.  The "media" which reports real estate is 4-6 weeks behind in their reports.  Sort of like listening to a delayed broadcast of a baseball game while watching it live.  

Sales are definitely down from June of last year some 30%.  Last year was also the hottest housing market we have had in the past 12 years.  So it is bound to have some pause.  Still it appears there was about 5% over biding during the slow down.  So things are not that bad.

What is really bothersome is the "Feeling" of this market environment.  Like the run up the past 12 years in San Mateo and Santa Clara County have been dominated have been dominated by the FAANG Stocks.  Quarterly Revenue growth was astronomical.  With that growth has been a similar growth in stock values and employment.  All have added to higher housing prices and a highly affluent class of employees. That has come to an end.  Higher interest rates, higher inflation have attributed to lower sales and earnings, either or both, for FAANG.  Layoffs in an industry that saw nothing but new hiring and a strong class of headhunters have started.  Growth has given way to profits protection and eliminating costs.  The overall stock market collapse has created the realization that "I should have sold" being a standard to, "honey, what happened to our retirement portfolio".  Growth stocks are down, 60,70,80 %.  A rally during this past earning quarter is being called a Bear Market Rally.  

This all impacts the Housing Market.  CRASH?  This is not a crash, it is a correction from over zealous buyers and investors both flush with cash looking out the rear view mirror, without viewing the larger picture out the front window.  

What it means for the buyer is that you have more time, more choices and less competition of all cash offers and over bids.  To the sellers it means that you will not get the price your neighbor got 3, 6 or 12 months ago.  The seller must realize the market will go back to a barter of back and forth offers and counter offers with financing and appraisal contingencies.  

There should be a realization that the real estate agent does not make the market.  The market is a "willing buyer and willing seller" agreeing with the help of the negotiating skills of a buyer's agent and a seller's agent.  Homes do sell, it takes a little longer and a little less than past sales.

The U.S. gross domestic product contracted in the first quarter by 1.5%.  The stock market will tumble again.  inflation will remain high and be a continued reason for interest rates to go higher.  Pending homes have fallen for six straight months.  They are now below 2019 levels.  The buyer now controls this market not the seller and the lack of inventory.

This will not be a straight forward recession.  While job cuts in mortgage brokers and hiring freezes in the high tech industry exist, there are two job opening for each person unemployed. That means wages must go up.  Wages went up 5.5% from a year ago.  That did not match the 8% rise in the cost of living. 

While recession usually means bad news for the commercial market, it is booming!  Apartment building demand is high and the rental market investor in single family homes is high.  Look at East Palo Alto single family residential market as an example of the single family rental market....OVER BIDS.

Warehouse demand is strong as retailers are looking for space for product to avoid supply side disruptions.

It all comes down to the $9 trillion that the FED has created and it still shows in the FED Balance sheet.  Investors are looking for stability and do not want volatility.  Have the Crypto players lost enough to put them back into sensible investing?

The real problem in real estate is the office market.  SF Chronicle writes, "Downtown is Dying.  Why our pandemic recovery is dead last in the nation".  Heard on the Street in the Saturday/ Sunday Wall Street Journal writes, "The Future of Our Empty Downtowns.  The reason?  Over specialization in tech and finance.  The employees can all work form home!

This is a 70's market.  When the Modern Portfolio Theory of buying indexes turns out to be a loser.  Individuals without experience of stock picking loose out.  Real Estate will be the only answer to the build up in savings.  That is why Commercial Apartment Buildings are in demand.  6.75% to +8% Cap Rate with rental increase is certainly a better choice than taking a shot on Meta's recovery.  Maybe that is why the recent writing on why the Luxury High End in our area is at record levels....The Captains are not going down with the ship!

Todays summary of MLS Listings for San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties

New Listing (33)
List Price Increased (2)
List Price Decreased (29)
Transaction Fell Through (1)
Listing Back On Market (1)
Contingent (5)
Pending (32)
Changed to Sold (34)
Changed to Rented (0)
Listing Expired (2)
Listing Canceled (14)

The Prices Come Tumbling Down

Some years ago I came face to face with a competitor over a Menlo Park Listing.  The owners were from Oregon.  They had owned the property for some time.  They were faced with updating and correcting many problems that would put them in violation of the Landlord/Renters Act if not repaired.  When they faced the costs of updating the house and property and rent the recapture rate was too far out based upon their age.  They opted to sell.

