Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Forced relocation takes bite out of blight




A number of older East Coast and Midwest cities have experienced severely declining populations as traditional industries close down or move elsewhere around the globe.

In so many ways, the loss of residents sits heavily on those who stay on, from a decline in services and educational opportunities for children to diminished tax rolls and boarded-up stores.

It doesn't matter if you have a good job with high pay in a city that has been in decline -- it will still be a burden to your pocketbook because the value of your home has probably peaked and in some cities like Detroit, has been dramatically slashed.


Even if you lived in a "good" area of a city like Detroit, home values can't be maintained as more and more of your neighbors go elsewhere looking for jobs.


The question is, can't anything be done to help?


My suggestion is a radical one.


In cities where the loss of jobs has been so dramatic that residents have been moving away for decades, the city government needs to make the drastic decision to reduce the areas within its boundaries where housing is available. The concept means selectively zoning out housing, removing existing individual residents and returning a specific section of the city to green space.


Let's say, for example, your city once boasted a population of 400,000 people crowded into 25 square miles of space. That was back in 1950, but now your city counts only a populace of 200,000 all still living within the same 25 square miles. Populations rise and fall, but on the East Coast and Midwest, the boundaries of the cities never change.


I say keep the boundaries and create parks. If your city of now 200,000 people has most of that population living in the 15-square-mile southwest corridor, while the 10-square-mile northeast corridor has experienced the biggest population loss, and, indeed, fewer than 100 families are now inhabited there, I say boost the southwest corridor and return the northeast corridor to nature.


There are a number of once flourishing cities east of the Mississippi that have been in a steady decline for decades, from Newark, N.J., to Youngstown, Ohio, but Detroit seems to be the most egregious example. In the 1950s, Detroit was one of the country's largest cities with 1.5 million people, but has seen those numbers diminish to 750,000 as the city has declined along with the U.S. auto industry.


What has that meant for the local housing market? The Chicago Tribune reported the median price for a home sold at the end of 2008 in Detroit was $7,500. That's right, just $7,500! In thriving cities, people pay that much for a parking space.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Nikkei lifted by trading houses and real estate




Japan's 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average spent most of Tuesday morning in negative territory as investors sought out issues that would likely flourish in the New Year, such as those related to emerging markets.

The benchmark Nikkei, buoyed in late trade by commodity-related issues, trading houses, retailers and real estate shares, finally added 3.83 points, or 0.04 percent, from Monday to close at 10,638.06, marking a fresh four-month closing high.


The broader Topix index of all First Section issues on the Tokyo Stock Exchange was up 1.09 points, or 0.12 percent, to close at 915.87, a new three-month high.


Japanese trading houses and resource-linked issues gained after oil touched a five-week high of more than 79 U.S. dollars a barrel on Monday, as demand for fuel is expected to rise in the U.S.


Nippon Oil Corp. added 0.46 percent to 439 yen and Osaka Gas Co.Ltd. gained 1.58 percent to 322 yen as domestic demand increases in the winter months.


Nippon Paper Group Inc. advanced 1.47 percent to 2,415 yen, whilst rival Oki Paper Co. Ltd. rose 0.51 percent to 392 yen.


Metal and mining issues also rose Tuesday, with Sumitomo Metal Mining Co. Ltd. edging up 0.29 percent to 1,399 yen and Sumitomo Metal Industries Ltd. gaining 1.19 percent to 254 yen.


Import and export firms added to market gains, with Mitsui and Co. Ltd. advancing 2.07 percent to 1,329 yen and fellow trading house Mitsubishi Corp. adding 1.53 percent to close at 2,315 yen.


"Investors seem to be using the last days of this year to search for theme stocks -- companies connected to emerging markets,which are likely to remain strong next year, as well as resource-linked shares," said Noritsugu Hirakawa, a strategist at Okasan Securities.


Real estate issues faired well in a day of indecisive trading as fresh cues were lacking ahead of the year-end. Positive sentiment regarding Japan's rising industrial production output in November and the perceived gradual emergence from recession continued to resonate through the market, analysts said.


