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Monthly Archives: June 2009
Mostly Music in the Park 2009
Beginning Sunday, July 19th, Mostly Music in the Park 2009 will kick off with a concert by The Nudie Suit Stardusters, a Country Western Band featuring hit songs from the 40′s, 50′s and 60′s.
Are you wondering what a “Nudie Suit” may be? It’s the western wear suit singers like Ray Price and Webb Pierce liked to wear, designed by Nudie Cohen “Rodeo Tailor to the Stars.” The concert should be a lot of fun; it will be at Mercerdale Park, starting at 7pm and running until 8:30pm. Best of all, it’s free!
Windermere Mercer Island, a proud sponsor, has brochures with the summer concert line up available at the office. Mostly Music in the Park will continue every Thursday and Sunday, with the last performance held Sunday, August 16th.
In addition to the summer concert series, Wooden O Theater will put on Shakespeare in the Park at the Luther Burbank Amphitheater. Richard III will be performed at 7pm on July 9th, 10th, 12th, 16th, 17th and 18th. On July 11th there will be a special Summer Celebration performance starting at 2pm. The Taming of the Shrew, with a 7pm start time, will run July 23rd, 24th, 25th, 30th, 31st, August 1st and 2nd. Outdoor movies will “go to the dogs” at Mercerdale Park on Saturday, August 8th (Hotel for Dogs, PG, 9:10pm) and Saturday, August 22nd (Bolt, PG, 8:45pm). Just like the concerts, the play and movie performance admission is free.
Just a note: rain may cancel concerts and they may possibly be rescheduled.
The Mercer Island Arts Council sponsors many programs and events throughout the year. Check out the Art Council Programs often.
June 21st features open houses and the opening day of Mercer Island’s Farmers Market
Come on by and pick up the open house list for Sunday, June 21st. All ten of the properties on the list are located on the island and represent a variety of residential options— a condo, homes and land to build on. On the back of the list we’ve added a map, to aid you in locating the island opens. If you are in need of a more comprehensive map to use, we also have free maps of Mercer Island available.
While you are touring the island, visiting open houses, don’t forget to stop by the Mercer Island Farmers Market. Tomorrow is the first market day of the 2009 season.
We’re located at 2737 77th Ave. S.E. Mercer Island, WA 98040 and office hours are 10 am to 4 pm on the weekend. Have a question? Call us at 206.232.0446. As always, we have free coffee available!
Mercer Island Stats for May 2009 Show Pending Sales Up 59%
Pending Sales are up 59% over the same time last year with the inventory of homes for sale holding steady just below 200. While pending activity is up markedly, sales price are down, indicating that more sellers are having to negotiate the prices downward to entice a sale. The Price Per Sq Ft is continuing to trend upward from a low of $269/Sq Ft in February to a current $339/Sq Ft today. Average Days on Market are up to 179 in May with some homes languishing on the market while others aggressively priced to sell are seeing sales activity. The List to Sales Price ratio dropped to 90% due to significant movement off of list price on a handful of May sales. The Average Sales Price in May was $1,003,000, a full third lower than the Average Sales Price in May 2008 of $1,504,000. Months of Inventory for Sale stands at 19.5 in May which is twice that of the prior year. The Median Sales Price of $790,000 is based on 10 sales in May and is 34% less than it was in May 2008 when it ended the month at $1,202,000. Mercer Island still has a ways to go to mark a recovery of its real estate market. Pending activity is very encouraging as is the recovery in lower priced markets surrounding the Island which will drive market activity and sales here as move-up buyers are finally able to sell their homes and buy on Mercer Island.
NWMLS News Release – June Real Estate Market Report
People interested in real estate will want to know about the latest NWMLS information, published in June 2009.
Inventory shrinking, sales rising, prices stabilizing in some Northwest MLS areas
KIRKLAND, WA, June 4, 2009 – Waiting longer to buy a home is not likely to pay off, according to Northwest Multiple Listing Service director Kathy Estey after reviewing reports summarizing May activity. Estey pointed to shrinking inventory (about 20 percent fewer listings than a year ago), double-digit increases in the number of pending sales (up 17.7 percent from a year ago), solid open house activity, and signs of stabilizing prices (eight of the 19 counties in the report show price gains since January) as indicators of an improving market.
Northwest MLS brokers notched 7,160 pending sales during May. That total out-gained the year-ago tally by 1,075 transactions (up 17.7 percent) and improved on April’s total by 242 sales for a 3.5 percent increase. For the four-county Puget Sound area, pending sales jumped 21.5 percent from a year ago, rising from 4,526 to 5,498 transactions.
