by admin on March 13, 2009
An estimated 29,458 new and resale houses and condos were sold in California last month. That was down 22.1 percent from 37,836 in December and up 53.9 percent from 19,145 in January 2008. Sales have increased on a year-over-year basis for the last seven months. California sales for the month of January have varied from last year’s low of 19,145 to a high of 47,138 in 2004, while the average is 30,837. MDA DataQuick’s statistics go back to 1988.
The median price paid for a home last month was $224,000, down 10 percent from $249,000 for the month before, and down 41.5 percent from $383,000 in January a year ago. Around half the drop in median is due to price depreciation, the other half due to shifts in the types of homes selling, and how those homes are financed. Last month’s median was the lowest since it was $220,000 in May 2001.
Of the existing homes sold last month, 60.4 percent had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months. A year ago it was 29.6 percent.
The typical mortgage payment that home buyers committed themselves to paying last month was $969. That was down from $1,110 in December, and down from $1,790 in January last year. Adjusted for inflation, mortgage payments are 54.5 percent below the spring 1989 peak of the prior real estate cycle. They are 62.0 percent below the current cycle’s peak in June 2006.
San Diego-based MDA DataQuick is a division of MDA Lending Solutions, a subsidiary of Vancouver-based MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates. MDA DataQuick monitors real estate activity nationwide and provides information to consumers, educational institutions, public agencies, lending institutions, title companies and industry analysts.
Indicators of market distress continue to move in different directions. Foreclosure activity waned in the fall but edged higher in December and remains near record levels, while financing with adjustable-rate mortgages is at an all-time low, as is financing with multiple mortgages. Down payment sizes and flipping rates are stable, non-owner occupied buying activity has edged a bit higher, MDA DataQuick reported.
by admin on March 1, 2009
While I can’t guarantee the quality of the food or even if these restaurants are still in business, but if you are looking for a phone number or address this list should help:
17th Street Cafe
1610 Montana Avenue
310-453-2771
www.17thstcafe.com
Acadie Hand Crafted French Crepes
213 Arizona Avenue
310-395-1120
www.crepescompany.com
Akwa Restaurant
1413 5th St
310-656-9688
www.akwarestaurant.com
Baja Fresh
720 Wilshire Boulevard
310-393-9313
[click to continue…]
by admin on February 10, 2009
Community elements essential to supporting favorable home prices over the long haul.
With lower home prices and attractive mortgage rates, 2009 will present plenty of bargains for real estate shoppers. But as the historic bust continues, Americans everywhere are learning a painful lesson about home buying: property values don’t always increase. As such, anyone looking to purchase a home this year should make sure they’re buying into a community that can support long-term value. With the help of housing experts, U.S. News compiled a list of the top 6 ingredients of strong housing markets:
Please note that although the following factors will help support a home’s value over the long term, they can’t prevent short-term declines in a given market—especially in light of the ongoing real estate crash. “These would be forces that are going to impact [your home] over the next five to ten years, as opposed to next year,” says Mike Larson of Weiss Research.
1. A well-groomed neighborhood: Well-maintained homes and landscaping have a positive effect on property values in that community, says Joshua Dorkin, founder and CEO of BiggerPockets.com, a real estate networking and information site. By caring for the appearance of their homes, residents help to create a more aesthetically-pleasing environment that future real-estate hunters will want to buy into. So when you’re eyeing a home, make sure to take a drive through the entire neighborhood. Take note of how the neighbors care for their homes, lawns and gardens. “Run-down houses and abandoned cars are big red flags,” Dorkin says.
2. Good schools: Given the importance of education, communities located within strong school districts tend to support higher home prices. Parents, after all, will want to move into the communities with the best educational opportunities. “The school district is important in terms of increasing demand for that particular area,” says Richard Moody, chief economist at Mission Residential. Would-be home buyers can determine the strength of a local school system by accessing online information from local governments or community websites, Moody says.
3. Low Crime: Low crime rates also support strong home values. Since nobody wants to live in a neighborhood where they feel unsafe, crime limits housing demand in a given community. As a result, it’s important to obtain crime statistics for the neighborhood you’re considering moving into. The best way to do that, says Steve Dexter, a foreclosure expert and author of the book Beat the Banks, is to contact the local police department. “The police department is a public utility,” Dexter says. “Most medium- to large-sized [communities] have a public information [officer] that is dedicated to interacting with the public.” By contacting this office, home shoppers can get their hands on all the information they’ll need to determine a community’s level of safety.
4. Close to public transportation: Proximity to public transportation or commuter rails can also help boost home values, says Ron Phipps, a broker with Phipps Realty in Warwick, R.I. He argues that Americans are increasingly willing to pay a premium for properties that allow them to be less dependent on cars. “Access to bus lines and commuter rail lines is of huge value,” Phipps says. “The price of fuel is going to go up again and a lot of my clients are saying, ‘O.K., how do we position ourselves to minimize that impact?’” Phipps says.