Daiwa House Industry Co. Ltd. rose 0.70 percent to 1,008 yen, whilst Heiwa Real Estate Co. Ltd. gained 0.34 percent to 298 yen. Mitsubishi Estate Co. Ltd. closed up 1.36 percent at 1,486 yen and building developer Sekisui House Ltd. added 0.96 percent to 845 yen.


Banking issues weighed on the market Tuesday as investor consternation about equity financing mounts as banks are faced with meeting the demands of regulators calling for tighter capital standards.


"There are still concerns about banks raising capital," said Naoki Fujiwara, chief fund manager at Shinkin Asset Management Co.


Japan's second largest bank Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. lost 2.8 percent to 2,655 yen as the institution considers the prospect of share issuance to raise capital.


"We have to stay competitive," Sumitomo Mitsui President Teisuke Kitayama said in a televised interview. "It's not a case of copying somebody, but we need to fully examine the matter to make sure we're not slow off the block."


Larger rival Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., which has already raised 1 trillion yen (11 billion U.S. dollars) by way of new common share issuance, dropped 1.09 percent to 454 yen and Mizuho Financial Group Inc. relinquished 1.18 percent to 167 yen.


Struggling carrier Japan Airlines Corp. was a notable decliner on today's market, plummeting 8.3 percent to 88 yen, amid rumors of liquidation and bankruptcy court proceedings, which would effectively render their stock valueless.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Find home for renting or Rent-out what you own easily!




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Sunday, December 27, 2009

Homeowners Stepped Up in November to Take Advantage Of Tax Credits




While first-time home buyers are reducing their buying activities; existing homeowners have stepped up their home purchases, according to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance Monthly Survey of Real Estate Market Conditions.


Existing homeowners accounted for 41 percent of home purchase transactions in November -- an increase from 38 percent in October, according to the survey. At the same time, the number of first-time home buyers dropped from 47 percent in October to 45 percent in November.


"Our survey statistics are showing the effect of Congress’ delay in extending the homebuyer tax credit and then its eventual extension," said Thomas Popik, research director for the Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance Survey. "The first-time homebuyers started to lose interest in October when it appeared that Congress wouldn't extend the credit. When the credit was finally extended in early November, current homeowners jumped at the new opportunity for a tax credit on their home purchases."


Before Congress decided to extend the $8,000 home tax credit, first-time homebuyers were rushing to homeownership eager to take advantage of the tax break and historic low mortgage rates.


However, in October when it looked uncertain that Congress would approve the extension, interest waned, leaving many to wonder what would happen to the fragile housing market.


Eventually on Nov. 6, Congress approved the tax credit extension to April 2010, but many experts believe that there will not be another rush of first time home buyers until closer to the deadline.


In the meantime, existing homeowners, who have been hesitant about changing residence, saw an opportunity with Congress adding a $6,500 credit for current homeowners who purchased a new primary residence, when it passed the extension in November.


Another factor as to why existing homeowners are now jumping into the housing market is an increase in the number of non-distressed property available for sale. The survey found the purchase of non-distressed property home jumped from 58 percent in October to 63 percent in November. The theory is existing homeowners tend to purchase non-distressed properties.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

HOME BUYERS… YES YOU CAN!




FIRST TIME HOMEBUYER TAX CREDIT DEFINED:


The tax credit is equivalent to 10 percent of the purchase price of the home–although it’s capped at $8,000–and applies only to first-time home buyers and principal residences. The credit is claimed on the homebuyer’s federal tax return. The credit is refundable, which means that the homebuyer receives a refund for the amount of the credit minus any federal tax liability.

For the purposes of this tax credit, a “first-time home buyer” is defined as someone who hasn’t owned a principal residence for three years before buying a home. The date of purchase is determined as the day that the title is transferred. Simply speaking…. if you’ve owned a vacation home–but not a principal residence–within the past three years, you would still qualify for the credit.


Only buyers who purchase a home on or after January 1 and before December 1, 2009 are eligible for the credit.


Income limitations: $75,000 for single earner, $150,000 for two-income families. Buyers earning more than these limitations may be eligible for a reduced credit.