The agent I had known from his association with another Brokerage Firm of national recognition.  He was now an independent.  Going independent was not something new.  The real estate brokerage firms at that time had a scale of payouts based upon production.  The more the agent produced the higher the payout.  The exception to the rule were the agents who consistently were larger producers.  They got the highest payout both realtor and brokerage could agree upon.

The realtor made a proposal that put me back.  "I will buy the property, all cash, close in 10 days or at your discretion, no commission, no inspections, no state and federal regulatory forms. " 

I had the standard of disclosures, 5% commission, inspections, marketing plan and price based upon similar properties both active and sold.  I LOST.

The sale went through under a 1031 exchange.  The couple went back to Oregon. The realtor used an LLC, sub-divided the property, built two homes and eventually sold them for 4 times his purchase price.

This was my first introduction to the Fix & Flip buyer.  Coming from the investment community the concept of creating value from building and remodeling was not new.  But seeing it applied to residential single family homes was an eye opener,

Soon, this type of buyer began to proliferate the market place.  Realtors began to go independent and began prospecting as they did when they were with the major Real Estate Brokerages.  This time it was for themselves.  There were and are firms who will process a transaction for a minimal amount of money leaving the agent with well over 90% of the commissions.  If no commissions the cost of the transfer could be done directly with a local title company.

Sensing a change in the market banks and lending institutions began to offer construction contracts to the Fix & Flip buyer.  Terms were fairly easy.  70% of improved value loan required a qualified Broker Price Opinion of what the property would be worth when completed per a formal written opinion.  This started a new source of business that had gone idle after the Lehman Crash and the various Volker Rules.  The terms of the loans all varied by the institution but all were similar in the end.  Once the occupancy permit was issued by the City of County, the loan was due and payable within a set period of time. 

The search began for target properties. like any other realtor  The easiest target were the properties east of Highway 101.  Most were in lower income areas, many were rentals and many were in neglected condition.  Covid accelerated this market as the rent holdouts and foreclosure protection put the Mom and Pop landlords financially tight positions.  When a buyer sent out letters of all cash, no commissions and inspections there were responses.  The renters got Cash to vacate their back rent debt forgiven, the seller got out and what was left was financial opportunity.

This upset the statistics from reality.  The purchases did not show up in the multiple listing services.  Realtors did not see sale and the media only saw what was listed.  The assumption was no sales, lack of inventory was mistaken.  There was a very active "Dark" market outside of the MLS system. 

It was not too long for the major real estate firms to realize the game.  They too got into the game by working with large builders and buyers of income properties.  The negative to this was they still wanted a commission.

The Federal Reserve was pumping money into our financial system in record amounts with the total being around $9 Trillion.  A great deal of money seeking investments.  All types of Risk Assets soon saw astronomical rises.  New assets came about through the invention of technology and Wall Street Banks.   What was missed was the large source of funds available to the old stand by....Real Estate and a new buyer community.

Areas like East Palo Alto,East Menlo Park, East San Mateo saw a dramatic change in their character.  The character change was influenced further by the development of the Facebook Campus, and the numerous start ups that allowed inexpensive housing in the Cal Train Corridor to prosper.

Compared to the homes of Palo Alto, Menlo Park and San Mateo, Hillsborough and Burlingame; these homes were cheap!

All good things come to an end.  The FED increased interest rates to stop inflation, the virtual workers movement from working from an office had an impact on demand.  Higher mortgage rates put many homes out of reach.  Fortunately the homes East of 101 were still affordable.   They continued to move quickly.  This kept the flow of funds to pay off bank loans profitable to banks and lender alike.  The over bids continue in these comparatively low priced homes.

As rates increased soon the fear of Recession began to become a new conversation item in media.  Silicon Valley firms began to layoff employees and many accepted the virtual employee.  The virtual employees found small towns of Californai very acceptable.  El Dorado Hills became a community of young people with families and affordable homes, as many of similar communities have today.  Even the luxury market buyer found gated communities in Loomis and Granite Bay far more affordable than Atherton, Los Altos, Menlo Park, Woodside, Portola Valley or Hillsborough.

PRICES COME TUMBLING DOWN

Sooner or later it was bound to happen.  Fear of Recession, inability to qualify to higher interest rates and pure simple fear of the future has caused price cuts of listed homes and sales price below list.

