April median sold price, units, DOM, and $/sq.ft.

The median sold price continues to fall hitting a new 11-year low.  April’s 421 units sold exhibited a median sales price of $155,000 – down 3.1 percent from March’s median of $160,000; and down 13.9 percent year-over-year.  And the downward trend does not seem to be subsiding.  A colleague informed me that 300 listings had undergone price reductions this past week. There have not been that many price reductions in one week in over two years.  What do these Sellers know?

Not surprisingly, the median sold price per square foot continues to fall.  April’s $89.38 sold price per square foot represents a 2.4 percent drop from March’s number, and a 13.3 percent drop year-over-year.

Active listings appear to be holding steady while pendings continue to increase.

April sales by type break out as follows:

  • Bank-owned properties: 38% – down from March’s 41%
  • Short sales: 31% – up from March’s 30%
  • Equity sales: 31% – up from March’s 28%

April sales by price band break out as follows:

sales price ($000’s) units sold
0 – 99 78
100 – 199 220
200 – 299 74
300 – 399 22
400 – 499 10
500 – 599 5
600 – 699 5
700 – 799 1
800 – 899 0
900 – 999 2
1M+ 4
total 421

 

For those readers who prefer the median sold price for houses and condos combined, April’s 506 sold houses, condos and town homes exhibited a combined median sold price of $138,800 – down from March’s’s combined median of $149,950.

Historical data follows.

