August 2020 Sales Are off the Chart in Greenwich - 09/05/20

August 2020 Sales Are off the Chart in Greenwich - 09/05/20

Sales Contracts are Up 133% at the beginning of September

 
August single-family home sales were literally off the chart, at least my chart. We had 108 sales which meant I had to rescale my graph of monthly sales; it normally only goes to 100 sales. Post-recession, we have never had an August like this. We also have never had a post-recession year where the high point for sales was in August; it’s normally June or July. Covid has not only increased sales but time-shifted them, by two months or possibly more.
 
Starting in the 3rd week of June, we have seen weekly transactions, contracts, and sales) in a trading range, as the stockbrokers call it, that varies from 47 transactions to 68 transactions per week. The lower transactions weeks are primarily due to a 4-day holiday week or a tropical storm. Overall, we have been averaging about 60 transactions a week. In the most recent week, we had 63 transactions. For the last 4 weeks, we have averaged 64.3 transactions per week.
 
 

September Sales & Contract

 
As a result, September has a decent chance of beating August’s outstanding sales. We can be fairly sure that  September sales will be the highest for any September since September 1990, but they may not beat August 2020’s 108 sales. We have 193 contracts up from 83 last year, however, that number is down 15 contracts from the 208 contracts that we had at the beginning of August. We do have a late school start this year, so we will continue to see families in September pressing to get in before the beginning of school.
 
 

Inventory Stays Down, Despite Lots of New Listings

 
On the inventory side we, only have 505 listings, down 14% from last year. So, with increased sales and lower inventory, we are seeing big drops in months of supply. For the market overall, we have 8.8 months of supply dramatically down from 13.0 months of supply at this time last year. The really dramatic number, however, is when you take August sales and annualize them, there you go from 9.3 months of supply for last August’s annualized sales to 4.7 months of supply in August 2020. You just don’t see that kind of low number in a town, like Greenwich, where the median sales price is now $2,040,000. High-end houses take a while to sell and this results in higher months of supply, well at least did.
 
As of 9/1/2020
Inventory
Contracts
Last Mo. Solds
Last Month Solds+ Contracts
YTD Solds
YTD+ Contracts
Months of Supply
Mos w/ Contracts
Last Mo. MoS Annlzd
< $600K
1 4 1 5 10 14 0.8 0.7
1.0
$600-$800K
14 11 5 16 24 35 4.7 3.8
2.8
$800K-$1M
19 10 3
13
30 40 5.1 4.5
6.3
$1-$1.5M
56 29 17 46 86
115
5.2 4.6
3.3
$1.5-$2M
61 36 22 58 78
114
6.3 5.1
2.8
$2-$3M
105 40 28 68 109 149 7.7 6.7
3.8
$3-$4M
75 33 14 47 66 99 9.1 7.2
5.4
$4-$5M
44 6 9
15
24  30 14.7 13.9
4.9
$5-6.5M
48 10 3 13 16 26 24.0 17.5
16.0
$6.5-$10M
50 9 5
14
12 21 33.3 22.6
10.0
> $10M
32 5 1
6
6 11 42.7 27.6
32.0
                   
TOTAL
505
193
108 301 461 654 8.8 7.3
4.7
 

Prices Trending Up

 
Our median sales price in 2019 was $1,866,666 as of the end of August our median sales number is the aforesaid, $2,040,000, or an increase of 9.3%. Now as usually happens, most of this apparent increase in appreciation is due to a major increase in sales above our $2 million median, not an overall increase in prices across the town. As more houses sell above our old median price, the median gets pulled up. But we may finally be seeing real appreciation as more of these houses went contract after multiple bids close.
 
When you look at the sales price/sf, that number is up 4.5% from $503/sf last year to $526/sf this year. The other key indicator is the sales price to assessment ratio and that is up only .73% over last year, but even there we are looking at real appreciation. Another key indicator does show actual appreciation. When you look at the August sales price to the original list price ratio (SP/OLP) we see a lot more hot sales. Of the 108 sales in August 2020, 44% of them were for the full list or over-list price. This compares to August 2019 when only 8% out of 63 sales sold at list or over the list.
 
