August Market Stats

From the Record:

NJ real estate update: Home prices rose in August, but interest rates dipped

Of New Jersey’s 21 counties, eight of them saw more listings compared with August 2023, and four counties saw more new listings compared with July.

In North Jersey, Bergen County was the only county to see new listings increase from this time last year. With 732 new listings, the county saw a 7.96% increase from August 2023. Otherwise, all other North Jersey counties saw new listings decrease from last year:

  • Passaic: 268 (-2.19%)
  • Morris: 368 (-6.12%)
  • Essex: 352 (-20.36%)
  • Sussex: 192 (-14.29%)
  • Hudson: 360 (-7.69%)

Compared with July, all North Jersey counties saw a decrease in new listings:

  • Bergen: -17.19%
  • Passaic: -19.76%
  • Morris: -33.09%
  • Essex: -21.78%
  • Sussex: -11.11%
  • Hudson: -13.88%

In North Jersey, the counties of Essex, Sussex and Hudson had homes stay on the market for more days in August than this time last year, while Bergen, Passaic and Morris counties had homes stay on the market for fewer days.

  • Bergen: 32 days (-12.33%)
  • Passaic: 31 days (-1.59%)
  • Morris: 36 days (-5.26%)
  • Essex: 39 days (20%)
  • Sussex: 44 days (1.73%)
  • Hudson: 45 days (21.62%)

Eighteen of New Jersey’s 21 counties had an increase in median listing prices from August 2023. And when compared with July 2024, just six counties had an increase in median listing prices, while four counties stayed the same.

For North Jersey, median listing prices increased in all six counties compared to this time last year:

  • Bergen: $799,000 (2.27%)
  • Passaic: $525,000 (7.48%)
  • Morris: $699,000 (1.93%)
  • Essex: $580,000 (13.84%)
  • Sussex: $435,000 (11.61%)
  • Hudson: $661,500 (6.69%)
Posted in New Jersey Real Estate | 16 Comments

Prices to fall? Maybe?

From MSN:

These housing markets are poised for a downturn — and they’re not in Florida or Texas

ome buyers are contending with record-high home prices across most of the U.S., but some markets are poised for a correction and could offer buyers some room for negotiation, a new report says. 

California, New Jersey and Illinois had the highest concentrations of local housing markets at greatest risk of a downturn in the second quarter of this year, while the biggest such cluster was in the New York City metropolitan area, according to the property-data firm Attom. 

The level of risk was measured by variables such as gaps in home affordability, the share of mortgages that were underwater, the percentage of homes facing possible foreclosure, and unemployment. The company looked at nearly 600 counties across the country that had sufficient data to analyze.

“Some markets show signs of potential instability, which suggests a mixed level of risk, particularly in certain regions that repeatedly show signs of concern,” Attom Chief Executive Rob Barber said in a statement. As in other periods over the last few years, the company found that the same concentrations of coastal markets dominated the list of areas most at risk of a downturn.

To be sure, “these observations don’t indicate immediate red flags or warning signs of an impending downturn,” Barber said.

But they do highlight areas of relative risk, he added. “With the housing market still facing challenges, it’s crucial to closely monitor regions where key indicators suggest a higher likelihood of issues,” he said. 

Housing costs have skyrocketed in recent years. The cost of homeownership — which includes mortgage payments, property taxes and insurance for a median-priced single-family home — was “seriously unaffordable” in 33 of the 51 U.S. counties that were deemed most vulnerable to a market downturn in the second quarter of 2024, according to Attom, as they gobbled up at least 43% of average local wages. The median price of a home was $422,600 in July, according to the National Association of Realtors, up 4.2% from the same month last year.

Several counties in the New York City area also feature in the 51 at-risk counties, including Kings County, which covers Brooklyn; Richmond County, which covers Staten Island; and Bronx County. Four counties in New Jersey that Attom considers New York City suburbs — Essex, Passaic, Sussex and Union counties — also appeared on the top 51 list. 

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Employment, Housing Bubble, New Jersey Real Estate, NYC | 119 Comments

Can’t afford a house? How about a trailer?

From MyCentralJersey.com:

‘It’s not your grandma’s trailer’: Mobile homes are affordable solution to homebuyer woes

Cesar Gaona Jr.’s story is a familiar one.

A native of the Avenel section of Woodbridge in his late 20s, he was excited to buy his first home when he started his search last spring.

