Market Update

Last week we showed you the local trends for housing prices. This week, we have national numbers as well, released by the National Association of Realtors. They show that housing prices in metro Charlotte rose at nearly double the rate of the national median in the first quarter of this year. Median sales price of an existing single-family home in Charlotte grew year over year 13.4% to $209,600. Nationally, the median rose 6.9% to $232,100.

Low inventory factors into the high appreciation in Charlotte. There was a more than 20% drop in home supply in the Charlotte area, just a 2.5 month supply. This is well below the balanced market of 6 months supply, giving sellers a distinct edge in transactions.

Housing Analysis firm Metrostudy released figures on new home sales this week. They show that new homebuilding rose 16.4% from last year at this time to total 2,695. Additionally, the number of previously vacant new homes that are now occupied rose 23.5% to 2,725. Annual starts increased 7% to 11,372, and annual closings rose 10.6% to 10,922.

At the same time, the unemployment rate in North Carolina came in below the 5% mark in April according to newly released labor data. While this is still higher than the national rate of 4.4%, it is really encouraging. It also means that more people could be eligible for mortgages once they have enough job history in these new jobs.

There are some glimmers of a market correction on the horizon. Rental rates in the Charlotte area have showed a cooling trend in recent months. Housing markets across the nation are showing the same trend. Trulia published their report showing that 12.5% of rental listings had a price reduction to get tenants in. This could be a prelude to upcoming price cuts in the for sale market as well. We will keep you up to date on all of the market trends.

If you are in the market for a home in the Charlotte area, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also view listings on our website here.

Charlotte Transit Update

Four firms have submitted applications to become the consultants to analyze building new rail lines in Charlotte. The consultation would involve a transportation study expected to begin in July and take 18 months. Budget for the consultation could be as high as $4.4 million, though cost estimates have not been finalized.

The study will analyze building new lines and how those lines will align with existing stops and stations. This is the latest development for the 20 year old campaign to develop the transit system. Busses remain the main thrust of the system, but as light rail is built out, it will take on more of the load.

The first of the lines they will be studying is a proposed 25-mile northern rail line from Uptown to Iredell County. This proposed Red Line would help ease congestion on I-77 especially for people who live in Lake Norman, Mooresville, and Davidson.

The second line in the study is a western route connecting Uptown to the airport and possibly going to the future master planned community River District. This line would be great for travellers of all sorts, business travellers and tourists most especially.

The third piece of the study will be how the new lines would be integrated into center city. This would include the already proposed 13.5-mile $2.5 billion Silver Line extending from Uptown along Independence Boulevard towards Matthews. It will also include the currently under construction 9 mile $1.2 billion Blue Line extension connecting Uptown with UNC Charlotte.

Much has changed since the original transit plan was adopted and there are now new buildings that need to be accounted for in the plan to connect new rail lines. This could mean tunnels to get lines in and out of Uptown like were recently built in Seattle.

Rail advocates propose building all three additional lines simultaneously for an estimated range of $5 to $7 billion. These numbers are rough and are subject to change. Building out the light rail so robustly would launch Charlotte ahead of many other mid-sized cities and help make it more of a destination that it is currently. Many leaders see these lines as necessary as the population in Charlotte is projected to double from 2.5 million to 5 million in the next 20-30 years.

Real estate along the existing corridors has increased in value tremendously after construction completed. If you are interested in purchasing a home in Charlotte and want to take advantage of existing or future rail lines, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also view homes on our website here.

For more information, read the full article in the Charlotte Business Journal.

April Market Report

The Charlotte Regional Realtor Association released their monthly market report this week. Based on their findings, we are again facing historic low inventory and higher prices, but we are also seeing a dip in closed sales and in new listings from the same time last year.

Inventory for the entire region is now at 9,525 homes. This is up from last month’s 9,212, but substantially down from last year’s 11,919. The rise from last month is a typical trend, as spring goes on, more homes are listed.

Average sales price also rose year over year. Last year, the average price for a home was at $251,290. This year the average is a staggering $275,491. This is up $4,140 from last month’s average price of $271,351 and $38,269 up from this time in 2015.

Days on market time is down year over year as well. This means homes are staying on the market for a much shorter time before they are under contract. This speaks to the low inventory as homes are being snatched up almost as soon as they are listed. 96 days is now the norm from listing until a transaction is closed.