Month Year # Sold Sold Price Sold Price per Sq Ft Average DOM # of Listings # of Pendings
Apr 2011 421 $155,000 $89.38 137 1,914 1,593
Mar 2011 511 $160,000 $91.59 132 1,906 1,497
Feb 2011 385 $161,000 $93.35 142 1,882 1,416
Jan 2011 361 $159,900 $92.19 153 1,970 1,329
Dec 2010 480 $165,500 $94.43 144 2,021 1,148
Nov 2010 399 $170,000 $96.14 139 2,060 1,376
Oct 2010 418 $174,950 $98.57 135 2,146 1,371
Sep 2010 466 $168,000 $97.52 133 2,186 1,473
Aug 2010 449 $180,000 $97.53 127 2,222 1,513
Jul 2010 414 $180,000 $101.74 129 2,158 1,580
Jun 2010 602 $170,000 $100.52 145 1,966 1,625
May 2010 450 $175,807 $102.37 138 1,789 1,804
Apr 2010 510 $179,995 $103.13 128    
Mar 2010 477 $175,000 $99.14 141    
Feb 2010 338 $170,000 $101.68 138    
Jan 2010 346 $167,000 $97.06 134    
Dec 2009 424 $178,000 $101.28 126    
Nov 2009 461 $175,000 $103.61 112    
Oct 2009 561 $180,000 $103.52 123    
Sep 2009 520 $185,948 $103.31 128    
Aug 2009 482 $179,900 $102.64 116    
Jul 2009 515 $180,000 $103.45 126    
Jun 2009 536 $180,317 $104.09 136    
May 2009 426 $175,000 $102.29 139    
Apr 2009 429 $190,000 $105.71 133    
Mar 2009 369 $200,000 $105.85 133    
Feb 2009 293 $205,000 $111.52 132    
Jan 2009 233 $200,000 $113.04 117    
Dec 2008 294 $218,950 $121.74 145    
Nov 2008 269 $220,000 $122.24 152    
Oct 2008 354 $230,000 $131.43 144    
Sep 2008 358 $239,250 $136.72 145    
Aug 2008 321 $250,000 $142.14 140    
Jul 2008 397 $251,000 $145.48 139    
Jun 2008 369 $262,500 $148.05 142    
May 2008 314 $260,215 $152.30 134    
Apr 2008 314 $275,000 $154.05 172    
Mar 2008 238 $274,000 $150.93 166    
Feb 2008 195 $289,000 $156.48 149    
Jan 2008 165 $285,000 $170.23 146    
Dec2007 228 $283,950 $167.22 143    
Nov2007 204 $299,750 $172.24 126    
Oct2007 241 $296,000 $173.55 116    
Sep2007 230 $299,945 $179.46 114    
Aug2007 311 $305,000 $182.49 118    
Jul2007 300 $315,000 $189.78 113    
Jun2007 329 $320,000 $196.78 104    
May2007 364 $313,200 $190.81 107    
Apr2007 320 $309,500 $193.93 121    
Mar2007 324 $315,000 $189.61 121    
Feb 2007 269 $315,000 $191.18 126    
Jan 2007 245 $312,900 $199.79 133    
Dec2006 291 $309,000 $193.51 114    
Nov2006 281 $318,000 $197.32 111    
Oct 2006 363 $312,400 $201.44 105    
Sep2006 344 $314,950 $198.08 98    
Aug2006 349 $325,000 $210.92 94    
Jul2006 373 $335,000 $210.62 93    
Jun2006 424 $339,000 $214.54 91    
May2006 374 $339,950 $219.05 99    
Apr2006 368 $334,600 $212.08 88    
Mar2006 387 $340,000 $215.54 99    
Feb 2006 283 $335,000 $217.29 101    
Jan 2006 274 $365,000 $216.38 98    
Dec2005 333 $355,000 $217.31 89    
Nov2005 385 $349,000 $220.00 81    
Oct2005 484 $359,450 $223.06 77    
Sep2005 531 $354,500 $219.26 77    
Aug2005 582 $360,500 $220.52 73    
Jul2005 608 $353,000 $218.99 71    
Jun2005 679 $350,000 $215.69 69    
May2005 644 $333,250 $209.95 68    
Apr2005 558 $326,750 $207.57 77    
Mar2005 584 $325,000 $200.17 81    
Feb 2005 342 $318,500 $197.54 88    
Jan 2005 341 $310,000 $195.19 85    
Dec2004 450 $312,500 $190.72 77    
Nov2004 448 $309,950 $191.62 63    
Oct2004 512 $299,250 $188.72 53    
Sep2004 496 $292,750 $185.78 61    
Aug2004 505 $285,000 $182.95 56    
Jul2004 544 $304,300 $179.28 61    
Jun2004 533 $285,000 $172.16 65    
May2004 476 $278,750 $169.64 65    
Apr2004 526 $259,950 $158.08 67    
Mar2004 508 $245,000 $142.56 71    
Feb 2004 365 $237,000 unavailable 81    
Jan 2004 380 $228,500 unavailable 78    
Dec2003 441 $240,000 unavailable 82    
Nov2003 444 $220,750 unavailable 78    
Oct2003 430 $219,880 unavailable 76    
Sep2003 587 $223,000 unavailable 71    
Aug2003 512 $220,000 unavailable 75    
Jul2003 533 $210,000 unavailable 77    
Jun2003 475 $207,000 unavailable 77    
May2003 450 $198,950 unavailable 85    
Apr2003 478 $197,750 unavailable 82    
Mar 2003 428 $192,000 unavailable 77    
Feb 2003 321 $186,895 unavailable 79    
Jan 2003 316 $186,000 unavailable 96    
Dec 2002 379 $193,500 unavailable 93    
Nov 2002 423 $190,000 unavailable 82    
Oct 2002 483 $189,900 unavailable 83    
Sep 2002 410 $174,000 unavailable 85    
Aug 2002 459 $180,000 unavailable 74    
Jul 2002 469 $176,000 unavailable 83    
Jun 2002 445 $185,000 unavailable 80    
May 2002 470 $178,450 unavailable 77    
Apr 2002 360 $169,500 unavailable 93    
Mar 2002 377 $169,000 unavailable 84    
Feb 2002 323 $170,900 unavailable 89    
Jan 2002 269 $172,475 unavailable 99    
Dec 2001 287 $182,000 unavailable 86    
Nov 2001 323 $161,500 unavailable 85    
Oct 2001 357 $166,500 unavailable 79    
Sep 2001 355 $168,000 unavailable 81    
Aug 2001 448 $160,350 unavailable 84    
Jul 2001 433 $169,900 unavailable 90    
Jun 2001 426 $166,225 unavailable 96    
May 2001 404 $162,050 unavailable 97    
Apr 2001 370 $158,750 unavailable 94    
Mar 2001 385 $159,900 unavailable 97    
Feb 2001 297 $159,950 unavailable 104    
Jan 2001 264 $165,000 unavailable 102    
Dec 2000 272 $156,500 unavailable 100    
Nov 2000 355 $154,500 unavailable 93    
Oct 2000 348 $153,000 unavailable 98    
Sep 2000 356 $160,000 unavailable 104    
Aug 2000 412 $163,375 unavailable 94    
Jul 2000 368 $155,000 unavailable 110    
Jun 2000 466 $165,845 unavailable 104    
May 2000 363 $158,000 unavailable 105    
Apr 2000 312 $155,000 unavailable 113    
Mar 2000 339 $162,700 unavailable 102    
Feb 2000 244 $149,620 unavailable 110    
Jan 2000 223 $156,000 unavailable 113    
Dec 1999 264 $155,000 unavailable 118    
Nov 1999 293 $149,900 unavailable 98    
Oct 1999 289 $147,895 unavailable 108    
Sep 1999 311 $157,000 unavailable 106    
Aug 1999 360 $148,500 unavailable 112    
Jul 1999 375 $147,800 unavailable 105    
Jun 1999 372 $150,000 unavailable 103    
May 1999 307 $145,500 unavailable 106    
Apr 1999 324 $151,700 unavailable 111    
Mar 1999 308 $151,000 unavailable 121    
Feb 1999 249 $148,900 unavailable 120    
Jan 1999 210 $143,000 unavailable 115    
Dec 1998 265 $140,000 unavailable 118    
Nov 1998 280 $152,800 unavailable 126    
Oct 1998 286 $142,825 unavailable 115    
Sep 1998 279 $144,500 unavailable 102    
Aug 1998 331 $145,000 unavailable 113    
Jul 1998 335 $150,000 unavailable 108    
Jun 1998 351 $148,500 unavailable 103    
May 1998 302 $145,500 unavailable 99    
Apr 1998 235 $149,000 unavailable 111    
Mar 1998 267 $142,500 unavailable 114    
Feb 1998 201 $139,900 unavailable 126    
Jan 1998 167 $149,490 unavailable 129    

