Monday, October 31, 2016

Homes For Sale: Ghosts Included

Some home sellers and real estate professionals are using Halloween to market the “haunted home” reputation of their listing. And for fodder, here are some of the spookiest listings for sale across the country, according to TopTenRealEstateDeals.com:
Haunted mansion: A remodeled 5,000-square-foot home featuring five bedrooms and three baths on the water in Long Island, N.Y., may be quite a find to a buyer. But they may not to get past the home’s eerie past. The home was featured in the “Amityville Horror” movies. This home was originally listed for $1.15 million a few years ago but has since been re-listed for $850,000.
Asylum for sale: In Detroit, buyers can purchase a former mental asylum, which also comes with a bakery, fire department, and its own ZIP code. The cost is $1.5 million for the Eloise area, which consists of 76 buildings that covers 902 acres. For those buyers who like to get spooked, plenty of creepy stories have been linked to the asylum, including stories of ghosts and screaming former patients that haunt the area.
These real estate professionals have used their haunted house listings to their advantage. Read more about it at REALTOR® Magazine: A Haunted House Can Be Marketing Gold
High-end ghosts: In Pennsylvania, buyers could pay $16.5 million for a 110-room mansion that once belonged to wealthy investor A.B. Widener. But there may be some ghosts in the closet. Widener lost his son and grandson on the maiden voyage of the Titanic, the White Star Line that he had once invested in. Still in mourning, the legend goes, Widener died in his mansion three years after the sinking of the Titanic and that all three Widener ghosts are the caretakers in the home. The home has become known as the “world’s largest ghost house.”
Desert town: The abandoned town of Santa Claus, Ariz., only has the remains of “tattered skeletons of buildings, the weathered Santa Claus sign, and the sad remnants of the children’s Christmas train now covered with graffiti,” TopTenRealEstateDeals.com notes. The town is located between Phoenix and Las Vegas in the Mojave Desert. The town was most recently listed for sale in the 1980s for $95,000.

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Fewer New Home Choices for First-Timers

First-time buyers are struggling to find affordable options in the new-home market. Sales of low-priced new homes dropped in September, with just 2 percent of all new home sales at $150,000, the U.S. Commerce Department reports. That's down 5 percent from last year.
“Having starter home options for new buyers is really important,” says Danielle Hale, managing director of housing research at the National Association of REALTORS®. But “we do find the majority of first-time buyers tend to buy existing homes, because there aren’t many new homes on the market in the starter home price range.”
Indeed, about 12 percent of existing homes between $150,000 and $199,000 were sold in September, according to NAR. On the other hand, 57 percent of new home sales were in the $200,000 to $399,000 range, according to the U.S. Commerce Department. The median price of a new home was $313,500 in September – 33.9 percent higher than the median price of an existing home ($234,200).
The Commerce Department reported this week that overall sales of newly constructed single-family homes increased 3.1 percent last month month-over-month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 593,000 units. The inventory of new home sales was 235,000 in September – a 4.8-month supply at the current sales pace. Regionally, new-home sales rose by the highest amount in the Northeast, increasing 33.3 percent month-over-month, followed by an 8.6 percent increase in the Midwest and a 3.4 percent rise in the South. The West posted a 4.5 percent decrease in new-home sales in September.

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

50 Markets Ranked: Where Does Yours Fall?



Who has the hottest single-family housing market this fall? Fort Lauderdale, Fla., according to a new report released by Ten-X, an online real estate marketplace. Ten-X ranked the 50 largest single-family housing markets for fall 2016 based on current and forecasted fundamentals.
Florida markets continue to dominate its list for the second consecutive season.
“Florida’s housing market continues to set the pace for the nation, with five of the top 10 metros on our report,” says Rick Sharga, Ten-X executive vice president. “While all of the top five markets took substantial hits during the housing crash, especially Las Vegas, the continued road to recovery for these destination cities is looking even brighter.”
The five single-family markets topping Ten-X’s list for this fall are: Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Palm Beach County, Fla.; Tampa, Fla.; Orlando; and Las Vegas.
The rankings factor in pricing, sales, permit activity, and economic growth, population growth.
See how your metro stacked up.
Source: Ten-X