Pending sales are up from last year at this time. This means we could see a bump in closed sales next month. If we don’t start seeing more listing activity, there will be even more competition over the homes that do come up for sale. Buyers need to be prepared to pay higher prices and be prepared in case of multiple-offer situations.

If you are interested in purchasing a home in the Charlotte area, give us a call at (704) 525-4045 and let our experts guide you through every step in the process. You can also search for and view homes on our website here.

Tips for first time buyers

Are you a first time homebuyer? If so, you may have an unnecessarily long home search. Many first time buyers are looking for their forever home. This means that their eyes are sometimes bigger than their wallets. To help keep your home search as short as possible and get you into your dream home quicker, here are a few steps you can take:

  1. The first step to having the shortest home search is to be honest about how much home you can afford. There are plenty of home calculators online. Zillow.com just launched a new one and there is great one on Realtor.com. These can give you a rough idea of how much home is right for you. Affordability calculators take into account more than just the mortgage you can afford, good ones also look at your current debts such as car loans, student loans, monthly bills, and more. These costs, including the carrying costs of owning a home give you a much better picture of what you can afford.
  2. Find a lender and get pre-qualified for a loan. The lender will be able to give you a pre-qualification letter stating just how expensive of a home you can afford. They will use your financial data to come up with numbers personalized just for you. Armed with the pre-qualification letter, you are now ready to search for homes in your price range.
  3. Figure out which home features you need to have and which ones are only nice to have. If you can be real about which feature are musts for you, you will help yourself and your Realtor find your home faster. Maybe school district is the most important for you, maybe it’s a three car garage, or a pool, or a chef’s kitchen.

Once you are realistic about your home search, it should take the shortest time for you to find your next home. This might mean that your next home won’t be your forever home. Sometimes you need to build up equity in one home before you can get to the perfect dream home. If may mean changing your expectations a little bit first, but a starter home can be a great first investment. It can also be a great learning tool so you know everything it takes to own a home from mortgage to maintenance to upgrading.

If you are ready to search for your new home, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also search listings on our website here.

School Boundaries can Dramatically Affect Home Prices

There are many factors people look at when purchasing a home. For families with young children, school districts are usually an important consideration. Based on home sale data, the Charlotte Agenda concluded that school districts can mean the difference in hundreds of  thousands of dollars for homeowners. This means that everyone needs to be aware of school zoning when they purchase, not just young families.

These invisible lines that separate districts are important boundary lines that can mean the difference between a high performing school and a low performing one. These lines can be quite arbitrary, or follow main travel corridors. The lines affect people’s perception of the value of a home. This can dramatically affect how much money people are willing to pay for a home, even a home just across the street from one they would pay substantially more for.

We here at The Angle always remind you to verify school assignments as they are subject to change. Some of the changes can happen if a new school is built. Other times the change can come about because of community involvement, persistence, and activism. Boundaries can also change due to political reasons.

It is illegal for a Realtor to steer a client towards or away from a certain neighborhood or school. We can show you homes in a particular area if you direct us, especially if you want to be located in a particular school district. Even if you have directed your Realtor to show you homes in a particular school district, it is still up to you as the consumer to verify the school assignment.

Homebuyers aren’t alone in preferring higher performing school districts. Builders often prefer them as well. Higher profit margins are usually available if they choose those districts. It makes good business sense to go with a sure thing than to improve in a lower performing district with an unknown profit margin.

Student Assignment Plans like the one recently passed in Charlotte are a way cities try and break up areas of poverty. Without entrenched districts, those areas of lower priced homes have a higher chance for rapid appreciation due to increased interest by developers and buyers.

If you are interested in a home in the Charlotte area, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also view homes on our website here.

For the full document about Charlotte area school assignments, click here.

For more, read the full article in the Charlotte Agenda

New Project Coming to Elizabeth

After a long road and lots of resistance from the neighborhood, developer Faison expects to finally break ground on a new development in Elizabeth this summer. The timeline once ground is broken is about 18 to 20 months to completion. This would put an end date roughly between October 2018 and April 2019.

The mixed use development is expected to contain 60 apartments and 21,000 square feet of commercial space. There will be two buildings on the 1.7-acre site. There could be 5,300 square feet of restaurant space while the rest of the commercial space could be retail or office space.

Located at the corner of East Seventh Street and North Caswell Road, the new development is a short block away from Independence Park. There are many restaurants and businesses within walking distance. An Uptown commute is a quick trip down Seventh Street.