Here are some examples:


Home purchase price of $60,000 – $6,000 tax refund

Home purchase price of $80,000 – $8,000 tax refund

Home purchase price of $100,000 -$8,000 tax refund


A home buyer can file in 2009 for refund OR they can amend their 2008 returns and get the money now! The money can be used for whatever the home buyer chooses and doesn’t have to be paid back! The refund is in addition to whatever refunds already expected.


The other stipulation for this tax credit is that buyers have to own the home for at least three years in order to capitalize on the credit. If the home is sold before then, the buyer would have to return the credit to the government. Some exceptions would be made in certain instances… such as death or divorce.


Lenders in some states have successfully petitioned state government to create legislation allowing them to create loan programs where the tax credit could be used for the down payment for the buyer’s mortgage. So far, Florida is not one of the states offering this type of loan program, but lenders in Florida are trying to change that…. more updates on that in future postings!

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Home resales surge to nearly three-year high




Home resales surged last month to the highest level in nearly three years, reflecting an extraordinary level of federal support that has pulled the housing market back from the worst downturn since the Great Depression.

Buyers were racing to complete their sales before the original expiration date of a tax credit for first-time buyers that was scheduled to expire Nov. 30. Last month, Congress decided to extend and expand the credit to ensure the housing market could sustain its recovery.

The Realtors estimated that about 2 million homebuyers have taken advantage of the credit so far and forecasts that another 2.4 million will use it by the middle of next year. First-time buyers made up about half of all transactions last month, driving sales up 44 percent above last year's levels, a record jump.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Botched commute: First two inches wreak havoc




Commuter vehicles driven without appropriate equipment or skills are scattered like toys tonight, as the first two inches of what could become a two-foot snowfall brought Charlottesville-Albemarle transportation to a near standstill.


There were two vehicles stopped on westbound Route 250 Bypass just west of the McIntire Road exit around 6:15pm, turning the normal commuter artery into a capillary. Meanwhile, on Interstate 64, traffic never got above 30mph, and several drivers— apparently traumatized by the concept of driving in snow— were running with their emergency blinkers.


The situation in Albemarle on Dick Woods Road bordered on the ridiculous, as a reporter counted nine vehicles nosed into ditches along a half-mile stretch near Ivy Depot.


Two cars that smashed together head-on on Route 250 west of Morgantown Road stalled traffic and made for a 3 1/2-hour commute from downtown Charlottesville to Crozet for those leaving around 4:30pm. On Ivy Road heading west, speeds at times reached 5mph until grinding to a soul-deadening halt for hours. Route 240 and its uphill trajectory also proved tricky for autos without four- or front-wheel drive, causing further delays.


“It’s surprising that the salt is not doing as good a job as it usually does,” said City spokesperson Ric Barrick, who reserved blame for the havoc on commuters who waited downtown too long and set out without four-wheel-drive vehicles.


“We’ll start plowing when it gets to three inches, so that should start shortly,” Barrick said at 7:25pm. “VDOT hasn’t started plowing yet either.”


Barrick explained that plows require sufficient snow to create a buffer between blade and pavement to avoid injuring the asphalt.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Federal Reserve Holds Interest Rates at Record Lows




The Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pledged Wednesday, December 16, to hold interest rates at a record low rate to help drive down double-digit unemployment, turning an economic crisis into an economic recovery. Seeking a second term as Fed chief, Bernanke has made it clear sustaining an economic recovery is his top priority.


The Fed Chairman said that while the economy is growing, it is occurring a very slow pace. He also sounded hopeful saying the pace of layoffs is slowing. That’s why the Fed kept a target range for its bank-lending rate at zero to 0.25 percent. This historic low level has been in place since last December. Bernanke repeated his pledge to keep interest rates at "exceptionally low levels" for an "extended period." The Fed says it can hold rates at super-low levels since it expects that inflation will remain "subdued for some time."


The Fed knows overall weakness in the economy remains due to sluggish spending, the weak job market and tight credit. That’s why the Federal Reserve Board delivered a bold and clear message that interest rates will remain low for the foreseeable future as long as economic confidence remains weak due to an economic crisis.


In response, commercial banks' prime lending rate, used to peg mortgage rates on home equity loans, certain credit cards and other consumer loans, will remain about 3.25 percent, the lowest point in decades.