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

More Chinese Buyers Are Coming to America

The influx of money coming in from China to U.S. real estate is reshaping some markets and serving as a major catalyst behind price upswings in some locales, The Washington Post reports. It’s not just luxury properties that Chinese buyers are targeting either.
Buyers from China rank first among foreign nationals purchasing property in the U.S., according to the National Association of REALTORS®. Home sales in the U.S. to the Chinese-born totaled $27.3 billion, but could reach $50 billion by 2025, according to a report by the Rosen Consulting Group and the Asia Society.
Jim Conlan, a real estate broker with Century 21 North Homes Realty in Seattle, says Chinese buyers are behind the major increase in prices in Seattle.
“Chinese buyers have been flooding this market the past few years,” says Conlan. “Some of them buy homes sight unseen, while others travel here for a kind of real estate tourism and buy real estate after only one viewing.”
In the San Francisco Bay-area, particularly Palo Alto and Woodside, home prices have doubled in the past three years while the number of buyers from China has nearly doubled since 2012, says Penelope Huang, a broker with Re/Max Distinctive Properties.
“Listings are snapped up in a week or sometimes less in this market,” she says. “That kind of pace of sales directly affects first-time buyers.”
Indeed, real estate professionals report a similar impact in Brooklyn and Queens, N.Y., where the number of Chinese buyers has also nearly doubled since 2012.
“They’re now competing with buyers at the middle of this market, and that added competition is making life tougher for people looking to buy their first home,” says Jennifer Hsu, a broker with Halstead Property in Queens.
Danielle Hale, NAR’s managing director of housing research, told The Washington Post that Chinese buyers are often bidding up prices in markets where demand is already high.
“That can cause prices to rise sharply and make it that much more difficult for locals to find a home to buy,” Hale says. “That’s particularly the case for many first-time home buyers looking for moderately priced homes.”
Broker Elizabeth Schwartz of Compass in New York says she’s worked with many buyers from China. Most are not just looking to buy a trophy property but are looking for more moderately priced homes that offer a good return at resale, Schwartz says.
“There’s a huge population of hardworking, educated Chinese who look to the U.S. for real estate investment,” Schwartz says. “But they come to this market not with money to just throw around, but rather to make informed, well-reasoned investment choices.”
Source: “Wealthy Chinese Buyers Are a Growing Force in U.S. Real Estate Markets,” The Washington Post (Oct. 14, 2016)

Monday, October 17, 2016

California home sales register nominal year-over-year increase in September for first time in seven months

- Existing, single-family home sales totaled 425,680 in September on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate, up 1.3 percent from August and 0.8 percent from September 2015.

- September’s statewide median home price was $514,320, down 2.3 percent from August and up 6.1 percent from September 2015.

- Statewide sales of condos and townhomes fell 8.5 percent from August and were up 1.4 percent from September a year ago.

LOS ANGELES (Oct. 17) – California existing home sales ticked up in September on a year-to-year basis for the first time in seven months as a shortage of homes available for sale continues to hold back the market, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) said today.
  
Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 425,680 units in September, according to information collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations and MLSs statewide. The statewide sales figure represents what would be the total number of homes sold during 2016 if sales maintained the September pace throughout the year. It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

The September figure was up 1.3 percent from the revised 420,360 level in August and up 0.8 percent compared with home sales in September 2015 of a revised 422,360. Home sales remained above the 400,000 pace for the sixth straight month, and the year-over-year increase was the first since January.
“While higher sales both on a monthly and an annual basis is a glimmer of good news, with most of the home-buying season behind us for 2016, it’s not enough to tip the scales for an increase above 2015’s sales pace,” said C.A.R. President Pat “Ziggy” Zicarelli. “With listings continuing to decline and demand still strong, especially at the lower end of the market, affordability will remain a challenge for would-be buyers.”

The statewide median price remained above the $500,000 mark for the sixth straight month, with minimal signs of cooling down outside of a few select markets. The median price of an existing, single-family detached California home was down 2.3 percent in September to $514,320 from $526,580 in August. September’s median price increased 6.1 percent from the revised $484,670 recorded in September 2015. The median sales price is the point at which half of homes sold for more and half sold for less; it is influenced by the types of homes selling, as well as a general change in values. The monthly price decline is primarily due to seasonal factors.

“While demand remains strong for lower-priced homes, which are more inventory constrained, sales of homes at the higher-end have slowed significantly,” said C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young. “For example, sales of properties priced between $2 million and $3 million, which are the least inventory constrained, grew by high double-digits in 2014 and 2015, but the pace has slowed down to a negligible 0.2 percent increase through the first nine months of this year.”