There have been a few different iterations of the project as the community has been vocal with what they need and want. The developer has stated that they are “gearing after more of an empty nester, older demographic”. There is a lot of history in the neighborhood and they are trying to be sensitive to that while providing for the community. They have worked closely with Elizabeth Community Association as they have honed the design.

The residential portion of the project should include 85% two-bedroom apartments, with the remainder split between one and three bedroom units. Units will average 1,300 square feet. Rents have not yet been set, but corner units and units with uptown views will command premium pricing. As they are targeting empty nesters, look for the developer to cater to people who have abundant disposable income.

As ground has still not broken yet, plans are subject to change. The zoning that was approved in July 2016 would allow for up to 100 apartments and 30,000 square feet of commercial space.

If you are interested in a home in the Charlotte area, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also view listings on our website here.

The Queen City is Desirable, but is it Affordable?

This week, Trulia, released a report examining income of people in various professions in almost 100 major U.S. metropolitan areas to see if they are struggling to afford to buy a home in their community. Trulia is an online residential real estate site with listings and housing data. They examined income data for doctors, teachers, first responders, and restaurant workers for the study. According to their report, Charlotte is among the least-affordable markets in North Carolina for teachers.

The report shows that the average American worker makes $37,040 per year. The median home in the United States costs $254,900. This means the average worker would have to spend 42% of their income on a mortgage if they bought that median home. This is up 6% from two years ago.

Trulia defined affordability as a debt-to-income ratio of 31%. This means monthly housing payments would take up only 31% of monthly take-home pay. Percentages were figured assuming a 20% down payment and a 30-year fixed rate mortgage with an interest rate of 4.1%.

Teachers in the Charlotte metro area earn on average $45,683 per year. Trulia’s report shows that only 33% of teachers could afford the median priced home in Charlotte of $299,900. 29% of first responders can afford that same home with an average salary of $41,630. Restaurant workers in the region have an average salary of $20,322 which means only 7% of them can afford the median priced home. Doctors in the area average $208,000 per year and 96% of them can afford the same home.

Two-income households have an advantage in affordability, but if one partner loses a job or takes a leave for family or other reasons, they could be in a real financial bind.

The Charlotte area has been feeling an affordability pinch recently. With a shortage of homes on the market, prices have been going up steadily. In fact, a recent report from Re/Max shows that the median sales price of a home in Charlotte was up 10.1% just between February and March of this year.

There are still some great neighborhoods in Charlotte that fall below the median sales price which are great for single income households. There are also many neighborhoods that fall close to the median price that are great options for dual income households. With prices continuing to appreciate, it is also a great option to purchase a starter home and work your way up to a more expensive home after a few years. The city is also working on getting many more affordable housing units included as part of most new developments.

No matter where you are in your home buying journey, New Angle Realty can help you. Call us at (704) 525-4045 or visit our website to view listings here.

Millennial Buying Habits Appear to be Changing

Are you attached to the home you currently own? If you are, you join 79% of homeowners in the Charlotte area. Bank of America conducted a survey of homeowners where they concluded that 79% of Charlotte residents could see themselves staying in their current homes for the rest of their lives. Homeowners here are proud of their homes and treasure the memories they have made. Traditional thinking has it that millennials are more interested in long-term renting than buying until they can find a forever home.

The survey helped Bank of America compile their second annual Homebuyer Insights Report. The national survey for the report looked at answers from 4,906 adults across the country. The bank focused on responses from 300 adults from 10 markets. The survey was conducted by GfK Public Communications and Social Science. The ten markets Bank of America focused on included Charlotte, Boston, Chicago, Dallas and Miami.

In the Charlotte area, 83% of homeowners believe home ownership has had a positive impact on their finances. 84% of homeowners are trying to make their homes more valuable by fixing up, adding on, updating, decorating and more.

Additional insights from the report include that millennials are much more interested in home buying than they have been before. Of millennials who have bought homes, 79% feel that home ownership has had a positive long-term impact on their finances.

It appears that the perception that millennials prefer long-term renting is incorrect. The study shows that they are buying homes or are interested in buying homes. They are realizing that buying a home can be more affordable than renting, and it does not have to mean that they have a harder time relocating. This means that the home they buy does not have to be a forever home, which is a shift from the previous year’s report when they said they might rent until they found a home they could live in forever.   