Encouraging Signs During The Nation's Economic Crisis:



* Economy grew in the third quarter, after four straight losing quarters
* Historically low mortgage interest rates allow more home buyers to get loans
* Layoffs slowed as employers cut 11,000 jobs last month, the best since the recession started two years ago
* Unemployment rate dipped nationwide to 10 percent in November, down 0.02 percent from October


The Fed’s moves have definitely worked at driving down mortgage interest rates. Freddie Mac says mortgage rates on 30-year fixed loans averaged 4.81 percent last week, a big drop from last year’s 5.47 percent.


With signs of financial and housing markets stabilizing, the Fed said that it would end several emergency-lending programs next year, including support for money market mutual funds, short-term corporate lending, money to investment banks, and money to other nation’s banking systems.


The Fed in on track to buy a total of $1.25 trillion in mortgage securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by the end of March. So far, it has bought $845 billion.

Monday, December 14, 2009

The greatest real estate turnaround ever




NEW YORK -- Charlotte Street was an apocalyptic nightmare version of urban life.


Weed-choked, junk-filled lots flanked the three-block stretch. Burned out tenement buildings punctuated the sky, and abandoned cars littered the landscape.


The street, like much of the rest of New York City's South Bronx, had fallen to epic lows by the late 1970s. The area had disgorged nearly two-thirds of its population as living conditions declined and arson fires raged. Some landlords, unable to find tenants, torched their properties for insurance money. Other blazes were set by junkies, while still more were set by residents of public housing trying to get moved into nicer apartments.


"Charlotte Street was burning," says Genevieve Brooks, a former resident. "Every day, I'd see the fires and smell the smoke. I slept with my shoes by my bed at night because you never knew if your building was next."


Just three miles away, at Yankee Stadium, is where Howard Cosell uttered his famous line: "There it is, ladies and gentlemen, the Bronx is burning."


No longer.


In the three decades since Cosell introduced the world to the plight of the Bronx during the 1977 World Series, Charlotte Street has morphed into a haven of single-family ranch houses accented by backyards flourishing with fruit trees and flowers. Boats sit in driveways and above-ground swimming pools are common. It's a slice of suburbia in one the country's most urban -- and poor -- counties.


What happened to the Charlotte Street that President Carter called "the worst slum in America?" Or the Charlotte Street that President Reagan visited during a 1980 campaign swing? The one he compared -- unfavorably -- with London after the Blitz.
One of the greatest real estate turnarounds ever.


"Charlotte Street is thought of as quite a success story, particularly considering its context: It rose, phoenix-like, out of the ashes," says Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard's Joint Center for Urban Studies.


Baby steps


One of the primary catalysts was Brooks, who had moved to Charlotte Street from South Carolina in the 1960s, when the neighborhood was racially mixed and thriving. But as the 1970s dawned, she watched the deterioration take hold.


When she asked her landlord about maintaining her building, he dismissed her. "He told me I should move to Queens, or Park Avenue," she remembers. "I could have left. But I was single at the time, no children, so I didn't have as much to lose."


Instead, she knocked on neighbors' doors and asked if they noticed the change. When they said "yes," she formed a tenants association. Then she helped form a block association to lobby the city to pick up trash and abandoned cars, and to crack down on crime.


"We went down to the cellars and bagged tons of garbage, brought it upstairs and got Sanitation to pick it up," she remembered. "The kids were excited about sweeping the streets. I would give them money for snacks. They would ask, 'Miss Brooks can we sweep the street today?'"


Bigger strides
By 1974, tired of the small scale efforts, a host of neighborhood volunteers formed a group they called the Mid-Bronx Desperadoes to lobby for improvements throughout the community.


"There was a tremendous amount of community action," says former Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer. "That was the secret ingredient. The community refused to give up. They needed allies. They needed people who took the decline of the South Bronx as personally as they did."


One of those people was urban planner Ed Logue, who was hired in 1978 to run a city agency called the South Bronx Development Office. The city was trying to erase the shame of its worst slums, and to do that Logue knew he would need the assistance of local organizations. The Desperadoes, headed by Brooks, were ready to step into the breach.


