Homes Sold Faster than Ever in 2017

– Shrinking inventory limits options for buyers this home shopping season, leading to more competition

– It took 81 days to sell the typical U.S. home last year, including the time to close the sale.

– The single fastest-selling month in 2017 was June, when the typical U.S. home sold in 73 days.

– Homes sold faster in 2017 than in 2016 in nearly all of the biggest 35 housing markets last year.

Seatle, WA – April 17, 2018 (PRNewswire) Home shoppers should be prepared to move quickly when they find a home they want, as homes sold at their fastest pace on record in 2017.

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It took 81 days to sell the median U.S. home in 2017, nine days faster than the year prior. The quickest selling month for the typical home was June 2017, when it took about 73 days for a home to sell, including closing. Since it can take between four and six weeks to close a home sale, that means that the typical home was on the market for around 30 days before going under contract.

Buyers are facing a limited market this home shopping season, as has been the case for the past three years. Inventory across the country has fallen on a year-over-year basis for 37 consecutive months, leaving fewer options for buyers. Last year, nearly a quarter of all homes sold for more than the listed price, signaling that tight competition may be leading to bidding wars and driving prices higheri.

“As demand has outpaced supply in the housing market over the past three years, buying a home has become an exercise in speed and agility,” said Zillow® Senior Economist Aaron Terrazas. “This is shaping up to be another competitive home shopping season for buyers, who may have to linger on the market until they find the right home but then sprint across the finish line once they do. Being prepared – working with a great agent, getting financing preapproved – can help a buyer make a stand-out offer.”

The typical buyer spends just over four months searching for a home and makes two offers before successfully buying a home, according to the 2017 Zillow Group Consumer Housing Trends Reportii. Since homes in several markets sold in less time than that, buyers should be ready to move quickly when they find a home they want to purchase.

Homes sold faster in 2017 than they did the year before in nearly all of the 35 biggest housing markets. In Houston, homes sold slightly faster in 2016 (80 days) than in 2017 (81 days). Homes in Miami sold in 110 days in both years.

The fastest-selling market in 2017 was San Jose, Calif., where the typical home sold in 41 days. San Jose also experienced the biggest drop in inventory over the past year, with 26.8 percent fewer homes to choose from than a year earlier. Homes in San Jose sold fastest last year in October, with a span of just 39 days from listing to closing.

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Zillow

Zillow is the leading real estate and rental marketplace dedicated to empowering consumers with data, inspiration and knowledge around the place they call home, and connecting them with the best local professionals who can help. In addition, Zillow operates an industry-leading economics and analytics bureau led by Zillow’s Chief Economist Dr. Svenja Gudell. Dr. Gudell and her team of economists and data analysts produce extensive housing data and research covering more than 450 markets at Zillow Real Estate Research. Zillow also sponsors the quarterly Zillow Home Price Expectations Survey, which asks more than 100 leading economists, real estate experts and investment and market strategists to predict the path of the Zillow Home Value Index over the next five years. Launched in 2006, Zillow is owned and operated by Zillow Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z and ZG), and headquartered in Seattle.

Zillow is a registered trademark of Zillow, Inc.

(i) https://www.zillow.com/research/home-sales-above-list-price-17875/
(ii) https://www.zillow.com/report/2017/buyers/the-home-search-process/

Housing Wealth for Older Homeowners Reaches $6.6 Trillion in Q4 2017

Senior Home Equity Grew by $149 Billion in Fourth Quarter

Washington, D.C. – March 27, 2018 (PRNewswire-USNewswire) Housing wealth for homeowners 62 and older grew to $6.6 trillion in Q4 2017, an increase of $149 billion in senior home equity over Q3, reports the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association today in its quarterly release of the NRMLA/RiskSpan Reverse Mortgage Market Index.

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The RMMI rose to 238.11 in Q4, another all-time high since the index was first published in 2000. Driven by an estimated 2.0 percent, or $163 billion, increase in home values, gains in senior housing wealth were offset by a 0.9 percent, or $13.4 billion increase, in senior-held mortgage debt. On an annual basis, the RMMI increased by 8.3 percent in 2017, compared to an annual increase of 8.0 percent in 2016 and 8.5 percent in 2015.

“Today’s retirees are more likely to leave the workforce with a mortgage and other debts that can put stress on monthly cash flow,” said NRMLA President and CEO Peter Bell. “In these situations, financial products that convert home equity to cash could be used to pay off revolving debt from credit cards and reduce or defer monthly mortgage payments. It’s worth doing the math to find out if a mortgage refinance, home equity line of credit, or reverse mortgage loan can help increase financial security during retirement.”

