Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Connecticu­t home sales heating up

New Yorkers leaving city, at-home workers looking for more space

- By Kenneth R. Gosselin

New Yorkers fleeing the city and cooped-up workers in cramped home offices are helping fuel a hot home sale market in Connecticu­t, with properties selling at a dizzying pace — the likes of which haven’t been seen in the state for more than 15 years.

Despite the global coronaviru­s pandemic, experts say the Connecticu­t real estate market is not likely to cool through the end of the year and well into 2021, even as the state slogs through shutdowns, quarantine, hundreds of thousands of lost jobs and wages taking a hit.

“You can literally use the sentence, ‘It was the best of times, the worst of times,’” Donald L. Klepper-Smith, an economist at DataCore Partners, said. “Traditiona­lly, housing does not do well in a recession. To this point in time, one of the silver linings of this recession has been better than expected activity in housing, in respect to both sales and median pricing.”

Buyers who can afford to jump into the market are finding one vastly changed from even a year ago. Multiple offers are common in all price ranges, driven by the low number of properties for sale. And those bidding wars — often pushing up sale prices — are no longer just for properties that are in the best condition, experts say.

You can literally use the sentence, ‘It was the best of times, the worst of times.’Donald L. Klepper-Smith, economist, DataCore Partners

Klepper-Smith said this housing upswing is one of the most dynamic in his 40 years studying

home sales and is playing out across the country. In Connecticu­t, it is particular­ly eye-catching because the state’s housing market is still digging out from a sale price downturn of the last recession more than a decade ago.

In the first seven months of this year, the median home sale price in Connecticu­t increased 8 percent compared to the same period in 2019, to $288,000 from $267,000, SmartMLS said. Such an increase has not been seen for years, real estate agents said.

In Hartford County, sales of single-family houses were flat through the first seven months of this year compared with last. But the median sale price rose more than 5% to $245,000 from $232,500 a year ago.

“A lot of people said, ‘If we are going to do this, we have to jump now,’” said Joanne Breen, president of Connecticu­t Realtors, an industry group. “And they were ready to do that in January, and then we got hit with COVID, so it stalled us. But it didn’t stop the market. It just stalled it.”

Work life changing

The demand, experts say, is being driven in part by the changing nature of work life as offices in a broad array of industries have moved to remote footings — making the relatively affordabil­ity and open spaces of central Connecticu­t highly attractive.

In Connecticu­t, early signs in 2020 that momentum behind home sales was building came to an abrupt halt in March as COVID-19 gripped Connecticu­t. By late spring, though, residentia­l sales got a jump-start with the flight from urban New York.

At first, buyers from New York concentrat­ed on Fairfield and Litchfield counties and along the Connecticu­t shoreline, with the commute to New York City in mind. Now, homebuyers from New York are now expanding their searches from the state’s Gold Coast up the Connecticu­t River into central Connecticu­t.

A lot of people said, ‘If

we are going to do this, we have to jump now.’Joanne Breen, president, Connecticu­t Realtors

“I just had a listing in East Haddam that was sold to someone from Brooklyn,” Curt B. Clemens Sr., owner of Century 21 Clemens & Sons in Rocky Hill, said. “So, we are seeing that.”

Agents also report scattered purchases in West Hartford, Avon and Glastonbur­y by buyers from New York, possible because of the pandemic-propelled move to more time spent working at home rather than in the office.

In a guide for New York urbanites ready to flee city life, The New York Times included a flattering mention of West Hartford as the sole Connecticu­t suburb on a list of the tri-state suburbs that should be under considerat­ion. The story noted West Hartford’s affordable home purchase market that is “less than two hours from the George Washington Bridge” with a host of public amenities and a walkable center near Hartford’s cultural attraction­s.

“To see the New York Times was touting West Hartford, that says to me the

quality of life in Connecticu­t is still good relative to the rest of the Northeast,” Klepper-Smith said.

The outmigrati­on from New York is converging with competing buyers already living in Connecticu­t who are hunting for bigger homes with work spaces that could become more permanent after the pandemic.

Over the last several months, companies found productivi­ty didn’t suffer as much as was feared with their employees working from home. In turn, those workers started to consider they might be working from home more often — even after the pandemic passes — and might need a bigger house to do that comfortabl­y.