If millennials are more inclined to buy a home, it may make the housing market even tighter than it is currently. There could be more buyers vying for the small inventory in the Charlotte area. This could give the advantage in a bidding war to an older buyer with more buying power or equity to invest. We will definitely keep an eye on this trend.

If you are interested in a home in the Charlotte area, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also set up a customized search for homes on our website here.

Rental Market Update

Charlotte’s rents are on the rise, which is great news for landlords, but not such great news for tenants. According to Apartment List, the Charlotte area had the second highest rental rate jump in the state last year just behind Wilmington. The 5.1% increase from March 2016 brings the median rent for a 2 bedroom unit to $1,210. To put that in perspective, the state had a yearly increase of 4.2% and the nation as a whole only increased by 2.4%.

If you look at numbers produced by Zumper, median rent on a two bedroom unit was $1,270. Based on their figures, that is an 8.5% jump for the year and 3.3% up from the previous month. Zumper lists Charlotte in a tie for 25th most expensive metro area in the country.

This means that a tenant would need to make more money to keep their same quality of life as rents increase. According to Zillow, they would need to make an extra $384 annually. This 0.7% increase in median salary would allow a tenant to pay rent and still have the same amount of disposable income. Zillow pegs the median rental rate in Charlotte at $1,248. According to their predictions, rents will rise around $32 per month to $1,280 by this time next year.

If the Fed increases interest rates again, which is predicted to happen two more times this year, these additional costs could be passed along to tenants in the form of rate hikes as well. These figures also don’t take into account any other increases a tenant might have aside from rent so they could feel the squeeze from higher healthcare costs, higher grocery bills, or a host of other factors.

The Charlotte population is on the rise so there is plenty of interest in new rental units. In fact, Charlotte just topped the entire nation with the most rental units added in the first quarter of this year.  Charlotte added 9,347 units for a 5.9% increase. This topped the 100 largest metro areas in the country. These numbers, from MPF Research, are encouraging and are well above the 1.8% national average.

Zillow predicts that there could be a slow-down of rent appreciation in hot markets like New York and San Francisco. It will be a welcome change for those areas, and could signal a change countrywide. There has been a push in most major metropolitan areas to add more affordable housing options to ease the affordability crisis. Charlotte is no exception to that trend. Affordable units are part of many of the newly announced uptown projects.

If you are interested in an investment property so that you can add a passive income stream, call us at (704) 525-4045. If you are done renting and want to purchase a home of your own, call us at (704) 525-4045. To view listings on our website, click here.

March Market Statistics

The Charlotte Regional Realtor Association published their monthly report today. For yet another month, inventory is down while home prices are up. Home sales are up from last year at the same time. There appears to be no end in sight for this current trend.

The downward slide in inventory continues with a drop of 20.3% to a 2.4 month supply. There were 9,212 homes on the market in March, down from 11,562 homes at this time last year. The 11,562 homes represented a 3.3 month supply.

There were 3,965 homes sold in March, up 11.5% from 3,557 homes in March 2016. In February of this year, there were 2,570 homes sold so the number of homes sold in March was up 54% from February. In 2016 this was only a 39% jump from February to March showing just how strong home sales this year have been compared to last year. Maybe it’s the amazing weather helping sales this year.

As is usually true about the law of supply and demand, when supply is low, prices go up. This has been true for the Charlotte area. Average sales prices were up 10.4% over last year to $271,351. The median sales price rose 11.6% to $220.950.   

Once homes hit the market, they are not staying there long. The average time from list to close is now 104 days. That is down 18 days from 2016, a decrease of 14.8%.

It appears that more homeowners are trying to take advantage of the spring season as new listings were up 6.2% from 5,648 last year to 5,999 this year. Pending sales also increased from 4,404 last year to 5,116 this year, a 16.2% jump.

Homes are selling for an average of 96.9% of list price. This is up from 95.6% of list price in March of last year. This follows the trend we are seeing of homes getting right around list price and in some cases multiple offers.

Home prices and sales could slow as the year progresses as the Fed has already indicated that they will be hiking interest rates two more times this year. This could make mortgages harder to obtain for first time buyers, and pricier for all other buyers. It remains to be seen how much, if any impact that has in Charlotte’s hot market.

If you are interested in a home in the Charlotte area, give us a call at (704) 525-4045. You can also view homes on our website here.