IRVINE, CA—A total of 51,434 U.S. single family home and condo sales were completed flips in the second quarter of 2016, up 14% from the previous quarter and up 3% from a year ago. That is the highest number of home flips since Q2 2010 — a six-year high.

This data comes from ATTOM Data Solution in its RealtyTrac Q2 2016 U.S. Home Flipping Report which was released today. ATTOM Data Solutions is a leading source for comprehensive housing data and the new parent company of RealtyTrac.

Daren Blomquist

For the report, a home flip is defined as a property that is sold in an arms-length sale for the second time within a 12-month period based on publicly recorded sales deed data collected by ATTOM Data Solutions in more than 950 counties accounting for more than 80% of the U.S. population (see full methodology below).

Homes flipped in Q2 2016 accounted for 5.5 percent of all single family and condo sales during the quarter, down from 6.7% of all sales in the first quarter but up from 5.4% of all sales in Q2 2015.

A total of 39,775 investors (including both individuals and institutions) completed at least one home flip in Q2 2016, the highest number of home flippers since Q2 2007 — a nine-year high.

“Home flipping is becoming more accessible for smaller operators thanks to an increasingly competitive lending environment with more loan options for real estate investors, who are also benefitting from the historically low mortgage interest rates,” said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at ATTOM Data Solutions. “That favorable lending environment for flippers has helped to fuel the recent flipping frenzy we've seen over the past five quarters.

“We're starting to see home flipping hit some milestones not seen since prior to the financial crisis, which is somewhat concerning, but there are a couple of important differences in the home flipping of 2016 compared to 2006 when home flipping peaked during the last housing boom,” Blomquist continued. “First, home flippers are realizing a much bigger gross ROI in 2016, averaging 49% in the first two quarters compared to an average gross ROI of just 27% in 2006. Second, while an increasing number of flippers are financing their purchases, more than two-thirds are still using cash to purchase compared to about one-third using cash to purchase back in 2006.”

Of the 51,434 homes flipped in the second quarter, 68.3% were purchased with cash by the flipper, down from 71.1 percent in the previous quarter and down from 69.6% in Q2 2015 to the lowest level since Q3 2008 — a nearly eight-year low.

“The single family real estate sector is becoming more institutional, which means that more financing is available and more attractive,” said Varun Pathria, CEO at Asset Avenue, a company that provides investor rehab, bridge and rental loans. “The entrepreneurs are also becoming savvier and as a result are looking to leverage their capital more. There continues to be a fringe group of people who enter and exit the sector based upon opportunity and those people are hard to predict but generally look to take maximum leverage.”

Pathria noted that 79% of the rehab loans Asset Avenue has originated so far in 2016 have been purchase loans while the remaining 21% have been refinance — typically an investor who purchases with cash at a foreclosure auction or some other auction and subsequently finances the property.

Homes flipped in Q2 2016 sold on average for $189,000, $62,000 more than the average purchase price of $127,000, according to ATTOM data. That $62,000 average gross profit was up from an average $59,250 gross flipping profit in the previous quarter and up from an average $57,900 gross flipping profit in Q2 2015 to the highest average gross flipping profit since Q1 2000, the earliest quarter tracked in the report. The average loan amount for rehab loans originated by AssetAvenue so far in 2016 was $193,786, according to CEO Pathria.

The $62,000 average gross flipping profit represented an average 48.8% return on the original purchase price, down from a 49.3% average gross flipping ROI in the previous quarter but up from a 47.5 percent average gross flipping ROI in Q2 2015.

Among 100 metropolitan statistical areas with at least 90 homes flipped in Q2 2016, those with the highest flipping rate were Memphis (11.1%); Visalia-Porterville, California (10.1%), Tampa (10%); York-Hanover, Pennsylvania (9.7%); and Mobile, Alabama (9.6%).

Other high-level takeaways:

· Thirty-five percent of all homes flipped in Q2 2016 were sold by the flipper for between $100,000 and $200,000, the biggest share of any price range, but the biggest year-over-year increase in terms of price range was homes flipped in the $200,000 to $300,000 range – up 10% from a year ago.

· Homes flipped for more than $5 million yielded the highest average gross ROI (73%), followed by the $50,000 to $100,000 price range (58%) and the $100,000 to $200,000 price range (58%).

· Homes that were flipped in Q2 2016 were purchased by the flipper at a 25.7% discount below full “after repair” market value on average and sold by the flipper for a 9.2% premium above market value on average.

ATTOM Data Solutions analyzed sales deed data and automated valuation data for this report. A single family home or condo flip was any transaction that occurred in the quarter where a previous sale on the same property had occurred within the last 12 months. Average gross profit was calculated by subtracting the average price for the first sale (purchase) from the average price of the second sale (flip). Average gross return on investment was calculated by dividing the average gross profit by the first sale (purchase) price.

