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THE BEAT GOES ON – LOCAL REAL
ESTATE MARKET UNSTOPPABLE
/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>
/smaller>/fontfamily>Year-end
report
By Paul and Nellie Brocchini
/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>
F/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>OR THE third time in the last four
years, the total value of homes sold in the 10 Monterey
Peninsula real estate markets
exceeded one billion dollars last year. The total for 2003 was $1,153,569,459,
slightly above 2002 and just a shade under the record-breaking number for the
year 2000, according to figures compiled by the Monterey County Association of
Realtors.
Digging into the numbers, one finds that the make-up of the
gross dollar volume has changed dramatically. The big money markets of
Carmel,
Pebble Beach
and South Coast
are all substantially off their 2000 numbers. The other high-end market,
Carmel
Valley, posted a small gain. Here
are figures: Carmel sales were $308
million in 2000, $252 million last year; Pebble
Beach sales were $270 million in
2000, $157 million in 2003; South
Coast
had $120 million in 2000, $38 million in 2003. These three markets combined for
a decrease of $251 million in 2003 as compared to 2000.
This shortfall was overcome in 2003 by healthy increases in
the lower-priced markets, especially Seaside.
Incredibly low interest rates spurred those big gains. Seaside
booked $82 million in 2003 and only $40 million in 2000; Marina’s
dollar volume reached $49 million last year as opposed to $33 million in 2000.
Another area of strong increases was the Salinas/Monterey
Highway corridor. Dollar volume there has been
pumped up by the marketing of the new properties at Pasadera and the expansion
of Las Palmas. The Corridor booked
$187 million in 2003 as opposed to $99 million in 2000.
These numbers reflect the theme of the split market that we
have been reporting for a couple of years. Our local real estate market has
been, and continues to be strong at the lower end and relatively weak at the
luxurious end of the market.
/smaller>/fontfamily>/flushboth>Prices
still climbing
Prices continue their inexorable upward march. Six of the 10
markets posted double-digit gains over 2002. Monterey
led the pack with a 16.8 percent gain over 2002, jumping from a median sales
price of $535,000 to $625,000 in 2003.
When the current boom began in 1996, Monterey
lagged for a long time in price. Last year Monterey
caught up!
These year-end reports are the meatiest ones we do as we
have the luxury of reviewing a full year’s numbers and comparing them to
previous years. Just for fun, we did five years of price appreciation and
discovered these interesting numbers: Carmel was up 51.5 percent in the period
from 1999 to 2003; Carmel Valley 42.6 percent; Del Rey Oaks 87.2 percent;
Marina 71.4 percent; Monterey 57 percent; Pacific Grove 49.4 percent; Pebble Beach
40.9 percent; Salinas/Monterey Highway 69.8 percent; South Coast 52.3 percent,
and Seaside a whopping 210 percent.
/smaller>/fontfamily>/flushboth>Number
of transactions
There were 1,391 closed real estate transactions on the Peninsula
in 2003. This was the third highest total in the last five years and a up a bit over last year. Fourth quarter transactions
dipped slightly, from 415 in 2002 to 378 in 2003. Of the 378 sales closed in
the 4th quarter of last year 92, or 24 percent, were for more than one million
dollars; 75 percent of the sales were for more than $500,000. Housing on the Peninsula,
even in the so-called affordable markets, has become very expensive.
/smaller>/fontfamily>/flushboth>Great
start for 2004
/smaller>/fontfamily>/center>Our
Market Barometer was red hot on Jan. 1. Seventy-five percent of the listings in
Marina were in escrow, 66 percent
in Seaside, 44 percent in Pacific
Grove and 36 percent in Monterey.
These are extremely strong readings reflecting a thin inventory.
These numbers may, however, be inflated because many
listings expire Dec. 31, diminishing the number of listings on Jan. 1. The
month of January is also a strong listing period, so, in theory, the inventory
should grow during the month. We did a spot check on the above four towns Jan.
26, and found Marina had a total of 17 listings, of which 12 were in escrow,
for a reading of 70.6 percent, a little off the Jan. 1 mark but still very
strong; Seaside’s Jan. 26 reading was 51.5 percent; Pacific Grove, 40.4 percent
and Monterey, 33 percent.
These are also excellent numbers. As we moved toward the end
of the month, the market in these towns continued to be strong, indicating
there will be lots of closings in those markets during the first quarter.
At the cool end of the market, the situation is less rosy.
Carmel
and Pebble Beach
had barometer readings of 17 percent on January 1, and
South
Coast had an extremely low reading
of 10 percent. Our Jan. 26 spot reading showed Carmel
had moved up a bit to a respectable 22 percent but Pebble
Beach had slipped to 13 percent and
South Coast
to an almost invisible 7 percent.
Everything points to a terrific beginning for 2004 in the
lower-priced markets. The high end, though not dead, is struggling. It will
have its day again. We just do not know when.
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