But even with his job as a business development manager in the IT sector, he soon found that high interest rates, low inventory and the most competitive real estate market possibly ever stood in his way of fulfilling the American dream of becoming a homeowner.

That was until about five months later when he toured a new unit at the Carteret Mobile Park.

“I purchased the home and I’ve never looked back,” Gaona Jr. said. “It was so unexpected, and it was probably one of the best decisions I’ve ever made.”

Gaona Jr. isn’t the only one giving mobile home living, long the victim of a dingy reputation, a try – and loving it.

In the wake of a ruthless real estate market that has gone up nearly 50% since 2020, more homebuyers are turning to mobile homes to finally have a place to call their own.

And turns out, said Edison Mobile Estates and Carteret Mobile Park marketing director Maria Dolan, “It’s not your grandma’s trailer anymore.”

Posted in Crisis, Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, New Jersey Real Estate | 49 Comments

Can’t afford to stay, can’t afford to go

From The Hill:

Americans moving at lowest rate in decades: Census Bureau analysis

The percentage of Americans who move is at its lowest rate in recent history. And new research suggests the rate will stay low for quite some time.

Migration hovered at around 20% from just after World War II through the 1980s. Since then, it’s been on a steady decline to just 8.4% in 2021. The latest rate, taken from U.S. Census Bureau statistics, is 8.7% in 2022.

William Frey, a senior demographer at the Brookings Institution, tells Axios that several factors have collided to bring down the moving rate:

  • Younger people are living with their parents longer and delaying marriage
  • Older people, especially those in homes that are paid off, are less likely to move
  • Remote work means fewer people have to move to a new job
  • Two-income households make it tougher for both parties to find new jobs in new cities
  • Sky-high housing prices inhibit the ability to upgrade housing
  • Residual effects of the COVID pandemic

Frey’s analysis revealed one big anomaly. Local moves, defined as moving within the same county, fell to below 5% in the 2021-2022 survey period. That’s down from nearly 9% in 2010. But long-distance moves are up slightly to about 1.5%, following four years of steady decline.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Employment, National Real Estate | 23 Comments

Uh oh, are buyers all gone?

From Barrons:

U.S. Pending Homes Sales Slip to Lowest Level on Record

The number of homes going under contract in the U.S. fell back sharply in July, reaching its lowest in decades as soaring prices bar many Americans from the housing market.

Here are the main takeaways from the National Association of Realtors’ report released Thursday:

—The pending home sales index, a leading indicator of house sales based on contract signings, dropped 5.5% on month to 70.2 in July. That marks the lowest level since the index began to be compiled in 2001, and bucks economists’ expectations for a slight rise on the month. A reading of 100 marks the level of sales in the year the index began.

—Compared with a year earlier, pending sales were 8.5% lower.

—“A sales recovery did not occur in midsummer,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said. Job growth offered some succor to the housing market, but this was more than offset by high prices, as well as by a wait-and-see attitude among some potential buyers ahead of November’s presidential elections, Yun said.

—All four regions of the U.S. booked lower pending home sales over the month. The Midwest and South recorded the sharpest decreases, with the West and Northeast booking gentler declines.

—A combination of elevated mortgage rates and high prices has made home-buying unaffordable to millions of Americans and pushed many buyers out of the market. Housing has emerged as a central issue of the elections, with the Democratic and Republican parties alike promising to boost housing stock and bring prices down.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 57 Comments

NY Metro tops Case Shiller in June

From CNBC:

Home prices hit record high in June on S&P Case-Shiller Index

Even as mortgage interest rates were rising, home prices reached the highest level ever on the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index.

On a three-month running average ended in June, prices nationally were 5.4% higher than they were in June 2023, according to data released Tuesday. Despite being a record high for the index, the annual gain was smaller than May’s 5.9% reading.

The index’s 10-city composite rose 7.4% annually, down from 7.8% in the previous month. The 20-city composite was 6.5% higher year over year, down from a 6.9% increase in May.

“While both housing and inflation have slowed, the gap between the two is larger than historical norms, with our National Index averaging 2.8% more than the Consumer Price Index,” noted Brian Luke, head of commodities, real and digital assets at S&P Dow Jones Indices, in a release. “That is a full percentage point above the 50-year average. Before accounting for inflation, home prices have risen over 1,100% since 1974, but have slightly more than doubled (111%) after accounting for inflation.”

