Antelope Real Estate Market — The Return of the Seller’s Market
Two areas in Sacramento County hold some special fascination for me — Elk Grove and Antelope. In both areas, a large number of foreclosures have fueled steep drops in prices, and the fall in prices has created hot markets for bank foreclosures.
Antelope is on the verge of transitioning from a buyer’s market into a seller’s market. To be sure, the “sellers” are banks, and there are still a lot of foreclosures to get through. Fully 84.1% of all homes in Antelope that are currently for sale in the MLS are either in foreclosure (22.1%) or being sold short (62%).
In spite of the number of foreclosures — which would lead one to suspect that further price cuts are in the cards — all indicators in Antelope are showing that the price decreases have already hit a sweet spot where demand is turning up sharply:
- At 72 units sold last month, unit volume is up 71.4% over last year (compared to 46% overall for Sacramento County).
- The expired to sold ratio has fallen to only 18.1% in April, compared to 73.8% last year.
- Days on market are down 25%, from an average of 60 in April of 2007 to an average of 45 in 2008.
- The ratio of the sold price to the list price has risen from 98.5% last year to 99.3% this year.
- Current inventory is down to 6.79 months. Anything under six months is traditionally considered a seller’s market.
No doubt many of the 199 short sales that are currently available will go to foreclosure soon, and as they do, they’ll be purchased by eager buyers. In April, 9.7% of the homes that sold were short sales, even though they make up 62% of inventory. In contrast, 76.4% of the homes that sold in Antelope were bank foreclosures, though only foreclosures make up only 22.1% of inventory.
May 7th, 2008 at 3:12 pm
As home values drop due to the foreclosures and short sales the owners who are making their payments are also losing. When an area starts in the foreclosure cycle it just tends to keep spiraling. Wonder where the bottom lies.