 

Sales under $1 Million

 
When you look at the price ranges our inventory under $1 million is supply constrained with only 34 listings compared to 47 last year. Sales are the same as last year. One reason may be that these houses are on smaller lots, so these buyers may be buying large lots further upstate Connecticut and in Manchester, New York.
 

Sales from $1 – 4 million

 
The standout part of the market is from $1 – 4 million where we have 339 of our 461 sales so far this year. This is up 121 sales from last year. We also have 138 of our 193 contracts between $1 and $4 million. This is our family market.
 
The remarkable thing is that the last one million price range from $3 – 4 million. This is traditionally an older buyer with high school or college kids or empty nesters looking for a large house that marks a lifetime of hard work and success. This year it includes successful families with toddlers and young children that might have otherwise stayed in the city.
 

Sales over $4 million

 
Even over $4 million, we are seeing more young families. Patty Ekvall and I have had a bunch of showings at 22 Cherry Tree Lane in Harbor Point in the Little Belle Haven Section of Riverside. This house is on for $7.25 million and with one exception, the buyers have all been families with elementary school or younger children. Two of the buyers have had houses in the Hamptons and now want a high-end house that is a commutable distance from NYC.
 
 
If you are interested in percentage change rather than absolute number changes the high-end is the place to look. Our contracts from $6.5 – 10 million are up 350% from last year. Last year we had 2 contracts in that price range, this year we have 9 contracts. For the whole market over $5 million we are up 24 sales and contracts to 58 transactions this year.
 
The high-end market was slow to get started, but really started to heat up in the middle of June and has only continued to get busier. To see that just look at transactions over $5 million in the last three days from 8/31 to 9/2. We’ve had 4 sales over $5M including 75 Byram Shore Road at $12,000,000 after it had been on the market for 971 days.
 
 
The really remarkable deals are the 4 listings in contract in that 3-day period. The Helmsley place finally went to contract after 1,540 days on market. On the shorefront, 32 Indian Point Lane is under contract and is listed at $21,000,000. Over in Belle Haven, 66 Glenwood Drive listed for $13,750,000 has a contract after being on and off the market since April 2018.
 

Some Do’s and Don’t

 
Some sellers are seeing all this activity and are reaching for the golden ring on their listing price. Despite all this activity, that is probably not your best strategy. Any busy broker can tell you of houses that are overpriced and just aren’t getting showings. The idea that in a hot market people will come to see houses that they think are overpriced is just wrong.
 
In most price ranges you are not competing against other Greenwich houses, but potentially two counties worth of similar listings. Traditionally, a Greenwich buyer was a Greenwich buyer. A Covid buyer just wants out and the particular town is not as crucial. Even if the market is tight here, buyers that think your house is priced too high are often looking at Scarsdale or Bedford or New Canaan, or Westport.
 
For buyers, be prepared and be prepared to move fast. You can check out my article in the Greenwich Sentinel from a couple of weeks ago about how to be the winning bidder in a hot market. Set up a meeting with your mortgage banker and your attorney, either in person or virtually. They need to know who you are before you need them. Also, get the contact info for an inspector or two in case the first one is busy. You want to be able to get to contract before your competition. Even being a day faster can mean you get the house.  I have had two buyers contact me after they lost a house because they were a day late and would not have been a dollar short if they had the money.
 

The Future

 
So, can this market just keep getting hotter? The short answer is yes. We still have lots of contacts waiting to close. We have a lot of inventory coming on the market now, something that normally is a trickle just before Labor Day. These last three weeks were the hottest of the year when you count sales and contracts. We also have lots of folks looking.
 
For the glass-half-empty types, contracts are down a fraction, and inventory from $5 – 10 million is up by 7 listings. We also need more inventory under $600K as we only have 1 listing. For me personally, the last two weeks have been the busiest of the year, but fall is coming, a time when the market slows down after a couple of weeks of post-Labor Day inventory increases. This year that slowdown may be much later.
 
 
 

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