Turnaround Towns

Turnaround Towns

Some of the nation’s real estate markets that have
traditionally been considered “bad” areas to invest
are experiencing a big turnaround.

Lexie Puckett recently wrote an article for Realtor.com where she highlighted 10 towns that experienced grown in the second quarter of 2013.

“Oakland, Orange County and the Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc area in California are leading the nation in housing recovery, according to the realtor.com® Turnaround Towns report for the second quarter of 2013. And Detroit is an unexpected winner, showing up as No. 7 on the list.”

Top 10 Turnaround Towns

1 – Oakland, CA: Oakland has been well on the path to recovery for more than a year. In the second quarter of 2013, listings in the Oakland market fell more than 34 percent from year-ago levels. Oakland led the nation in year-over-year list-price increases in the second quarter of 2013, and houses in Oakland are staying listed on realtor.com® for only 15 days, which is the youngest inventory in the nation. The median list house price in Oakland has risen from $339,000 a year ago to $479,000 in the second quarter of 2013.

2 – Orange County, CA: Orange County had record numbers of foreclosures just four years ago, but its home prices rose 29.4 percent above year-ago levels. In the second quarter of this year, Orange County had the fastest-declining inventory in the nation, with listings on realtor.com® down 36.6 percent. The median age of Orange County homes on realtor.com® in the second quarter of 2013 was 51 days, far below the national median of 83 days and 43.3 percent lower than a year ago.

3 – Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, CA: Santa Barbara’s strong prices catapulted it into third place on the list. In the second quarter of 2013, this market’s median price was up 34.3 percent over a year ago, to $685,000. Though Santa Barbara inventories were still extraordinarily low – down 27.8 percent from the second quarter of 2012 – they have started to recover. The average time that Santa Barbara listings spend on realtor.com® – 56 days – dropped 30.9 percent from the second quarter of 2012.

4 – San Jose, CA: Inventories in San Jose dropped 35.4 percent compared to the second quarter of 2012, the second-largest drop in the nation. Year-over-year San Jose prices were up exactly 25 percent in the second quarter of 2013, another sign that the market is returning to normal after a combination of historically low inventories and strong demand powered prices in San Jose and several other Northern California cities to huge increases.

5 – Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA: Seattle has worked its way into the top turnaround towns with consistently low inventories and a young age of listings. The median age of the market’s inventory on realtor.com® in the second quarter was only 23 days, making it the second-youngest in the nation. Homes listed for sale on realtor.com® are down 29.9 percent since the second quarter of 2012. Though Seattle’s market prices are not rising as quickly as those of other cities on this list, it is seeing resurgence in seller confidence.

6 – Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA: Los Angeles-Long Beach ranks fifth in the nation in price appreciation, with year-over-year prices up 30.3 percent as of the second quarter of 2013. Inventories were down 28.9 percent in the second quarter of 2013 from the same period in 2012. The median age of inventory, a measure of the balance between supply and demand, was 59 days compared to 83 days nationally.

7 – Detroit, MI: Although Detroit just filed for bankruptcy, the area’s housing market has been putting up numbers that bode well for the future of the city. Median list prices on realtor.com® are 37.8 percent higher in the second quarter of 2013 than the same period one year ago, while inventories are down 26.5 percent. The market’s median age of inventory is just 45 days, down 25 percent from the second quarter in 2012.

8 – Portland, OR-Vancouver, WA: Changes in the size of Portland-Vancouver’s inventory and a sharp decline in the time that homes are on the market are setting the stage for growth. Inventories are down 23.5 percent in the second quarter of 2013 from the same period in 2012, while median price is up 12 percent over the second quarter of 2012. The key to this market is its age of inventory, which has shrunk 45.8 percent in the past year. At 39 days, it is far below the national average of 83 days.

9 – San Diego, CA: For a large market, San Diego is putting up very strong numbers. Prices are up, inventories are down and homes are selling briskly. Prices are up 21.1 percent in the second quarter compared to the same period a year ago, and inventories are down 28.5 percent. Age of inventory in the San Diego market dropped 26.4 percent to 53 days.

10 – Reno, NV: Reno’s strong demand and shrinking inventory combined to create double-digit price appreciation. In the second quarter of 2013, list prices were up 26 percent over the same period last year, at the same time that its property count on realtor.com® fell 29.1 percent. Age of inventory dropped 32.3 percent.

http://www.realtor.com/news/turnaround-towns-for-q2-2013/

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Turnaround Towns

Drew,

Thank you for sharing this article with everyone. I hope as investors we are looking at all kinds of media to get our information. Articles like this can help us narrow down markets to invest in, we just need to do a little more due diligence on the areas mentioned in the articles to then decide how we want to approach our investing strategies'. Being a informed investor is the best kind to be. If your market is not moving at the pace you want then shift markets, no matter how far way they are. Don't be afraid to do remote investing.

Thanks,
Shah Ali


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