Research from the Ohio State University shows that reverse mortgage borrowers often use loan proceeds to pay off an existing mortgage, and nearly a third use funds to pay down other debt, such as credit card balances or personal loans.

Real Estate Equity Infographic

On April 24, 2018 at 3:00 PM ET, NRMLA and Next Avenue, the public media website for America’s booming older population, will host a free webinar Q&A to answer consumer questions about using home equity to supplement retirement savings and support aging in place. Experts from Blue Ocean Global Wealth, Magnify Money, the National Council on Aging, and NRMLA’s Education Committee, will explain housing wealth and what the term home equity means, how it can be tapped, and situations when it may make sense to incorporate home equity into a retirement financial plan.

Registration details are available on NRMLA’s consumer education website reversemortgage.org.

About Reverse Mortgages
Reverse mortgages are available to homeowners age 62 and older with significant home equity. They are a versatile financial tool seniors can use to borrow against the equity in their home without having to make monthly principal or interest payments as with a traditional “forward” mortgage or a home equity loan. Under a reverse mortgage, funds are advanced to the borrower and interest accrues, but the outstanding balance is not due until the last borrower leaves the home, sells or passes away.

To date, 1,079,654 households have utilized an FHA-insured reverse mortgage to help meet their financial needs. For more information, please visit www.ReverseMortgage.org

About the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association
The National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association (NRMLA) is the national voice for the industry and represents the lenders, loan servicers, and housing counseling agencies responsible for more than 90 percent of reverse mortgage transactions in the United States. All NRMLA member companies commit themselves to a Code of Ethics & Professional Responsibility. Learn more at www.nrmlaonline.org.

About RiskSpan, Inc.
RiskSpan offers end-to-end solutions for data management, risk management analytics, and visualization on a highly secure, fast, and fully scalable platform that has earned the trust of the industry’s largest firms. Combining the strength of subject matter experts, quantitative analysts, and technologists, the RiskSpan platform integrates a range of data-sets–including both structured and unstructured–and off-the-shelf analytical tools to provide you with powerful insights and a competitive advantage. Learn more at www.riskspan.com.

Contact:

Jenny Werwa – National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association
(202) 939-1783
jwerwa@dworbell.com

U.S. Home Flipping Increases To 11-Year High In 2017 With More Than 200,000 Homes Flipped For The Second Straight Year

Top Major Market Flipping Rates in Memphis, Las Vegas, Tampa, Birmingham, Phoenix; $16.1 Billion In Financed Flips in 2017, Up 27 Percent From 2016 to 10-Year High

Irvine, CA – March 8, 2018 (PRNewswire) ATTOM Data Solutions, curator of the nation’s premier property database, today released its Q4 and Year-End 2017 U.S. Home Flipping Report, which shows that 207,088 U.S. single family homes and condos were flipped in 2017, up 1 percent from the 204,167 home flips in 2016 to the highest level since 2006 — an 11-year high.

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The 207,088 homes flipped in 2017 represented 5.9 percent of all single family home and condo sales during the year, up from 5.7 percent of all sales in 2016 to the highest level since 2013.

A total of 138,410 entities (individuals and institutions) flipped homes in 2017, up 4 percent from the 133,407 entities that flipped in 2016 to the highest level since 2007 — a 10-year high.

“The surge in home flipping in the last three years is built on a more fundamentally sound foundation than the flipping frenzy that we witnessed a little more than a decade ago,” said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at ATTOM Data Solutions. “Flippers are behaving more rationally, as evidenced by average gross flipping returns of 50 percent over the last three years compared to average gross flipping returns of just 31 percent between 2004 and 2006 — the last time we saw more than 200,000 home flips in consecutive years. And while financing for flippers has become more readily available in recent years, 65 percent of flippers still used cash to buy homes flipped in 2017, nearly the reverse of 2004 to 2006, when 63 percent of flippers were leveraging financing to buy.”

Home flip lending volume up 27 percent to 10-year high
The total dollar volume of financed home flip purchases was $16.1 billion for homes flipped in 2017, up 27 percent from $12.7 billion in 2016 to the highest level since 2007 — a 10-year high.

“We aren’t surprised that the dollar volume and share of financed flips are hitting new highs,” said Matt Humphrey, co-founder and CEO of LendingHome, which saw a nearly 70 percent increase in its dollar volume of loans on home flips completed in 2017 compared to 2016, according to an ATTOM analysis of loan data. “Online lenders like us exist because banks and large lenders don’t play in this space, and they aren’t using technology to be efficient, nimble and fast. Now that investors have digital-native lenders catering to them, financing becomes an attractive alternative to cash. We predict this trend will continue because 2018 is already off to an incredible start for us.”

