Miami’s
housing market is now facing what amounts to a giant reality check, according
to the newly released Elliman reports, as its overheated pace of sales falls
like a ton of bricks to more moderate — albeit less sexy — levels.
But
while the overall picture isn’t all doom and gloom, tough times are still ahead
for those in South Florida’s real estate community, especially in the luxury
sector.
“The
market is transitioning from this irrational, hyperbolic period that was
unsustainable to a market with a more moderate pace,” Jonathan Miller, whose
firm Miller Samuel authors the quarterly reports for Douglas Elliman, told The
Real Deal.
Sales
The
most stunning figures in Douglas Elliman’s second-quarter report come from
drooping sales in both Miami Beach, stretching from Fisher Island to Sunny
Isles Beach; and Miami’s coastal mainland, which encompasses neighborhoods east
of I-95.
For the
mainland, sales dropped by 12.5 percent year-over-year, from 5,016 homes and
condos sold last year to 4,390 in this year’s second quarter.
Miami
Beach fared much worse with sales plummeting 24.7 percent, from 1,186 deals
during 2015’s second quarter to 893 this year.
While
condos were to blame for those drastic sales cuts in previous quarters,
single-family homes dragged the numbers down equally this time around for both
markets.
Miller
said one major reason behind the ongoing sales slowdown is simple supply and
demand: on the mainland, listing inventory for condos exploded by 35 percent to
5,120 active properties during the second quarter, while single-family homes
saw an equally remarkable jump of 38 percent to 658 listings.
In
Miami Beach, listing inventory for condos jumped 20 percent to 9,306 units, and
inventory for single-family homes rose 8.3 percent to 3,537 houses.
All
that new inventory means buyers — who are already feeling indecisive from
factors that include the economy and presidential election — are taking
longer to close deals.
Time
spent on the market doubled for many neighborhoods, with aggregate numbers
showing an average of 103 days listed on the beach and 76 days for the
mainland.
“Everybody
has to acclimate to the speed difference, and that impacts your perception of
the market,” Miller told TRD. “There’s still a lot of activity, it’s
just not moving as quickly as everyone is accustomed to.”
Trends
The
other not-so-obvious factor is a quickly shrinking supply of distressed
properties, which tend to trade quickly at smaller price points.
When
the housing market crashed in 2008, distressed homes and condos made up a large
chunk of the properties that traded hands. Now that stronger buyers have
snatched up many of those properties, the share
of distressed property sales is significantly lower.
The
mainland saw 369 distressed condos sell during the second quarter, a reduction
of 43 percent from the year before. Single-family homes saw a similar 45
percent decrease down to 363 distressed sales.
Miami
Beach was much the same. The barrier islands saw 44 distressed condos trade
during the second quarter, down 55 percent year-over-year, and a mere three
distressed single-family homes — down 72 percent in that same time frame.
While a
shrinking pool of distressed properties might be dragging down sales numbers,
it could also be fueling Miami’s ever-growing home prices. Lender-owned homes
and short sales typically carry significantly smaller price tags than
properties with financially strong owners, so having fewer distressed
properties means fewer discounted homes watering down the market as a whole.
Miller
said you also have to take into account that most of the homes and condos
trading nowadays are noticeably larger in terms of square footage compared to
previous cycles, and therefore command higher prices.
When
you peel back those layers, Miller said, price growth is already starting to
become more conservative. Recent reports from research
firm S&P Dow Jones show
housing values in the tri-county area are rising by single-digits
year-over-year. That’s a far cry from the double-digit appreciation in 2013 and
2014, when South Florida’s real estate market rocketed up from the recession.
On the
mainland, median prices for a single-family home grew 10 percent to $330,000 in
the second quarter. Condo prices grew by 5.4 percent to $230,000.
On the
beach, however, condo prices seem like they’re gearing up for a correction. The
median price for a unit on the barrier islands hit $383,750 in the second
quarter, growing by only 3.2 percent year-over-year.
Single-family
homes, however, saw prices spike 14.3 percent to an incredible $1.6 million —
the highest median price recorded in at least a decade.
Luxury
While
the market as a whole is downshifting into a more sustainable place, the luxury
sector is starting to get volatile.
On the
coastal mainland, prices for both condos and houses in the luxe sector —
defined as the upper 10 percent of all sales — fell significantly.
The
median sales price for a luxury condo plummeted 16.7 percent to $1 million per
unit. Single-family home prices in the upper echelon also dropped 4.9 percent
to $1.25 million.
Sales
were also down on both fronts. Luxury condos saw 231 sales, down 13 percent
year-over-year, while single-family homes saw 211 sales, down 10 percent.
One
look at the inventory numbers paints a clear picture as to why sales and prices
are hurting: There were 3,103 condos of the million-dollar variety actively for
sale during the second quarter, up a whopping 78 percent year-over-year. Houses
fared a bit better with 1,124 homes on the market, marking an inventory
increase of 28 percent.
“Inventories
are clearly rising and rising. The increases are much more pronounced as you
move up in price,” said Miller, whose firm is based in New York. “We’re seeing
the same thing in New York, where the housing market is generally softer on top
than anywhere else.”
On the
beach, however, pricey is only getting pricier.
The
median price of a luxury Miami Beach condo spiked 20 percent year-over-year to
$2.85 million, while costs for the barrier island’s ritzy single-family
residences grew by a more moderate 3.7 percent to $8 million.
Sales
on the beach, however, were going anywhere but up. Only nine deals were cut for
single-family homes in the second quarter, down 34 percent compared to the 14
sales made last year. Luxury condos had 83 trades, a decrease of 21 percent
year-over-year.
And
much like the mainland, inventory continues to stack up.
The
second quarter saw 1,048 luxury condos and 193 homes go up for sale on the
beach, marking an increase of 31 percent and 67 percent, respectively.
All
those factors, from ever-increasing prices to a mountain of listings, spell
trouble for the market’s most visible — and coveted — sector.
“There’s
a lot of uncertainty; people are taking longer to make decisions,” Miller said.
“It’s just not the same sense of urgency, and that’s not easy for Miami.”
Original Content The Real Deal
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