Other key points from C.A.R.’s September 2016 resale housing report include:

• Current home prices in the state are still 13.5 percent below their previous peak, though most parts of the San Francisco Bay Area have already reached new all-time highs.

• C.A.R.’s Unsold Inventory Index, which indicates the number of months needed to sell the supply of homes on the market at the current sales rate inched up to 3.5 months in September from 3.4 months in August. The index stood at 3.6 months in September 2015.

• Statewide active listings continue to decline, falling 3.1 percent from August and 4.9 percent from a year ago. The year-over-year listings decline is the highest since January 2016.

• The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home was unchanged from August at 28.9 days but was down from 31.8 days in September 2015.

• C.A.R.’s sales-to-list price ratio* dipped slightly in September, with sales prices slightly decreasing to 98.6 percent of listing prices statewide in September from 98.9 percent in August and flat from September 2015.

• The average price per square foot** for an existing, single-family home statewide reached a post-recession high in September at $249, up from $246 in August and from $235 in September 2015.

• San Francisco County had the highest price per square foot in September at $852/sq. ft., followed by San Mateo ($759/sq. ft.), and Santa Clara ($612/sq. ft.). Counties with the lowest price per square foot in September include Tehama ($123/sq. ft.), Siskiyou ($126/sq. ft.), and Tulare and Kings both at $128/sq. ft.

• Mortgage rates are expected to remain low in the foreseeable future, though the Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates by year’s end. Mortgage rates edged slightly higher in September, with the 30-year, fixed-mortgage interest rate averaging 3.46 percent, up from 3.44 percent in August but down from 3.89 percent in September 2015, according to Freddie Mac.  The five-year, adjustable-rate mortgage interest rates also rose in September to an average of 2.81 percent, up from 2.75 percent in August but down from 2.92 percent in September 2015.

Graphics (click links to open):

Note:  The County MLS median price and sales data in the tables are generated from a survey of more than 90 associations of REALTORS® throughout the state, and represent statistics of existing single-family detached homes only.  County sales data are not adjusted to account for seasonal factors that can influence home sales.  Movements in sales prices should not be interpreted as changes in the cost of a standard home.  The median price is where half sold for more and half sold for less; medians are more typical than average prices, which are skewed by a relatively small share of transactions at either the lower-end or the upper-end. Median prices can be influenced by changes in cost, as well as changes in the characteristics and the size of homes sold.  The change in median prices should not be construed as actual price changes in specific homes.

*Sales-to-list price ratio is an indicator that reflects the negotiation power of home buyers and home sellers under current market conditions.  The ratio is calculated by dividing the final sales price of a property by its last list price and is expressed as a percentage.  A sales-to-list ratio with 100 percent or above suggests that the property sold for more than the list price, and a ratio below 100 percent indicates that the price sold below the asking price.

**Price per square foot is a measure commonly used by real estate agents and brokers to determine how much a square foot of space a buyer will pay for a property.  It is calculated as the sale price of the home divided by the number of finished square feet.  C.A.R. currently tracks price-per-square foot statistics for 39 counties.

Leading the way…® in California real estate for more than 110 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States with 185,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles.

September 2016 County Sales and Price Activity(Regional and condo sales data not seasonally adjusted)
September-16Median Sold Price of Existing Single-Family HomesSales
State/Region/CountySep-16Aug-16 Sep-15 MTM% ChgYTY% ChgMTM% ChgYTY% Chg
CA SFH (SAAR)$514,320$526,580 $484,670r-2.3%6.1%1.3%0.8%
CA Condo/Townhomes$414,570$418,750 $388,740r-1.0%6.6%-8.5%1.4%
Los Angeles Metro Area$463,330$473,950 $440,870r-2.2%5.1%-2.4%2.8%
Inland Empire$319,350$317,050 $289,690r0.7%10.2%-1.9%8.1%
S.F. Bay Area$770,150$777,160 $734,330r-0.9%4.9%-6.4%-2.1%
          