Note: The medians table above is updated on a monthly basis. The median home price data reported covers the cities of Reno, Nevada and Sparks, Nevada [NNRMLS Area #100]. Residential data includes Site/Stick Built properties only. Data excludes Condo/Townhouse, Manufactured/Modular and Shared Ownership properties. Data courtesy of the Northern Nevada Regional MLS – May 2011.  Note: This information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.

33 comments

  1. Raymond

    Median price down 13.9% YoY. This must be further evidence of the “stabilizing median” that was talked about so much on this blog last year.

  2. Cal

    Nationwide, house values dropped last quarter at the fastest rate since 2008.

    Nice to see the market above $500K is alive and kicking, with a whopping 4% of total sales.

  3. Ralston

    “What do these sellers know?”

    That house prices are on the next leg down. It’s in the air. And all the federal and state “incentives” and “assistance” and prop-ups, bailouts, moratoriums, and add-ons cannot stop it.

  4. Martin

    I surf through the MLS about every two weeks just to keep myself up to date. I have never seen so many “price reduced” listings as I have in the last 2-3 weeks.

  5. Free Falling

    My hats off to the perma-bears. You guys clearly called this one right. Two years ago there wouldn’t have been many takers on a bet that the median price would be down to $155 k and still falling…

  6. skeptical

    This is one of those times when it ain’t so fun being right. That said, and it’s been said many, many times before:

    “Falling prices aren’t the problem. They are the solution.”

    If the market hits the point where this inventory can finally begin getting sold off, Home Depot, Lowe’s, and Western Nevada Supply will be hiring new folks. Contractors will get to work fixing fences, roofs, and furnaces. Reno is a great place to live. If the market is allowed to adjust, the economy will once again thrive. Just my two cents….

  7. Norton

    I would agree with the increasing numbers of “price reduced” listings. However, I see most of them for houses listed above the median. Some well above the median. Many have said here for a least a couple of years now that that if a buyer has a fixed amount of money to spend on a house, the longer he can wait the better the house he can buy with his money. Only a fool would deny at this point that a buyer in almost any price range, but particilarly the higher ranges, can buy a much nicer house today than he could have one year ago. There do not, however, appear to be very many buyers in the higher price ranges.

