Pend Oreille County Real Estate

Pend Oreille County Real Estate Now servicing your Real Estate needs in the Pend Oreille County! Buying, Selling, Investing. I offe

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03/25/2023

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Improved 5 acre lot $129950.
10/18/2022

Improved 5 acre lot $129950.

For sale This is a vacant land. It is located at 327968 Highway 2 Newport, Washington.

02/10/2022

Beyond Supply And Demand: Today’s Tech Is Helping House Prices Skyrocket

Real Estate

Falling interest rates and the pandemic are the top two reasons for house prices skyrocketing over the last year and a half but there’s another reason no one talks about.

Today’s technology simply makes it easier for house prices to increase when buyer demand increases. If house prices are indeed more sensitive to increases in demand, it would make house prices higher but also more unstable.

The huge house price increases in the 2020s were started by mortgage interest rates falling from 4.9% in November 2018 to 2.7% in December 2020. By the end, with the same monthly principal and interest payment, house buyers could borrow 30% more money so they were bidding up house prices along the way. Prices really took off in the summer of 2020 after mortgage interest rates had been falling steeply for over a year and a half.

Covid-19 changed the market, as well, of course. A lot of that was also based on new technology. Zoom and similar technologies made work-from-home a lot more practical for some people and some of them bought houses farther from work or bought second homes because they could spend more time at their second homes with work-from-home.

A lot of other factors were also at play, including a hot stock market so a lot of people had a lot more money to move up to better homes or to buy second homes.

House prices had a huge amount of upward momentum going into 2021 and then, at the same time, Covid-19 deaths took off. They peaked in January 2021.

Many potential house sellers delayed putting their houses up for sale so the number of houses hitting the market tanked at the exact same time sales were soaring after two years of falling mortgage rates.

On top of the two main reasons, the overlooked reason for skyrocketing house prices was the huge amount of technological change that had occurred in the house buying process since the last house price boom in the 2000s.

Potential house buyers today have so much information at their fingertips about the market and about individual houses that they can make buying decisions more quickly and, in addition, it’s just a lot easier to make an offer to buy a house today. The mechanics of the home buying process are far faster than during the 1980s real estate boom or during the 2000s real estate boom. That increased speed exaggerated the increases in demand that came from the lower rates and pandemic changes in demand.

That speed is equivalent, in a way, to having more buyers because it becomes more likely a house will get multiple offers when it first hits the market. And when it's so easy to make offers, potential buyers can make a lot more offers on a lot more houses before they get discouraged, give up and stop making offers.

Economists would say modern technology has lowered the transaction costs of buying a house. Today’s quicker offers lead to higher prices and those higher prices contribute in a feedback loop to even higher prices.

Some prominent economists have said housing prices are driven largely by what people expect house prices to be in the future. When prices have increased a lot in the past, some buyers expect them to continue increasing fast in the future so they’re willing to pay more and that can cause house prices to rise without any new changes in supply or demand. House prices are determined by supply, demand and what buyers think future house prices will be.

Clearly, last year house prices skyrocketed because of falling interest rates and Covid-19, but technological change was also likely an important factor—a factor that will continue into the future long after the influences of record low mortgage rates and Covid-19 are gone.

Contact me with questions..

Kevin

12/11/2021

Top Housing Markets of 2022

Salt Lake City, Utah; Boise, Idaho and Spokane, Wash. are anticipated to see the highest home price appreciation and sales growth in 2022
Driven by strong local economies, tech sector job growth and relative affordability, Realtor.com® forecasts its Top Housing Markets of 2022 will lead the nation in listing price appreciation and home sales growth next year.

Concentrated in the Mountain West, Midwest and New England, this year's top 10 in rank order are: Salt Lake City, Utah, Boise, Idaho, Spokane, Wash., Indianapolis, Ind., Columbus, Ohio, Providence, R.I., Greenville, S.C., Seattle, Wash., Worcester, Mass. and Tampa, Fla.

Based on the 2022 Realtor.com® local housing forecast, the areas on this list are expected to see the strongest combined growth in home sales and listing prices among the 100 largest U.S. metros.

In fact, home sales across the top 10 markets are forecasted to grow by 11.6% year-over-year in 2022, which is nearly two-times the national home sales growth projection (6.6%).

Additionally, average home prices in the top 10 are expected to increase 7.4% – more than double the national pace (+2.9%).

Give me a call with questions... 425-444-HUNT(4868)

Kevin

12/09/2021

Housing Inventory Plunges To A Record Low In November

In November, 33% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within one week of hitting the market.
Shopping for a new home in late November most likely gave frustrated buyers little to be thankful for as demand for homes continued to outpace supply.

The number of homes for sale hit an all-time low during the week ending November 28, according to a new report from Redfin, a technology-powered real estate brokerage. During that period, sustained demand pushed the median home price to another record high, and a third of homes sold in one week or less.

“The number of homes for sale typically declines another 15% in December,” said Redfin chief economist Daryl Fairweather. “That means that by the end of the year, there will likely be 100,000 fewer homes for sale than there were in February when housing supply last hit rock bottom. I think more new listings will hit the market in the new year, but there will also be a long line of buyers who are queuing up right now.”

“Meanwhile, headlines and new restrictions related to the omicron variant of the coronavirus might fuel some uncertainty and volatility in the economy,” said Fairweather. “In the short term, global interest rates, including mortgage rates, could fall. In this extremely tight housing market, we would quickly see a proportional increase in competition and home prices.”

Key housing market takeaways

The median home-sale price hit a new all-time high of $360,375, up 14% year over year. This was up 31% from the same period in 2019 and up 1.5% from a month earlier, far greater than the 0.2% increase seen during the same period last year.
Asking prices of newly listed homes were up 12% from the same time a year ago and up 27% from 2019 to a median of $349,750.
Pending home sales were up 8% year over year, and up 49% compared to the same period in 2019.
New listings of homes for sale were down 4% from a year earlier, but up 12% from 2019. During the seven-day period ending November 28, active listings (the number of homes listed for sale at any point during the period) fell to a new all-time low. For the four-week period, active listings fell 23% from 2020 and 42% from 2019.
45% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within the first two weeks on the market, above the 39% rate of a year earlier and the 28% rate in 2019. Since the four-week period ending September 19, the share of homes under contract within two weeks is up 2.3 percentage points. During the same time in 2019, the share fell 3.1 points.
33% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within one week of hitting the market, up from 27% during the same period a year earlier and 18% in 2019. Since the four-week period ending September 12, the share of homes under contract within a week is up 2.9 percentage points. During the same time in 2019, the share fell 2.3 points.
Homes that sold were on the market for a median of 25 days, down from 31 days a year earlier and 46 days in 2019.
43% of homes sold above list price, up from 35% a year earlier and 21% in 2019.
On average, 3.8% of homes for sale each week had a price drop, up 0.7 percentage points from the same time in 2020 and up 0.2 points from this time in 2019.
The average sale-to-list price ratio, which measures how close homes are selling to their asking prices, was 100.5%. In other words, the average home sold for 0.5% above its asking price.

Need to sell your home?
Give me a call 425-444-HUNT(4868)
or email me [email protected]

11/03/2020

Sterling, Johnston Real Estate is looking to add Real Estate agents to Pend Oreille and Spokane counties.
Call Eirik Olsen to discuss what we have to offer!

206-276-8322

Address

291 Yergens Road
Newport, WA
99156

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