Coming Soon – New Foreclosure & Short Sale Search Options

10 months after the Minneapolis/St. Paul area MLS (RMLS of MN) made available the somewhat-useful-but-really-bastardized-lender-mediated-mls-field and 14 months after I started openly pushing for specific fields, they have now come to see the light and are redoing the fields as three separate and distinct fields that address each of the major questions/problems of lender mediated listings:

Three new required fields will be added to NorthstarMLS. (Tentatively planned for activation Tuesday night–we will let you know if that changes.)

The current “In Foreclosure/Lender Owned?” field will be replaced with two separate fields: “In Foreclosure” and “Lender Owned.”  As with the current combined field, the options will be Yes, No and Not Disclosed.  For current listings, both separate fields will automatically be populated with whatever you have selected for the combined field.  If this is incorrect for either of the separate fields, you will need to edit it in Home Base.

If you have any Saved Searches in Matrix that include the current “In Foreclosure/Lender Owned” field, it will automatically be replaced with the single “In Foreclosure” field.  If you want to add “Lender Owned” to any of your current saved searches, you will need to revise them.

NorthstarMLS continues to define “In Foreclosure” as:  The homeowner being served official notice of foreclosure by a governing entity.

“Short Sale?” is our third new field.  The options here are also Yes, No and Not Disclosed.  Existing listings will have nothing selected for this field.  If you want to make a selection, you will need to go to Home Base and edit the listing.

For NorthstarMLS, we define “Short Sale” as:  A transaction where title transfers; where the sale price is insufficient to pay the total of all liens and costs of the sale; and where the seller does not bring sufficient liquid assets to the closing to cure all deficiencies.

For all three fields, you should have the seller’s signed consent for a disclosure of “Yes.”  You can get this through their signature on the Listing Input Form or on a Change Form.

The new fields will also be available for broker/agent Web sites (through Broker Reciprocity) after a three week notice period for developers.  Therefore, the new fields will be visible to the public.

So based on my math, by mid-May consumers searching public web sites (and agents using our proprietary system) will both be able to clearly identify & separate MOST properties as short sales, bank owned, or traditional sellers.  I say most because “not disclosed” is an option for all three fields.  Many will assume “not disclosed” means Yes but that will not always be the case.

At a time where lender mediated sales are full 1/2 of the sales in our market, any further detail we can use to help us parse the listings is quite welcome.  The differences between foreclosed homes, short sales, and traditional sellers is huge and many buyers have specific wants/needs that dictate their need to focus on only certain types of listings.

The other great benefit is that in the coming months the reporting that MAAR and I have put out will be able to clearly differentiate between the three types of properties and produce statistics on each category of properties.  This could lead to dramatic enchancements to our reports but due to the timing of the system changes we likely will not have sufficient data to make the differentiations until July or August at the earliest.

Inventory of Foreclosures & Short Sales in Twin Cities Dropping Fast

Today MAAR released the quarterly update to their report: “Foreclosures and Short Sales in the Twin Cities Housing Market,” which was co-developed and authored by Jeff Allen from MAAR and myself.

Monthly Lender Mediated Inventory - Through April 1 2009
Today’s headline number is that while foreclosures and short sales (what we call lender mediated sales) are still a large part of our new listings and our inventory, they are an even larger part of our sales, which means that the for sale inventory of these lender mediated listings is dropping dramatically.  In fact, from February 1 2009 to April 1 2009, inventory of lender mediated listings fell by 1200+ units, a drop of more than 13%.  This dramatic reduction in active inventory happened while new lender mediated listings still stayed at record high levels.  The foreclosure moratoriums that many lenders put in place in late 2008 and early 2009 have not lead to a marked decrease in new lender mediated listings, so the reduction in lender mediated listings for sale is based solely on dramatically increased buyer demand.

2009 Q1 Listing & Sale Activity
Lender mediated sales in Q1 of 2009 were up 147% from Q1 2008 while traditional seller sales were down 41% over the same period last year.  This shift has been evident since Q3 2008 and is likely to continue well through much of 2009 due to lender mediated sellers using their pricing power to attract buyers to their listings.

Lender Mediated Sale Price Historical Chart
The difference in median sales prices between traditional and lender mediated sales hit a new record in Q1 2009: lender mediated sales averaged $122,900 while traditional sellers received $212,000 on average, a difference of nearly $90,000!

As was first released in the Q4 2008 Update, we also have new detailed community-level activity data as well.  You will find no better analysis of local market impact from lender mediated sales anywhere in the country… this data and methodology is exclusive to our market.  I’m proud of what we have and I hope you are too!

