Tuesday, August 28, 2012

How Investors Are Skewing Home Price Recovery

Home prices finally appear to be catching up with the increase in overall sales pace. That is usually the case, as prices lag sales on the way up and on the way down. 

The latest reading from S&P/Case-Shiller, which employs a three month running average, shows home prices in June posted positive annual growth rates nationally and for the top ten and top 20-city composites. (Read More: Home Prices Rose in All Major US Cities in June: Case-Shiller.)
“I think this is a very strong report,” said S&P’s David Blitzer in an interview on CNBC. “I think this is a clear sign we’ve turned around.”

The summer months are usually stronger for home prices historically, due to the mix of homes that are selling. Larger, more expensive homes sell in the spring and summer, so that families can move without disrupting school. Still, the gains are showing not just month-to-month, but year-over-year, so seasonality should not play too much of a role.

What is playing a strong role is a combination of investor activity in the market and supply, both of which have been falling. Listed inventory in July was down nearly 24 percent from a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors. Investor activity in the market fell to 21.9 percent of all transactions in July, according to a new survey by Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance. That’s down from 23.5 percent in June and a two-year peak of 25.3 percent in May. (Read More: As Housing Boom Recovers, Will Apartment Boom End?)

From the survey:
Real estate agents responding to the HousingPulse survey indicated that recent price increases caused the sharp reversal in investor interest. “Investors are dropping out due to the increase in prices,” reported an agent in California. “Prices are too high here for investors,” added an agent in Massachusetts.

Thomas Popik, research director for Campbell Surveys, claims the drop in investor share is not just due to a rise in overall home sales and fewer distressed sales.  

“Overall homebuyer demand and home price appreciation is being driven by historically low interest rates,” Popik said. “But savvy investors are the canaries in the coal mine—they are warning that if rates rise, the high proportion of distressed properties could once again push home prices down.”
Foreclosures have been falling steadily, with 58,000 completed in July, down from 69,000 in July of 2011, according to CoreLogic. (Read More: Cautious Moves on Foreclosures Haunting Obama.)

"Completed foreclosures were down again in July, this time by 16 percent versus a year ago, as servicers increasingly rely on alternatives to the foreclosure process, such as short sales and modifications," said Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic.

Given the unprecedented nature of the recent housing crash, there is not a lot of historical perspective to help us gauge if this is in fact a real recovery in home prices or a temporary bump due to a slowdown in distressed supply and a pull-back by investors. Seasonal factors will likely come into play in the fall, tempering home price gains. (Read More: Cities With the Most Affordable Homes.)

There is still too much noise in the numbers, however, to draw any firm conclusions yet. Nearly 12 percent of all homeowners with a mortgage are either delinquent in their payments or already in the foreclosure process, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.  

Banks are still sitting on thousands of already-foreclosed properties, while the government looks to unload even more foreclosures through bulk deals. Record-low mortgage rates are beginning to rise again, and new rules governing the mortgage market that could further affect those rates are in the works. Too much noise.

—By CNBC's Diana Olick

Monday, August 27, 2012

Are investors taking over your neighborhood?

They’ve got the cash and the manpower working in their favor. They’re buying up parts of your neighborhood in hopes of turning quick profits, and in their own words, moving a once-stagnant market forward. For first-time homebuyers, they’re seen as potential hurdles.

The presence of real estate investors in San Diego County has mushroomed. A total of 1,030 properties were sold in June to absentee buyers, mainly investors and buyers of second homes, DataQuick numbers show. That’s the highest level of absentee-buyer activity since 1,089 in June 2005 — when countywide home prices neared a dizzying peak of $517,500 and amateurs placed risky bets in the real estate game. Their share now of the total housing market in the county has skyrocketed, too. Absentee sales made up 30 percent of all homes sold in February, a peak, and has been in the 28 percent region ever since.

An absentee buyer is someone who indicates at the time of sale that their property tax bill be sent to a different address, based on DataQuick’s definition.

