Decline Continues in the Front Range Housing Market, Part II !!

Current Status of Front Range Cities Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo

This page is a snapshot of the state of the real estate market from Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo. Shown below are three graphs of the status of each of these markets (Figure 1.) As I’m most interested in the Front Range of Colorado from Denver to Pueblo, I’m including snapshots of what’s happening there.  Generally, green means good for a seller, and red means good for the investor.

Figure 1 – Rough indicators for Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo, Colorado real estate.

Analysis

The market for Colorado Springs, Pueblo, and Denver is significantly weaker than it was in July 2023.  All three STAR momentum indicators look virtually identical being red, with the current market being only one long-term indicator showing green. The Technical Analysis Point Score (TAPS) graphs showing all these areas are solidly weak.    

 State of Colorado

From a wealth accumulation point of view, Denver, the largest market in Colorado, reflects the state of Colorado.  The three individual graphs indicate that the Denver metro and Colorado Springs areas continue to depreciate around 4-5%. Pueblo is finally going in the same direction as the rest of the state with depreciation near 5%. Colorado as a whole is a weak market.  

Notice from Figure 2 that the long-term and short-term moving averages are diverging. Only when those two lines cross back over can we expect the market to grow.  

Figure 2 shows the wealth accumulation as a percentage of the state of Colorado.  Green areas are when the market is appreciating and white areas are when the market is depreciating. But if you look at the green (10 quarters) and red (20 quarters) lines of moving averages, you’ll notice that the market changes when these two lines cross over each other.  You can see at the far right that these two lines crossed over signifying a significant change in market direction for Colorado that is now manifesting itself. Colorado has ended its long upward trend that started in 2012 and wealth accumulation has dropped precipitously by >100% since the high last year. 

Figure 2 – Long term wealth accumulation (appreciation) cycle for the state of Colorado. 

Explanation of graphs

The first set of graphs (Figure 3) is the Six Trigger Alert Reports (STAR).  There are six momentum indicators ranging from short-term indicators on the left to long-term indicators on the right for Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo.  Normally, green is good if you’re a seller, and red is good if you’re a buyer.  (Normally, but the market is a little wonky because of the really low-interest rates people got on their houses during 2020-2022.) The indicators go back in time as you go down each row on the graph.

Figure 3 – STAR Momentum Indicators for the State of Colorado.

The indicators for the current quarter (top row) suggest that the short-term through long-term indicate a weak seller’s market for Colorado.  A year ago, all the momentum indicators except for Short-Term #1 were green.  (These graphs are from HousingAlerts.com.   This is just a quick snapshot of what HousingAlerts.com has to offer.  Go to my home page to get a free version for your state.)

The next graph (Figure 4) indicates the Technical Analysis Point Score (TAPS.)  Each market is graded using a series of technical criteria. (I don’t really know the details.) Again, green is good for home sellers, and red is bad for home sellers, but good for investors.  You can see that Colorado has moved into the weak zone.

Figure 4 – Technical Analysis Point Score (TAPS) for the State of Colorado 

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