  8. Corina

    What constitutes the “higher price range” today? Over $300K?
    Only 12% of all houses that sold last month sold over $300k.

  9. Phil

    Hell, $300K is almost twice the median now.

    The median is now down 58% from the bubble high. At the bubble high, a house costing twice the median was $730K. Now it is $310K. This is an epic housing collapse. Never before seen. Anywhere. And right here in Reno.

    I recall back in 2004-2007 when it was standard realtor pablum to say how special the Reno housing market was. How unique. They had no idea how right they were.

  10. BanteringBear

    “For those readers who prefer the median sold price for houses and condos combined, April’s 506 sold houses, condos and town homes exhibited a combined median sold price of $138,800 – down from March’s’s combined median of $149,950.”

    It’s been a while, friends. Looks like things are playing out nicely.

  11. trader joe

    bantering bear………….welcome home

  12. Reno Ignoramus

    It has indeed been an epic housing market collapse. And, yes, right here in Reno. If it were not for the fact that Las Vegas has had an even larger housing market collapse, Reno would be the attention of the national media, just as LV is now.

    Hey Bear, remember when they called us “hostile pessimists” on this blog?

  13. Pending

    The increase “pending sales” on the MLS are a reflection of the number of short sales being moved to the pending category…where they hang out for 8-1o weeks (on a good day) before the buyer knows if the bank accepts their offer…and then another couple of months if everyone agrees and they can proceed to close.

  14. Walter

    Median 58% down.

    And if we include condos in the figures, as we used to do in the beginning, before Guy changed the metric, it is 63% down.

    Absolutely staggering.

  15. Carney

    Epic is a good word. And how much more epic is it going to get?
    Remember those 12,000 or so missing in action NODs.

  16. Steve Herschbach

    In Anchorage in the late 80s we had our own recession due to the collapse in oil prices and subsequent departure of many high paying oil jobs. There had been a building boom in condominiums and strip mall. By the end of the decade condos dropped to one third the prices seen at the peak. And the new strip malls sat empty. People who bought condos back then for $15,000 – $20,000 made a killing when the market recovered.

    Now the rest of the country is in the toilet but we are pretty much sitting this one out as high oil prices have the state sitting with budget surpluses unlike most states in the country. I sure am glad I am here right now but it is sad to see so many people suffering down south. I guess the only good note is some young families are now going to be able to buy in a market they were once priced out of. If you factor in inflation house prices are even lower than they appear since $150,000 in 1990 dollars was a lot more money than $150,000 is now.

  17. Rebelrunner

    Staggering? You want to see staggering?

    Values at the Bubble Invented Lake Las Vegas are down around 70% from their bubble highs in 2006. Condos selling for around $800,000 in 2006-07 are now selling for around $225,000-$250,000.

  18. Sully

    Rebelrunner; I agree Reno has a ways to go. 75th percentile in Las Vegas (listing prices) is 179K versus 350K in Reno. Median is a little closer to historical levels at 120K versus 180K.

    A bunch of drunken developers built enough $1 million + houses here to last a couple of decades, forgetting to add all the millionaires required to live in them. At some point, all these overbuilt homes will sell and probably at the levels you are seeing in Vegas.

  19. Downbutnotout

    Now if we could get Smarten out of retirement it would be just like old home week.

  20. Mark D

    All mortgages bought during the 2004-08 bubble should be scrapped–allow the home owner to refinance their primary home at today’s rates as long as they qualify with income, provided at least 20% down at original closing, and never missed a payment. Cap the principal amount owed in the refinance to 125% of the appraised value (which is the loan to value limit currently in place for refinancing) and discard everything above that. Limit the term of the refinance to 20 years or less to allow for faster principal reduction. Banks and credit unions can’t continue to trap the owner didn’t do anything wrong (other than bad luck and unfortunate timing of market conditions) in severely underwater loan and provide temptation to strategic default which only drives the values of surrounding homes even lower.

