Friday, September 12, 2014

Housing Price Cuts Point To A Shift In Southern California's Southland Market

Source:  latimes.com



Housing price cuts point to a shift in Southland market


Real EstateBusinessHomesReal Estate SellersReal Estate Buyers
The number of homes with reduced asking prices has risen sharply in recent months, a reversal from last year
No longer a seller's market? In O.C., about one-third of home sellers have had to cut their prices
Buyers are gaining leverage in Southern California's housing market: Price cuts are back
The latest sign that buyers are gaining leverage in Southern California's housing market: Price cuts are back.
The number of homes with reduced asking prices has risen sharply in recent months, a reversal from last year's sellers' market, when list prices seemed more like a floor than a ceiling.
In Orange County, the region's priciest market, about one-third of sellers have been forced to cut prices, according to data from real estate firm Redfin. Across the Southland, prices have hit a plateau this summer, with sales volume slumping as buyers got pickier.


These trends have been building all year. But home sellers -- often the last to see market shifts -- are finally getting the message, said Paul Reid, a Redfin agent in Temecula.
"A lot of what we've seen over the last six or eight weeks is people lowering their prices to get buyers in the door," Reid said.
The shift from a red-hot sellers' market to something more balanced is reflected in price trends.
Every month for nearly two years, starting in mid-2012, the median home price in Southern California notched double-digit annual gains, according to housing data firm CoreLogic DataQuick. The growth peaked last June, with a 28% gain.


But the 9.1% year-over-year increase in August marked the third straight month of single-digit gains. In higher-priced parts of the region, gains are even slower; it was just 5.4% in Orange County.
Still, August's median was $420,000, the highest point since the recession started in December 2007. That's keeping many buyers on the sidelines, said Andrew LePage, an analyst with CoreLogic DataQuick.
"Prices are high enough to be a hurdle for a lot of buyers," he said.
After two years of bidding wars and big price run-ups, some sellers have yet to come to terms with reality, said Steven Thomas, chief economist at Reports on Housing, which tracks the Southern California market.


"People have been putting a sign in the yard and expecting offers immediately. That's not reality," Thomas said. "In a normal market, you've got to put some work into selling it."
David Silva, a veteran agent with Ricci Realty in Orange, has watched as the number of homes for sale in that Orange County town ballooned from about 100 in early 2013 to about 270 today.
With more competition on the market, some of his clients have had to cut prices to drive up interest. He's heard stories from colleagues about would-be buyers walking away from contracts when they found a better house for less money.


"It comes down to affordability," Silva said. "A lot of people are looking for a good deal. The lower-priced properties are going quickly. The mid-range inventory is taking longer."
Silva said some of his clients are receptive to the idea of cutting prices to sell their homes. But some sellers -- those with less motivation to move now -- are pulling their homes off the market, said Steve Shrager, an agent with Coldwell Banker in Studio City.
Sellers who can't get the price they want are choosing to rent their home, or try to sell again in another year.
"They feel the price can't go anywhere but up," Shrager said.
Buyers are choosier too, he notes. Though price growth has leveled off, many buyers still aren't seeing bargains. And while the selection of homes has expanded, some aren't finding any property they really want.


Some, he said, are choosing to stay put, or maybe try the market again next spring.
"I don't want to use the word correction, but we're in a bit of an adjustment period right now," Shrager said.
Waiting for the spring selling season is fairly normal behavior for both buyers and sellers, Thomas said. But after a decade of boom, bust and boom again, many aren't sure how to react to a normal market.
"People are not used to this," he said. "That's why you get some panic. Eventually these houses will sell. You just have to be patient."
Patience and price cuts are paying off for Joseph David, an investor and rehabber who listed a blue three-bedroom Craftsman in Highland Park in late June at $624,990. When it went on the market, his agent got a lot of phone calls. Dozens of people showed up at open houses. But none of them pulled the trigger.
"We got a lot of response, but we didn't get any offers," David said. "There were a lot of looky-loos."
Before long, he knocked a bit off his asking price. Then earlier this month, he cut it more sharply, to $549,000.
Interest picked up dramatically. His agent started to get a lot more phone calls, making David confident he'll get that offer soon.