Brook's and Logue's vision was to go to the rotted core -- Charlotte Street -- and work outward. But most everyone advised them to rebuild starting from the healthy fringes. They wanted single-family homes; critics wanted density and multi-family dwellings, saying it would promote a lively, safe neighborhood and attract merchants.


"The conventional wisdom was that no one would invest their life savings in such a devastated area," says Julie Sandorf, who worked with the MBD and is now president of the Charles H. Revson Foundation, a New York City-based charity.


Brooks, though, knew most of the families in the area were African Americans from the South, Caribbean blacks and Puerto Ricans, and she was convinced that the long home-owning traditions of these groups would help make a community of single-family homes work.


So she and Logue focused on convincing the Local Initiatives Support Corp., a newly launched nonprofit that had a $10 million grant from the Ford Foundation to assist burgeoning neighborhood revivals.


"There was so much devastation in the Charlotte Street area, it needed a big infusion of dollars," Brooks remembers. "We were in the financial disaster stage."
Convincing skeptics


LISC was indeed interested in assisting in the South Bronx, but the foundation had its doubts about the plan. "People at LISC were skeptical about the notion of doing single-family homes in the South Bronx," says CEO Michael Rubinger. "It was thought to be a crazy idea."


But Logue and Brooks dazzled then-director Anita Miller with a vision of white picket fences. She agreed take a gamble and put up the $125,000 the groups needed to purchase two model homes.


Those first three-bedroom, two-bath ranch homes were manufactured in Pennsylvania and trucked over the George Washington Bridge one night in 1983. Sandorf and her husband were on site waiting for the trucks. The first people they saw was a rough looking street gang -- whom Logue had hired to secure the grounds.


Still, Sandorf says, her husband was a little spooked. "He kept asking, 'Where are all the lights?' I had to tell him all those buildings are abandoned. There are no lights."
The homes were priced at about $50,000, and they sold like hot cakes. "We got more than 600 applications from potential buyers in the first three weeks," says Sandorf.
Within three years, 92 homes would be built on the street and the area re-christened Charlotte Gardens. About 90% of the buyers were from the Bronx, according to Sandorf; many were low-income.


Homeownership was made possible by discounting the houses: Each property sold for between $50,000 and $59,000 even thought it cost an average of $110,000 to build. The difference was funded through federal dollars, but the City of New York and various foundations also helped subsidize buyers.


"The houses in Charlotte Gardens were very deeply subsidized," says former borough president Ferrer. "But it wasn't just city money: That provided a stimulus for financial institutions who were reluctant to lend. We told the banks they had to get involved, they had to get up here and lend. Some admitted they had to eat crow: They never expected the complex to succeed."


Shining example


But succeed it did. Original buyers invested and stayed; fewer than a dozen homes out of the 92 have ever been sold. Plus, while the rest of the country is being wracked by foreclosures, Charlotte Gardens has lost just one home to the plague.


"The selling of Charlotte Gardens is the extreme opposite story of what happened in the recent real estate debacle," Sandorf says. "It is a shining example of how to do it right. House buyers were carefully selected and vetted. They were subjected to strict credit checks and homeownership counseling."


Property values, too, have soared. Homes that originally went for $50,000 now sell for ten times that -- when one is available. Currently, there is only one for-sale sign on all of Charlotte Street. The owners, who are original, have retired and are moving to Florida. They listed the property for $459,000 -- which is still inexpensive by New York standards. Just across the river, in Manhattan, buyers pay that for a studio apartment.


"Sales are so rare that finding comparables to make an accurate appraisal is very hard," says Tina Gordon, the Century 21 real estate agent for the property.
Genevieve Brooks and her husband retired several years ago and returned to South Carolina, where they have family. But they still come back often to visit friends in Charlotte Gardens.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Housing Prices Increase in Third Quarter:FHFA




The first quarterly increase of housing prices since the second quarter of 2007 has some hoping that stabilization is on the horizon.

monthly change from July to August was estimated to be negative 0.3 percent but was changed to negative 0.5 percent. Seasonally adjusted prices dropped 3.8 percent during the 2009 third quarter, compared to the third quarter last year, and prices of other goods and services fell 2.8 percent. As a result, the inflation-adjusted price of houses fell approximately 1.0 percent from last year.

