Housing inventory shortages continue in King County

Published 3:56 pm Monday, June 6, 2016

About 80 percent of the homes coming on the market in King and Snohomish counties are selling within the first 30 days.
About 80 percent of the homes coming on the market in King and Snohomish counties are selling within the first 30 days.

Just as expected, the month of May had an uptick in new listings (12,272), but just as many buyers (12,275) made offers on homes during the month to keep inventory depleted, according to the latest figures from Northwest Multiple Listing Service that covers 23 counties in the state.

“Inventory is being squeezed from all directions,” said Frank Wilson, branch managing broker at John L. Scott in Poulsbo, in a Northwest Multiple Listing Service news release on Monday.

He said the pool of house-hunters includes young first-time buyers, renters whose rents are escalating, buyers who are returning to the market after recovering from a foreclosure or short sale, investors, and baby boomers who are purchasing for their retirement needs. Additionally, in Kitsap County where his office is located, there are military families who are transferring to a base there and want to buy.

By month end, member brokers reported 15,198 active listings in the Northwest MLS database. That’s down more than 22 percent from a year ago when buyers could choose from an inventory of 19,515 listings across the 23 counties served by the listing service.

“The May housing market was not just hot, it was frenzy hot,” said J. Lennox Scott, chairman and CEO of John L. Scott Real Estate. “Brokers are working like bees in a hive as the housing market creates a buzz of sales activity in the Seattle-Central Puget Sound area.”

By his analysis, 80 percent of the homes coming on the market in King and Snohomish counties are selling within the first 30 days.

“Many sell within the first week,” Scott said. “A healthy/normal market would have 30 percent selling in the first 30 days.”

MLS figures show there is only 1.76 months of supply system-wide. In both King and Snohomish counties, there is barely more than one month of supply – well below the 4-to-6 months that many experts use as an indicator of a balanced market.

“With less than two months of inventory, every new listing seems to draw multiple offers,” Wilson said.

He also said homeowners who want to move up in this same market know they face a conundrum: “If we sell today, will we be able to buy tomorrow?”

Buyers are becoming more and more aggressive with offers and pricing, and that concerns some brokers, said Northwest MLS director George Moorhead. As the gap between pricing and value widens, some would-be buyers may overextend themselves. Also, appraisers are struggling with a lack of comparable sales versus multiple offers that escalate well beyond the listing price, said Moorhead, the designated broker at Bentley Properties. Since lenders base loans on appraised values, buyers will likely need to make up the shortfall.

Even though brokers say paltry inventory is limiting sales, the year-over-year volume of pending sales rose more than 7.4 percent last month. Members reported 12,275 mutually accepted offers, up from the year-ago total of 11,425. MLS data going back to 2004 shows that one-month total is the highest on record.

Prices also rose. The median price area-wide for last month’s 8,630 closed sales of single family homes and condominiums (combined) was $339,950. That’s up more than 7.2 percent from twelve months ago when purchasers paid $317,000 for the median-priced home. Ten counties reported double-digit price hikes.

In King County, the median price jumped more than 11.7 percent, from $434,000 to $485,000. Prices on single family homes surged nearly 16.5 percent, rising from $480,942 to $560,000. Condo prices were up 9 percent, but finding one proved challenging as inventory dropped 29 percent in King County.

Brokers offer various suggestions to prospective buyers as they vie for scarce inventory:

“The best advice I can offer to potential first-time buyers is to think outside the box” said Gary O’Leyar, a past chairman of the Northwest MLS board. He encourages buyers to consider purchasing a “stepping stone” property. Since the close-in neighborhoods in Seattle and Bellevue hold little opportunity for first-time buyers, their best option is to look further out, he suggests.

“Consider future growth, such as in areas near light rail or other transit services, and areas that have good public schools,” said O’Leyar, the owner and designated broker at Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Signature Properties in Seattle. “Waiting on the sidelines to buy will likely lead to increasing rental costs, so why not make a real estate investment purchase and have some hedge against future inflation,” he added.

Brokers do not see an easing in the inventory crunch for some time to come. Even if the Fed raises interest rates, he believes shortages will persist because of the backlog of buyers.

“There’s good news for luxury homebuyers,” Scott said. It’s prime time to showcase such properties, he explains, and “this is the season when more luxury inventory hits the market. The good selection in King County is easing the pressure for homebuyers in the luxury ($1 million and above) market. A search of the MLS database shows there are more than 900 listings in King County with asking prices of $1 million or more.

Northwest Multiple Listing Service, owned by its member real estate firms, is the largest full-service MLS in the Northwest. Its membership of nearly 2,100 member offices includes more than 25,000 real estate professionals. The organization, based in Kirkland, Wash., serves 23 counties in Washington state.