Flipped homes originally purchased by the investor with financing represented 34.8 percent of homes flipped in 2017, up from 31.6 percent in 2016 to the highest level since 2008 — a nine-year high.

“Institutional demand in this space has grown substantially over the last several years. Fix-and-flip has become an asset class of its own that is well-financed by banks and highly sought by institutional buyers,” said Maksim Stavinksy, co-founder and COO at Roc, a nationwide originator which saw close to double the dollar volume of loans on home flips completed in 2017 compared to 2016, according to an ATTOM analysis of loan data.

Among 52 metropolitan statistical areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the highest percentage of 2017 completed flips purchased with financing were Denver, Colorado (55.4 percent); Boston, Massachusetts (52.8 percent); Providence, Rhode Island (49.4 percent); San Diego, California (48.5 percent); and Seattle, Washington (48.0 percent).

“Across Southern California, the flipping of investment properties continues to be a challenge, due to low available housing inventory, which is in turn driving up pricing and downsizing profitability for investors,” said Michael Mahon, president at First Team Real Estate, covering Southern California. “To best position cash available for investment, we are experiencing more investors looking to utilize loan financing as leverage, as opposed to all-cash purchases, in an effort to capture greater numbers of investment opportunities, as opposed to maximizing individual profitability on investment projects.”

Share of flips sold to FHA buyers at a three-year low
Of the homes flipped in 2017, 17.6 percent were sold to FHA borrowers — likely first-time homebuyers — down from 19.4 percent in 2016 to a three-year low.

Among 52 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the smallest share of completed flips sold to FHA buyers in 2017 Richmond, Virginia (3.7 percent); New York, New York (4.3 percent); Minneapolis-St. Paul (4.9 percent); St. Louis, Missouri (6.4 percent); and San Diego, California (10.0 percent).

“We are seeing an entirely new category of sellers on Roofstock made up of investors choosing to buy/fix/lease/sell with a tenant in place versus buy/fix/flip vacant via the MLS,” said Gary Beasley, CEO and co-founder at Roofstock, an online marketplace for investment properties. “This allows home flippers to reduce their selling costs, earn income during their hold period rather than having carrying costs, and potentially turn their capital faster. The availability of data on where single-family rentals are trading on a cap rate basis allows value-add investors to back into the prices they can pay based upon their targeted profit margins and estimates of renovation costs and market rents, allowing them to take advantage of robust investor demand for cash-flowing properties.”

Among the 52 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the highest share of completed flips sold to all-cash buyers — often other real estate investors — in 2017 were Providence, Rhode Island (43.1 percent); Birmingham, Alabama (42.8 percent); Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (41.0 percent); Orlando, Florida (40.4 percent); and San Antonio, Texas (38.0 percent).

Average home flipping returns pull back from all-time high
Completed home flips in 2017 yielded an average gross profit of $68,143 (difference between median purchase price and median flipped sale price), up 5 percent from an average gross flipping profit of $64,900 in 2016 to a new all-time high for as far back as data is available (2000).

The average gross flipping profit of $68,143 in 2017 represented an average 49.8 percent return on investment (percentage of original purchase price), down from an all-time high average gross flipping ROI of 51.9 percent in 2016 but still the second highest average gross flipping ROI of any year as far back as any data is available (2000).

“I think it is starting to feel a little like 2007 again, only with one major difference: the people buying investment properties are not ‘sub-primers’, but investors with more sophisticated deal sourcing methods,” said Brad McDaniel, co-founder and CEO with Likely.AI, a company that applies artificial intelligence and machine learning to predict future events in real estate and mortgage origination. “One of our clients, in the wholesale business, made a strategic move to become more data-driven in all aspects of their business. I believe this trend, the adoption of big data, and AI by residential real estate investors, is in its infancy. It’s been said that real estate is a laggard when it comes to technology adoption; that is changing because of AI.”

Among 174 metro areas with a population of at least 200,000 and at least 100 home flips in 2017, those with the highest average gross flipping ROI were Scranton, Pennsylvania (168.2 percent); Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (145.5 percent); Baton Rouge, Louisiana (122.9 percent); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (115.7 percent); and Erie, Pennsylvania (114.1 percent).