“These data provide some evidence of short-term stabilization in housing prices, a likely result of the many ongoing efforts to stabilize markets,” DeMarco said. “Given the headwinds facing markets, including high unemployment rates and continued high levels of delinquency and foreclosures, the longer-term view remains uncertain.”

The most significant price movements during the third quarter were seen in the Mountain Division where prices dropped 1.4 percent and the Pacific Division where prices increased 1.9 percent. Seasonally adjusted, purchase-only indexes indicated that prices rose in 19 states and the District of Columbia during the last quarter. Only seven of these states saw price increases over the last four quarters.

For the 25 most-populated Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) in the United States, purchase-only indexes showed four-quarter price declines were most prevalent in the Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Arizona MSA, where prices dropped 22 percent between the third quarter of 2008 and this year’s third quarter. During the same time period, prices remained strongest in the Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, Colorado MSA, where prices increased 3.3 percent.

According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) seasonally adjusted purchase-only house price index (HPI), released Tuesday by FHFA acting director Edward J. DeMarco, housing prices grew modestly in the third quarter. Calculated using home sales price information from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the HPI, on a seasonally adjusted basis, was 0.2 percent higher during the third quarter than during this year’s second quarter.

Unlike the purchase-only index, FHFA’s all-transaction HPI, including date from mortgages used for both home purchases and refinances, fell 2.4 percent between this year’s second and third quarter and 4.1 percent over the four-quarter period.



Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Second homes: Base village brings Winter Park ski resort to its peak




Despite being more than 50 miles from Denver, the Winter Park ski resort is actually part of the city. Back in 1939, city officials bought the mountain, located west toward the Rockies, so Denver residents would have a local place to ski.

Although ranked in the nation's top 10, the mountain never made much money from the Denver day-trippers. Without private investment, facilities were tired and the area lacked resort amenities such as hotels, retail and dining. So in 2002, the city partnered with ski operator Intrawest, which has already invested more than $50 million in on-mountain skier improvements.

The bigger change is the new pedestrian base village, with condo hotels, restaurants and shops. Now Winter Park — which had only 230 condos in 2000 — has base-area condos for sale, and more on the way, at prices lower than most Western competitors. The average home price of $450,000 in Grand County is nearly half of nearby Summit County (where Breckenridge, Copper and Keystone are located) and even less compared with Eagle (home to upscale Vail, Beaver Creek).

These dramatic changes have also spurred development in downtown Winter Park, 2 miles away, and for 30 more miles up the road, as the popularity of the resort — the closest large mountain to Denver and its airport — has grown.

"Customers coming to the valley now are expecting more in the way of nightlife and restaurants — and they are getting it," says Realtor Lance Gutersohn of ReMax Peak to Peak. Gutersohn estimates that over 90% of residential real estate built in the last decade are second homes, and several new communities are a direct result of the base-village expansion. The ski resort itself has approvals for 1,300 more residences and, should it get too crowded, for another entire mountain also owned by Denver.


A look at three Winter Park neighborhoods



• Slopeside Village: New condos are in two hotel-style complexes and in luxury lofts above the new retail and dining storefronts in the pedestrian village. Since there are no hotels at Winter Park, these can be rented out through the resort to generate income. Two-bedroom condos start around $350,000, while the lofts cost around $670,000. In older buildings, studio condos begin under $150,000. The most luxurious options are the custom homes in Bridger's Cache, averaging about $3 million. (lovewinterpark.com)

• Town of Winter Park: Two miles from the ski area, Winter Park has a store- and restaurant-lined Main Street and numerous condos and single-family houses. The most notable is Grand Park, a 1,700-acre community at the northern end of town with its own village underway. A new four-bedroom house meeting Colorado's "Built Green" certification costs $549,000. (grandparkco.com)

