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Prices may not be shooting up, but homes are once again selling at a rapid
clip in many markets, draining multiple-listing services and turning up the
competitive pressure on buyers. Yep, that's right: Multiple offers are back.
We'll also round up the latest national housing statistics and answer a
reader's question on whether it's prudent to rent out the home he can no longer
afford and try to get a mortgage for a more affordable smaller house.
(For next month's
column: Buyers, has a low appraisal kept you from purchasing a
home? Have you lost a home to an all-cash investor this season? Please share
your experiences with us at msnrealestate@microsoft.com.)
Dude, where's my house?In markets such as Portland,
Ore.; Memphis, Tenn.; Seattle; and Salt Lake City, listings are practically
evaporating as they come on the market.
"There's not an awful lot out there for sale," says Niels Brownlow, a broker
with Coldwell Banker Barbara Sue Seal in Portland — especially, he says, on the
lower end, as investors and first-time buyers vie for bargains.
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"'If (a buyer) is not there the first day a home comes on the market, it's
gone," Brownlow says. Indeed, Brownlow says he recently had someone make an
offer on a condo in Portland's downtown area without even seeing it.
Portland's neighbor to the north, Seattle, is also getting highly
competitive, as 36% of the inventory has melted off the market, according to
data from Realtor.com. (Realtor.com is an MSN Real Estate partner.)
"I'm seeing multiple offers on just about every one of my listings," says Jed
Kliman, with Windermere Realty.
The competitive environment has already begun to nudge prices up in some
coveted Seattle neighborhoods such as Ballard and Queen Anne.
Indeed, a lot of what's left for buyers in hot markets such as Salt Lake City
is "junk parts," says Dave Winters of Re/Max Associates. "When a quality
property that is priced accurately comes out on the market, it's not going to
sit around."
Bargain prices and historically low interest rates are bringing buyers back.
The belief among buyers, agents say, is that the housing market has already
turned the corner and that there won't be a better time to land an affordable
home.
Home affordability calculator
However, a lot of potential sellers still can't list their homes at today's
prices because they are underwater on their mortgages, says Mark Fleming, chief
economist for property analytics firm CoreLogic. That has kept supply in check.
Moreover, the flow of foreclosures and other distressed properties onto the
market has slowed considerably after the robo-signing controversy and as
loan-modification and rental programs have been expanded. As a result, buyers
are fighting over those decent properties that are left. In some cases, they are
even competing with foreign buyers who see cheap U.S. real estate as a
once-in-a-lifetime rental investment.
"We are seeing buyers from New Zealand, Switzerland and from the U.K. here,"
says Rita Driver, an agent in Memphis. "I'm winding up with more multiple offers
now than I have in the last five years."