New York saw the highest annual gain among the 20 cities, with prices climbing 9% in June, followed by San Diego and Las Vegas with annual increases of 8.7% and 8.5%, respectively. Portland, Oregon, saw just a 0.8% annual rise in June, the smallest gain of the top cities.

Posted in General | 80 Comments

DOJ accuses RealPage of price fixing

From ProPublica:

DOJ Files Antitrust Suit Against RealPage, Maker of Rent-Setting Algorithm

The Department of Justice and eight states on Friday sued the maker of rent-setting software that critics blame for sending rents soaring in apartment buildings across the country.

The civil lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Greensboro, North Carolina, accuses Texas tech company RealPage of taking part in an illegal price-fixing scheme to reduce competition among landlords so they can boost prices — and profits. It also alleges the company took over the market for such price-setting software, effectively monopolizing it.

“RealPage has built a business out of frustrating the natural forces of vigorous competition,” said Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter at a news conference Friday with top department officials. “The time has come to stop this illegal conduct.”

The antitrust lawsuit is the latest — and most dramatic — development to follow a 2022 ProPublica investigation that examined RealPage’s role in helping landlords set rent prices across the country, an arrangement that legal experts said could result in cartel-like behavior. Since then, senators have introduced legislation seeking to ban such practices, tenants have filed dozens of ongoing federal lawsuits, and San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors moved to bar landlords from using similar algorithms to set rents.

Justice Department officials said Friday that their lawsuit followed a nearly two-year investigation into the company. Along with traditional approaches, such as examining internal records, they said their probe involved data scientists who dug into computer code to understand how these algorithms set prices.

RealPage’s software enables landlords to share confidential data and charge similar rents, the officials said.

“We learned that the modern machinery of algorithms and AI can be even more effective than the smoke-filled rooms of the past,” Kanter said, referring to artificial intelligence. “You don’t need a Ph.D. to know that algorithms can make coordination among competitors easier.”

Posted in Housing Bubble, National Real Estate, Unrest | 81 Comments

Market finally moderating?

From CNBC:

Home sales rose in July for the first time in five months

Closed sales of previously owned homes rose 1.3% in July compared with June to a seasonally adjusted, annualized rate of 3.95 million units, according to the National Association of Realtors. That was the first gain in five months.

Sales were 2.5% lower compared with the same time last year.

Sales saw the biggest gains in the Northeast and were flat in the Midwest. Prices also rose the most in the Northeast.

“Despite the modest gain, home sales are still sluggish,” said Lawrence Yun, the NAR’s chief economist, in a release. “But consumers are definitely seeing more choices, and affordability is improving due to lower interest rates.”

These sales are based on contracts that were likely signed in May and June, when mortgage rates were well over 7% on the popular 30-year fixed loan. Rates began dropping in July and are now hovering around 6.5%.

All-cash offers made up 27% of July sales, up from 26% the year before and far higher than the historical norm.

The supply of homes for sale continued to move higher in July. At the end of the month, there were 1.33 million houses on the market, an increase of 0.8% from June and 19.8% higher than in July 2023. At the current sales pace, that represents a four-month supply, slightly lower than it was in June.

The increase in supply did not, however, help to cool home prices. The median price of an existing home sold in July was $442,600, an increase of 4.2% year over year.

First-time buyers made up 29% of sales in July, unchanged from June but down from 30% in July 2023. Historically, these buyers make up closer to 40% of home sales, but affordability has been hit hard in the last two years due to fast-rising home prices and higher mortgage rates.

With rates now slightly lower, demand is starting to pick up. A separate report from Redfin, a real estate brokerage, found requests for tours and other buying services from Redfin agents rose 4% over the last week to their highest level in two months.

Posted in Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 66 Comments

Hottest Zip Codes in NJ

From Fox 5:

These NY, NJ towns have the hottest ZIP codes for home sales 

Realtor.com has released its 2024 list of hottest zip codes for home sales, and towns in NY and NJ made the list!

Seven of the 10 hottest zip codes on this year’s list are in the Northeast, while the Midwest claims three spots on the list. Realtor.com noted that three of the Midwest zip codes were on the 2023 list.

2024 Hottest ZIP codes in America

  1. 43230 Gahanna, Ohio
  2. 63021 Ballwin, Mo.
  3. 01970 Salem, Mass.
  4. 07920 Basking Ridge, NJ
  5. 14609 Rochester, NY
  6. 08054 Mount Laurel, NJ
  7. 01453 Leominster, Mass.
  8. 01085 Westfield, Mass.
  9. 46322 Highland, IN
  10. 18062 Macungie, Pa.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate, New Jersey Real Estate | 53 Comments

Tippie top?