Fannie Mae Relaxes Waiting Period for Distressed Borrowers

Source: http://dsnews.com
Author: Brian Honea September 11, 2014
Waiting Period Distressed Borrowers
Fannie Mae recently released a report revising the waiting periods for distressed borrowers with a derogatory credit event such as a foreclosure, bankruptcy, short sale, or deed-in-lieu of foreclosure on their credit history to obtain a new loan.
For borrowers with a short sale or deed-in-lieu of foreclosure on their record, Fannie Mae's new mandated minimum waiting period to become eligible for a new loan is four years. The time is shortened to two years if there are extenuating circumstances. According to Fannie Mae, extenuating circumstances are defined as "nonrecurring events that are beyond the borrower’s control that result in a sudden, significant, and prolonged reduction in income or a catastrophic increase in financial obligations."
If a borrower has a foreclosure on his or her credit record, the new minimum waiting period is seven years. Under extenuating circumstances, that period is shortened to three years with some additional requirements for up to seven years.
For those with a bankruptcy (chapter seven or 11), the waiting period is four years (two years with extenuating circumstances). For distressed borrowers with a chapter 13 bankruptcy, the required waiting period is now two years from the discharge date and four years from the dismissal date. If there are extenuating circumstances, the waiting time from the dismissal date is shortened to two years.
If there are multiple bankruptcy filings on a borrower's record, the waiting period for a new loan is five years if there has been more than one filing in the previous seven years.  Under extenuating circumstances, the waiting period is cut to three years from the most recent dismissal or discharge date.
Fannie Mae said in the report that it is "focused on helping lenders to provide access to mortgages for creditworthy borrowers while supporting sustainable homeownership" and that the new policy "provides opportunities for borrowers to obtain a loan to Fannie Mae’s maximum LTV (loan-to-value) sooner after the preforeclosure (short) sale or DIL."
The new policy is effective for loans with application dates on or after August 16, 2014.

Under the previous policy, the standard waiting period for borrowers with a derogatory credit event was two years with a maximum 80 percent LTV ratio; four years with a maximum 90 percent LTV ratio; or borrowers were eligible for a new loan after a standard seven-year waiting period. For borrowers with extenuating circumstances, the previous waiting period was two years with a maximum 90 percent LTV ratio.

Monday, September 8, 2014

Home Sales Typically Slow in Autumn Despite Economic Gains, Analyst Says

Source: DS News
Author: Brian Honea September 5, 2014

Lawrence Yun, chief economist and senior vice president of the National Association of Realtors (NAR), issued a statement on September 3 reporting that despite reports of more jobs, lower interest rates, and overall economic improvement, home sales are typically slow for the autumn months.
Yun said in his statement that the autumn and winter months have historically been unkind to the housing market. He reports an average decline of 16.4 percent in home sales month-over-month from August to September over the last 15 years. After holding steady in October, Yun said, home sales typically take another 8 percent dive in November. Figures for December usually match those in November before they plummet by 27 percent in January, then begin the slow rebound as winter turns to spring.
"Despite the weaker business opportunities in the upcoming autumn and winter months, media headlines on home sales are likely to show an upturn and possible strengthening conditions based on NAR home sales releases," Yun said in the statement. "What gives?"
The difference is in seasonal adjustments, Yun said. Most economic and housing data (including unemployment and GDP) reported in the media is seasonally adjusted in order to "better gauge an underlying economic trend of slight weakening or slight strengthening," he said.
Yun cited Myrtle Beach as an example of how seasonally adjusted employment data can make numbers appear more favorable than they actually are. He said the South Carolina beach town usually has about 15,000 more jobs available in summer than the rest of the year; if one summer there were only 6,000 more jobs available in Myrtle Beach, then the seasonally adjusted data would indicate that employment in the city was doing worse.
When applied to housing, if the annual average month-over-month decline in home sales from August to September is 16.4 percent and one year they decline only 8 percent in September, the media reports that that housing market has improved, Yun said. And seasonally adjusted data is commonly what consumers are exposed to through the media.

"The media just may be reporting improving home sales throughout the upcoming autumn and winter," Yun said. "This does not mean a home seller should be raising the listing price. Invariably, there are fewer home buyers in autumn and winter."

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Housing recovery pushes investors into more remote areas to find deals, with more looking to flip properties, C.A.R. survey finds

LOS ANGELES (Aug. 20) – Given the depletion of distressed homes on the market, investors are changing their strategy and are moving away from purchasing homes in more popular, urban areas in favor of more rural areas of the state where better deals can be found, according to a CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) investor survey.

In 2014, nearly half (45 percent) of investors said they purchased properties in such counties as Sacramento, San Joaquin, Fresno, Kern, Merced, and Tulare, up from 27 percent in 2013, C.A.R.’s “2014 Investor Survey” found.  Fifteen percent of investors purchased properties in Northern California in 2014, down from 27 percent in 2013, and 40 percent purchased properties in Southern California in 2014, down from 50 percent last year.

