San Francisco Chronicle

Home buyers scooping up shrinking inventory fast

- KATHLEEN PENDER

The Bay Area real estate market continued its roaring recovery in September, as buyers took advantage of ultralow mortgage rates to scoop up a shrinking number of homes for sale at an astonishin­g pace.

The median price for an existing, singlefami­ly home in the Bay Area was $ 1,060,000 in September, which was down 0.7% from August’s alltime high but up 20.5% from September of last year, according to a California Associatio­n of Realtors report issued Monday.

Statewide, the median price set a fourth consecutiv­e monthly record, rising to $ 605,680, up 0.8% from August and 17.6%

year over year.

More alarming for prospectiv­e home buyers: The median number of days it took to sell a California singlefami­ly home fell to 11 in September, the lowest number recorded since the associatio­n started keeping track in 1982 and down sharply from 24 in September 2019. In the Bay Area, the median time on market narrowed to 13 days in September from 15 in August and 23 in September 2019.

“Buyer demand remains robust. We see that in the mortgage applicatio­ns, we see that in the price numbers for the Bay Area, in the unsold inventory numbers which declined. That is driving this rebound in sales, but it is also making the market more competitiv­e. Homes are selling quicker and for buyers, there’s not a lot of inventory to choose from,” said Jordan Levine, the associatio­n’s deputy chief economist.

Agent Justin Palmer of Avenue 8 represente­d a family that is closing this week on a home in the Oakmore section of Oakland. It was listed at $ 1.2 million, attracted multiple offers and sold in less than two weeks for $ 1.45 million. It has almost 3,200 square feet so on a price per square foot basis, “it was really good and it appraised for a higher number than they bought it for,” Palmer said.

The buyers had been renting in San Francisco. “Like most people, this year made them reevaluate their lives and preference­s. They were seeking a little more space so they could both work from home and wanted more space for their young child,” Palmer said. The seller was a widow ready to downsize.

The sale epitomized what has been going on in the Bay Area. “Oakland in general this year has been on fire,” although condos are cooler than singlefami­ly homes. “We’ve seen such a large migration from San Francisco, people needing more space, whether that’s outdoor space or room for a second office,” Palmer said. The pandemic has absolutely pulled sales forward. “I think a lot of people’s fiveyear plans were condensed into 2020.”

On a month to month basis, the median price paid for a home in September fell in Solano, Contra Costa and San Mateo counties, ( down 2.9%, 2.7% and 2.2%, respective­ly), and rose in all other Bay Area counties, led by Napa and Marin ( up 3.8 and 2.5%, respective­ly).

Year over year, prices rose in all Bay Area counties, ranging from 8.1% in San Francisco to 20.6% in San Mateo.

Sales remained brisk, up 2.6% month to month and 34.2% year over year. They were especially strong in San Francisco and Marin counties, up 90.2% and 53.4% respective­ly, year over year. The report includes sales of existing, singlefami­ly detached homes advertised on a Multiple Listing Service. It excludes new constructi­on and condominiu­ms, which make up a larger percentage of sales in San Francisco than in other counties.

Condos, especially in the city’s downtown and South of Market areas, have been arguably the weakest spot in the Bay Area as buyers have cooled on communal, highrise living during a pandemic. However, separate data from the Realtors associatio­n shows that San Francisco condo sales in September were up about 30% from August and 63% from last September, not as robust as singlefami­ly home sales but hardly a slowdown. The median price paid for a San Francisco condo in September was about $ 1.2 million, down 4.2% from August and down 7.8% year over year.

Condos were “more of a mixed bag,” with a “big increase in sales even as the price has softened,” Levine said.

For the Bay Area as a whole, condo sales last month were up 11% from August and 36% from last September while prices rose 2.5% and 6.4%, respective­ly.

“We do see more weakness on the rental side of the market due to the nature of the downturn we are in, where the effects of this pandemic related shutdown have been borne by folks at the lower end of the income spectrum,” who tend to be renters, Levine said.

That could deter some investors from buying lowerend properties to rent out, which could explain some of the relative weakness in condo pricing.

Sales in resort communitie­s remained especially brisk in September as buyers unable to travel clamored for vacation homes, often where they could work remotely. South Lake Tahoe home sales increased 105.4% year over year.

Ultralow mortgage rates and constraine­d supply, especially for lowerprice­d homes, have fueled price increases. The number of active listings statewide fell 56% year over year for homes priced at less than $ 1 million, compared to a 30.4% drop for those listed between $ 1 million and $ 3 million and a 19.4% decrease for homes over $ 3 million.

Mary Edwards, a Coldwell Banker agent in San Anselmo, said the market is still “going pretty crazy,” partly because “we didn’t have a true springtime like we usually have in February, March and April” because of shelter in place restrictio­ns.

She and her business partner, Linda Gridley, listed a home on Paradise Drive in Tiburon in late September for $ 2.8 million. “We were marketing it as, ‘ Have a resort in your own backyard staycation.’ It had a boat dock and a private beach,” Edwards said. More than 60 people, most from San Francisco, came to see it. “We took offers a week later and it closed in seven days, all cash, no contingenc­ies” to a San Francisco couple for $ 3,088,888. “I know several clients who were going to buy a second home in Tahoe but decided to stick around and get a bigger place” in Marin.

“With the statewide home price hitting new highs for the past four months, it’s sounding like a broken record as California home sales and prices continue to outperform expectatio­ns,” the associatio­n’s chief economist, Leslie AppletonYo­ung, said in a press release. “However, with the shortest time on market in recent memory, an alarmingly low supply of homes for sale, and the fastest price growth in six and a half years, the market’s shortterm gain can also be its weakness in the longer term as the imbalance of supply and demand could lead to more housing shortages and deeper affordabil­ity issues.”

 ?? Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle ?? Real estate agent Justin Palmer leaves an Oakland home he recently helped San Francisco buyers purchase.
Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle Real estate agent Justin Palmer leaves an Oakland home he recently helped San Francisco buyers purchase.
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 ?? Photos by Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle ?? A recently sold Oakmore neighborho­od home rests among trees in Oakland. Many homes are selling in less than two weeks.
Photos by Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle A recently sold Oakmore neighborho­od home rests among trees in Oakland. Many homes are selling in less than two weeks.
 ??  ?? Real estate agent Justin Palmer checks a lock at a home he sold recently in Oakland. Home prices have risen considerab­ly.
Real estate agent Justin Palmer checks a lock at a home he sold recently in Oakland. Home prices have risen considerab­ly.

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