IRVINE, CA—A total of 51,434 U.S. single family home and condo sales were completed flips in the second quarter of 2016, up 14% from the previous quarter and up 3% from a year ago. That is the highest number of home flips since Q2 2010 — a six-year high.

This data comes from ATTOM Data Solution in its RealtyTrac Q2 2016 U.S. Home Flipping Report which was released today. ATTOM Data Solutions is a leading source for comprehensive housing data and the new parent company of RealtyTrac.

Daren Blomquist

For the report, a home flip is defined as a property that is sold in an arms-length sale for the second time within a 12-month period based on publicly recorded sales deed data collected by ATTOM Data Solutions in more than 950 counties accounting for more than 80% of the U.S. population (see full methodology below).

Homes flipped in Q2 2016 accounted for 5.5 percent of all single family and condo sales during the quarter, down from 6.7% of all sales in the first quarter but up from 5.4% of all sales in Q2 2015.

A total of 39,775 investors (including both individuals and institutions) completed at least one home flip in Q2 2016, the highest number of home flippers since Q2 2007 — a nine-year high.

“Home flipping is becoming more accessible for smaller operators thanks to an increasingly competitive lending environment with more loan options for real estate investors, who are also benefitting from the historically low mortgage interest rates,” said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at ATTOM Data Solutions. “That favorable lending environment for flippers has helped to fuel the recent flipping frenzy we've seen over the past five quarters.

“We're starting to see home flipping hit some milestones not seen since prior to the financial crisis, which is somewhat concerning, but there are a couple of important differences in the home flipping of 2016 compared to 2006 when home flipping peaked during the last housing boom,” Blomquist continued. “First, home flippers are realizing a much bigger gross ROI in 2016, averaging 49% in the first two quarters compared to an average gross ROI of just 27% in 2006. Second, while an increasing number of flippers are financing their purchases, more than two-thirds are still using cash to purchase compared to about one-third using cash to purchase back in 2006.”

Of the 51,434 homes flipped in the second quarter, 68.3% were purchased with cash by the flipper, down from 71.1 percent in the previous quarter and down from 69.6% in Q2 2015 to the lowest level since Q3 2008 — a nearly eight-year low.

“The single family real estate sector is becoming more institutional, which means that more financing is available and more attractive,” said Varun Pathria, CEO at Asset Avenue, a company that provides investor rehab, bridge and rental loans. “The entrepreneurs are also becoming savvier and as a result are looking to leverage their capital more. There continues to be a fringe group of people who enter and exit the sector based upon opportunity and those people are hard to predict but generally look to take maximum leverage.”

Pathria noted that 79% of the rehab loans Asset Avenue has originated so far in 2016 have been purchase loans while the remaining 21% have been refinance — typically an investor who purchases with cash at a foreclosure auction or some other auction and subsequently finances the property.

Homes flipped in Q2 2016 sold on average for $189,000, $62,000 more than the average purchase price of $127,000, according to ATTOM data. That $62,000 average gross profit was up from an average $59,250 gross flipping profit in the previous quarter and up from an average $57,900 gross flipping profit in Q2 2015 to the highest average gross flipping profit since Q1 2000, the earliest quarter tracked in the report. The average loan amount for rehab loans originated by AssetAvenue so far in 2016 was $193,786, according to CEO Pathria.

The $62,000 average gross flipping profit represented an average 48.8% return on the original purchase price, down from a 49.3% average gross flipping ROI in the previous quarter but up from a 47.5 percent average gross flipping ROI in Q2 2015.

Among 100 metropolitan statistical areas with at least 90 homes flipped in Q2 2016, those with the highest flipping rate were Memphis (11.1%); Visalia-Porterville, California (10.1%), Tampa (10%); York-Hanover, Pennsylvania (9.7%); and Mobile, Alabama (9.6%).

Other high-level takeaways:

· Thirty-five percent of all homes flipped in Q2 2016 were sold by the flipper for between $100,000 and $200,000, the biggest share of any price range, but the biggest year-over-year increase in terms of price range was homes flipped in the $200,000 to $300,000 range – up 10% from a year ago.

· Homes flipped for more than $5 million yielded the highest average gross ROI (73%), followed by the $50,000 to $100,000 price range (58%) and the $100,000 to $200,000 price range (58%).

· Homes that were flipped in Q2 2016 were purchased by the flipper at a 25.7% discount below full “after repair” market value on average and sold by the flipper for a 9.2% premium above market value on average.

ATTOM Data Solutions analyzed sales deed data and automated valuation data for this report. A single family home or condo flip was any transaction that occurred in the quarter where a previous sale on the same property had occurred within the last 12 months. Average gross profit was calculated by subtracting the average price for the first sale (purchase) from the average price of the second sale (flip). Average gross return on investment was calculated by dividing the average gross profit by the first sale (purchase) price.

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David Phillips

David Phillips is a Chicago-based freelance writer and consultant with more than 20 years experience in business and community news. He also has extensive reporting experience in the food manufacturing industry for national trade publications.

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