I just got back from a fun yet relaxing trip to sunny Sayulita, Mexico. I am refreshed & ready to hit the ground running as the spring market is in full swing! If you've never been to Sayulita, I highly recommend it. It's a small, bohemian fishing village about an hour north of Puerto Vallarta, known for surfing, charming shops & restaurants and the friendliest people.
As much as I tried to unplug for the week, it was hard to not follow the big news stories unfolding at home: it started with regulators seizing Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank (NY) fell a couple days later & regional bank stocks were being halted from trading.
The good news is that the Fed ensured that all depositors of SVB, including those above the $250K FDIC limit, would be paid back in full. The same was announced for Signature Bank.
Now I'm not a qualified financial executive, but when looking at the reported fundamentals that caused the failure of SVB, it's reassuring that it doesn't look to involve faulty lending standards or fraud (and we all know from '08 how loose lending standards can create catastrophic, systemic failure across Wall Street). SVB had exceptionally high exposure to rising interest rates due to their investment strategy of long-term mortgage bonds and treasuries. Combined with the less plentiful times in the tech/VC world, if customers reached back for their deposits before their investments matured, the bank simply wasn't liquid enough to cover. SVB tried to raise capital after taking a loss on some of their investments, and customers panicked, resulting in a run on the bank.
So, how does this impact real estate? More specifically, how does this impact real estate in the Bay Area & San Francisco? The obvious answer is we are way too early to tell and that this is a fluid situation: news is coming out by the minute. What I can offer is some insight into the state of our market right up until the news of SVB collapse - and the market has certainly rebounded from Q4 2022.
After the acute decline in market activity in the 2nd half of 2022, buyer demand rose dramatically and most market indicators turned positive in 2023: Open house traffic, number of offers, and overbidding & absorption rates all saw improvement.
It is too early for significant effects to show up in home prices: Through February, 3-month-rolling median house sale prices saw year-over-year declines across all Bay Area counties (these percentage declines should be regarded cautiously until substantiated over the longer term):
San Francisco Median Sale Price
February 2023: $1,500,000 (down 14.5% YOY)
February 2022: $1,755,000
February 2021: $1,570,000
February 2020: $1,460,000
February 2019: $1,445,000
February 2023: $1,041,000 (down 16.7% YOY)
February 2022: $1,249,500
February 2021: $1,125,000
February 2020: $1,175,000
February 2019: $1,100,000
Even with the striking improvement in demand over late 2022, most year-over-year indicators remain depressed, but these comparisons are with the severely overheated conditions prevailing at the peak of a 10-year housing market upcycle. March through May is typically the most active listing and sales period of the year, and should soon provide much more data on supply, demand, and price trends. Over the last 3 years, spring markets were deeply affected, in very different and often surprising ways, by the onset of the pandemic (2020), the pandemic boom (2021) and soaring interest rates (2022).
To me, as has been the case for the last 14 months, the biggest wildcard remains interest rates: After dropping considerably in January from a November peak, they climbed again in February and early March, with big impacts on loan application rates. As rates climb, more opportunities exist, and cash holds more value. The Fed meets again this week and a quarter-point rate hike is anticipated.
If you have any questions about the market, a specific property, my top investment choices in the market today, etc, I'm always here to help.
I'll be back next month with another market update as well as some fun ideas for spring!