Feature image for SF: Oct 2022 Market Stats

October 11, 2022

SF: Oct 2022 Market Stats

By Compass

Virtually across the Bay Area, Q3 median sales prices retreated dramatically from their spring peaks, and SF was hit harder than most area markets. Part of this was due to seasonal trends – median sales prices often peak for the calendar year in Q2, then drop in summer – but part of the decline was clearly due to changing market conditions prompted by shifts in interest rates, inflation, stock markets, and consumer confidence. In this report, home prices will be reviewed from a variety of angles to provide greater context. On the supply and demand side, it appears that after the big drop in demand in early-mid summer, conditions have mostly stabilized: Generally speaking, sales numbers are no longer appreciably dropping, though overbidding statistics continue to decline and days on market to climb.

When looking at recent market changes, it is important to remember how overheated the market was in 2021 and early 2022 – many quarter-to-quarter and year-over-year comparisons are distorted by the unusual (sometimes frenzied) conditions that prevailed then. It is also wise not to jump to definitive conclusions based on a single quarter’s data: The economy and real estate market are still in a period of adjustment.

Comparisons with the crash of 2008 continue to be made, but the precipitating factor in the 2008 crash – tens of millions of households talked into home loans they could never afford, forcing a tsunami of frantic sales during the great recession – simply does not apply today. Mortgage payments as a percentage of income and loan delinquency rates are both close to all-time lows; most homeowners’ mortgages are held at historically low rates. There has been no surge of desperate sellers: New listing numbers are actually down from last year. Stock market declines, though substantial, cannot compare with those seen in 2008-2009, and employment remains very strong. This is not to minimize the correction the market is going through: There are certainly major economic and demographic challenges at play right now, but a market correction is not a crash, being more like a slow leak in an over-pressurized tire than a blowout on the highway at high speed.

The relatively short autumn selling season began after Labor Day and runs through mid-November. The mid-winter holiday slowdown then runs through mid-January. Though sales continue every month of the year, listing and sale activity drops dramatically as we near Thanksgiving. Slower markets can offer opportunities to buyers, but the selection of homes for sale usually tumbles.Delinquency Rate on U.S. Single Family MortgagesSan Francisco House Price TrendsSan Francisco: Year-over-Year House Appreciation Rates since 2020San Francisco Condo Price AppreciationSan Francisco: Year-over-Year Condo Appreciation Rates since 2020San Francisco Home Price Trends – Selected District MarketsSan Francisco Home Price Trends – Selected DistrictsSan Francisco House Price Trends – by Bedroom CountSan Francisco Condo Price Trends – by Bedroom CountNew Listings Coming on MarketSan Francisco Homes MarketActive Listings on Market – Longer-Term TrendsListings Accepting Offers (Going into Contract)San Francisco Home Sales by QuarterMonthly Sales Volume – Longer-Term TrendsSales of Priced Reduced ListingsPrice Reductions on Active ListingsSan Francisco Higher-Price Home Sales since 2018San Francisco Luxury House MarketSan Francisco Luxury Condo, Co-op, Townhouse & TIC MarketPercentage of Listings Accepting Offers (Absorption Rate)Percentage of Sales Selling Over List PriceAvg. Sales Price to Original List Price Percentage (SP/LP %)Average Days on Market by QuarterDisclaimer slide

If you have any questions or want to talk more about local market trends, please don't hesitate to reach out. I'd be happy to grab a coffee or chat via phone. 

Thank you,
Shannon

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