The inventory of available homes in the area is a sure sign of where prices are going. Lack of inventory = trends up in prices for the most part.
For the County of Santa Clara, available homes and condominiums combined are as follows, as of March 21, 2011:
2008 = 6899 homes. 2009 = 5979. 2010 = 3467. 2011= 3501.
For the area comprised of Menlo Park, Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos and Los Altos Hills, the figures are as follow:
2008 = 392 homes. 2009 = 685. 2010 = 483. 2011 = 369
This latter figure explains why, currently, about half of the homes offered in Palo Alto receive multiple offers and prices are going up as a consequence. What I experience is that the best products for sale right now are very much in demand, and based on the number of offers on some of these properties for sale, there are a lot of people in a position to buy "right now". On the other hand, those properties that are not particularly attractive for some reason or another can linger a long time on the market. Now more than ever quality & desirability rule.
On an other front, according to C.A.R.’s February sales and price report, the median price of an existing single family residence declined about 2.5 percent year over year (California Association of Realtors). Go figure...
Calif. median home price:
Calif. median home price: February 2011: $271,320 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. highest median home price by region/county February 2011: Marin $632,580 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. lowest median home price by region/county February 2011: Merced $117,270 (Source: C.A.R.)
-
Mortgage rates: Week ending 3/10/2011 30-yr. fixed: 4.88 Fees/points: 0.7% 15-yr. fixed: 4.15% Fees/points: 0.7% 1-yr. adjustable: 3.21% Fees/points: 0.5% (Source: Freddie Mac)
Thank you for reading. Let me know if you need specific statistics on your neighborhood.
Francis Rolland
Dir: 650-947-2259
MLS search
Local trends and statistics
Silicon Valley real estate resource