According to recent data from RealtyTrac, 17,309 homes or
four percent of all single family homes sold in the first quarter of 2015 were
flipped, that is, they were sold as part of an arms-length sale for the second
time within a twelve month period. While this seems like a reasonably large
number, it has actually declined from 6.7 percent of all homes sold in Q2 2014
as shown on this graph:
The average gross profit
of these sales in Q1 2015 was $72,450, up from $65,290 in the previous quarter
and up from $61,684 one year earlier in the first quarter of 2014. In
fact, this is the highest gross profit level seen since record-keeping of this
type began in Q1 2011. The average return on investment or ROI was 35.1
percent during Q1 2015, down very slightly from 35.3 percent in the previous
quarter and about the same as the return on investment in the first quarter of
2014.
Here is a graphic showing
the flipping returns trend:
The ten metropolitan
areas with the biggest home flipping returns are:
Baltimore, MD - 94.1
percent
Deltona - Daytona Beach -
Ormond Beach, FL - 74.7 percent
Ocala, FL - 73.9 percent
Lakeland, FL - 62.5
percent
Detroit - Warren -
Livonia, MI - 58.3 percent
Tampa - St. Petersburg -
Clearwater, FL - 57.2 percent
Tucson, AZ - 56.0 percent
Pittsburg, PA - 55.2
percent
Memphis, TN - 54.8
percent
Dayton, OH - 53.7 percent
In each of these
metropolitan areas, at least 50 single family home flips took place during the
first quarter of 2015.
Here is a list of the ten
metropolitan areas with the highest share of homes being flipped:
Memphis, TN - 10.6
percent
Ocala, FL - 8.0 percent
Miami - Fort Lauderdale -
Pompano Beach, FL - 7.9 percent
Tampa - St. Petersburg -
Clearwater, FL - 7.4 percent
Sarasota - Bradenton -
Venice, FL - 7.2 percent
Port St. Lucie, FL - 7.2
percent
Lakeland, FL - 7.1
percent
Stockton, CA - 6.8
percent
Reno - Sparks, NV - 6.7
percent
Los Angeles - Long Beach
- Santa Ana, CA - 6.6 percent
It is interesting to note
that the metropolitan areas with the highest share of flipped home sales were
among the hardest hit when the housing bubble burst in late 2007. Of the
top 20 markets for flipping, 10 are located in Florida, four are located in California and
two are located in Nevada.
Who is buying these
flipped properties? Of the completed flips in Q1 2015, 34.7 percent were flipped
to non-owner/non-occupant buyers, in other words, real estate investors and second
home buyers. This is the highest share of non-owner/non-occupant buyers since
the first quarter of 2011. Here are the markets with the highest share of
non-owner/non-occupant buyers during Q1 2015:
Virginia Beach, VA - 88.8
percent
Colorado Springs, CO -
88.4 percent
Washington - Arlington -
Alexandria, DC - VA - 86.2 percent
Richmond, VA - 84.4
percent
Boston, MA - 83.4 percent
More than half of all
homes flipped in the first quarter of 2015 ranged in price between $100,000 and
$300,000 as shown on this graphic:
The best returns on
investment were for homes ranging in price between $100,000 and $200,000 where
the gross ROI was 47 percent followed by homes ranging in price between $1
million and $2 million where the average gross ROI was 44 percent. The
worst returns were on houses that had a flipped price of less than $50,000;
these homes generated a gross ROI of negative 2 percent.
Right now, home flippers
are benefitting from four factors; ultra-low mortgage interest rates, rising house prices,
low rates of new home construction and a general shortage of housing.
According to Bloomberg, many of these purchases are funded
through the use of bridge loans, funded by a growing number of Wall Street
companies including Colony Capital Inc., Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital
Management. As well, private equity and non-bank companies like Oaktree
Capital, Arixa Capital Advisors and Auction.com LLC are offering short-term
financing to buy and renovate properties since there are few banks that are
willing to grant credit for these speculative real estate deals.
In many ways, what we are
seeing today is similar to what was seen in the housing market in 2006 but on a
smaller scale. Back then, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
more than 33 percent of all U.S. home loans went to people who already owned at
least one home as shown on this graph:
You will notice that in
some states, the situation was even worse with up to 45 percent of new
mortgages being issued to multiple home owners in Arizona, California, Florida
and Nevada, three states that are currently experiencing very high levels of
home flipping.
What is concerning about
the current situation is that flipping is concentrated in a few metropolitan areas, mainly
in the sun and sand belt states that were hit hardest by the housing bubble collapse. This is likely creating a situation where some
markets are experiencing unsustainable price increases, particularly in an
environment where mortgage interest rates will eventually rise and housing flippers could find themselves holding real estate that they can't get rid of.
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