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Tim Tanz, St Louis Real Estate

Weekly Single Family Home Market Report - City of St Louis - July 11, 2009

Following is my market report for single family residential homes in the city of St Louis (Areas 1,2,3,4,5). These statistics were gathered from the local Multiple Listing Service and are provided as a service to the public:

There were 1564 Total Active Listings on the market.

262 listings Sold in the last 30 days.

Average sales price was $123,200.

Maximum Sales Price in the last 30 days was $900,000.

81 was the average days on market (DOM).

There were 110 new Active listings, with list prices ranging from $4,500 to $695,000.

42 listings went Under Contract (Contingent/Option), with list prices ranging from $13,000 to $1,849,000.

69 listings moved closer to closing (Pending), with List prices ranging from $6,000 to $824,000.

58 listings Sold, with Sold prices ranging from $7,250 to $600,000.

57 listings Expired from the market, with List prices ranging from $8,150 to $869,000.

And 15 listings went Inactive (Cancelled/Withdrawn), with List prices ranging from $64,900 to $500,000.

The Pending Ratio was 4.4%. This is the Pendings divided by the Actives (69/1564). This is the number of properties going under contract compared to the number of active properties on the market.

The Absorbtion Rate was 5.97. This is the active homes on the market divided by the number of homes sold in the last 30 days (1564/262). This tells us how many months of inventory we have on the market. It demonstrates how long it would take to sell all the homes on the market if no other homes came on the market.

For the 58 Sold listings, 31% were on the market 0-30 days, and 25.9% were on the market for 120+ days. For the 0-30 day category, the average sales price to list price ratio was 96.8%. For the 120+ day category, the average sales price to list price ratio was 84.1%. That goes to show homes that are listed correctly sell for more money in a shorter amount of time.

Deed Restrictions on Short Sales

I just found out today that the Underwriter for our title company will not insure a purchase when short sale has a payoff/instruction letter that includes the following: "There are to be no transfers of the property within 30 days of the closing of this transaction." Bank of America is now including this wording, and more lenders are sure to follow. This is an attempt on the lenders part to prevent a property from being resold for a higher figure or "flipped." I am working with an investor on my North County short sale, and this will pretty much kill the deal. I've been working on this deal for going on 5 months. I finally secured an end buyer who we will now probably have to let out of their contract because my investor must now have the property in his name for 30 days before Bank of America will allow it to be sold or transferred. The end buyers wanted to close on September 1. That won't happen now, and they really love the home. This stinks! http://www.agentsu.com/

http://www.timtanzhomes.com

City Garden - St Louis - A Must See!

We recently visited Citygarden, located on three acres in Downtown St Louis that stretches west from 8th to 10th Street and north from Market Street to Chestnut Street.

This new park/garden is amazing! I was so impressed. The modern and contemporary sculptures are so cool! I wanted to share some of the pictures I took that afternoon.

They did a fantastic job on the landscaping. Citygarden contains 235 trees. There are 1,170 shrubs; 4, 194 perennials, grasses and wildflowers; 8,000 bulbs; 12,726 groundcovers, and 32,000 square feet of grassy area. 1200 blocks of Missouri limestone were incorporated into the design of one wall.

There are three fountains. My favorite is the splash plaza which includes 102 vertical jets that shoot water up to ten feet high. Everyone, adults and kids alike, are free to run through the jets. It was so fun watching the little ones enjoy the water. People are even allowed to play in the reflecting pools.

This sculpture moved in the wind and was brilliant when the sun reflected off it.

There's even a cafe, built like a glass box with floor to ceiling windows, so diners can enjoy the views as they eat.

The bunnies are too cute!

Citygarden is free to visit and explore. We want to visit after dark because the garden is completely lit, and I've heard it's even more spectacular!

I think St Louis should be very proud to have a new treasure like this so close to the Arch. If you visit St Louis, you must put Citygarden on your list of places to visit.

For more info, please visit: http://www.usatoday.com/travel/destinations/2009-07-13-st-louis-citygarden_N.htm

http://www.timtanzhomes.com

Today in St Louis - August 1, 2009

Wishing everyone a great weekend so far...

I'm holding my Lindenwood listing open tomorrow from 1 to 3 pm. http://www.5245LindenwoodAve.com

I had this one under contract, but the buyer lost his FHA funding. The buyer is 1099d and so is considered an independent contractor. That was one of several issues with his new job that killed the deal.

I closed 938 Wilmington (2 family flat) this week. Both the owner and I were glad to get that one finally closed. We had buyers walk on an earlier deal on that one, too.

I got an accepted contract on my Crestwood listing this week. The buyers had their building inspection and appraisal done yesterday. We probably won't hear anything on that one until after the weekend.

Just received an offer on my North County Short Sale listing this afternoon.

Still don't have a lender approval on my Reber Place Short Sale listing. The buyer got frustrated at the lack of response from the lender this week and reduced his offer on the property. This one is going on 5 months.

Culprit Found:

Both our neighbors' and our goldfish were disappearing from our garden ponds this past week. We discovered the culprit - an egret. We walked out in the back yard one evening and there it was standing by the pond. I told Dennis to get the camera so I could get a pic and right at that moment, it reached in the pond, snatched one of my large goldfish and swallowed it whole! The next day we bought netting and covered over both ponds. The neighbors lost at least 20 goldfish before they netted the pond. We didn't lose that many, but the egret hung around for several days until he finally gave up. The netting isn't very noticable, but it is a pain with which to work. It's better than losing all our fish, though...

http://www.timtanzhomes.com

http://www.timtanz.com

Weekly Multi-Family Market Report - City of St Louis - June 20, 2009

Following is my market report for Multi-Family Dwellings (2-4 Families) in the city of St Louis (Areas 1,2,3,4,5). These statistics were gathered from the local Multiple Listing Service and are provided as a service to the public:

There were 500 Total Active Listings on the market.

56 listings Sold in the last 30 days.

Average sales price was $55,236.

Highest sales price in the last 30 days was $197,000.

60 was the average days on market (DOM).

There were 76 new Active listings, with list prices ranging from $5,900 to $224,900.

5 listings went Under Contract (Contingent/Option), with list prices ranging from $99,900 to $299,900.

11 listings moved closer to closing (Pending), with List prices ranging from $9,900 to $299,900.

16 listings Sold, with Sold prices ranging from $7,501 to $174,000.

6 listings Expired from the market, with List prices ranging from $8,500 to $114,900.

And 10 listings went Inactive (Cancelled/Withdrawn), with List prices ranging from $10,400 to $99,000.

For the 16 listings that Sold, 56.2% were on the market for 30 days or less, and 12.5% were on the market for 120+ days. For the 30 day or less category, the average sales price to list price ratio was 86.9%. For the 120+ day category, the average sales price to list price ratio was 62.6%. That goes to show homes priced correctly will sell quicker and closer to list price.

The Pending Ratio was 2.2%. This is the Pendings divided by the Actives (11/500). This is the number of properties going under contract compared to the number of active properties on the market.

The Absorbtion Rate was 8.93. This is the active homes on the market divided by the number of homes sold in the last 30 days (500/56). This tells us how many months of inventory we have on the market. It demonstrates how long it would take to sell all the homes on the market if no other homes came on the market.

http://www.timtanzhomes.com