Archive for the ‘Statistics’ Category

Philly Biz Journal says Phila Area Home Sales Up 10% in First Quarter

CITYSPACE | May 5th, 2010 | No Comments »

16th Street BuildingsHas anyone else noticed a lot of homes being sold in Philly lately? I for one noticed both with increased sales in our office and in the neighborhood I live in Northwest of Center City. There are 3 homes for sale on my block – make that 2, one just sold last week after being on the market for 5 days. According to the Philadelphia Business Journal, Philadelphia Area home sales were up 10% in the first quarter of this year, perhaps pointing to a recovery of the housing market.

There is a lot happening in terms of home sales right now.  Prices are starting to go up a wee bit and homes are beginning to move a bit faster off the crowded market. Of course a lot of this was motivated by the First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit – a boon to buyers and the real estate industry alike, but with it ending last week, we’ll have to wait and see if the tax credit either gave the industry the boost it needed to get going again, or if it was simply a good idea that allowed a bunch of people to buy homes.

Check out the PBJ article for more great stats for Philadelphia Area Home Sales.

SCOPE: Selling City Owned Property Efficiently

astella | June 15th, 2009 | No Comments »

Nutter Butter Post by Rachel Lipton

You might notice that Today’s Nutter Butter does not directly refer to our great city’s Mayor, but instead the focus is on a project that the REALTORS of Philadelphia have come up with to help the RDA (Re-Development Authority) and other city agencies sell blighted properties to bring in much needed tax revenue and perhaps help push these hard to swallow budget proposals to the back burner.

Realtors helping sell government-owned vacant properties

By Jennifer Lin
Inquirer Staff Writer

Al Perry sells houses for a living, so it bothers him to see a boarded-up shell or overgrown lot that is owned – and ignored – by the city. As president of the Greater Philadelphia Association of Realtors, Perry is working on an idea that could help the city reduce blight and raise money.

It’s marketing: Use Realtors to sell some of the 11,000 vacant houses and lots owned by government entities.
The Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority, which owns about 3,000 of those properties, is testing the idea. So far, officials like what they see.

Terry Gillen, the RDA’s executive director, said that for the first time, the authority had listed properties on the region’s multiple-listing service. Five are in Southwest Philadelphia and two in South Philadelphia.

Realtors with three agencies, including Perry, also are showing houses to prospective buyers – another first for the RDA.
“With its scattered small properties, the RDA is not in the habit of going after sales,” Gillen said. If it owns a lot or an empty house, a prospective buyer would have to comb city records to find that out.

As part of the pilot project, the RDA also has listed 12 properties on its Web site to measure public interest. Offers have been made on half of them.

The RDA intends to post online the address of every vacant property this summer.

“Realtors, meanwhile, are advising the RDA on how to simplify its paperwork and make buying a property from the agency easier. In addition, they are giving advice on pricing,” Gillen said, for they tend to have a better grasp of whether appraised values are too low or too high.

“We definitely want to try to take this project to the next level,” Gillen said. “We’d like something bigger than the pilot by this fall.”

For decades, blight has been a challenge for Philadelphia mayors and redevelopment officials.

The city has about 55,000 vacant properties and lots, of which government entities own about 20 percent, according to new data from the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors.

The RDA has 2,920 vacant properties and lots, the association said. Many of those decrepit assets were acquired in the 1950s and 1960s for redevelopment plans that did not materialize.

There is “immense interest” among Realtors in Philadelphia in collaborating with the RDA and “cleaning up city streets,” Perry said.
In the pilot, which began in February, the Realtors were given five houses and two lots to market, ranging from $19,900 to $43,700. The lots, in the 1200 block of Webster Street in South Philadelphia, are under agreements of sale and could fetch $17,400 more than the RDA had expected. The agent will earn $2,500 or 6 percent of the sale price, whichever is lower.

Under terms of the sale, the properties must be redeveloped within 18 months.

Philadelphia Realtors borrowed the program idea from Baltimore, which has 30,000 vacant houses and lots.

Baltimore calls its program SCOPE – Selling City-Owned Properties Efficiently. Since 2005, 263 sales have been transacted, raising $6.6 million for the city.

Joseph Landers III, executive vice president of the Greater Baltimore Board of Realtors, said, “The city didn’t think its property had any value. Our members said, yes, it did.”

To deter speculators, Baltimore requires that the nonprofit Community Law Center review each sales agreement. The law center checks finances and searches for outstanding judgements or housing-code violations. Robert Strupp, a lawyer for the center, said that, to date, no property had gone into foreclosure.

SCOPE, too, requires buyers to rehab properties within 18 months. The city pays a broker $2,500 or 8 percent of the sale price.
Philadelphia City Council wants to know more about the Baltimore program.

“If it worked in Baltimore, I don’t know why it wouldn’t work here,” Councilman James F. Kenney said.
One big difference between the cities is the political component. In Baltimore, sales of city property require approval by the Board of Estimates, which sets fiscal policy and includes the mayor and president of the council.
Here, state law dictates that any sale by the RDA go before Council for approval.

For the pilot program, Council President Anna C. Verna and Councilman Frank DiCicco gave their advance approval of sales.

Urban redevelopment experts say that for the Baltimore program to work here, Council members must be willing to pre-approve locations to sell in their districts, as well as the uses for the properties. Otherwise, if Council can derail sales, buyers might be reluctant to make offers.

