As we transition into the second half of 2023, a seasonal summer slowdown is upon us. The definite lull is dramatically different from the robust activity of the post pandemic summers of 2021 and 2022. Today’s sellers are frustrated by fewer showings, silent open houses, and no offers, not even low, embarrassing bids.
In New York, we’re back to pre-pandemic levels, having regained the acknowledged 8-12% drop in property pricing from 3 years ago. This year, we’ve managed to avert disasters, but it was a helluva roller coaster ride!
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Goodbye 2022. We are ready for 2023! We’ve lived through considerable challenges these last three years with inflation in the forefront running at a 40-year high, and Covid hangovers splicing into a variety of flu and mystery viruses.
In uncertain times, when world events and macro outlooks are dire, there’s no better urban center to invest in than New York City. Our residential market is leveling to be sure, but we’re holding our own. In fact, there’s opportunity, and smart home shoppers are buying.
What are we seeing?
The burst of new listings we were expecting to begin mid-January never materialized. As a matter of fact, the continuing low supply of properties is pretty significant. Here’s what we are seeing.
● As expected, after Labor Day and the Jewish holidays, a wave of new inventory appeared to the significant tune of 2,088 total new offerings across all product categories and price segments. Surprisingly however, supply dipped in the weeks following, and resale stock has become short again, frustrating buyers who were looking for more options and prompting multiple offers. New listings were down nearly 30% YOY in Q3, forcing buyers to act quickly and helping to drive sales.
With Labor Day and Rosh Hashanah coinciding on this year's calendar, it’s no surprise that the number of new offerings dropped last week, making 8 consecutive weeks of shrinking new inventory. What’s eye-popping is that 27 contracts over $4M were signed last week, with condos outselling co-ops by nearly 4:1. Even more surprising, the previous week from August 23-29 saw 23 luxury contracts inked with 5:1 condos to co-ops and 9 townhouses, the largest number of TH contracts since Donna Olshan began tracking this $4M+ market segment in 2006 and the strongest pre-Labor Day week since 2014. It was the sixth month in a row for record high contract activity.
August vacations may account for some of the market declines in inventory and contracts this month. With supply super scarce in outlying suburban markets, is it possible that Manhattan will mirror the shortages seen in Westchester, Connecticut and Long Island? As housing stock drifts lower each week this summer, the pressure is on for buyers who are competing for fewer properties.
Stats from the second quarter reaffirm Manhattan real estate’s amazing rebound. Following on the heels of a stellar Q1, surging pent-up demand and low interest rates continued to work in tandem to drive up the number of contracts signed. At this point, we have regained values that were lost to Covid discounts and, by and large, we are back to pre-pandemic pricing. It’s activity however, not pricing, that’s way up.