From Mansion Global:

U.S. Home Price Growth Is Finally Slowing Down

U.S. house prices rose 6.8% annually in July, marking the lowest annual increase since January, according to a report from Redfin on Tuesday.

Though home value growth is slowing, prices still remain close to all-time highs amid a shortage of supply relative to buyer demand. And while mortgage rates have notably decreased over the last several weeks, the rate cuts have not yet translated into a large increase in buyers, curbing prices from spiking more quickly.

“There aren’t enough sellers listing their homes to cause prices to fall and there aren’t enough buyers to create competition to drive prices up significantly,” said Redfin senior economist Sheharyar Bokhari. “Relatively low sales and gradual price increases will remain the status quo each month until one of those things changes.”

Additionally, home prices were up 0.2% on a monthly basis, equal to the smallest month-over-month increase since January 2023. 

Of the 50 most populous metros in the U.S., 20 recorded a seasonally adjusted monthly drop in prices in July. 

Austin, Texas, saw house prices drop the most, falling 1.6% monthly. San Francisco followed at a 1.1% decrease, and Nassau County, New York, ranked third for price drops at 0.7%.

As for monthly price increase, Indianapolis and Miami came out on top, both with a 1.2% uptick in home prices. San Antonio, Texas, closely followed with prices up 1.1% from the month before. 

Posted in Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 89 Comments

Build baby build

From NJ.com:

One of N.J.’s wealthiest towns to get first luxury apartment complex amid controversy

Hundreds of rental units are coming to Colts Neck — one of New Jersey’s wealthiest communities — where developers have already broken ground on the township’s first apartment complex.

A total of 360 luxury apartments will be available in the 15-building complex along Route 537 in the township, according to the project’s developers, Kushner Companies, a New York-based real estate firm.

The 30-acre property, named Livana Colts Neck, broke ground last month despite some opposition from neighbors and environmentalists.

In the years leading up to the groundbreaking of the complex, previously named Colts Neck Manor, Kushner Companies sued Freehold Township in 2020, seeking access to the township’s water and sewer lines for the apartments.

Freehold, which borders the development, countersued Kushner, alleging that the company was forcing the township to pay millions to accommodate the large-scale housing project.

Kushner then revised its plans to include an underground, onsite wastewater treatment and disposal system — a change that has sparked controversy.

Along with a mix of one-, two-, and three-bedroom floor plans, it will also include 72 units designated for affordable housing, according to Kushner officials. Construction is expected to be completed by February 2027, officials said.

Colts Neck Township has a median household income of $187,969, one of the highest in New Jersey and nearly double the state’s median. The average residential property value in the Monmouth County township is more than $1 million.

Kushner is also the real estate company behind the $500 million Monmouth Mall redevelopment project in Eatontown. The firm plans to transform the mall into a town center with 1,000 residential units.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, New Development, New Jersey Real Estate, Shore Real Estate | 84 Comments

The commercial slump

From NorthJersey.com:

New commercial real estate projects have slowed in NJ thanks to high borrowing rates

Construction in New Jersey isn’t what it used to be. In the commercial real estate sector — think strip malls, industrial warehousing, research and development, and office space — new projects aren’t getting built as much as they were just a couple of years ago.  

There are a few new projects in the works. The former Nabisco building in Fair Lawn is undergoing demolition and the site will be converted into a warehouse. And earlier this year a new warehouse opened on the Marcal property in Elmwood Park, just off Route 80. 

But commercial construction for new projects has seen a marked slowdown. 

Thank interest rates, which the Federal Reserve hiked 11 times between 2022 and 2023 in a bid to tame inflation, which had risen to a 40-year-high in 2022. This month, the Federal Reserve has signaled a possible rate cut in September. 

“That’s going to impact construction lending,” said Jim McGuckin, New Jersey’s regional manager in Saddle Brook for the real estate services firm Marcus & Millichap. 

The Dodge Momentum Index — a measure of non-residential construction planning — fell 8.6% in March, the largest decrease of the year so far, with decreases being felt in the R&D sectors, and commercial space such as offices and hotels

Meanwhile, office construction has slowed down, Kennedy said. Only the most high-performing downtown offices are seeing high occupancy, such as M Station in Morristown, or areas with easy access to transit, such as the ON3 campus in Nutley.

