Economic
Snapshot
A look at the
current real estate market; provided by RE/MAX ALLIANCE
March/2012
As
is characteristic of this time of year, the inventory level of available homes
starts to expand. For Boulder County, active listings are
up 18% through February/2012 compared to the end of 2011. Sales of single
family homes and attached units are up 4% for the first two months of this year
compared to the first two months of 2011.
After
four years of a declining real estate market (2006 to 2009) and the past three
years having reached a plateau in sales activity (2009 to 2011), there appears
to be a renewed buyer interest in the Boulder County real estate market.
This can be attributed to a variety of reasons.
·
Home
Values Have Stabilized: Through February/2011 the median sold price for a
single family home in Boulder County was $365,000 and an
attached unit was $198,202. Through February/2012 those values were $370,000
for a single family home and $195,000 for an attached unit.
·
Home
Mortgage Interest Rates: Who would have thought mortgage interest rates
would hold at historic lows for as long as they have. The traditional
thirty-year fixed rate loan continues to hover around 4%. Adjustable rate
mortgages (those dastardly fiends that caused many people to lose their homes)
can be had for fewer than 3% with the first five years fixed. Interest only loans (also a bane of the past)
are still available, but not as attractive as they once were.
·
Real
Estate Is A Bottom Up Business: When a real estate market begins to churn
in a positive direction it always starts at the bottom. Less expensive
properties fuel the fire. This activity creates the opportunity for the domino
effect to surface. Low end sellers buy more expensive homes causing a
chain of sales to occur. Lack of available inventory can hamper this cycle as
sellers wishing to move-up can’t find what they want.
·
New
Construction: In the movie Field
of Dreams, the voice in the cornfield whispers: “Build it and they will
come.” That is true of new construction. Activity begets activity. The sound of
boom boxes and hammers pounding is like a moth drawn to a light, they attract
buyers. Production builders have seen the light with new homes being
constructed in pocket areas across Boulder County this late winter/early
spring.
·
Short
Sales and Bank Foreclosures: These continue to play an active part of the
real estate market as banks and the Federal Government continue to work their
way through this process. When this mess is finally put to bed, we would hope
the financial institutions and the government have learned their lesson and we
won’t find ourselves treading down this path again – ever.
·
Unemployment
Rate: Jobs fuel the economy. The current unemployment rate for Colorado is
running around 7.9%. At the beginning of 2011 it was at 8.9%. When the Boulder
County real estate market peaked in 2005 the Colorado unemployment rate
stood at 5.2%.
There
are a lot of positives in the Boulder County real estate market as
we head into the spring. It continues to be a buyer’s market, especially in
homes priced above a million dollars, but we are gradually moving toward a more
balanced marketplace, which is good for both buyers and sellers.
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