The pressure is now on the Fix and Flip buyer.  The banks all want their money within the terms.  There is no way to not evade the due on completion clause.  "Notice of Foreclosure" is now popping up.  Deed in leu of legal foreclosure keeps the property out of legal proceedings.  The bank sells the property and if there is anything left over it goes to the borrower.

As the FED raises near term rates mortgage rates increase.  As mortgage rates increase the pressure is on the buyer seeking finance.  Will they qualify.  Offers will all be subject to financing and appraisal.  Inability to pass will find the property back on the market.  All cash buyers will be faced with higher savings rates and the question is will the price come down and will I be wise to get higher interest on my cash balance than buy?

Sellers will have two choices:take the property off the market, wait, or cut the price and sell.  There really is no choice.  Cut the price and sell.  The price in the future will or could be lower.  To  the buyer it is opportunity.  The price is lower, the rate will be fixed and if they wait a lower price is not that much an advantage as the higher cost of the interest rate on the mortgage.

To the Fix and Flipper, the pressure is on.  Foreclosures are most certain for the novice who will hold out think the market will pop back.  Once the REO market returns buyers and investors will return.  To the average buyer this is a market they are restricted from. There is not bidding at the court house steps, sale occur between banks and well qualified buyers who will buy direct; without MLS REO listings.  To those who want a home put your offers in at what you can afford. 10% under the list or more.  The sellers of Fix and Flip have little choice.

I don't see much outlook for sellers in this market.  The speculators need to be washed out before our market returns to what it was before the FED flooded the economy with cash!

RENT DOMINO FALLING?

Rent is a function of value.  Consider the rent like interest you receive on an investment.  When interest rates rise and property values fall, rent cannot stay up!  Silicon Valley rental yields historically are about 3% of property value.  That means if you are renting a 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath house for $5000 per month the value of the house is $2.2 million.  If the prices of homes weaken the 3% remains the same and the rent declines.  

There is competition of rent to owning a home.  Rent can't go beyond the cost of home ownership. There is always a premium a buyer is willing to pay once they were a renter.  The corporate property owner is generally an apartment building.  Turnover occurs and rents rise on a regular basis.  The single family home is generally a "mom & pop" situation.  They will normally collect rent and repair the structure and most cases take care of the water and landscaping expenses.  They don't raise rents annually, but they are difficult to come immediately to make repairs.  When there is a property manager, he too will be difficult to get to work on the property if it becomes apparent there is a substantial amount of deferred maintenance.  The property manager usually get a 6% annual fee for their work.  Once the calls become more often then spend more time and make less.  At some point the property manager would rather ignore the requests and get the renter to move.  Property Manager and Owner win with a higher rent and a higher % fee to the Property Manager.  

Rents are not that easy to monitor.  This is an off the grid type of market.  Signs in the window, postings on Craig's List and Zillow or Zumper or another such service and no fees to a realtor.   Once it rents there is no notice of the rent agreed upon.  It becomes a word of mouth situation of a private under ground of real estate agents.  Today, prices are coming down.  Competition out of the area pulls rental prices down as does the value of the home.

This is all a part of killing Inflation.  The FED is committed to killing inflation so rents and home prices must go down.  This is opportunity.  The home buyer is the greatest benefactor than the renter.  Home prices will once again increase once the FED has killed inflation.  Home values will see value from accretion of equity from mortgage payments of principal and interest added to the increase in property value over the next 10-20 years.  Renters will still fight with landlords and land lords will want to get the most for as little cost to them.  Interest rates on mortgages today will be cheaper than in the future.  Whether the price of the home goes down further is of little consequences when the cost of the mortgage remains fixed and at a lower rates than the future market rate as the FED raises rates or shrinks money Supply by either selling FED inventory of bonds or letting them mature without re-investment the proceeds.

American Cash Hoard Could Cushion a Downturn

There is something missing from the "Media" that must be addressed in forecasting Home Prices.  What you and I have either read or seen has dealt with Recession, Bear Market in Stocks and forecasts on the housing market.  All forecasts are based upon history.  History going back before anything a dramatic as what we have experienced in past 2 years.