More analysis to follow….

Minnesota 2008 Foreclosure Statistics Released

Thanks to the Minnesota Homeownership Center Blog for telling me about HousingLink’s Q4 2008 update to their Foreclosure Report.

What’s especially interesting to me is the chart showing foreclosure counts as a percentage of total houses:
2008 Minnesota Foreclosures by County

MAAR did a similar “heat map” for the Twin Cities, specifically looking at 2008 “lender mediated sales” – which are foreclosures or short sales in our MLS:
2008 Lender Mediated Sales in the Twin Cities

Q4 Lender Mediated Report & City Level Data Released

Today I am pleased to announce the release of the Foreclosures and Short Sales in the Twin Cities Housing Market: Q4 2008 Update.  This is the 4th installment of quarterly reporting of lender mediated sales and their impact in the Greater Minneapolis/St. Paul area, which I co-author with the musically, intellectually, politically and statistically talented Jeff Allen.  2008 reports from quarters 1, 2 and 3 are also available.

Here’s how to know if buying a foreclosure or short sale is right for you.

This quarter’s report continues to show the same trends we’ve seen all of 2008, mainly an increase in the market share of lender mediated MLS listings both for sale and those that sold in the quarter.  Traditional sellers are very seasonal and so while the fact that 46% of sales and 42% of new listings in Q4 were lender mediated is very notable, it is somewhat inflated by the seasonality.

While some trends have certainly continued from previous quarters, we have seen a new trend develop as well: the Q2-Q3-Q4 period showed a relative peak of new lender mediated listings coming on, and Q4 showed our first drop in both lender mediated new listings inventory for sale at quarter-end.  Prior to Q2 2008 we saw dramatically more new lender mediated listings each quarter since 2006, while the Q2-Q4 period demonstrated a stop to that growth, at least for now.  There’s no way to know whether this near-term peak will turn out to be the long-term peak of this market activity or simply a stepping block to higher volume in 2009 but the fact that this trend is solid for 3 straight quarters is certainly an optimistic indicator.Q4 Lender Mediated Report - New Listings

Hennepin County, who publishes their sheriff sales online for a rolling 12 month period, reported 550-700 sheriff sales each month for all 2008, with a significant trend down since July 2008.  November and December’s relatively low number of foreclosures may be at least partly attributable to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s decision not to take foreclosure actions from Thanksgiving through the end of January (it was extended).  While Hennepin County is only one of 13 counties in the RMLS’s definition of the Twin Cities, it is by far the largest in terms of foreclosures and is a good (but not complete) indicator of what is going on in our market on the foreclosure side of things.  Keep in mind that the Lender Mediated report that Jeff Allen I produce includes foreclosures AND short sales while this data is only sheriff sales, which is a middle-step in the foreclosure process.  Most homes take 6-8 months after the sheriff sale to get listing on the MLS.
Hennepin County Sheriff Sales through December 2008

But Wait!  There’s Much More!

I’m glad you kept reading… this is where it gets really good.  For the first time in the Twin Cities, and I believe the first time anywhere in the country, we are able to release city/area level lender mediated sales information.  While the metro-wide reports are very helpful, they do not adequately explain what is happening in individual communities throughout the area.  Some communities are barely impacted by these listings, while other communities find that well over 50% of their recent sales and current inventory for sale lies in foreclosures and short sales.  It also demonstrates using actual market sales information that the higher the proportion of lender mediated sales you have in an area, the more “pain” the traditional sellers in that community suffer as well, in terms of more significant year-over-year median sales price decreases.

As every expert in this field has said, this housing market is very localized and these new reports help give a better glimpse into how true that statement really is.  While this information is very helpful, it can sometimes be misleading as well.  We are working with smaller sample sizes when we get down to the local level and in many communities there simply was not enough data to accurately report what is happening, so we didn’t publish data in those communities.  In the communities we did publish, there is the occasional “huh?” moment where the data reported simply doesn’t match up with the daily experiences in the market.  This could be because of the low sample size, which allows individual listings to have a major impact on the results, or it could be because what is selling today is different than before… i.e. some communities have very few Traditional Seller townhouses and condos selling but many single family houses selling so the Median Sales Price actually is higher this year over last year.  It isn’t that prices increased, but that the “typical” house selling this year is at a higher price point.  Unfortunately there wasn’t a reasonable way for us to take those kind of events into account and so we leave that interpretation to you.  Take a look at price per square foot as another good indicator of value changes… while this too can be skewed in some cases, it seems to be reporting numbers that FEEL more accurate to me in terms of change year over year than the Median Sales Price sometimes suggests.



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