• Granby Ranch: This 5,000-acre golf and ski community is 15 miles north in the Highway 40 development corridor. Granby Park has its own small (33 trails) ski resort, SolVista Basin, and many residents use both the skiing here and Winter Park. Slopeside condos start under $200,000, and lots for new houses can be found in the mid-$100,000s. (granbyranch.com)

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Real Estate Activity Picking Up in Mumbai after Long Lull




Real Estate Activity has picked up pace after a long lull in Mumbai’s Bandra Kurla Complex (BKC) as valuations in commercial property across the city recover from the economic slowdown. An unlisted pharmaceutical chemical company has bought 15,000 sq ft of space at Rs 31,000 per sq ft in the 16-storeyed Crescenzo, a standalone corporate building at BKC. Although the valuation of the deal is only around Rs 45 crore, analysts say this is an important deal as it marks the return of commercial realty. Dhaval Shah, director, Parinee Developer, which owns Crescenzo, confirmed the deal, but refused to disclose the buyer’s name. “With the prices in BKC bottoming out and now looking up, this is the perfect time for investors and corporates to take a fresh look at buying space in BKC,” he said.

BKC had seen a decline of up to 45% in capital and rental values, but finalised a deal last week that is around 30% higher than values prevailent in the area and almost on par with 2007 valuations. The slowdown between 2008 and May 2009 hit the Indian real estate market hard. While the residential market gradually stabilised, the commercial market continued to suffer and prices in Mumbai and New Delhi-NCR saw a 45% drop. This was fuelled by a lot of supply hitting the market, with several corporates putting their property up for sale. However, the situation seems to have improved by December.


Ravi Ahuja, executive director, development services, Cushman & Wakefield, said: “After witnessing a significant correction during the first two quarters of 2009, rental and capital values in BKC bottomed out and are gradually stabilising. They could even see a moderate rise. This can prove to be the right time for both investors and end-users to enter the market at an advantageous level, especially since there has been an increase in leasing demand by 35% in the thirdquarter of 2009 over the previous quarter in BKC. This is likely to push rental and capital values northwards.” BKC, which was planned to be developed as an alternate corporate location to Nariman Point, has been seen as a corporate hub. Buildings with modern amenities, large floor plates and more contemporary designs have added to the attraction of this location.


BKC is also expected to gain in terms of connectivity through the planned Metro and Mono Rail, Sion-Kurla flyover, Santacruz-Chembur Link Road and Bandra-Worli Sea Link. All this is in addition to the existing and proposed social infrastructure in the location such as schools, consulates, hospitality, health care and multi-storied car parking facilities.

Monday, December 7, 2009

REAL ESTATE- ON THE BLOCK- Queenly blue: Stucco turns heads in Belmont


















Address: 710 Belmont Avenue
Neighborhood: Belmont
Asking: $519,000
Assessment: $420,200
Year Built: 1920
Size: 1,895 fin. sq. ft. / 200 unfin.
Land: 0.12 acres
Agent: Sonja Casero, 296-0134, Frank Hardy Inc.
Curb Appeal: 9 out of 10


A house isn't always just a house. Some have only walls surrounding space, while others have an ineffable something— we could call it heart— that makes the place a home. It's hard to put a finger on what that element is-- or a price tag, for that matter.


While visitors may quibble about whether that element is evident in this Queen Anne at the corner of Belmont Avenue and Church Street, it does have curbside presence. Its blue stucco exterior catches a passerby's eye, and a new copper roof extends over a romantic turret that makes one imagine a cozy space for reading or other private endeavors.


When the current owner bought the place in 2004, there was not a single plant on the property. Today, all the landscaping has resulted in lush gardens, even in November. Shrubs and young trees provide height and counterpoint to low herbs and grasses. A stone walkway through a small seating area leads to the front door and around the house to the fenced yard in back. Stones from two log-cabin chimneys surround raised beds that look authentic enough to be original.


Although small, the backyard is an oasis, with a koi pond and soothing waterfall, and the covered back porch is big enough entertain a small group. (Prospective buyers shouldn't get too attached to the fish, though, as they do not convey.)
Inside, warm pine floors and a gas-converted hearth create a lived-in feel in the living room beside the generous foyer. A wide doorway leads to an updated kitchen with the dining room beyond. Painted a vibrant red, it's quite dramatic, but the current clunky furniture shrinks the size of the room. New owners may probably want to shift to minimalist to give the appearance of a larger space.


