JtR New Listing
I’ll go everywhere to help out a bubbleinfo reader! This is a great house too, built in 1995 on a culdesac with no HOA or Mello-Roos for only $569,000. I’ll be doing open house this Sunday from noon to 3pm:
I’ll go everywhere to help out a bubbleinfo reader! This is a great house too, built in 1995 on a culdesac with no HOA or Mello-Roos for only $569,000. I’ll be doing open house this Sunday from noon to 3pm:
Reader elbarcosr sent in these thoughts and numbers on Carmel Valley:
I always pause and try to take a big-picture look at the market each month when you post inventory watch. I get confused trying to get a feel for where the market is actually doing since so many stats come out blending apples and oranges and focusing on MOM or YOY, which I don’t like since snapshots seem misleading to me.
So I ran a comparison for 92130 detached solds for 1/1 to 9/29 for 2013 and 2014. Limited it to 4br, over 2500 sq ft and under 1.8 since I think that is the sweet spot for CV, albeit maybe I should have lowered the top end sales price. I didn’t delete any anomalies off the results, though it might have provided more accuracy had I done that.
I think 92130 is a decent proxy since there is a lot of volume and the houses are fairly interchangeable, give or take. You can’t use west of the 5 as any over-all indicator I don’t think, Encinitas is pretty scattered with product variation and I don’t know Carlsbad all that well.
Data Point | |||
No. of Sales | |||
Avg SP | |||
Med SP | |||
Avg $/sf | |||
Med $/sf | |||
Avg DOM | |||
Med DOM |
What do these numbers say? Perhaps despite all the histrionics needed to sell papers (I guess generate clicks would be more accurate), has 2014 just been a slightly boring to above-average year? DOM still seems pretty low.
JtR thoughts:
1. The price increases on top of last year’s frenzy are impressive, but they are relatively modest – and not large enough to scare off buyers who have already seen a 19% increase in the average cost-per-sf since 2012. So something else is contributing to the rather-large 30% drop in sales – either not enough houses for sale, or we’re running out of buyers.
Carmel Valley Total Detached-Home Listings Jan 1 – Sept. 15
2013 = 606
2014 = 563 (-7%)
There have been 7% fewer houses listed for sale in 2014, but sales are down 30%. My guess is that the ‘inferior’ houses for sale are not selling like they were in 2013, and contributing to the rest of the difference. Without frenzy, buyers get picky.
2. Run Out of Buyers? It sounds far-fetched, but once they buy their residence, buyers are done (or look elsewhere for rentals). There have been 841 CV resales over $1,000,000 in the last 48 months, and while there will always be buyers, the demand has to be thinning out somewhat with higher pricing.
3. Carmel Valley is its own club – there isn’t a substitute. The only other way to stay in the Del Mar School District is to move to Del Mar, where it costs more and you don’t have easy choices like you do with the newer tract homes that populate the 92130. Same if you’re on the north side of CV and in Solana Beach schools – moving to Solana Beach takes big money and you’re probably going to buy an older home that needs work. Ewwww
4. The Days on Market has been fast-forwarded due to new listings being disseminated to buyers within minutes of hitting the MLS – and it has helped to inflict urgency too. But the hyper-speed also contributes to listings going stale after a week or two, because both buyers and agents keep a Teflon memory, and consider a new listing for about as long as a loaf of bread. I doubt it will change, and sellers need to be sharp on price from the beginning.
I agree with elbarcosr that Carmel Valley is a decent proxy for the rest of the local market. It is by far the best place to compare like-kind properties, due to it being almost exclusively newer tract houses – and built by the same builder! And while the rest of SD County doesn’t enjoy the confluence of location, schools, and proximity of employers like Carmel Valley, at least we can learn from its general market data and see if it applies elsewhere.
It was nine years ago today that we got started!
It was early on a Saturday morning that I signed up for a free blog website, hoping to inform and educate sellers about the impending doom on the horizon.
It’s been a wild ride since!
In many ways it’s been a full circle back to where it started – trying to deliver pertinent information to assist sellers and buyers with making decisions.
I would like to be your realtor – if you are thinking of moving and want to discuss in detail how I can help, let me know!
Thanks for being here, and participating!
Here’s one of the first foreclosure videos, from August, 2008. All types of quirky things have happened along the way – one of the viewers of this video repeatedly pointed out how I was breaking the law by not pulling my car all the way up the driveway, and was blocking the sidewalk:
This is a new video of the remodeled 1,946sf single-story house on Manzanita in Carlsbad that just hit the MLS today for $799,000. Kayla and I will be there from noon to 3pm on Saturday for open house, and Richard will be there on Sunday during the same time period – stop by!
Home improvement doesn’t have to be a daunting and expensive endeavor. Ingenuity and the internet will take you a long way!
Here’s an example of how to turn a drab-looking 1970s townhouse into a chic, modern home without spending millions!
Chair lifts are their own cottage industry, and you can spend more than $10,000 on the fancy ones. But you don’t hear much about removing them!
The Android mobile app is available – with blog comments!
https://play.google.com/store/
Get the iOS version here – the blog comments will be seen here soon:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/bubbleinfo/id836149128?ls=1&mt=8
Let me know what you think of the performance/usability!
The readership here at bubbleinfo.com has been evolving.
Between the market bottoming and comment section getting sorted out (from free-for-all to moderated), we lost a few folks.
At the end of 2011, we were reaching 14,000+ unique visitors per month, with 80% of them male.
Over the last six months, there have been 8,000+ unique visitors per month, and closer to a 50/50 split between male and female readers:
Other curious data points from Google Analytics:
1. There has always been a steady stream of new folks that make up about a third of the monthly unique visitors. These days, 4% of them come from twitter/facebook, and 4% come from piggington.com (THANK YOU RICH TOSCANO!). The rest are all organic.
2. About half of the visitors stop by at least 9 times per month, and 36% visit more than 51 times per month – thank you for your loyalty and commitment!
3. Two-thirds of the visitors stay for less than ten seconds – I gotta be laser!
4. One-third of the readers are using mobile devices (phones & tablets), and two-thirds are on desktops. For mobile users – the bubbleinfo mobile app should be out soon!
5. The age groups are fascinating – 61% of the readers are under 35:
Thank you for being here – I will do my best to keep it lively, and worth coming back! If you, or someone you know, is thinking about moving, I’d love to assist.
Most of us know our good friend and realtor Tom Stone from www.calculatedriskblog.com, where he has been commenting for years. He also joined us on the Blog Talk radio segment with Bill McBride here at the 61:50-mark (from January, 2012):
He also produces his own blog, doing his part to educate the consumer – something I wish all agents would do. If you don’t want to do your own blog, no problem, at least try to contribute by making comments here and other blogs – like Tom, who even makes fashion statements:
HT to RD!
Prof Hoff is selling her inland digs, and what a house!
She and Tom have created an incredible modern contemporary with epic views of the mountains and hills – and centrally located less than an hour from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, South Coast Plaza, John Wayne Airport, and Staples Center. Only 90 minutes to Sea World or Big Bear!