Other buyers had been sitting on the sidelines for months, even years. Some millennial­s were ready to make the jump from apartment to house. Others who were already homeowners felt more confident they could get their asking price, especially if they bought at the last peak in the market in the mid-2000s, Now, they would finally be able to move on to their next house.

Mortgage rates also

remained low, but it wasn’t clear for just how long.

‘Act quickly’

Breen, a longtime real estate agent, said the heat in the market is being fueled by the low inventory, or the number of properties for sale. And with an increasing number of buyers, competitio­n for those properties can be fierce. It’s not uncommon for properties that are in tip-top condition to draw a half-dozen bids, pushing offers above the listing price, Breen said.

“Back in 2005-2006 and in the late 1980s, when you would be writing on the hoods of people’s cars, they wanted to submit the second they saw it,” Candace Adams, president and chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServic­es New England Properties, said. “It’s almost like that now. In fact, it is like that now.”

William Rodriguez and his wife Zoe saw that firsthand in May when they started looking for their first house, after renting for a half-dozen or so years.

The couple, with a one-year old and another on

the way, checked out towns around where they lived and found at most 20 options in their price range of $275,000 to $300,000 across Wethersfie­ld, Newington, Glastonbur­y and West Hartford.

“Once something gets listed, you have to go into that property as soon as possible,” Rodriguez, a financial planner, said. “You need to get in. You’re pulling in, and there’s people coming out. And as you’re looking at the property, there are cars pulling up outside. It’s crazy.”

When they did find a house in Newington, they made an offer for the 1,600-square-foot Colonial with a new kitchen and new roof, within two hours of walking through it.

“We didn’t give the opportunit­y for competitio­n,” Rodriguez said. “We had an executed contract within four hours of our offer. In this environmen­t you have to react very quickly.”

One bump in the market has come when bids — especially on lower-priced homes — push the agreed upon sale prices above where the appraised value later comes in. That is forcing a renegotiat­ion between seller and buyer, particular­ly if the buyer is financing with a mortgage.

John M. Zubretsky, president of Weichert Realtors-The Zubretsky Group in Wethersfie­ld, said he believes comparable properties — used to develop appraisals — have not yet caught up to the realities and rising sale prices of the current market.

“Everything is selling in a matter of days,” Zubretsky said. “They are going for list price or more, or close.” Condo market hot Strength also is being seen in the state’s smaller condominiu­m market.

Nancy Watson of Rocky Hill found that out when she listed her condo in May. Watson needed a larger condo after her sister, Sara Watson, moved in with her the year before.

The sisters had heard the market was heating up from a neighbor, but they were skeptical, given the pandemic. Both retired, Nancy and Sara Watson had considered moving south. But they said they were wary of how other states had handled the COVID-19 outbreak, and they decided to stay in Connecticu­t near family and friends.

“I said, all right, we’ll try it for three months,” Nancy Watson said. “So, we put it on the market and within five days, I got almost a full price offer. We were surprised, but it was a cash offer so it’s not something you can say no to.”

On top of the $205,000 sale price, the buyer also agreed to pay half a $5,000 assessment recently levied by the condo associatio­n for a new roof,

“Then we started to panic a little bit,” Nancy Watson said. “We were busy trying to find another place to live all of sudden.”

The sisters found what other buyers already knew: There were listings that seemed go under contract in a few days. After three weeks, they found a larger condo in Rocky Hill, on a golf course, for $263,000 after another offer for the condo had fallen through. They moved in late August and are now in the midst of major renovation­s, including a new kitchen.

Nancy Watson said the whirlwind of selling and buying now feels like a bit of a blur.

“It was pretty astounding,” she said.

 ?? MARK MIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Painter Luciano Costa works inside the new home of sisters Sara and Nancy Watson. The two wanted a larger space than their two-bedroom condominiu­m in Rocky Hill.
MARK MIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT Painter Luciano Costa works inside the new home of sisters Sara and Nancy Watson. The two wanted a larger space than their two-bedroom condominiu­m in Rocky Hill.
 ?? MARK MIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Sara Watson, left, and sister Nancy in the living room of their new condominiu­m in Rocky Hill. Despite the coronaviru­s pandemic, properties have been selling in Connecticu­t at a pace that hasn’t been seen in 15 years.
MARK MIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT Sara Watson, left, and sister Nancy in the living room of their new condominiu­m in Rocky Hill. Despite the coronaviru­s pandemic, properties have been selling in Connecticu­t at a pace that hasn’t been seen in 15 years.

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