DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Is the North Texas Real Estate Market Sputtering? More Like a Soft Landing?
Share
Font ResizerAa
DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
DALTX Real Estate > Blog > Is the North Texas Real Estate Market Sputtering? More Like a Soft Landing?
Blog

Is the North Texas Real Estate Market Sputtering? More Like a Soft Landing?

7 Min Read
SHARE

Dallas_skyline_and_suburbs-1024x552

Huge Wall Street Journal story being circulated via Twitter, etc. today, “The U.S. Housing Boom Is Coming to an End, Starting in Dallas.”

Dallas, really?

“Home prices zoomed higher in recent years, and mortgage rates are climbing. Buyers are queasy.”

Now we know our market is not as hot as it was in 2015 and 2016, two of the hottest years for DFW real estate values, which have really growth-spurted in recent years. As the WSJ puts it, affordability has gotten “out of whack with historic norms.” A median priced home is now about $235,000 in Dallas, about 50 percent more than what it cost in 2007 before the Great Recession. We know that the corporate relocations to Plano and areas north have cooled, with transplants’ primary homes, at least, snapped up. But (and I actually have many “buts” here) I might use another verb other than “sputter“:
PLANO, Texas—A half-hour drive straight north from downtown Dallas sits one of the fastest-growing counties in the country. Cotton fields have been replaced with Toyota’s new North American headquarters, a Dallas Cowboys training facility and a sand-colored shopping strip with a Tesla dealership and a three-story food hall.

Yet even with the booming growth, Dallas’s once vibrant housing market is sputtering. In the high-end subdivisions in the suburb of Frisco, builders are cutting prices on new homes by up to $150,000. On one street alone, $4 million of new homes sat empty on a visit earlier this month. Some home builders are so desperate to attract interest they are offering agents the chance to win Louis Vuitton handbags or Super Bowl tickets with round-trip airfare, if their clients buy a home. Yet fresh-baked cookies sit uneaten at sparsely attended open houses.

First of all, developers have long offered agents perks to sell their homes — hate to tell you, but Louis Vuitton handbag lures are nothing new. (I sure hope they are not knock-offs!) We have talked before about the North Texas slow down, particularly in million dollar plus homes.

How many ways can an agent say “price reduced” without really saying it?

It’s a classic economic cycle story: inventory contracts, demand expands, so home prices go up up up almost beyond reason, where I think we have been quite recently. Nail in coffin: this year interest rates started to creep upwards, combined with major changes in the tax code. I have heard my share of experts say that the changes in home mortgage and property tax deductibility will not affect buyers, but you know what?

I think it will. When you pay upwards of $20,000 a year in property taxes which are no longer 100% deductible, you start thinking of what else you can do with that money. Plus North Texas home prices have risen faster than our wages even though we got like 100,000 jobs a year over the last five years. We got those jobs BECAUSE of lower wages:

Dallas, which had the second-strongest annual increase in employment of any metropolitan area in the country in September, helps explain why. Even though the economy in the sprawling metro area has boomed, home prices have grown much faster than wages, and buyers have been straining to afford homes.

“I agree with most of the article” says veteran appraiser DW Skelton. “But I don’t like the example of Plano. There is not that much inventory left in Plano for land development, hasn’t been for years. Developers are really going north to Frisco, Celina, McKinney and beyond, or west to Colleyville and Grapevine, where there is still land to develop.”

But at least, says DW, we are not seeing developers give away luxury cars, at least not yet. 

So “sputter”? DW calls the current market conditions more of a  “soft landing”, something he has long heard of, but never seen.

“It’s moving down to Preston Hollow without a doubt,” he says. “Housing prices just got too high. A couple of years ago it was difficult to even appraise properties, a lot of us going on “opinion of value”. We have heard about this soft landing since I’ve been in the business. But I have ever seen it start filtering down to a reasonable level.”

DW actually thinks a little break in the market may be a good thing. We are certainly nowhere near the Death Star days of the mid-80’s when Fannie Mae bulldozed entire home developments until the recession was over because it was cheaper to maintain raw land than empty houses.

“Those were the days of “jingle mail: if the envelope jingled because it had keys in it, they were sending the keys back in to the bank,” recalls DW. “If we get lucky, we’ll have a a soft landing.”

If not, I guess we will crash and the rest of the country will follow.

Dallas has been the “canary in the mine shaft” this housing cycle, said Paige Shipp, regional director for Metrostudy, a consultant to home builders. Homes are taking longer to sell, bidding wars are rarer and price cuts are more common as buyers absorb the impact of higher rates.

That’s because more Dallas residents rely on mortgages than folks in other parts of the U.S. do, such as bonus-rich Silicon Valley. While cash buyers and large down payments are common in booming West Coast markets, the average household in Dallas finances 83% of its home purchase.

That figure is only slightly higher than the national average of 81%, according to Black Knight Inc., a mortgage data company. In San Francisco and Seattle, buyers on average finance 74% and 79% respectively.

Dallas_skyline_and_suburbs-1024x552

Dallas_skyline_and_suburbs-1024x552

Dallas_skyline_and_suburbs-1024x552 Dallas_skyline_and_suburbs-1024x552 Dallas_skyline_and_suburbs-1024x552

When the bank owns most of your home, giving it back is not all that hard.

But what about jobs? What about inventory. Are we also overbuilt on apartments? To be continued…

 

See Inside a $1.7 Million Preston Royal Home That Has Been — SOLD
MidlandDirt.com: ‘Expect a Strong Housing Market the Next Few Years,’ Reports Say
NAR Names Dallas-Fort Worth One of The Top Real Estate Markets to Watch in 2023
What’s The Best Way To Send an Electronic Funds Transfer During Closing?
Splurge vs. Steal: Love these Two Lakewood Beauties with Desirable Amenities
TAGGED:EconomyNorth Texas home prices sputtering?North Texas home values
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article ‘Homes for the Holidays’ Tour Features Southern Coastal Charmer
Next Article Champions School of Real Estate Celebrates 35 Years of Success
Popular News
Dead Spots

Boosting Poor Indoor Cellular Coverage Key to Wireless Living

Small or Tall, Midway Hollow Is Still a Hot Neighborhood
Neiman’s Bankruptcy Talks Advance But Expert Thinks Store Closings Not Likely
Sales Are Riding High at Steamboat’s Alpine Mountain Ranch and Club
Traditional Open Houses To Steal Your Heart This Weekend
about us

DaltxRealEstate.com is the largest real estate blog and the only one in North Texas.

Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us
  • Paid Guest Post Submission

Categories

  • Wednesday WTF
  • East Dallas
  • Monday Morning Millionaire
  • Upon Closer Inspection

Get Involved

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us: Submit Guest Post

Find Us on Socials

© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?