S.F. Bay Area         
Alameda$762,250$775,000 $731,000r-1.6%4.3%-3.0%6.7%
Contra-Costa$552,000$570,000 $525,000r-3.2%5.1%-10.0%-8.6%
Marin$1,165,000$1,200,000 $1,050,000r-2.9%11.0%-13.9%-16.4%
Napa$650,000$625,000 $617,500r4.0%5.3%9.0%0.8%
San Francisco$1,218,750$1,257,500 $1,189,000r-3.1%2.5%-11.3%5.1%
San Mateo$1,290,000$1,250,000 $1,200,000 3.2%7.5%-12.1%-8.1%
Santa Clara$1,000,000$975,000 $955,000 2.6%4.7%1.3%-0.9%
Solano$389,500$410,000 $350,000r-5.0%11.3%-12.2%-5.8%
Sonoma$590,000$585,000 $541,500r0.9%9.0%-8.6%4.9%
Southern California         
Los Angeles$546,920$517,400 $517,750 5.7%5.6%2.8%2.5%
Orange $739,000$749,000 $705,000r-1.3%4.8%-11.1%-0.8%
Riverside $352,250$355,000 $329,000r-0.8%7.1%-1.8%11.1%
San Bernardino$254,330$243,370 $229,890 4.5%10.6%-2.1%3.6%
San Diego$569,000$563,000 $525,000r1.1%8.4%-8.8%6.4%
Ventura$629,420$652,330 $599,710r-3.5%5.0%-10.1%-14.2%
Central Coast         
Monterey$566,500$515,000 $480,000 10.0%18.0%1.7%3.5%
San Luis Obispo$574,750$535,000 $518,000r7.4%11.0%5.7%6.1%
Santa Barbara$732,500$775,000 $745,000r-5.5%-1.7%-9.0%3.4%
Santa Cruz$774,500$824,000 $755,000 -6.0%2.6%-17.6%-19.6%
Central Valley         
Fresno$240,000$239,000 $220,000r0.4%9.1%-6.8%16.4%
Glenn$220,500$230,500 $231,250r-4.3%-4.6%50.0%50.0%
Kern$215,000$220,000 $219,900r-2.3%-2.2%-2.6%-7.2%
Kings $197,000$209,220 $198,000r-5.8%-0.5%-3.2%-4.2%
Madera$240,000$245,000 $218,480r-2.0%9.8%-19.8%35.2%
Merced$214,000$220,000 $205,050r-2.7%4.4%-8.9%4.2%
Placer $430,240$430,000 $390,000r0.1%10.3%-4.3%1.1%
Sacramento$317,500$323,500 $290,700r-1.9%9.2%-7.6%2.9%
San Benito$527,500$538,380 $466,000 -2.0%13.2%-8.0%12.2%
San Joaquin$322,000$325,000 $295,000r-0.9%9.2%-5.7%-6.0%
Stanislaus$270,000$272,750 $252,000r-1.0%7.1%-13.2%-14.2%
Tulare$209,900$204,900 $189,540r2.4%10.7%-12.1%8.5%
Other Counties in California         
Amador$243,500$257,500 $240,500r-5.4%1.2%0.0%15.0%
Butte $275,000$264,120 $248,000r4.1%10.9%-15.8%4.3%
Calaveras$285,000$310,000 $262,000r-8.1%8.8%-12.9%6.3%
Del Norte$239,500$174,500 $216,500r37.2%10.6%-44.4%-37.5%
El Dorado $419,000$425,000 $399,000r-1.4%5.0%-12.3%0.3%
Humboldt$290,000$290,000 $270,000r0.0%7.4%-13.3%18.2%
Lake $220,000$234,500 $225,000r-6.2%-2.2%-39.4%-6.0%
Mariposa$332,500$311,500 $236,150r6.7%40.8%-65.0%-41.7%
Mendocino$370,000$362,500 $340,000r2.1%8.8%-17.2%23.3%
Mono$465,000$532,500r$550,000 -12.7%-15.5%-8.3%100.0%
Nevada$348,700$343,000 $339,900r1.7%2.6%-14.1%5.8%
Plumas$278,500$275,000 $267,500r1.3%4.1%-9.5%-20.8%
Shasta$239,000$248,000 $238,450r-3.6%0.2%-5.8%9.0%
Siskiyou $192,000$204,500 $175,000r-6.1%9.7%11.5%18.4%
Sutter$247,500$267,410 $231,000r-7.4%7.1%-13.4%4.4%
Tehama$219,000$202,000 $192,500r8.4%13.8%-31.4%-7.9%
Tuolumne$242,500$266,450 $249,000r-9.0%-2.6%-22.1%0.0%
Yolo$407,000$410,480 $409,000r-0.8%-0.5%-25.0%0.7%
Yuba$245,000$249,900 $230,000r-2.0%6.5%-14.4%2.5%
r = revised
September 2016 County Unsold Inventory and Time on Market(Regional and condo sales data not seasonally adjusted)
September-16Unsold Inventory IndexMedian Time on Market
State/Region/CountySep-16Aug-16 Sep-15 Sep-16Aug-16 Sep-15 
CA SFH (SAAR)3.53.4 3.6r28.928.9 31.8r
CA Condo/Townhomes2.82.6 2.8 27.329.229.6 
Los Angeles Metro Area3.73.7 3.9 42.145.2 47.1 
Inland Empire4.04.1 4.5r42.945.3 48.9 
S.F. Bay Area2.62.4 2.2r24.323.5 22.4r
           
