AZ Homes for Sale Search Homes for Sale in Arizona
You can search like a Realtor
AZ Homes for Sale Search Homes for Sale in Arizona
You can search like a Realtor
Mid Month Pricing Update and Forecast
Each month about this time we look back at the previous month, analyze how pricing has behaved and report on how well our forecasting techniques performed. We also give a forecast for how pricing will move over the next 30 days. Current Phoenix Real Estate outlook.
For the monthly period ending May 15, we are currently recording a sales $/SF of $150.42 averaged for all areas and types across the ARMLS database. This is up 0.1% from the $150.25 we now measure for April 15. Our forecast range midpoint was $151.29, with a 90% confidence range of $148.26 to $154.32. We were correct in forecasting last month that the average $/SF would rise less quickly, but after an extremely strong rise between March and April we saw a very small increase over the past month.
On May 15 the pending listings for all areas & types shows an average list $/SF of $153.97, up 1.3% from the reading for April 15. Among those pending listings we have 95.0% normal, 2.0% in REOs and 3.0% in short sales and pre-foreclosures. This mix contains fewer short sales and pre-foreclosures than last month.
Current Phoenix Real Estate outlook. Our mid-point forecast for the average monthly sales $/SF on June 15 is $151.94, which is 0.8% above the May 15 reading. We have a 90% confidence that it will fall within ± 2% of this mid point, i.e. in the range $148.90 to $154.98.
So although last month’s rise was pretty small, we are still expecting a respectable increase in prices over the next 31 days.
Beyond those 31 days we would expect to see 3 months of price weakness as the third quarter sales mix tends to include fewer high end homes than the rest of the year. However there is no sign of supply and demand converging and the overall long term trend is still upwards.
Market Summary for the Beginning of May
Starting with the basic ARMLS numbers for May 1, 2017 and comparing them with May 1, 2016 for all areas & types:
We can see that supply is even further below last year than it was last month, both in total active listings and in active listings with no contract.
The monthly sales rate is down over 6% from last month, but this is a very unfair comparison. March had 23 working days and April, because it had a weekend at both ends, only had 20. With 13% fewer working days we could easily have seen sales drop a lot more than 6%, so demand remained in strong shape throughout April. Sales were up 3% from April 2016, but in 2016 April had 1 extra working day, so that again is a pretty strong result.
Sellers remain in charge of the market in most sectors and price is responding accordingly. The average sales price per sq. ft. is our preferred method of measuring prices and it is up over 7% from last year at this time. The median sales price has stuck at $230,000 for quite some time but we now expect it will pop up to $235,00 in short order. The current reading is up over 5% from last year.
Sales are extremely hampered by lack of supply below $200,000, but above $200,000 supply is more free flowing and sales are up by very large percentages from 2016. Only when we get over $1.5 million does the market start to look less healthy thanks to the abundance of supply at the high end. Despite this, sales volumes of luxury homes have picked up nicely compared to last year, and especially so at the very high end over $3 million.
The contract ratio stands at 66.5 for the overall market, the highest number for the start of any month since August 2013. This number is convincing evidence of a hot market because in 2013, as in 2011 through 2012, the high contract ratios were amplified by the large number of short sales that hung around under contract for a long time without closing. These have disappeared to just a trickle today.
So in summary almost the whole market is humming along with all cylinders firing. However there is little sign that it is going to move up a gear from here. The Cromford® Market Index appears to be making little effort to surpass its recent peak of 147.5 thanks to a very slight weakening in some demand indicators (including listings under contract). We are at a point where the seller remains in firm control but the seller’s advantage is no longer growing stronger.
Whether that brings any significant relief to buyers I very much doubt, because we are entering the period, from early May to early October, when active listing counts tends to fall back, leaving even less supply for them to chose from. In fact if they fall any faster than average that may completely counteract the slight fall in demand we are currently seeing.