Certainly as Lord Toynbee wrote "History Repeats Itself" there is truth.  History is not alway repetitive in circumstance that eventually lead to a conclusion.  Let us take the Federal Reserve System and the Board of Govenors action to lower interest rates and take on a strategy of using Quantitative Easing.  A never in history event would not result in "History Repeating Itself". In fact it is more of creating a new history.  The back page of the Friday, June24, 2922, Edition of the Wall Street Journal Business & Finance Section points out Americans usually lack something heading "A LOT OF CASH".

Consider that the FED unleashed $9 Trillion into the the US economy to stop an economic collapse from the Pandemic, and then to create inflation.  The trouble with considering this large amount of money.  (More money and assets on the FED Balance Sheet were created Historically!) It fed the pockets of everyone from Wall Street to the average American.  

At the end of the first quarter 2022, U.S. Households held $17.9 trillion in cash and cash equivalents.  This was up from $13.7 trillion they held at the end of the first quarter 2020.

Now comes the most interesting statistic.  People in the top 10% held 32% more in cash and cash equivalents, BUT people in the bottom half HELD 45% MORE! It rose for whites, black, hispanics.  It rose for college graduates and high school graduates.  It rose for Millennials, Gen-Xers and Boomers!  In addition; the equity in home values increased at multiple factors, portfolios increased.  The economic wealth of U.S. Households are or have never been better going into a fear of a Recession.

Jobs are still in demand.  Virtual jobs out distant demand in work in location jobs.  The ability of households to find lower cost of living communities allow workers to work were affordable.  Those areas tend to be smaller, safer and have as good as or better schools.

The cost of living by inflationary costs do affect the portion of take home pay that is not spent...SAVINGS.  that portion fell to 4.4% in April.  In pre-pandemic era it was 7.6%.  Even with inflation it will take until the end of 2023 per Barclays Economists to drain off excess cash.  Even so, there is an offset of higher interest rates increases to balances.  

This does not mean consumers will spend willy-nilly.  They have learned just as the Baby Boomers Parent learned from the Depression Era Parents.....They Saved!  

Consumer appetites, in my opinion, have most likely been sated.  All the durable goods have been bought.  Cars will last to at least 200,000 miles.

The type of Belt Tightening that has happened in past Recessions may never happen! That will blunt any Recession or any depth to the economic downturn.  

Then we have "Guns or Butter" in economic spending.  Thank you President Putin.  Guns built and expended need to be replaced.  Oil is needed, drilling must increase.  Nuclear plants need to be built that are far better than any ever produced.  Think this, there is only one producer here in the U.S: GE and Westinghouse, a privately owned company.  Plants are now smaller and more efficient, thanks to Bill Gates Foundation.  Companies are moving back to the U.S.  Finally, as noted prior; Butter are Consumer Durables and they have been purchased

The positive outweigh the negatives.  Housing Prices could see some hesitancy to follow higher.  Buyers could find areas outside the Bay Area that fit their budgets and life style.  Companies could build in less expensive areas and draw employees away from the Bay Area.

Through natural selection home prices for the Bay Area could see reality and more listings will compete for sales, price cuts will become a standard, agents will offer incentives.  Homes not sold will come on the Rental Market and rents will decline.  All sound good for buyers and renters.

Just looking at the MLS Listing Summary for the past 7 days there has been increases in homes listed, prices cut.  Compare the current Summary to last weeks Summary and make your own opinion..,

Market Watch

Asset price Re-evaluation

 The stock market is definitely in a Bear Market, as defined by a 20% correction from past highs.  Lower lows and lower highs all create for a trend downward.  Interest rates had a big day in the terms of Mortgage Rates this past week.  At one point I saw a 6.4% 30 year mortgage offered.  30-year conventional per the local Mercury News were quoted at 5.9%; which is unique to the 30-year jumbo at 5.44%.  Whatever the rate, they are up substantially from the past week and the month prior and going back to one year ago.  The days of The FED is Your Friend are done.  Easy money and frivolous spending is out.   There are 75 new listings in the past 7 days, up from 63 a week ago.  23 price cuts and fewer sales and closes as the days and weeks prod by.  Agents are sending out emails offering higher commissions to agents representing buyers....as if we are pimps who work for the highest bidder.  Agents who prided themselves on numerous listings now are offering wine and cheese parties to promote their listings.  

The premiums of list to sales are also declining as with the days on the market increasing.  This is usual for the summer.  Cancelled, expired and withdrawn listings continue to expand.  This is normal for the June forward period.  There is one area in which sales to list and days on the market continue to maintain strong interest....East Palo Alto.  