Space in the back on this floor, currently used as a second living room, would make a striking master suite with a new spa-like bath and tiled shower sporting two showerheads and a built-in bench. Two steps down from the bath, what could be the bedroom leads directly to the covered porch. If new buyers wanted to make this space the master suite, they probably would add a second door to the backyard.


In the renovation, the staircase was opened up on the second floor to create a potential office or play area. Here, built-in shelves take the place of a railing and sit low, again creating a feeling of space. Two second-story bedrooms are connected by a bath with a claw-foot tub. A washer and dryer are also up here behind closet doors.
Some extras, like plantation shutters and antique and handmade light fixtures, are in keeping with the character of the house, while a whole-house water purification system is an update for contemporary needs. Two heat pumps have also been installed.


The detached garage, accessed from Church Street, could be converted into a carriage house-- the owner has an architect's plans for the conversion that will convey and might be useful for a buyer seeking some rental income.


Beyond the obvious beauty and character of the house, the price does reflect updates and the owner's personal investment. Finding an older house in turn-key condition is a boon, though, and character is hard to price.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Hong Kong worried about real estate bubble




Hong Kong's government is "very concerned" about the risk of an asset bubble developing although a bubble is not apparent yet, Financial Secretary John Tsang told legislators on Monday, referring to a surge in the city's property prices this year.

Residential property prices have jumped 30 per cent this year, and price gains for luxury property have topped 40 per cent, as the city has drawn massive capital inflows - amounting to a record $US73 billion between October last year and November 13 this year - with foreign investors attracted by its low interest rates. Wealthy mainland Chinese have also been snapping up luxury Hong Kong apartments.

Tsang said the financial system was sound and the city could cope with capital inflows and outflows but echoed chief executive Donald Tsang and central bank chief Norman Chan, who have also warned recently about the risk of an asset bubble developing.

"We are very concerned about the risk of an asset bubble," Mr Tsang said. "The risk is there but it is not very apparent."


The Hong Kong Monetary Authority recently reduced the mortgage limit for luxury property to 60 per cent from 70 per cent to try and cool the market, and mortgage demand has eased from a few months ago.


A government economist told legislators that speculation in the property market was not too heated and demand mainly user-oriented, with 90 per cent of transactions for mass-market property. Housing affordability meanwhile was above a 20-year average.


Mr Tsang said the government would monitor the situation but did not comment on the possibility of further measures to reduce the risk of an asset bubble.



Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Intuit to sell real estate software business




Software maker Intuit Inc. said Tuesday that it will sell Intuit Real Estate Solutions to private equity firm Vista Equity Partners for $128 million in cash.


Intuit Real Estate Solutions, which used to be known as Management Reports Inc., offers software and services to real estate management and investment companies.

The business is based in Highland Hills, Ohio and has 340 employees.

The deal is expected to close by the end of January, and Intuit said the sale will boost its earnings by 10 to 12 cents a share.

The company said it still expects its revenue to grow 4 percent to 8 percent in 2010, even excluding Intuit Real Estate Solutions revenue.

The business contributed $74 million to Intuit's overall fiscal 2009 revenue and was expected to contribute $80 million in fiscal 2010. Intuit reported total revenues in fiscal 2009 of $3.18 billion.

Intuit shares fell 3 cents in after-hours trading, after finishing regular trading up 24 cents at $29.45.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

160% Increase in California Real Estate Foreclosures




According to an article in CNN, foreclosures are spiking everywhere. Nationally they are up 53% over last year but for us in California, the article states that there was a 160% increase in July 2006 vs. July 2005.


Can this be an indicator of a famous "bubble" or just a hiccup?


Remember, the NAR's July Existing Home Sales Report had this to say about the West...


Existing-home sales in the West dropped 6.4 percent to an annual pace of 1.32 million in July, and were 18.0 percent lower than a year earlier. The median price in the West was $348,000, down 0.3 percent from July 2005.


Will the California real estate market weather the impending storm or will this be a repeat of 89-91?