Buyers had fewer choices during May than at this time a year ago. At month-end, member-brokers reported 41,318 active listings throughout the NWMLS service area. A year ago, there were 51,817 active listings. Current inventory includes 11,278 single family homes and condos that brokers added during May. For the same month a year ago, brokers added 14,176 new listings to inventory.
Estey, the managing broker at the Bellevue Downtown office of John L. Scott Real Estate, said affordable homes inventory is down to the levels of a normal market and reaching for a sellers’ market. “Multiple offers are common in the under $400,000 range when the home is priced well, shows nicely and is marketed professionally,” she remarked. “Buyers who are waiting for prices to come down more have missed the bottom,” Estey believes.
Close in markets are the most active, with rural areas still lagging, but Estey says there is now some activity where little to none had existed in the first quarter. She believes prices have adjusted and completed new construction is still a very attractive purchase. “Builder inventory is being absorbed and there are fewer incentives. In January builders were giving away the farm, by March it was only half the farm and now they may just give away a chicken or two in order to make the deal.”
Prices are showing signs of stabilizing, according to NWMLS data. Prices area-wide are down around 10 percent from twelve months ago, but a comparison to January shows price gains in eight of the 19 counties in the NWMLS report. System-wide, prices for single family homes and condominiums that closed last month are up about 2.6 percent since January. (See chart, page5.)
In King County, prices dipped about 12 percent from twelve months ago and have declined about 3.5 percent since January, but a closer look shows considerable variation within sub-areas. Prices in southeast King County fell 20 percent from a year ago, but since January are down only about 2.8 percent in north King County.
Condominium activity remains slow. Pending sales are down about 15 percent from a year ago. The median sales price of $240,000 is about 7.7 percent lower than a year ago. Condos in King County sold for a median price of $270,450 last month, which compares to the year-ago price of $287,925, a drop of about 6 percent).
Demand for high-priced homes is also tepid. According to Estey, there are “amazing opportunities for buyers with good credit scores and 25 percent down payment in the $900,000- plus marketplace.”
“What we’re currently seeing is real estate’s version of Back to the Future,” said J. Lennox Scott, chairman and CEO of John L. Scott Real Estate. He believes the combination of historically low interest rates, adjusted lower prices, and the $8,000 tax credit has created advantageous conditions for buyers that haven’t been seen in decades. He noted sales in the four-county area continue to see double digit increases. “The more affordable markets are seeing a major boost which is leading to higher sales in the mid-priced markets and causing some increases in activity in the upper end,” Scott remarked.
While cheered by the more vigorous activity, brokers note short sales and foreclosures continue to be a drag on the market. Such properties, often sold at deep discounts, may take extraordinary time to close once there has been mutual acceptance of an offer. (Note to editors: see explanatory note, p. .5)
NWMLS director Meribeth Hutchings, broker/owner of Windermere Real Estate/Lake Stevens Inc., said her office represents the buyer of a short sale that has been pending since October. The buyers who hope to purchase the home in Mukilteo have been very patient, but are becoming less so and are ready to move from the small apartment where they have been living with two large dogs. “Every time we think we are getting close, the lender changes what they want,” Hutchings stated.
Another NWMLS director, Pat Grimm, reported similar experiences with a short sale. “We just closed one in Montlake on May 28 — after the parties to the transaction reached mutual acceptance on Feb. 10, said Grimm, the owner/broker at Windermere Real Estate/Capitol Hill. (NWMLS defines a short sale as a transaction that does not produce sufficient funds to cover the existing monetary encumbrances against the property, closing costs, real estate commissions, and other financial requirements of closing.)
Tacoma broker Dick Beeson of Windermere/Commencement Associates said he has several agents deeply involved in handling short sales since Pierce County is so hard hit. He estimates around 25 percent of all properties for sale are either bank owned or short sale, and one of every three pending sales is one or the other.
“Short sales play a big role in what many buyers are looking for,” according to Beeson, who also noted these buyers often fail to realize the extraordinary length of time it takes to close a sale – generally twice as long as a conventional sale. “Many get discouraged after 60 or 90 days and withdraw from a sale, never having received notice form the underlying lender what they are willing to take for the property. Many properties end up going to foreclosure because of the inefficiency of the banks in providing answers to offers,” Beeson commented.
The recent uptick in pending sales, both locally and nationally, is a hopeful sign that we’re putting the worst of the market behind us, suggests Ron Sparks, managing vice president at Coldwell Banker Bain.