  21. Fred

    It’s interesting to note that Incline Village is also beginning to take part in this real estate “carnage”. I monitor the area closely and am astounded at how the number of foreclosures has suddenly skyrocketed.
    I remember BB saying a long time ago that IV would also eventually crumble, but at a later date. Seems he is right(again).

  22. rory

    The term hostile pessimists still fits. You can still be right in your predictions and be a hostile pessimist.

  23. Transplant

    Just like you can be a starry-eyed optimist and still be blind as a bat.

  24. MikeZ

    Banks and credit unions can’t continue to trap the owner didn’t do anything wrong (other than bad luck and unfortunate timing of market conditions) in severely underwater loan and provide temptation to strategic default which only drives the values of surrounding homes even lower.

    Trapped?! Can you explain what you mean by “owners are trapped?”

    How is anyone trapped when they can simply walk away and hand the house to the lender in return for cancellation of the debt? And especially now, with The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act from Uncle Sam. That’s a red carpet invitation to walk away, until 2012.

  25. MikeZ

    BlabberingBear, now that you’ve admitted you’re back/never left, why not drop the (at least) 2 aliases that you’re still using and just post as yourself now?

    Just sayin’…

  26. BanteringBear

    Say what, MikeZ? I can’t even remember the last time I read here.

  27. BanteringBear

    “All mortgages bought during the 2004-08 bubble should be scrapped–allow the home owner to refinance their primary home at today’s rates as long as they qualify with income, provided at least 20% down at original closing, and never missed a payment. Cap the principal amount owed in the refinance to 125% of the appraised value (which is the loan to value limit currently in place for refinancing) and discard everything above that.”

    This is completely irresponsible, and sets a terrible precedent. People who are not paying their mortgage need to get packing, and the banks who hold those loans need to be forced to adhere to traditional accounting standards, and quit all this extend and pretend BS. Kick the deadbeats out, and shut down these zombie banks.

  28. BanteringBear

    Is MikeZ, derrick?

  29. bob_c

    deduct 20% for inflation (26,000) and 129,000 in 2001 dollars would be 155,000 today
    thus a 129,000 purchase in 2001 of a median home would be break even
    (2% non compounded for 10 years on 129k is close to 26K)
    we are IN a depression……ZIRP…..QE2…..major loss of jobs nationally in last decade…..and the ballooning deficit to keep the ship afloat
    these are epic times

  30. Paul

    Fred, actually a realtor in Incline was gloating the other day that all of the REOs in Incline were sold. I checked my email from the title company and there are at least 30 more in the pipeline. Incline is still VERY expensive relative to rents and is populated mostly by baby boomers in a very narrow age band that will need to sell and get off the hill in the next 10 years.

  31. Paul

    BB welcome back. I tend to agree with Mark, let people discharge the debt above current FMV through a chapter 11 bankruptcy, only on their principal residence and only purchase-money mortgages. I agree – liquidate the speculators, the serial refinancers, and the zombie banks, but cut some relief to those whos only mistake was timing, and in some ways are victims of the government’s failure to stop the housing bubble. Allowing borrowers to chop off the part of thier mortgage that’s underwater, going forward, will force lenders to collect a sizeable downpayment up front, and will prevent future housing bubbles caused by reckless lending practices.

  32. BanteringBear

    Why should anyone be rewarded for an extremely poor purchase decision at the expense of the prudent? The answer is they shouldn’t. This whole problem is one of leverage. The banks allowed people to lever themselves into homes with zero skin in the game, giving them teaser rates so they could squeak by and make the payments, hopefully unloading the sh!tbox down the road to another fool with a suicide loan for an even more ridiculous price. Now, people like those who posted above me want to reward the most-levered crowd? Some chowderhead who put zero down and owes $500k on a $200k home gets a $250k gift, but the guy who paid cash gets the middle finger?! F*** THAT. Leaving now before I really go off.

  33. Rubiconer

    “Inlcine is populated mostly by baby boomers in a very narrow age band that will need to sell and get off the hill in the next 10 years.”

    That is an absolutely astute description of IV. There is getting to be more grey hair in IV than at the Social Security office.

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