Luxury Realtors are now seeking other areas in which the markets remain strong, Redwood City has many agents that once would never take a "Deadwood City" listing are popping up.  Woodside, Los Altos, Palo Alto and Menlo Park seem to find the market more favorable to them in /redwood City.  All a sign of a softening market.

In the Broker Price Opinion work, there continues to be work by "Fix and Flippers" in the East Menlo Park and East Palo Alto area.  Once forgotten rentals that only the destitute would rent are now being stripped remodeled and marketed quickly for reasonable prices.  Alas, Home Depot enhancements, but; never the less, a major improvement form the rat infested former home, where abandoned cars sat in the front yard and weeds grew with abandon.  The neighbors of these new remodels are now seeing pride in ownership and update and work on their landscaping.  A new wave of home ownership is happening.  While cheap interest rates created riskless abandon.  It did help create a new wave of home ownership.

Broker Price Opinion is now spreading from the "Fix and Flip Market" to the luxury high end market as long time owners are now thinking about downsizing.  From Atherton, to Menlo Park Allied Arts, to Los Altos Hills; owners are interested in what their home is worth.  All of this should be good for the inventory market.  Too long home owners and buyers looked at their home as a FAANG stock.  Yes, it is the largest part of an estate, but it is not easily liquidated as shares in common stocks.  

Now what about the stock market?  Did you know that if Exxon Mobil had remain in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and was not replace by Sales Force. The difference would be Exxon up 75% and Sales Force down 75%.  Now look at the other companies that were removed in the hey day of growth and  high technology.   Wall Street has a way with playing with your pocket book.  

My son-in-law says they always come back.  Well youngster you weren't here in the 70's and many never came back!  

Now is this the 70's of Stagflation and recession.  While I read the "experts" tell me that the high interest rates will cause a recession, I still do not see anything else than an asset value re-evaluation.  The change in the use of interest rates, the negative interest rate and the creating of money supply by the FED buying Bonds in the after market has created a large reserve of cash in the populace's savings.  Most average citizens are not big investors.  Yes, they have a 401-K plan and a retirement plan at work; but by-in-large they only play the market.  Once burnt they stay out for a long time.  So, we will see if the Crypto craze vanishes as quickly as it started; along with MEME stocks.

My energy portfolio has done exceptionally well.  The merger acquisition part continues to add profits.  Mergers will continue to be the place to go as equity prices decline.  A company is worth more to an acquirer than that in the public market so just keep your eyes on mergers.  The new place is Biotech.  Forget about the ETFs, Tokens, Index plays and anything else created by a kid from Wharton in the back room of an Investment Bank.

In closing for all of you who have expressed your appreciation in this Newsletter or Blog, send me your referral to ad to the list.  A Referral is your greatest complement.

New Listing (75)
List Price Increased (2)
List Price Decreased (23)
Transaction Fell Through (0)
Listing Back On Market (0)
Contingent (6)
Pending (41)
Changed to Sold (49)
Changed to Rented (0)
Listing Expired (0)
Listing Canceled (10)



Bear Market Rally in stocks, Real Estate Market Softens

 Real Estate is an Asset Class that represents store of value.  Unlike stocks, bonds, coins, commodities and crypto, real estate offers offers livability.  

I have always had issue with the concept of interest rates being used to control the economy and inflation.  It is really nothing more than an adjustment of supply to match demand.  Common sense and affordability will control the rest.  The increase in rates with more to follow will affect real estate prices just as it has stock and bond prices.

One in 5 listings in the US has had a price cut.  We have not seen that so far in our area. As I watch the Daily MLS Listings summary for our area, I do see agents offering buyer agents more in commission to motivate their buyers, I do see more yard sales, I do see more open houses.  Sooner or later the trend in the US will follow through to our area.

Californication or the movement of Californians flush with cash to parts east to buy has finally slowed down, says Redfin.  Further Redfin states that the FHA buyers are now finding that they are not outbid by All Cash Buyers.  Unfortunately, HFA loans are not dominant in our area.

Further proving the softness is that New Home Sales, nationwide, declined in April 16.6% from March.  Meanwhile the inventory of unsold homes in the US jumped 8% in April to 444,000 a 13-year high.  Now this is not 2008 and home prices are not falling.  The average price of a home in the US ticked up to $450,600, up 45% from 2-years ago.  That number should tell you why Californication is going on when the median price in our area is over $1 million.