“As you would expect in a recovering market, not all neighborhoods are uniformly performing, and for home sellers particularly, there are plenty of challenges that remain.” However, he observed, “In many neighborhoods where just a few years ago broad affordability had all but vanished, lower prices, flexible terms and very low interest rates are pushing inventory absorption for single family homes to levels not seen since 2007.”
Sparks said multiple offers for the best listed properties are occurring everywhere, including Pierce and Snohomish counties. “Improving sales in one neighborhood helps dwindle inventory, and can push motivated buyers to search for homes in other neighborhoods. This process typically occurs before prices start to stabilize,” he explained.
Has that stabilization begun? “As my old Magic 8-Ball used to tell me: signs point to yes,” according to Sparks, who noted eight counties served by the NWMLS have seen price increases since January. “The sales volume in my Bellevue office is now roughly 10 times what it was in February, with expanded sales in almost every price category. Overall inventory levels have dropped substantially as well. Does this mean the optimal time for home buyers to take full advantage of favorable market conditions has passed? I’d probably defer that to the Magic 8 ball also…“Ask again later.”
Recent fluctuations in mortgage rates have brokers and buyers alike wondering if rates will escalate as inflation worries return.
“While rates now are wonderfully low, waiting has cost buyers. Loans recently available for 4.75% are now 5.25%,” according to broker Kathy Estey. On a $400,000 loan, that means the monthly payment rises from around $2,128 to about $2,253 – and increase of nearly $125. She believes it would be wise to act now for the best selection in the affordable homes. “Who knows if we will see rates of 5% or below again anytime soon,” she wonders.
Commenting on a recent report from the National Association of Realtors showing a third consecutive month of improving pending sales, Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said buyers are responding to very favorable market conditions. “Housing affordability conditions have been at historic highs, but now the $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit is beginning to impact the market,” he said. “Since first-time buyers must finalize their purchase by November 30 to get the credit, we expect greater activity in the months ahead, and that should spark more sales by repeat buyers.”
Northwest Multiple Listing Service, owned by its member brokers, is the largest full-service MLS in the Northwest. Its membership includes approximately 28,000 brokers and agents. The organization, based in Kirkland, currently serves 19 counties in western and central Washington.
Statistical Summary by Counties: Market Activity Summary – May 2009 (updated June 5)
| May 2009 Single Family Homes + Condos |
LISTINGS |
PENDING |
CLOSED SALES |
|||
|
New |
Total |
# Pending |
# |
Average |
Median |
|
| King |
4310 |
13537 |
2801 |
1618 |
$423,875 |
$351,500 |
| Snohomish |
1759 |
5656 |
1160 |
666 |
$325,502 |
$299,950 |
| Pierce |
1632 |
6088 |
1196 |
643 |
$252,431 |
$225,000 |
| Kitsap |
531 |
2005 |
341 |
219 |
$292,797 |
$240,000 |
| Mason |
182 |
812 |
73 |
56 |
$189,062 |
$161,405 |
| Skagit |
258 |
1369 |
140 |
78 |
$251,548 |
$207,250 |
| Grays Harbor |
180 |
840 |
75 |
63 |
$139,161 |
$114,000 |
| Lewis |
152 |
722 |
78 |
40 |
$159,230 |
$138,150 |
| Cowlitz |
113 |
657 |
82 |
55 |
$194,685 |
$177,900 |
| Grant |
145 |
724 |
73 |
36 |
$166,956 |
$148,450 |
