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M00m00's property bee graphs - Finally
m00m00
Posts: 1,755 Forumite
here are the first 2 months worth of graphs for York, from data extracted from property bee.
interesting note the way the 'market' is going in terms of property available, no need to draw a trend line on this one.

York Month One : Reductions
average -£8,248 -3.48% Median -£5,005 -3.23%

York Month 2 reductions
Average -£9,094 -3.98% Median -£5,050 -3.33%

interesting note the way the 'market' is going in terms of property available, no need to draw a trend line on this one.

York Month One : Reductions
average -£8,248 -3.48% Median -£5,005 -3.23%

York Month 2 reductions
Average -£9,094 -3.98% Median -£5,050 -3.33%

It's a health benefit ...
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Comments
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Can we have some "legends" so everyone can understand what you are measuring? Also, can you keep the colours consistent in the pie charts.A house isn't a home without a cat.
Those are my principles. If you don't like them, I have others.
I have writer's block - I can't begin to tell you about it.
You told me again you preferred handsome men but for me you would make an exception.
It's a recession when your neighbour loses his job; it's a depression when you lose yours.0 -
whoops, uploaded the old version of month 1 pie chart.
(I did say it was a test)
as for a key
STC = Sold Subject to Contract
Reductions = properties reduced in price
Increases = properties increased in Price
STC A = properties which were previously sold subject to contract, but now available
market = all properties left which have had no change at all in the 4 week spell being measured.
as for the bar graphs, they should be fairly explanatory. One is amount of property on the market in week on week form. The other is the amount of reductions in the same format.It's a health benefit ...0 -

average -7000.11 -4.42%
median -5000.00 -3.73%

average -6393.18 -3.98%
Median -5000.00 -3.37%It's a health benefit ...0 -

average -£7,856 -3.88%
median -£5,000 -3.45%

Average -£10,165 -4.54%
Median -£5,753 -3.86%It's a health benefit ...0 -
more to come during the rest of this weekIt's a health benefit ...0
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Thanks m00m00.
I'm following York aswell, it's getting pwned big time.poppy100 -
It's a really nice idea but your data isn't self explanitory at all. Why doesn't your 'properties on the market' graph start from zero when your 'reductions' chart does? Couldn't they be compared to each other - SSTC + any reductions + no change + new instructions each week in one graph? The perhaps your graph of the number of properties on the market in any one week.
How do the number of properties on the market drop in NG15 by 10% in one week when only 4% are SSTC over one month, let alone two?
And what are those reductions? It can't be rolling data if it isn't constantly increasing like the number of properties on the market does? no? unless those properties are selling?
You're not giving enough information on what you are showing for it to make much sense
Everything that is supposed to be in heaven is already here on earth.
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ok, the ng15 big drop after 2 weeks was caused by an estate agent double listing all their properties and removing them en masse after realising. that one is an anomaly.
this is just a graphical representation of the data contained in the other thread. It should make a lot more sense to the numerate to look at the actual numbers and percentages on a weekly basis in there.
all the 'rolling reductions graphs' are showing is the weekly amount of property reduced via property bee, each column is independent of each other column. the cumulative 'total' reductions is shown in the weekly thread after each area.
remember I'm also only showing properties which have had status CHANGED during the time I measure, in some cases properties were stc before I started tracking and have been taken off rightmove during the period I'm tracking. These properties will be counted in the total on the market, but not in the total number of STCs.It's a health benefit ...0 -
What about the overall reduction in house prices in those areas? What is the average house price each week?
That's the main number that people are wanting to look at. So while it's interesting to know that the properties that reduced their prices, reduced by an average if 5%, you could pretty much guess that out by the fact that most won't drop it by all that much in one go, also that a proportion were stupidly overpriced in the first place. If you throw it in with those that have successfully sold, you end up with a more rounded figure.Everything that is supposed to be in heaven is already here on earth.
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it's not currently possible to extract an average or total price for the properties which have not had changes tracked, due to the way property bee works.It's a health benefit ...0
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