On the other hand, swathes of suburban office parks have faltered and ultimately succumbed to the wrecking ball

“We are on the verge of a crisis in the industry, with very little lending ongoing at the regional level because the banks need the money themselves to offset their exposures,” Alan Hammer, executive committee member at the law firm Brach Eichler, told Commercial Property Executive

The real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield reported in July that in recent months, new leasing and renewals reached their lowest point since the pandemic. Office demolitions and conversions have meanwhile soared, the report added. 

Posted in Crisis, Economics, Employment, National Real Estate, New Development | 73 Comments

Go North!

From the NY Post:

Home prices have risen a whopping 79% in five years in this state — and it’s nowhere near Florida or Texas

Homebuyers are grabbing their winter gear and flocking to far-flung Maine — where they’ve managed to drive up the median home price a bone-chilling 78.5% in just five short years, a new report reveals. 

According to freshly published findings from industry news site Pro Tool Reviews, The Pine Tree State has experienced the most significant increase in median home prices of any of the fifty since 2019 — jumping from $219,000 to $391,000.

The explosive growth comes in spite of the fact that Maine’s population has trickled upward a mere 0.32% since 2008, according to research conducted by Pew Charitable Trust — well below states like Texas (1.52%) and Florida (1.34%), better known for their heated housing markets in recent years.

Neighboring New Hampshire slid into second place on the list, experiencing a 76.4% rise in average residential real estate prices since 2019. 

The new wave of northern New England homesteaders don’t appear to be struggling to make their purchases either — The Granite State ranked highest for size of downpayment, boasting $72,750 on average.

Another state in the region took third place on the overall list — Rhode Island, which experienced a 73% jump.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 130 Comments

Grow baby grow

From NorthJersey.com:

North Jersey city to see the region’s third highest number of new apartment units in 2024

In RentCafe’s annual Apartment Construction Report, analysts reviewed new apartment construction data for 369 U.S. metropolitan areas and uncovered which ones are expected to have the greatest number of new apartment units by the end of 2024.

The New York metropolitan area was found to have the overall most new apartment construction in the U.S. for 2024, with 32,935 new units expected by the end of the year, according to the report. This is the third year in a row that the region topped the rankings.

The New York metropolitan area also came in second for having the most number of new apartment units completed from 2019 to 2023 at 116,207 units, and leads the nation for having the most number of new apartment units expected to be built from 2024 to 2028 at 150,327 units.

As for the region’s top cities for new apartment construction, Jersey City was named the third busiest city for creating new apartment units in 2024, according to the report.

This Hudson County city is expected to welcome 2,412 new apartment units by the end of 2024, which is twice as many than those expected in other apartment construction hubs like Queens and White Plains — 1,232 and 1,218, respectively.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, National Real Estate, New Development, NYC | 92 Comments

Sorry about your commission

From Mr. Diamond at the APP…

“M.I.K.E. to the D. You come and see me and you pay a fee. Do what I do professionally. To tell the truth, I am exactly what I want to be.”

New real estate commission rules kicking in: What should buyers, sellers do to save money?

The real estate industry is rolling out new rules for paying buyers’ and sellers’ agents beginning Aug. 17 in a move that advocates say could lower overall commissions, but also put pressure on consumers to shop for skilled real estate agents and read the fine print.

The rules change a decades-long financial arrangement between the two sides. Sellers, for example, will no longer be required to pay buyers’ agents, while buyers will need to sign contracts with their agents that lay out their compensation terms.

“The new rules provide both opportunities and risks for consumers,” said Stephen Brobeck, a senior fellow with the Consumer Federation of America. “Knowledgeable home buyers and sellers will be able to take advantage of the opportunities and avoid the risks.”

As part of the National Association of Realtors settlement, sellers are no longer required to compensate buyers’ agents, and buyers need to sign agreements with their agents spelling out the compensation terms.

Sellers’ agents still can share their commission with buyers’ agents, but they can’t disclose the agreement on the MLS.

“I think the best way (to find out if the commission is being shared) is for the buyer’s agent to call the seller’s agent and just ask,” Traverso said.

“Buyers should take the opportunity to (negotiate), setting a goal in dollar terms of 2% of the home sale price, or less,” the Consumer Federation of America said. “And so should sellers, who have had the same opportunity but frequently have decided not to pursue it.”

Posted in National Real Estate, New Jersey Real Estate | 47 Comments