4 predictions about 2012 real estate market

Mood of the Market

Inman News®

With 2012 nearly upon us, many of us will be spending this week reviewing the events of 2011 and setting resolutions, goals or visions for what we'd like to accomplish next year.

It will come as no surprise that the most common New Year's resolutions fall into the categories of getting organized and getting fit -- physically and financially.

Financial fitness includes getting your real estate business in order. But you can't set up your real estate plans for the year in a vacuum. They must be done in context of what's going on in the market. Here are four predictions about what that market context will look like in the coming year:

1. Even more foreclosures

While I'd like to claim crystal-ball credit for this one, it doesn't take heightened powers of prediction to foresee an uptick in the rate of home repossessions in 2012. Last fall's robo-signing debacle and the ongoing legal fallout from it created a massive backlog in the foreclosure pipeline, meaning that banks are taking many months, even years, to actually foreclose on mortgages in default.

Earlier this year, the New York Times reported that the additional hurdles New York state courts are requiring banks to leap in the wake of the robo-signing revelations, like additional settlement meetings with the homeowner to see if a modification can be brokered, have created a backlog of foreclosures that it would take 62 years to clear, at the current rate of foreclosure.

It's pretty clear that in 2012 and beyond, the banks will work through those backlogs. The inevitable result will be an increase in foreclosures.

2. REOs and short sales will become the new normal

If you even know anyone who has house-hunted in the past couple of years, you've likely heard tales of the high-drama high jinks -- super-long escrows, first-time buyers being bested by investors' cash offers, banks resistant to negotiating for repairs -- that take place in the course of a distressed property sale.

In the coming year, distressed home sales will continue to represent an increasing share of homes on the market. So, buyers will shift from considering whether to buy a short sale to understanding that they must be educated and prepared to do a deal with a seller, a bank (to buy an REO) or a hybrid of the two (to buy a short sale) to access the full selection of homes on the market.

This, in turn, will empower buyers to make smart decisions about what to offer and what to expect on any listing they like, as well as to set smart priorities and make realistic comparisons between listings based on their own personal priorities around timing, certainty and seller flexibility.

3.  So-called 'smart cities' will do well 

This year, a number of housing markets saw double- or even triple-dips in home values. In others, pricing stayed relatively flat. However, in areas where technology powers the economy, home values prospered along with the industry. Silicon Valley real estate, for instance, saw fierce competition among buyers as the young employees of companies that went public like used their newly stocked bank accounts to buy their first homes.

I recently talked with Jed Kolko, chief economist for real estate search site Trulia, and his 2012 forecast was that so-called "smart cities" will continue to have hot real estate markets next year. But Kolko defined smart cities much more broadly than the California tech hubs. Other tech centers like Austin, Texas, and the Massachusetts suburbs of Cambridge, Newton and Framingham all made Kolko's list, as did Rochester, N.Y. (a town known for its highly educated, highly skilled work force).

4. Consumers will get 'hopeless'

I mean hopeless in the best of all possible ways. For years, buyers and sellers have been waiting for that singular event to occur that would cause a quick market recovery. But 2012 will mark the fifth or sixth year of the real estate recession, depending on who you talk to. I predict that those consumers who have not already done so will drop unrealistic hopes for a fast return to the heady real estate fortunes of the subprime era.  Instead, people will make their real estate plans based on:

  • today's low home prices, rather than the fantasy of what could happen if the market miraculously came back;
  • assumptions of very low, or no, appreciation in home values for years to come; and
  • very conservative estimates of their own finances and how they will grow.

As a result, buyers won't break their necks to hurry and buy before prices uptick; rather, they'll save and plan to buy when it makes the most sense for their finances. Homeowners will do the same; they will either refi, remodel and be content where they are for the long haul, or decide their homes no longer fit their lifestyles and their finances, divest of them and move on. But the good news is, people will make these decisions based on what is or is not sustainable for their lives and their finances, and not based on inflated hopes about what the market will or will not do.

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is author of "The Savvy Woman's Homebuying Handbook" and "Trillion Dollar Women: Use Your Power to Make Buying and Remodeling Decisions." Tara is also the Consumer Ambassador and Educator for real estate listings search site Trulia.com. Ask her a real estate question online or visit her website, www.rethinkrealestate.com.

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Submitted by Brian Hickey on December 27, 2011 - 7:12pm.

There is a constant in real estate that is often overlooked - "real sellers". Real sellers are the senior citizens that sell regardless of 1-4.

This demographic sell in good and bad market conditions; they sell because they have to - the owners may no longer be able to fend for themselves or are simply deceased.

The supply of these properties is significant and add to the supply of the REOs and foreclosures.

With all the supply you allude to plus the ongoing supply of "senior sellers" - 2012 could end up being a great year for real estate opportunities.

Bottom? Don't know, but we'll take some version of capitulation.
Thanks,

Brian Hickey
teardowns.com

 
Submitted by Tim Thornton on December 29, 2011 - 10:43am.

Hi Tara.

I agree. 2012 is going to be an interesting year. And because Real Estate is about the local markets, I would add a side note to your well written article. #3 has some over-riding effects on the other items in your list. That is to say, areas like Austin, Texas have seen very little foreclosures and short sales, and Austin is already seeing a Seller's Market in both inventory levels and Buyer's (multiple) bids. Our flat market is turning up fast here locally, so the Smart City Effect has ramifications that can make it the only salient factor to our local Real Estate market.

It is going to be interest to see how 2012 unfolds.

Thanks,

AustinRealEstateSecrets.com

 
Submitted by Grant Hammond on January 2, 2012 - 6:31pm.

I have to respectfully disagree with your 2012 analysis. While certain oversaturated markets will continue to deal with an onslaught on foreclosures, I don’t see the market as hopeless at all. I live and work in Nashville and this market couldn’t be further from hopeless if you close your eyes and say it three times. I have watched market optimism return over the past 12 months and see no reason for that trend to discontinue. Foreclosure sell quickly, sellers received multiple offers and a sense of urgency has returned. The national news appeared to be focused on the negative…where is coverage for markets like Austin and Nashville?

If you disagree, take a look at my research: www.GrantHammond.com

Happy New Year all, I wish you much success in 2012!

 
Submitted by Robert A. Hulme on January 3, 2012 - 6:04pm.

You are right on message. We are in for a massive amount of REO's and Short Sales. The next 6 months will be by far the best time for Home Buyer's to enter the Market. Lower Selling Prices along with record lows with Interest Rates set up my buyers, for a very happy Home Buying experience.

The first two days of the year have brought over 4 times the buyer leads over what I had during the same time last year.

Robert A. Hulme
Principal Broker
Home Buyer Realty Utah, LLC
www.ProvoOremHomes.com
www.UtahCountyHomes.ws