Along with Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, other major metro areas with at least 1 million people and gross flipping ROI of at least 80 percent were Cleveland (113.3 percent); Baltimore (97.7 percent); New Orleans (92.9 percent); Cincinnati (85.0 percent); and Buffalo (82.2 percent).

Highest home flipping rates in Memphis, Las Vegas, Tampa, Birmingham, Phoenix
Among 52 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, those with the highest home flipping rate in 2017 were Memphis, Tennessee (12.8 percent); Las Vegas, Nevada (9.1 percent); Tampa-St. Petersburg, Florida (9.0 percent); Birmingham, Alabama (8.6 percent); and Phoenix, Arizona (8.5 percent).

Other major markets in the top 10 for highest 2017 home flipping rate were Baltimore, Maryland; Virginia Beach, Virginia; St. Louis, Missouri; Miami, Florida; and Orlando, Florida.

Among 5,998 zip codes with at least 10 home flips completed in 2017, the highest home flipping rate was in 38116 in Memphis where home flips represented 31.5 percent of all home sales for the year. Other zip codes in the top 20 for highest 2017 home flipping rate included zip codes in Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Penitas, Texas; Los Angeles, California; Opa Locka, Florida; Jamaica, New York; Washington, D.C; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Farmersville, California; Houston, Texas; Miami, Florida; and Saint Louis, Missouri.

Biggest increase in home flipping rates in Buffalo, New York, Dallas, Louisville, Birmingham
Among metro areas with at least 1 million people, those with the biggest increase in home flipping rate in 2017 were Buffalo, New York (up 34 percent); New York-Northern New Jersey (up 29 percent); Dallas-Fort Worth (up 23 percent); Louisville, Kentucky (up 22 percent); and Birmingham, Alabama (up 17 percent). Other major markets in the top 10 for biggest increase in home flipping rate in 2017 were Grand Rapids, Michigan; Rochester, New York; Indianapolis, Indiana; Cleveland, Ohio; and Houston, Texas.

Counter to the national trend, the home flipping rate decreased in 2017 in 19 of the 52 metro areas analyzed in the report with at least 1 million people, including Los Angeles, California (down 2 percent); Miami, Florida (down 14 percent); Boston, Massachusetts (down 7 percent); San Francisco, California (down 3 percent); Riverside-San Bernardino, California (down 1 percent); and Seattle, Washington (down 2 percent).

“I believe the drop in Seattle home flipping can be attributed to the large number of buyers that home flippers are competing against in the market,” said Matthew Gardner, chief economist with Windermere Real Estate in Seattle. “As a result, they’re being forced to pay more which cuts deeply into potential profits — also down from last year. I anticipate that supply limitations, in concert with rising home prices, will continue to put downward pressure on the number of flips in the Seattle market in 2018.”

Average time to flip unchanged from 2016
Homes flipped in 2017 took an average of 182 days to complete the flip, tied with 2016 for the highest average days to flip since 2006 — an 11-year high.

Among 174 metro areas with a population of at least 200,000 and at least 100 home flips in 2017, those with the longest average time to flip were Lansing, Michigan (226 days); Ogden, Utah (221 days); Albuquerque, New Mexico (217 days); San Luis Obispo, California (216 days); Naples, Florida (215 days).

Report methodology
ATTOM Data Solutions analyzed sales deed data for this report. A single family home or condo flip was any transaction that occurred in the year where a previous sale on the same property had occurred within the last 12 months. The average gross flipping profit is the difference between the purchase price and the flipped price (not including rehab costs and other expenses incurred, which flipping veterans estimate typically run between 20 percent and 33 percent of the property’s after repair value). Gross flipping return on investment was calculated by dividing the gross flipping profit by the first sale (purchase) price.

About ATTOM Data Solutions
ATTOM Data Solutions blends property tax, deed, mortgage, foreclosure, environmental risk, natural hazard, and neighborhood data for more than 155 million U.S. residential and commercial properties multi-sourced from more than 3,000 U.S. counties. A rigorous data management process involving more than 20 steps validates, standardizes and enhances the data collected by ATTOM, assigning each property record with a persistent, unique ID — the ATTOM ID. With more than 29.6 billion rows of transactional-level data and more than 7,200 discrete data attributes, the 9TB ATTOM data warehouse powers real estate transparency for innovators, entrepreneurs, disrupters, developers, marketers, policymakers, and analysts through flexible delivery solutions, including bulk file licenses, APIs and customized reports.

Media Contact:
Christine Stricker
(949) 748-8428
christine.stricker@attomdata.com

Data and Report Licensing:
(949) 502-8313
datareports@attomdata.com