Prince George's County Real Estate Market Report, April, 2008

Team Benya's Monthly Market Report- P.G. County, Maryland

What's Happened:Prin_2000_ytd_ng

The Prince George's County Market is without a doubt slanting more and more heavily towards buyers. Sellers are finding it increasingly difficult to sell and inventory of available homes is steadily growing. March 2008 saw roughly 400 homes sold in P.G., and more than 7,000 homes on the market!

There was a very slight growth in the number of pending settlements and actual sales, and actual sales prices have continued to decline slightly. As a matter of references, sales prices have fallen back to the same average ($300,000) we saw exactly 3 years ago, in April of 2005. That's down 15% from the market's peak in October 2006

The average Days on Market (DOM) fell in March as well, from 130 days to 120 days (a drop of 8%), but it's still a far cry from the days when real estate was on the market for an average of less than 30 days!

What Does This Mean?

News like this is sort of "love it or hate it", depending on whether you're trying to buy or sell. It's really just further solidification of the fact that this is a "Buyers Market". Foreclosures are having a big impact on the market right now, and they make up a significant portion of sales right now, and unfortunately those properties are what traditional sellers are forced to compete with.

Prin_avgdom_ng For sellers, it's a tough road, and in order to get through it and successfully sell your home, you need to do two things: Price aggressively and market heavily! There are 7,000 other homes on the market in P.G. alone, and that's your competition. You need to work very hard to stand out above the crowd and be seen.

For buyers, sitting on the fence has been slowly forcing down prices, and we're starting to see some good deals emerge, but it does not seem to be a full mainstream sense of value just yet. The biggest problem that I see is agents are not paying attention to what new construction homes are selling for when they're doing CMA's.

As a buyer, if you could buy a 2,800 s.f. resale home for $380,000, or buy a brand new 2,800 s.f. home for $395,000 with $15,000 in closing, which would you do? The pricing of new developments is very attractive right now, which makes buyers even more scarce for resale home sellers.

If you would like more information about the Price George's County Market, Foreclosures, Listings, or New Construction Developments, please ask! I have a wealth of local information and resources and I'm always willing to assist people in navigating this tricky market!

~Jonathan Benya
Century 21 New Millennium
9405-A Chesapeake St
La Plata, MD 20646
301-609-9000
301-653-8116
Waldorf and Southern Maryland Real Estate
www.teambenya.com

Posted Friday Apr 18

(04/18/08 11:37PM) — Margaret Woda, Maryland REALTOR

When it comes to Prince George's County, most of my business is in the Bowie area.  I've been shocked to see the number of foreclosures in Bowie (20715 and 20716).  As I stand in front of my son's house there, he can point to three homes in some stage of foreclosure.  A four-bedroom model sold about $385,000 just 2 years ago, and now there is at least one nice forecosure on the market under $300,000.  If this does't bring buyers out of the woodwork, I don't know what will.  We know Bowie will survive this market, and people who buy now are going to make some money on their home in the next 10 years.

Great research, Jonathan, and great charts!  I work the Northern part of the County - near College Park, Greenbelt, Laurel, etc. and the inventory up here is through the roof (pardon the pun). Trying to convince Sellers to price their homes low enough to attract buyers is a difficult task. I have to say, though, that the current, stricter mortgage guidelines with down payment requirements and higher credit scores are probably shrinking the Buyer pool.  So even with low prices the only way to go is FHA and that still requires 3% from a Buyer unless you get creative with Nehemiah and the like.  It's not as easy as it used to be.  That's for sure.

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