S.F. Bay Area          
Alameda2.12.1 2.3 19.818.4 18.0 
Contra-Costa2.52.4 2.4 21.419.7 21.2r
Marin4.33.6 3.3r37.241.0 36.3r
Napa4.44.8 4.2r53.147.1 59.0r
San Francisco3.22.2 3.0 25.225.1 21.5 
San Mateo2.41.9 1.9 20.620.2 18.7 
Santa Clara2.22.3 2.1 21.721.8 19.1 
Solano3.02.8 2.5r43.042.8 41.3r
Sonoma3.02.9 3.6r46.449.5 45.6r
Southern California          
Los Angeles3.33.3 3.6r35.740.3 42.3r
Orange 3.83.7 3.7 49.252.4 53.0 
Riverside 4.14.1 4.6r44.048.0 50.3r
San Bernardino3.94.1 4.3 41.040.2 46.5 
San Diego3.43.3 3.7 23.622.5 24.3 
Ventura4.24.0 3.7 56.753.3 52.4 
Central Coast          
Monterey4.34.4 4.2 27.325.3 26.2 
San Luis Obispo4.04.4 4.3 31.533.2 42.4 
Santa Barbara4.94.6 4.4r32.533.2 26.3r
Santa Cruz2.92.7 2.8 26.024.8 25.2 
Central Valley          
Fresno3.73.5 4.8 24.724.9 27.1 
Glenn4.36.9 5.8 50.326.4 31.0 
Kern3.73.8 3.7 27.126.6 26.0r
Kings 3.43.2 3.2 25.022.6 33.3 
Madera4.74.1 8.0 45.554.1 75.5 
Merced2.92.8 4.1 31.535.0 38.3 
Placer 2.93.0 3.2 23.923.7 25.5 
Sacramento2.62.5 2.7 20.319.5 22.4 
San Benito3.83.7 3.3 26.723.0 26.2 
San Joaquin3.23.1 3.1 21.321.7 23.1 
Stanislaus3.53.1 3.2 24.021.7 23.7 
Tulare3.93.5 4.6 27.728.4 32.6r
Other Counties in California          
Amador5.35.8 5.9 52.849.5 63.9 
Butte 3.73.3 4.2 27.126.5 39.1 
Calaveras5.44.9 6.3 58.229.5 69.5 
Del Norte16.19.6 10.1 95.8110.3 84.2 
El Dorado 4.03.8 4.4 45.933.9 46.8 
Humboldt3.63.3 4.9 27.524.0 46.5 
Lake 7.34.6 6.8 74.195.0 94.6 
Mariposa13.04.3 9.8 98.391.0 31.0 
Mendocino7.06.0 9.0r77.371.9 80.8r
Mono6.510.4rNA 123.494.6 123.4 
Nevada3.73.3 4.8 31.026.4 40.4 
Plumas10.710.3 8.8 108.494.2 126.8 
Shasta4.74.5 5.7 41.536.4 46.0 
Siskiyou 5.06.0 6.8 38.740.3 78.4 
Sutter3.32.8 3.5 24.923.4 33.2 
Tehama6.84.7 6.6 52.251.5 41.9 
Tuolumne6.45.4 6.7 46.739.3 71.9 
Yolo2.82.1 3.0 23.023.3 24.0 
Yuba2.72.4 3.3 22.119.5 23.2 
r = revised
NA = not available

Realtor in Thousand Oaks, Conejo Valley

I help people selling their homes get them sold quickly and almost always at 100% asking, even over in some markets. I save my real estate b...