USA TODAY International Edition

Home flipping rate may be bad sign

Activity at nine-year high but market is cooling

- Dalvin Brown

The rate of buying, fixing up and reselling a house – also known as flipping – hit a nine-year high with more than 49,000 single-family homes and condos selling in the category in the first quarter.

However, experts warn that’s not necessaril­y an indicator of the housing market’s overall strength.

A report released June 6 by the property database Attom Data Solutions found that flipping activity represente­d 7.2% of all home sales nationwide during the start of 2019. That’s up from 5.9% in the previous quarter and up from 6.7% this time last year, representi­ng the highest home-flipping rate since the start of 2010.

Still, that’s only part of the picture. The total number of homes that were flipped was down 8% from the first quarter of 2018, and the number of investors engaging in the activity also was on the decline. Experts say that an uptick in home flipping activity could indicate that conditions in the housing market are worsening.

“While the home flipping rate is increasing, gross profits and ROI are starting to weaken, and the number of investors that are flipping is down 11% from last year,” Attom’s chief product officer Todd Teta said in the new report. “If investors are seeing profit margins drop, they may be acting now and selling before price increases drop even more.”

In the first quarter, flipped houses sold for a median price of $215,000. The median purchase price stood at $155,000, making the gross flipping profit just $60,000, which is a threeyear low.

In the same quarter last year, the gross flipping profit was $68,000.

That may be why some investors decided to sit on the sidelines.

“With interest rates dropping and home price increases starting to ease, investors may be getting out while the getting is good, before the market softens further,” Teta said.

Last year, researcher­s told MarketWatc­h the real estate market may be cooling, describing home-flipping as a “canary in the coal mine” as the high velocity of transactio­ns give flippers realtime data on the direction of the market.

The time it took to flip the house also was slightly down from a year ago, 180 days compared with 182 days, Attom found.

 ??  ?? In the first quarter, flipped houses sold for a median price of $215,000. The median purchase price stood at $155,000. GETTY IMAGES
In the first quarter, flipped houses sold for a median price of $215,000. The median purchase price stood at $155,000. GETTY IMAGES

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