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Top Home Sellers' Markets
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The Methodology
To measure inventory glut, we used Moody's Economy.com and National Association of Realtors data that tracked a market's current sales rate by projecting the amount of time it would take to sell off the excess housing stock at the current rate of sales.
We also looked at the change in sales rate over the last year to measure the relative tightening or loosening of the market. Finally, a measure of price stability was applied so as to prevent the list from being a rundown of upstart markets.
The measurements left out a few cities that lacked comprehensive data. Seattle, for example, has incredibly strong market fundamentals--the lowest vacancy rate of major metros at 0.9% and is a small geographic area not conducive to overproduction. It is a good seller's market, but for tracking what we were after, Seattle data was incomplete for our analysis.
Moody's Economy.com chief economist Mark Zandi points out that the best-performing markets are those that had barriers to over production during the housing boom.
The Top Tier
In the case of San Francisco, which ranked second on our list, it's an issue of geography: There is little space for growth or new development and the local government doesn't do much to incentivize new construction.
Strong in-migration stemming from local economic strength is another good way to keep up demand here. New houses being built isn't a problem if there are new people moving to town.
This scenario is also playing out in Raleigh, N.C., the No. 1 city on our list. Moderate growth and disciplined building over the last five years prevented the market from developing a significant glut. Additionally, a strong local economy has helped contribute to the city's healthy 1.6% vacancy rate.
What's more, the rate of home sales against home inventory was healthy in Raleigh; in this category, it ranked fifth best of big cities, according to Moody's metrics. Even though the market has low vacancy to begin with and displayed strong construction restraint during the housing boom, Raleigh still has the eighth best rate of tightening.
Similarly, strong in-migration and local economic pop carried Austin as a seller's market. It finished fourth overall in sales rate to inventory size and has had the fifth-best home price appreciation figures of the large markets Moody's measured. Its mediocre 14th best market tightening ranking can be attributed, in large part, to its small inventory excess. A 1.5% vacancy rate, like Austin's, is where the national average stood during the most recent housing boom. In other words, that low a vacancy rate indicates a housing market at close to full capacity.
While the market isn't going gangbusters for investment, sellers in these markets are faring much better than their counterparts across the country.
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2004-2006 Andrew Roth Real Estate. All Rights Reserved. |
Andrew
Roth Real Estate 4040 24th Street San Francisco, CA 94114 415.695.7707 web@rothrealestate.net |
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