| Thurston |
521 |
1722 |
406 |
214 |
$273,164 |
$247,000 |
| San Juan |
64 |
499 |
14 |
4 |
$464,750 |
$410,000 |
| Island |
253 |
1136 |
107 |
86 |
$299,378 |
$248,500 |
| Kittitas |
152 |
612 |
48 |
38 |
$250,716 |
$170,000 |
| Jefferson |
84 |
562 |
34 |
12 |
$298,000 |
$294,500 |
| Okanogan |
86 |
386 |
27 |
17 |
$159,435 |
$140,000 |
| Whatcom |
496 |
2024 |
311 |
179 |
$269,633 |
$250,000 |
| Clark |
106 |
408 |
64 |
57 |
$229,296 |
$206,900 |
| Pacific |
60 |
404 |
39 |
13 |
$157,333 |
$175,000 |
| Others |
194 |
1155 |
91 |
60 |
$218,748 |
$214,000 |
| MLS TOTAL |
11,278 |
41,318 |
7,160 |
4,154 |
$329,680 |
$280,000 |
4-County Puget Sound Region Pending Sales (SFH + Condo combined)
(Totals include King, Snohomish, Pierce & Kitsap counties)
|
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
| 2000 |
3706 |
4778 |
5903 |
5116 |
5490 |
5079 |
4928 |
5432 |
4569 |
4675 |
4126 |
3166 |
| 2001 |
4334 |
5056 |
5722 |
5399 |
5631 |
5568 |
5434 |
5544 |
4040 |
4387 |
4155 |
3430 |
| 2002 |
4293 |
4735 |
5569 |
5436 |
6131 |
5212 |
5525 |
6215 |
5394 |
5777 |
4966 |
4153 |
| 2003 |
4746 |
5290 |
6889 |
6837 |
7148 |
7202 |
7673 |
7135 |
6698 |
6552 |
4904 |
4454 |
| 2004 |
4521 |
6284 |
8073 |
7910 |
7888 |
8186 |
7583 |
7464 |
6984 |
6761 |
6228 |
5195 |
| 2005 |
5426 |
6833 |
8801 |
8420 |
8610 |
8896 |
8207 |
8784 |
7561 |
7157 |
6188 |
4837 |
| 2006 |
5275 |
6032 |
8174 |
7651 |
8411 |
8094 |
7121 |
7692 |
6216 |
6403 |
5292 |
4346 |
| 2007 |
4869 |
6239 |
7192 |
6974 |
7311 |
6876 |
6371 |
5580 |
4153 |
4447 |
3896 |
2975 |
| 2008 |
3291 |
4167 |
4520 |
4624 |
4526 |
4765 |
4580 |
4584 |
4445 |
3346 | 2841 | 2432 |
| 2009 | 3250 | 3407 | 4262 | 5372 | 5498 |
2009 Median Prices, Closed Sales (SFH + Condo combined)
|
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Change |
|
| King |
$364,137 |
$348,000 |
$335,000 |
$350,000 |
$351,500 |
-3.47% |
| Snohomish |
$295,000 |
$301,750 |
$304,950 |
$290,000 |
$299,950 |
1.68% |
| Pierce |
$235,000 |
$239,950 |
$228,375 |
$225,000 |
$225,000 |
-4.26% |
| Kitsap |
$234,200 |
$225,000 |
$246,495 |
$240,000 |
$240,000 |
2.48% |
| Mason |
$170,900 |
$147,075 |
$130,000 |
$137,550 |
$161,405 |
-5.56% |
| Skagit |
$246,950 |
$252,500 |
$240,000 |
$225,000 |
$207,250 |
-16.08% |
| Grays Harbor |
$155,855 |
$131,200 |
$142,250 |
$150,000 |
$114,000 |
-26.86% |
| Lewis |
$158,250 |
$162,000 |
$166,000 |
$174,950 |
$138,150 |
-12.70% |
| Cowlitz |
$161,500 |
$151,250 |
$180,000 |
$179,000 |
$177,900 |
10.15% |
| Grant |
$152,557 |
$166,539 |
$145,125 |
$144,000 |
$148,450 |
-2.69% |
| Thurston |
$239,950 |
$259,000 |
$240,000 |
$232,600 |
$247,000 |
2.94% |
| San Juan |
$573,500 |
$520,000 |
$1,162,500 |
$226,000 |
$410,000 |
-28.51% |
| Island |
$243,803 |
$247,000 |
$248,500 |
$244,450 |
$248,500 |
1.93% |
| Kittitas |
$230,000 |
$210,000 |
$206,675 |
$196,000 |
$170,000 |
-26.09% |
| Jefferson |
$227,500 |
$325,000 |
$238,730 |
$213,750 |
$294,500 |
29.45% |
| Okanogan |
$139,000 |
$137,450 |
$110,000 |
$149,000 |
$140,000 |
0.72% |
| Whatcom |
$245,000 |
$246,218 |
$257,000 |
$259,450 |
$250,000 |
2.04% |
| Clark |
$221,000 |
$236,375 |
$248,750 |
$202,500 |
$206,900 |
-6.38% |
| Pacific |
$182,000 |
$122,500 |
$147,000 |
$135,000 |
$175,000 |
-3.85% |
| Others |
$183,500 |
$193,371 |
$186,500 |
$224,500 |
$214,000 |
16.62% |
| Total |
$273,000 |
$278,000 |
$270,000 |
$270,000 |
$280,000 |
2.56% |
Information and statistics compiled and reported by the Northwest Multiple Listing Service.
©Copyright Northwest Multiple Listing Service, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without prior permission.