Additionally, with home prices on the rise, more investors are flipping properties instead of renting them.  In 2014, 28 percent of investors flipped the property, up from 20 percent last year. Fifty-eight percent of investors rented their properties in 2014, down from 73 percent in 2013.
More than eight out of 10 investors (83 percent) own other investment properties, with 7 percent owning more than 10 properties, 17 percent owning 6-10 properties, 47 percent owning 2-5 properties, and 12 percent owning one other property.

Among the reasons investors cited for buying now include profit potential (cited by 58 percent), good price (43 percent), location (26 percent), personal (21 percent), and low interest rates (14 percent).
The median sales price of an investment property in 2014 was $320,000, up 9.6 percent from $292,000 in 2013, reflecting increasing home prices and fewer available distressed properties over the past year.

Additional findings from C.A.R.’s “2014 Investor Survey” include:

• Reflecting the recovering housing market, the majority of investment properties purchased (70 percent) were equity sales, while 18 percent were short sales, and 12 percent were foreclosures.

• More than two-thirds (67 percent) of investors paid cash

• One-third of investors were foreign investors, with China, Mexico, Taiwan, and India being the top countries of origin.

• While most investors made minor or no repairs to the properties, the percentage of those who did major remodeling nearly doubled from 9 percent in 2013 to 17 percent this year.

• Investors spent more on remodeling costs in 2014, putting a median of $15,000 into the investment property, up 50 percent from $10,000 in 2013.

• Investors own an average of 8.3 properties in 2014, up from 6.5 properties last year.

• More than half of investors (55 percent) intend to keep the property less than six years.

California Investor Survey Slides (click links to open):

C.A.R.’s “2014 California Investor Survey” was conducted in May 2014 in an effort to learn more about the role of investors in the California housing market.  The survey was emailed to a random sample of REALTORS® throughout California who had worked with investors within the 12 months prior to May 2014.
For complete survey results, visit www.car.org/marketdata.

Leading the way...® in California real estate for more than 100 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States with 165,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles. 

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

July 2014 US National Housing Trends


Angela Yglesias

Levesque Realty 

Cell: 805-490-4944   
Phone: 805-490-4944 

Housing Trends

July 2014


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National market update

Existing-Home Sales Up in June, Unsold Inventory Shows Continued Progress

WASHINGTON (July 22, 2014) – Existing-home sales increased in June and reached an annual pace of 5 million sales for the first time since October 2013, while rising inventory continues to push overall supply towards a more balanced market, according to the National Association of Realtors®. Read more

International Home Buyers Continue to Invest in Profitable U.S. Market, Realtors® Report

WASHINGTON (July 8, 2014) – Favorable exchange rates, affordable home prices and rising affluence abroad continue to drive international buyers to the U.S. to purchase properties and make real estate investments.
Source: NAR
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National housing indicators

Existing home sales (June)

5.04 million units* *

Existing home median price (June)

$223,300

Housing Starts (June)

893,000 *

New home sales (June)

504,000 *
*Seasonally adjusted annual rate. Source: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.

National economic indicators

Home ownership

2nd Qtr 2013

65.0%

2nd Qtr 2014

64.7%
The homeownership rate in the second quarter 2014 was 64.7 percent, down 0.3 (+/- 0.4)* percentage points from the second quarter 2013 rate of 65.0 percent. The homeownership rates in the Northeast and South were lower than the rates in the second quarter 2013, while the rates in the Midwest and West were not statistically different from the rates a year ago.

New home sales

June 14

-8.1%

May 14

+8.3%
Sales of new single-family houses in June 2014 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 406,000. This is 8.1 percent (+/- 12.3%)* below the revised May 2014 estimate of 442,000.
Source: U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

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Click on the links below to view data from two different industry sources. Choose information on local prices & state sales from any of 150 metropolitan housing markets prepared by the National Association of REALTORS® or information on sales & price activity from local area markets in 25 states prepared by Clarus MarketMetrics.

Representing residential and commercial buyers and sellers in Ventura and LA Counties.
Buying is now cheaper than renting in 74 percent of the nation’s largest cities. Low home prices and “rock-bottom” interest rates as well as tax advantages of homeownership are the reasons why it’s now cheaper to BUY a 2-bdrm home than to rent one. Check out this CNN Money article with the details. Read more
Home Ownership matters…to people, to communities, and to America. Why? • For every two homes sold, one job is created in the U.S. • Each purchase generates as much as $60,000 in economic activity over time. Read more
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