San Francisco Chronicle

Listings for homes in city see sharp rise

- By J. K. Dineen

San Francisco’s residentia­l real estate market saw brisk activity from July through September with a steep increase in both sales and inventory, as a significan­t jump in buyers was not enough to keep up with the deluge of new condos and homes flooding the marketplac­e, according to a new report from the brokerage Compass.

The number of sales rose 30.2% compared to the third quarter last year, climbing from 1,151 to 1,499 transactio­ns. But the number of listings is at a 15year high, with a 10month inventory for condos in some neighborho­ods. Comparing September to the same month last year, the number of price reductions was up 172% for houses and condos combined. Of the price reductions, 80% were of condos.

“The issue is the inventory is increasing so much faster than the sales rate,” said Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst for Compass. “Any time you have this relatively huge overhang of supply, and demand is stable, you are going to see price reductions.”

The market was bifurcated: singlefami­ly homes did better than condos; large homes were more popular than smaller homes; and many

“The issue is the inventory is increasing so much faster than the sales rate.” Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst for Compass

downtown highrise offerings languished while listings in more suburban neighborho­ods tended to trade faster and slightly above asking price.

The contrast between the singlefami­ly homes and condos was apparent in price, how long a property sat on the market, and whether the asking price had to be cut to attract buyers. The median sales for singlefami­ly homes inched up year over year from $ 1.57 million to $ 1.66 million while condo prices lagged, dipping slightly from $ 1.275 million to $ 1.250 million. Singlefami­ly listings sold at an average of 102.5% of listing price while condos went for an average of 97.5% of listing price.

Even within the condo segment there are difference­s based on neighborho­od. There is a 10month inventory in the downtown neighborho­ods whereas a leafier district that includes Cole Valley, Eureka Valley and Noe Valley has a fourmonth supply, Carlisle said.

The average size of home that sold in the third quarter was 1,997 square feet, compared to 1,890 in the third quarter last year. The change reflects the reality of the pandemic: Wealthier families are keeping their jobs, staying healthy and enjoying robust stockmarke­t returns while less welloff families are more likely to be struggling with unemployme­nt and sickness.

San Francisco saw a 28% increase in sales of luxury homes — those over $ 2.5 million — year over year, Carlisle said.

“There is no doubt affluent buyers have been making up a larger percentage of people buying homes,” he said. “It speaks to the economic stratifica­tion going on.”

In contrast, the entrylevel buyer pool, dominated by young tech workers, is more likely to be leaving the city to work from home in more spacious or bucolic settings, Carlisle said.

With so many people looking to sell at once, there will likely be a scramble to unload properties before the market goes into hibernatio­n for the holidays, he said. That means that listings have to be priced correctly out of the gate.

“The properties that sell are selling quickly but there is another group of listings that the market is not reacting to and those are going through price reduction,” he said. “If you don’t grab attention of buyer quickly, you get lost in the shuffle of all the new inventory.”

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