BOTTOM LINE:  While the frenzy is over, there is still Pent-up Demand from those who have been searching for the past 2-years.  It looks like we will see a sellers market will remain in our area.  For the frustrated the only recourse is "Go East Young Buyer, Go East"

Stock Market comment:  For those of you who have asked my opinion on various stocks that have "hit the tank" as we use to say when I was a trader and stock broker, we are in a Bear Market Rally..  The FAANG stocks have declined over 20% and some more than 50% to 70%.  This is a transition phase when those FAANG and related growth stock were the dominant investment in a low interest rate market when the FED was the investors friend.  That era has gone.  

Short sellers, or traders who believe their target stock has been over priced, sell to buy back lower at lower prices and borrow stock to deliver to the offset buyer.  Interesting part of this pairing it is really a triad.  The stock that is borrowed is lent from a mutual fund, investment advisor or similar related firm.  When prices decline to a point of being over sold, the short seller buys to cover the short sale. This starts the rally in a Bear Market.  Individual investors or traders sensing a bottom jump on the band wagon and prices escalate quickly.  Then all stop and the funds and investors who missed the initial sell begin to sell positions.  Down it goes.

NO, it will not always go up as it has for the past years.  This is a different phase of a market.  The FED is not a friend. 

Sell your growth stocks and look for high end real estate.  The Luxury Market is strong and there is seldom a Bear Market there!

Wall Street Slumps Real Estate Cools Off

 The rise in interest rates are beginning to show the economy is slowing down.  Stocks are the most liquid of assets. Stocks and bonds are more immediate in price changes. Real Estate is slower in reaction.  Real Estate must be watched to gather trends.

I personally look at the MLS Daily Summary.  It lists all the new listings, pending sales, sales, with drawn, cancelled, expired, sold, and most important back on the market.

The MLS Listing indicates a sellers market as home prices stay relatively firm. Sales occur at over list in most of our markets.  Price cuts are beginning to mount.  We are still in the active season in the Real Estate market.  Once we get into June and the sales of April and May close escrow, we will see if a slow down in price or listings occur.  It is my observation that the listings are very strong now, I doubt they will slow down.  Why, too much money has been placed in remodeling and updating by contractor, speculators and home owners to want or can pull homes off the market.

The Thursday, May 19, 2022, Wall Street journal front page right column had The Stock Market Slump first and the Cool off in home prices next. 

Sooner or later the media will come about to see the impact of how higher interest rates will create asset weakness.

The worrisome part of this slow down is in the Subprime Borrowers.  They are the first line of first home buyers that are seeing their loan commitment drop and their credit card balances increase due to higher interest rates.

Two more interest rate increase are for certain.  It is certain that all forms of debt will see interest rates increase.  Along with the debt increase the interest paid on intermediate to short term US Government Bonds will increase.  It will be hard to not accept a 5-year US Treasury Bond at 5% or 5.5% versus a buy the bounce in a FAANG stock or Nvida, which so many clients and real estate agents ask my opinion of.

How does a buyer or seller operate in this market?

For the buyer, place offers in 10% under the list, make the offer contingent on financing and appraisal. If the appraisal comes in below list tell your agent to see of the seller will take a modification of purchase price to the appraisal.  Get ready for rejections.  Sooner or later you will get an acceptance.  In this manner your interest rate rise are partially being borne by the seller in a lower sales price.

If it is a MUST BUY, try talking to Homeward or DIVVY to buy the home for cash and allow you buy it back with your financing.  i never used them, but found them in an article on Startups.

For the seller; get your agent to get a CMA, comparative market analysis, no more than 3 months and the shortest being the most acceptable.  Place the list 10% under the CMA. Do not look to sell at the high price.  The seller wins in higher yield on money market accounts to store their proceeds in, and lower prices for the move to a new home.

Remember this, buyers and sellers get hurt in a rising interest rate market.  Waiting hurts both!  A recession in a inflationary market is called STAGFLATION.  It happened in the 70's.  It is financially and emotionally painful!  

Bear markets in stock will historically last 2 years.  That would make the end after or at the next presidential election or the congressional election in November 2022.  Inflation is the worst to survive, 27 months on average.

Follow this graph to chart the home market.



Gary McKae

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