With All The Crazy Market News, It Must Be Taking Forever to Sell A Philadelphia Property These Days?

CITYSPACE | October 15th, 2008 | No Comments »

Looks like on average, it’s taking sellers a little over 100 days to sell a property in Philadelphia. The graph below indicates a slow but steady increase in days on market.

Philadelphia Days on Market

What’s most notable about this graph is that while inventory levels (the number of homes for sale at any given time in Philadelphia) continue to increase steadily, “Days On Market” remains relatively steady.

There must be buyers out there swiping up some of the inventory, or it would be taking longer on average to sell?

Steady Absorption = Steady Values?

CITYSPACE | October 14th, 2008 | No Comments »

While real estate in much of the country has been depreciating over the past few years, Philadelphia’s market has remained relatively steady without much significant appreciation or depreciation to speak of.

The “supply/demand” (new listings/listings absorbed) graph below seems to illustrate a fairly stable Philly market nicely?

Philadelphia Absorption Rate

Forbes Lists Philly As One of the Easiest Places to Sell a Home

Melissa | October 6th, 2008 | 2 Comments »

Along with Sacramento, Las Vegas and others, Forbes cites Philly as a market where buying and selling has been promoted due to added inventory on the market. Of the cities studied, Philadelphia came out on top in terms of transactions, having “by far the steepest increase in home sales, with transactions more than doubling from the previous year,” with the percentage change from July ‘07 to July ‘08 listed at 57.1%. Read the full article here.

Despite this increase in activity, buyers and sellers need to have realistic expectations and a plan for making their next purchase or selling a current home. One tip: study statistics on your local market. Click here to read up on detailed statistics for the area where you currently live or a potential new neighborhood – market trends can differ substantially from area to area. Also, make sure you have an honest dicussion of your goals and expectations with your real estate professional to help you decide when the best time to buy or sell is for you.

Check out ALL local listings here or get in touch to talk more about the Philly market and your real estate needs.

Melissa Barrett
RE/MAX City Space
REALTOR, EcoBroker
email myphillyfinds@gmail.com
cell 215.300.4604

19130 – Monthly Stat-Us!

CITYSPACE | September 18th, 2008 | No Comments »

Here below is graph showing the average Price per square foot for condos and single family homes in Philadelphia’s Art Museum Area. (19130 Zip Code)

Looks like despite the fact that condos usually come with a condo fee, condos in the Art Museum area tends to cost about $75 dollars/ sq. ft more than their single family home counterparts.

To see every condo and home currently listed in the 19130 zip code, be sure to check out our Art Museum Area Neighborhood page. The page also features fun “Walk Score” graphs, more statistics, and links to other recent blog posts about the Art Museum Area.

In the meantime, if you can think of any other stats you’d like to see for the Art Museum or any other Philadelphia Neighborhood, please feel free to use the contact form below to make a request.

Art Museum Area Real Estate Average Price Per Square Foot

My Philly Finds – Best Cheesesteak!

Melissa | September 16th, 2008 | 1 Comment »

No disrespect to Pat’s, Geno’s or your own Philly favorite cheesesteak place, but I’ve found an exceptional steak in of all places…Manayunk!

Call ahead to Sorrentino’s Grocery at 215-487-0559 or stop in this quaint mom-and-pop corner shop with a nice deli selection at 4631 Cresson street, just down the street from Main street. You can pick up your steak, along with whatever you forgot from your last trip to the grocery store. (I highly recommend the cheesesteak with fried onions and mushrooms. They also have hot side orders if you need fries or onion rings with that steak!)
 

Before or after your steak feast, check out local Manayunk listings – then Sorrentino’s can be YOUR corner store. Click here to see all local listings!

Get the skinny on real estate trends and statistics for Manayunk and other Philadelphia neighborhoods here.

Looking for a good buy? Consider an Old City Condo…

CITYSPACE | September 2nd, 2008 | No Comments »

Here below is a graph demonstrating Market Action Index and Price per Square Foot in Center City Philadelphia’s 19106 Zip Code. This zip contains both the Society Hill and Old City neighborhoods. For the purposes of isolating conditions in Old City, we’ve restricted this graph to include data for condos only. (The Old City marketplace tends to be dominated by condos, while the Society Hill marketplace is mostly single family homes.)

Old City Philadelphia Real Estate Market Action Index

The current Market Action Index (rate of sales vs. current inventory) for 19106 Condos is hovering around 13. An index below 30 suggests a buyer’s market.

Price / per square foot numbers in Old City are also down nearly $20 over the past 10 months or so. Do you think market conditions in Old City will be stronger when the current large inventory of available condo units goes back to normal levels? If so, could be a good time to check out one of the following units?

Philadelphia Real Estate Market Action Index

CITYSPACE | August 21st, 2008 | No Comments »

How’s the Philadelphia Real Estate Market? Favorable to Sellers? To Buyers? … The “Market Action Index” measures the current rate of sales versus the current inventory. A Market Action Index above 30 indicates conditions are favorable to sellers (seller’s market), and a Market Action Index below 30 demonstrates conditions are favorable to buyers (buyer’s market.)

If the curve on the graph below is rising, perhaps it’s a good time to buy? If it’s falling, maybe it’s time to investigate this page.


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