California Home Pricing Tiers examined

During June 2024, home prices increased over the prior month across most price tiers in Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego.

The buyer uptick in pricing is seasonal as expected. Home prices ranged from 2% above May 2022’s peak in the low tier to 1% higher in the mid-tier, stabilizing at 0% change in the high tier.

Watch for prices to fall back in the months ahead following a spring seasonal bounce. The Fed has been slowing the economy which to control consumer inflation. The effort to control consumer inflation will bring on an inevitable reduction in jobs — income and spending — expected by early 2025. Thus, the bottom of the coming business recession will not arrive until 2026.

Beginning around 2027, prices will gradually rise as we cycle out of recession into recovery. The return of real estate speculators and long-term buy-to-let investors will jumpstart the housing market. Until buyer-occupants gain sufficient confidence in a recovery they will wait to begin purchasing in significantly greater numbers.

Real estate agents may need to switch their services to maintain their standard of living in this buyer’s market. The focus will be on the types of buyers willing and able to purchase during a recession.

Updated October 14, 2024.

Charts are updated monthly. There is a two-month lag in reported data.

high-endrolex.com

Chart update 10/14/24

Chart update 10/14/24

July 2024July 2023Annual ChangeMay 2022 past peakChange from 2022 peak
Low Tier486485+6%484+6%
Mid Tier417410+7%420+4%

High Tier

428396+8%414+3%

Chart update 10/14/24

Chart update 10/14/24

July 2024July 2023Annual ChangeMay 2022 past peakChange from the 2022 peak
Low Tier524494+6%500+5%
Mid Tier467430+9%438+7%

High Tier

414387+7%395+5%

Chart update 10/14/24

Chart update 10/14/24

July 2024July 2023Annual ChangeMay 2022 past peakChange from past peak
Low Tier398388+3%418-5%
Mid Tier385371+4%417-8%

High Tier

352341+3%384-8%

Forecast by firsttuesday

Chart update 10/14/24

July 2024July 2023Annual ChangeMay 2022 past peakChange from 2022 peak
Low Tier478456+5%468+2%
Mid Tier430404+6%426+1%

High Tier

398375+6%3980%

*The three pricing tier amounts listed in the Tri-City charts are averages of the tier constraints in Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco.

The above charts track sales price fluctuations of single family residence (SFR) resales in California’s three largest cities. Each city’s sales prices are organized by price tier, giving a clearer picture of price movement in each price range within the market.

To understand the “big picture” of the disparity between low-, middle-, and high-tier sales fluctuations, look to the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index as the authority. The index is a long-standing and invaluable source of pricing data for an accurate comparison of home pricing in California’s three major cities and the state as a whole.

The above charts track changes in specific tiers, displaying how different ranges of house prices in the market perform in comparison to one another. Portrayals of pricing in California take many forms. The index figure is particularly useful as it displays relative price movement rather than a misleading dollar amount which fits no single property anywhere.

Unlike many media sources, first tuesday shuns the uninformative median price approach for pricing movement. The median approach tracks all home prices as a single tier by assigning all sales with one mean price figure.

The one-price-fits-all dollar amount looks good on paper but is not instructive and is misleading for all owners. It is a mathematical abstraction creating illusions for sellers about what price trend applies to their property.

Brokers seeking the actual value of a specific property would do well to remember that a “median priced home” does not exist. You simply cannot find it. A single median price is a statistical point which fails to apply in a price analysis of properties in different price-tiers.

To determine how real estate evaluation behaves, you compare the price of a low-tier property with, well, a low-tier property – comparables, not prices of high-tier property. Properties in different tiers move in price for very different reasons. Although the market tends to move in the same direction over time, the percentage of annual price movement varies greatly from tier to tier within a business cycle.

The best way to initially evaluate a property and set its price is to study comparable property values in the same demographic location (same house, same tract) as achieved by the S&P Case-Shiller index). Other ways to set the ceiling price include:

  • cost per square foot (replacement cost); and
  • income analysis methods.

Return to sanity

Price persistence and illiquidity are the two factors economists use to explain price movement:

Price persistence is the tendency of listed prices in owner-occupied real estate to resist change, staying high even when buyer demand for resale homes has dropped, a condition more commonly called the sticky price syndromedownward price rigidity or the money illusion driven by yesterday’s prices.

Prices in California suffered from sticky prices in 2019. During this pre-pandemic period, home sales volume remained flat-to-down while mortgage rates steadily increased after 2012. And yet, home prices remained high for two reasons:

  • the lack of residential construction, particularly in the low tier where homebuyers are most plentiful and eager to enter the market; and
  • the steady jobs recovery across California, allowing homebuyer incomes to (almost) keep pace with consumer inflation and home prices (asset inflation).

Search frictions and debt overload hindrance

The reluctance of prices to adjust quickly to real financial conditions in the real estate market is due to one particular cause; the difficulty of finding a property through a gatekeeper such as a broker, agent or builder, and then agreeing to an appropriate price, called search frictions.

In the hunt for a home, search friction makes it difficult for properties to change hands and prices to be negotiated. This prevents deals from happening when a deal is what everyone has in mind. Thus, these frictions hinder the speedy resolution to price when rates of employment and mortgage interest shift.

Seller’s agents are most helpful in facilitating transactions when they figure out what it is that is the property they are selling. Once the property research is competed, a marketing package is prepared disclosing the conditions of the property (TDS/NHD and reports), its title, its monthly expenses of ownership and occupancy, and neighborhood statistics. It is property information which enables a buyer and their agent to make timely decisions.

If only we could stick to a cash price

Japan’s financial crisis of 1990 included a collapse in both commercial and residential property values. What we learned was income property prices were especially volatile throughout the collapse, ultimately falling faster and deeper than owner-occupied residential prices.

Thus, pricing of income property bottomed earlier than housing prices as investors are more rational than home buyers. Owner-occupied residential real estate, which had a much higher variation in pricing and greater debt leveraging, eventually fell catastrophically but to a lesser degree than income property.

The difference in price movement between income property sales and home sales is income-producing real estate:

  • is rationally evaluated by capitalization rates, income flow, and replacement costs) and
  • less burdened by high loan-to-value (LTV) debt ratios so equity exists to cushion negotiations.

Ownership conditions for income property as an investment by both seller and buyer, facilitate agreement as to an appropriate price. Thus, the seller has the ability to receive cash, resulting in greater liquidity than enjoyed by most homeownerships.

The relative ease of income property evaluation makes its real estate market a more exciting and less predictable field. Cap rates change dramatically, altering market values in weeks, not years. Conversely, owner-occupied residential property moves slowly and steadily as sellers are mentally affected by illusions of attaining yesterday’s prices, the sticky price syndrome.

Readers are reminded that real estate pricing often fails to correspond to objective reality. The discrepancy between the prices that homeowners set and the prices homes garner in the market is attributable to the human factor. Outrageous bubbles become more outrageous, and collapses become more devastating, due to a common set of irrational beliefs about market behavior. Property always goes up in value, right?

The most dramatic example of market fallibility took place in the very recent past — our Great Recession of 2008. It is about to happen again, but when?