This is my column for this week from the Arizona Republic (permanent link).
If you have cash or can qualify for a mortgage, this could be the ideal time to grab a bargain-priced home in the Phoenix area
The Phoenix area is hosting a wave of real estate investors like we haven’t seen since 2005. Unlike the novices who came here during the boom, these are experienced landlords. They’re here now because lender-owned homes are selling for bargain-basement prices.
They’re not alone. Savvy home-buyers are scooping up bargains, too, especially first-time homeowners. Interest rates are still attractive — even if the homes themselves are less appealing.
Interestingly, over the last couple of weeks, many of the lowest priced homes have seemed to evaporate. I’m guessing that October is going to be a banner month for closed transactions. Yes, most of these will be foreclosed homes, but buyers are performing the liquidator function, restoring the value of underperforming assets.
With so many homes selling, are we nearing a bottom in the Phoenix market? It’s plausible, if the number of sales meets or exceeds the number of newly-listed homes to be sold. But, even now, around 7,500 homes a month are entering the foreclosure process.
It could be a long time before that inventory is absorbed. And if it comes onto the market faster than buyers can snap it up, prices will continue to decline.
Visualize the real estate market as a pipeline. The home that gets a foreclosure notice today won’t hit the lender-owned market for three to six months. Are there enough investors and other buyers to snap up record numbers of homes, month-after-month, for the next two years — or longer?
The answer to that question is yes — if the price is right. If the demand for low-priced homes already exceeds the supply in the pipeline, prices will stabilize or even start to rise. If not, lenders will be forced to cut prices until buyers find them impossible to resist.
It’s an awful time if you have lost your home, and it’s not great if you are living in a home you cannot sell profitably. But if you have cash or can qualify for a mortgage, this is an ideal time to snag a bargain-priced home in Phoenix.
Technorati Tags: arizona, arizona real estate, investment, phoenix, phoenix real estate, real estate, real estate marketing
Discover more from Bloodhound Realty 602•740•7531
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Jim Boyer Chatham NJ says:
Hopefully this will snap the Phoenix AZ real estate market out of the slow time we have been in and get some action going again. My dad owns 2 homes there, and by this time next year I would love to see him owning one. But of course, he has the one he would sell rented, and so he is happy.
October 15, 2008 — 2:21 pm
Todd Waller says:
Greg,
Here in Michigan, we’ve been dealing with the “slower” real estate market for some time…nearly 4 years. Around the Ann Arbor area, the amount of inventory on the market is what gives the perception that nothing is selling. Yet, the stats show we are up on the number of transactions. And those numbers don’t move too much from year to year anyway.
October 17, 2008 — 1:21 pm