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Weekly Boston Condo and Real Estate Sales and Listings Update, July 26, 2008

The following information is from the local MLS database, as of July 26, 2008, compared to (July 19, 2008) (and July 28, 2007, where available).

Total # of condos for sale in the city of Boston: 2,191 (2,227) (2,395)
Average # of days on market: 133 (131) (125)

Number of condos sold (closed) over past 30 days: 422 (411) (445)
Average days on market, sold units: 101 (100) (84)
Ratio, closing (sales) price to original (list) price: 93% (92%) (95%)

Median close price, 2008: $379,750
Median close price, 2007: $371,000

Average close price, 2008: $495,007
Average close price, 2007: $472,827

Number of properties going under agreement, last 30 days: 419 (441) (418)
Average days on market: 98 (101) (N/A)

Velocity: $208,893,064 ($209,653,214) ($231,658,866)
(Velocity is the # of units sold during last 30 days multiplied by the $ amount)

My thoughts: Because it’s summer, fewer people put their properties up for sale. Therefore, the “days on market” of the listed units gets longer and longer. (One note of interest, this is the first time in recent memory that “under agreements” have matched, year to year.)

Based on information provided to and compiled by MLS Property Information Network, Inc. covering the period 6/26/2008 - 7/26/2008, and the period 6/28/2007 - 7/28/2007.

Read other posts about: Boston condo sales data

2 Responses to “Weekly Boston Condo and Real Estate Sales and Listings Update, July 26, 2008” »»

  1. Comment by confused | 07/27/08 at 3:33 pm

    Two comments/questions

    1. (One note of interest, this is the first time in recent memory that “under agreements” have matched, year to year.)

    Isn’t this the one year anniversary of the start of the credit crunch? I’m pretty sure it is which may explain it. I also think this is the first time in a long time that under agreements were lower than closings.

    2. Because it’s summer, fewer people put their properties up for sale. Therefore, the “days on market” of the listed units gets longer and longer.

    I don’t get this unless you mean that you have fewer 1 day on the market properties and that skews it up. I ask because I thought DOM measured how many days it took a place to sell.

  2. Comment by John A Keith | 07/27/08 at 5:07 pm

    You might be right about UAGs coming down below the # of sales. I’d have to check the data. My guess would be that this happens during the summer months, every year. Less going through the pipeline, which will then be reflected in the “sales”, going forward.

    There are two DOMs I report. For “on-markets” and for “sales”. For on-markets, I think the days go up because there are fewer buyers out there, in the summer, and fewer sellers putting their properties on the market to begin with. What’s on the market in July and August are properties that didn’t sell in May-June. Owners just leave them out there, waiting for the occasional showing and waiting for the fall.

    The DOMs for sales stretches because there are fewer buyers, so it’s harder for owners to find someone.

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