Houston Chronicle Sunday

High-end homes provide the bright spot in September

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Consumers kept the high end of the Houston housing market humming in September even as the market collective­ly continued transition­ing to more normal, pre-pandemic levels. Sales overall were off for a sixth consecutiv­e month due largely to the persistent lack of inventory and inflationa­ry headwinds that include rising interest rates.

However, the inventory landscape is showing signs of improvemen­t for consumers as an uptick in new listings helped boost overall supply to its highest level in two years.

According to the Houston Associatio­n of Realtors’ (HAR) September 2022 Market Update, single-family home sales fell 17.0 percent, with 7,664 units sold compared to 9,235 in September 2021. On a year-todate basis, the market now trails 2021’s record-setting volume by 5.1 percent.

The top sales volume performer was the $500,000 to $1 million housing segment, which rose 12.6 percent. The only other segment to remain in positive territory was $1M and above housing, which increased 7.2 percent. Many would-be home buyers continued to turn to rental housing options in September.

“The Houston housing market consists of many concurrent trends,” said HAR Chair Jennifer Wauhob with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Gary Greene. “The high end of the market continues to perform well, as is the rental market. But because of a lack of homes priced below $400,000, the market as a whole is slowing to levels we were accustomed to before the pandemic. The most encouragin­g news of all is the gradual build-back of inventory, which should yield more options for consumers going forward.”

Housing across greater Houston has experience­d historic appreciati­on since the pandemic struck in early 2020. The

average price of a single-family home rose 11.6 percent in September to $414,776 — well below the record high of $438,384 reached in May 2022. The median price jumped 14.7 percent to $343,950, which is also below the highest median of all time, $354,100, reached in June 2022. The average price for a single-family home in Houston first broke the $400,000 mark in March of this year. The median price has held above $300,000 since May 2021.

Home-buying activity slowed for a sixth straight month in September, with mortgage interest rates exceeding six percent for the first time in years, as well as a continued lack of housing inventory below $400,000. Year-over-year single-family home sales fell 17.0 percent. On a year-to-date basis, sales are trailing last year’s record pace by 5.1 percent.

Market indicators provided mixed readings in September. In addition to the drop in single-family home sales, total property sales and total dollar volume declined and pending sales fell 15.5 percent. Active listings (the total number of available properties) jumped 36.3 percent.

Months of inventory grew again in September, reaching a 2.7-months supply. That is the highest level since July of 2020 when it was 2.9 months. Housing inventory nationally stands at a 3.2-months supply, according to the latest report from the National Associatio­n of Realtors (NAR). A 6.0-months supply is generally considered make up a “balanced market,” in which neither the buyer nor the seller has an advantage.

Single-family home sales fell 17.0 percent in August with 7,664 units sold across the greater Houston area compared to 9,235 a year earlier. In September, the median price climbed 14.7 percent to $343,950 while the average price rose 11.6 percent to $414,776.

For a pre-pandemic perspectiv­e, September sales are up 8.7 percent compared to three years ago, in September 2019, when a total of 7,050 single-family homes sold. The median price then was 40.6 percent lower, at $244,679, and the average price, at $299,600, was 38.4 percent lower. Sales are 10.2 percent above where they were five years ago, in September 2017, when volume totaled 6,953. Back then, the median price was $232,000 and the average price was $290,683 — reflecting pricing jumps of 48.3 percent and 42.7 percent, respective­ly.

Days on Market, or the actual time it took to sell a home, grew from 29 to 37 days. Inventory registered a 2.7-months supply compared to 1.7 months a year earlier. That is the greatest supply of homes on the market since July 2020. The current national inventory stands at 3.2 months, as reported by NAR.

Broken out by housing segment, September sales performed as follows:

• $1 - $99,999: decreased 31.7 percent

• $100,000 - $149,999: decreased 25.5 percent

• $150,000 - $249,999: decreased 44.7 percent

• $250,000 - $499,999: decreased 11.3 percent

• $500,000 - $999,999: increased 12.6 percent

• $1M and above: increased 7.2 percent

HAR also breaks out sales figures for existing singlefami­ly homes. Existing home sales totaled 6,058 in September, down 22.8 percent from the same month last year. The average sales price rose 11.4 percent to $409,384 while the median sales price increased 11.9 percent to $330,000. Those figures are significan­tly below the pricing records that were set earlier this year.

Townhouses and condominiu­ms experience­d their fourth consecutiv­e monthly decline, falling 17.6 percent year-over-year with 601 closed sales versus 729 a year earlier.

The average price increased 7.5 percent to $257,781 and the median price rose 4.8 percent to $220,000. Both figures are below the historic highs reached in April 2022.

Inventory fell from a 2.3-months supply to 2.0 months.

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