Showing posts with label January. Show all posts
Showing posts with label January. Show all posts

Saturday, January 28, 2023

January, 2023 | Market Analysis | Fourth Quarter 2022




January 2023 – 

After two of the most volatile years in real estate, triggered by
the global pandemic that was COVID-19, sales numbers are returning to pre-pandemic levels. Sales prices are not.  

The past two years caused huge swings in market reports as the mandated isolation to
 prevent the spread of the virus forced offices to close, employees to quarantine, and 
stock in online conferencing services to skyrocket. Those trends are all reversing directions, 
and the Park City real estate market is reflecting those changes as the market returns to a 
more “normal” seasonal pattern.  
    • Listing inventory is rising – In December ‘21 only 539 residential properties and lots were for sale. By December ‘22, that number rose to 1,263 (but was still 37% below the Dec-2019 figure of 2,011) 
    • Prices are starting to level off – Within Park City limits, sale prices jumped 35% during 2021. In 2022 they continued to increase, but at half that annual rate.  
    • Mortgage interest rates are trending downward – In late October, the average 30-year fixed rate was 7.08%. 
    • By the end of December, it had dropped to 6.48% and was headed down more.  Buyers are becoming more hesitant to make instant offers above the asking price and sellers are reacting by lowering those asking prices albeit at a slower pace. In Q3, 763 listings had at least one price reduction. In Q4, that number was 375. Price reductions in Q3 averaged 6.4% versus 5.7% in Q4.  
Sale prices for single-family homes in the primary market area of Summit and Wasatch Counties 
as reported by the Park City Board of REALTORS® Multiple Listing Service for the year
ending December 31 showed moderate increases in both averages (Up 2%) and median (Up 3%). 
For the year earlier, those increases were 28% and 24% respectively.  

The rate of sales (number of units sold) dropped 29% for single-family homes and 27% for 
condominiums from the year prior. Fears that the country might be headed into a recession, 
reinforced by a continuing push by the Fed to raise interest rates and stop inflation, and other 
negative indicators (gas prices), slowed sales across the region. However, an assisting driver of lower
sales numbers continued to be the lack of inventory – agents cannot sell what owners will not offer
for sale.  

Park City neighborhoods vary widely in price comparison and the Q4-year-over-year results continued 
that pattern. 

For Single Family homes, all but one of the major areas that make up the greater Park City market 
showed drops in units sold through the 4th quarter of 2022 versus 2021. The exceptions were in 
Silver Creek Village where a boom in new construction pushed sales totals 200% higher than in 2021, 
and in the South Jordanelle area where the new Benloch Ranch development accounted for 68 of the 
85 sales in the $1 to $2 million range. Interest is growing in anticipation of the Mayflower Mountain 
resort project opening for the 2024-25 ski season. Sales in the Jordanelle area increased 78% over
 the previous year, albeit at a lower median price point of $1.6 million, down from $2.3 million the 
year prior. 

Condo sales across the entire market range followed a pattern similar to single-family homes. Total 
sales volume declined in all areas primarily due to a lack of inventory to sell. Within Park City 
limits, condo sales volume was down 44% but median sale prices rose 15% to $1.5 million. 
In the Snyderville Basin, total sales volume climbed 32% because average and median prices both
 rose by nearly 50%.  

The inventory of vacant land listings dropped from 902 in mid-2019 (before Covid hit) to 275 in 
spring 2021 (just before vaccines became available). That number has increased steadily through 
the end of 2022 when we had 525 listings. Some buyers who bought vacant lots in years past 
with the intention of building in Park City found years later that the cost of construction (materials 
and labor – both in short supply because of Covid)) had increased so much that they delayed 
construction hoping for costs to return to normal. Some are putting those lots back on the market. 
At the same time, the increased demand for housing has spurred developers to break ground on 
projects that were delayed by the pandemic as well. The combination of those two trends is reflected 
in the number of new-construction listings which increased by 240% from 2019 to 2022.  

Comparing the 12 months ending December 31, 2022, to the same period in 2021:

  • New residential listings (single-family and condo) year-to-date are showing signs of recovery after a lengthy period of decline. For the twelve months ending December 2022, total new residential listings were 2,997, down just 80 from the same period the year before.  
  •  The market is cooling off after an overheated two years of sales. PCMLS members signed 2,140 purchase contracts in 2022, 43% fewer than the previous year (3,765)  
  • With New Listings running slightly higher than Pending contracts, available inventory started to increase. Only 265 residential properties were active at the end of 2021. That number boomed to 738 as of December 31, an increase of 178% year over year.  

Overall, how did the local market fare? Here is our take on the total year-long results reported on a 
rolling year-over-year basis for the period ending December 31, 2022. (Note: only areas with 10 or 
more sales are considered in the tally and reporting.)

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