5. Favorable population trends: It’s also important to look at the population trends in the city you’re considering moving to, Moody says. “You want to see a track record of steady population growth, which supports growing demand for housing, which will in turn support rising home values,” Moody says. Such data can be found online at the U.S. Census Bureau, or though local county or township web sites, he says.
6. Healthy employment landscape: Employment plays a key role in population trends, as workers migrate to locations where they can find jobs. Thus, a healthy employment outlook is a key component of a strong housing market. “If you are in one of these upper Midwest cities and you’ve got layoffs, especially in a sector like automotives where the jobs are disappearing and they are not coming back, that is a huge problem,” Larson says. Home shoppers can obtain economic data from the local government or chamber of commerce, Larson says. Pay special attention to the unemployment trends and find out if any new companies are slated to move into—or out of—the area. “A lot of communities have been trying to attract the sort of economically insensitive industries like biotech and [pharmaceutical companies],” Larson says. “If you’ve got an area where that kind of business is being brought in—through tax incentives or other efforts—that would be a positive for your local area.”
by admin on January 5, 2009
Here are the five best reasons to be hopeful about housing in 2009:
1. Cheap mortgage rates: With inflationary pressures easing and economic concerns mounting, shell-shocked investors are seeking the protection of government securities, such as 10-year treasury notes, driving down yields. The lower yields, coupled with the Fed’s recently announced plans to buy up debt and mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have dragged mortgage rates to multi-year lows. Thirty-year, fixed mortgage rates hit an average of 5.47 percent last week, the lowest they’ve been since 2004, according to Freddie Mac.
To be sure, not everyone will be able to take advantage of these attractive rates: Tougher lending standards will prevent many would-be buyers from getting into the market, while homeowners whose houses are now worth less than what they owe on their mortgage won’t be able to refinance. Still, the rates present a welcome incentive for qualified borrowers to step up to the plate. “Lower mortgage rates mean more people with those credentials will be able to qualify,” says Patrick Newport, a U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight. While that might not make a dramatic impact on the market, it could be enough to keep home sales from declining as much as they otherwise would, Newport says.
2. Lower prices: Home prices at the national level have already fallen 21 percent from their 2006 peaks. And in certain bubble markets, the crash has been even steeper-prices have fallen more than 30 percent in Phoenix and Las Vegas over the past year alone. Although that’s a big blow to homeowners-the housing bust is expected to wipe out more than $2 trillion in home values in 2008-lower prices do help stimulate buyer demand, which is badly needed to mop up the excess housing inventory. And while home prices are expected to drop further in 2009, values in certain markets are already at levels low enough to tempt bargain hunters. “Falling home prices aren’t part of the problem, they are part of the solution,” says Mike Larson, a real estate analyst at Weiss Research.
3. Fewer housing starts: In the face of dwindling demand, home builders have been forced to sharply pull back on new construction. The government reported Tuesday that November housing starts dropped to their lowest level since 1959, when officials started keeping the statistics. While that’s bad news for the economy-because it means fewer jobs for builders and others-it’s an important step in bringing housing supply back in line with demand. The cutback will limit the supply of new homes coming into the market, which helps to reduce the glut of unsold homes that is putting such downward pressure on housing prices. “In order to get rid of the inventory, builders have to cut back even further and prices have to drop,” Newport says. “It’s very painful, but there is no way to get around the fact that that’s what you need to do to equilibrate the market.”
4. Obama stimulus: In an attempt to hoist the economy out of its rut, President-elect Barack Obama has announced plans for a massive federal spending program. The initiative is expected to put between $500 billion and $1 trillion into infrastructure repair and other projects in an effort to keep Americans working. Should this program succeed in preventing unemployment from skyrocketing and keeping the economic contraction from hitting the dourest projections, certain housing markets may firm up quicker than expected, says Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business. In the best-case scenario, “the housing market declines become contained to those markets where house price declines are significant,” Wachter says.
5. Credit programs: It will be tough for the housing market to come back to life until the credit markets-which have been log-jammed by fear for more than a year-begin to unlock. Like the fight to limit unemployment, reviving the credit markets is a daunting challenge. But remember, the federal government has already taken a number of steps designed to do just that. The Federal Reserve has slashed its benchmark interest rate to between 0 and 0.25 percent and committed nearly $2 trillion to new lending programs, bailouts, and additional measures designed to bolster the financial markets. Meanwhile, Congress passed a $700 billion bailout and the Treasury has already injected a chunk of that money into banks of all sorts. While these efforts haven’t been enough to restore the credit markets to health, they have produced results. Interbank lending, for example, has eased. And should this modest victory lead to a broader recovery in the credit markets, the economy-and the housing demand that comes with growth-could turn around quicker than expected. “Right now, panic is driving the credit markets,” says Moody of Mission Residential. “If, for whatever reason, confidence were to resume and people’s appetite for risk was starting to increase, then you could start all of a sudden seeing credit flowing much more freely, which obviously supports spending in both business and households.”