Real estate investor Curtis Gabhart, at right, inspects ceiling work on this house he bought on Seaview Avenue in Del Mar that he is remodeling and is trying to to sell for a profit. At left is construction worker Gary Madruga.
So are we back in 2005, a time of fast-and-loose borrowing and rocket-fast price appreciation? Not at all. In today’s market, mortgage underwriting remains tight and prices are steadily climbing. Also, investors now are savvier, eyeing smaller profits and have found strength in numbers. Instead of going at it alone and buying one-offs, they’re working with others and rehabbing several properties at a time.
“Unlike the dumb money of the 2003-2005 period, I would characterize the buyers of 2008-2012 as pretty sophisticated, often with full-time acquisition staff and more likely to do a lot more research before buying,” said Norm Miller, real estate professor at University of San Diego.

Another major difference in the current market is inventory levels. Right now, fewer than 6,000 homes are listed for sale in San Diego County, 55 percent lower than what was available about two years ago, the latest numbers from the San Diego Association of Realtors show.
Fewer homes on the market means more competition for anyone who wants to buy, from the investor looking for his next project to a couple looking for a starter home. It also means higher chances of multiple bids, sometimes upbids, which can dash first-timer hopes of buying in the under-$300,000 pricing area.
“There’s almost no inventory,” said Stan Gendlin, acquisitions manager with CT Homes, a local real home-flipping company. “Investors are looking for anything they can get. Everyone is bidding each other up.”

What kinds of tactics are investors adopting?

Curtis Gabhart has been a full-time real estate investor for 12 years. Like many in his field, he goes where there are opportunities.
Before the real estate bust, Gabhart’s focus was apartment buildings. Post-bust, it’s been single-family homes.
Problem is, he and others like him have already gobbled up most of the under-$300,000 inventory, which also is popular among first-time homebuyers. Homes in that price range have been popular since they cost less to acquire, and if they require little work, could yield higher, faster profits.
So what are investors doing instead? Moving up in price. In Gabhart’s case, he’s shifted to the million-dollar market, where there’s less competition. This is considered rare among flippers.
Gabhart and his company so far have bought, flipped and sold a 5,700-square-foot home in Poway they picked up for $1,150,000 and sold for $1,415,000 within roughly 90 days, which includes renovation and time on market.
The process worked so well that they’re in the midst of another luxury flip. This time, crews are gutting and redoing a 1960s-era home in Del Mar that was bought for $1,250,000. The envisioned selling price is low- to mid-$2 million.
“We’re not necessarily looking for just high-end, but (instead) if we have the capacity to close the deal,” Gabhart said.
What Gabhart means is price isn’t the only important factor in an investment. It also must make sense logistics- and time-wise. There also must be a market for the product.
Roger Faulkner with his partners at RBD Ventures, another local home-flipping company, also have begun shifting from the entry market to the $500,000-$600,000 range, considered the middle of the move-up market.
“Last year, it was about the first-timer,” Faulkner said. “Now, we’re moving to midlevel buyers ... They’re a lot of the same people. They’re military families with teens, young professionals at Qualcomm.”
Move-up activity in San Diego County has been evident this year, DataQuick numbers show.
When comparing June 2011 to June 2012, sales of homes between $300,000 to $800,000 rose nearly 11 percent.

What does this absentee activity mean for market?

Investors have left heavy imprints on local communities since the start of the recession.
In the first half of the year alone, they’ve infiltrated the first-time homebuyer markets of areas like College, northeast Carlsbad and Golden Hill. In those areas, more than 50 percent of sales priced below $300,000 were by absentee buyers.
The heavy investor presence has posed challenges for first-time homebuyers, they say. Investors still have a stronghold on the dwindling sub-$300,000 market, which is the typical pricing for first-timers.
Ben Barrios and his wife house hunted in the $300,000-$400,000 range for a total of 10 months before finding a place in Lemon Grove they’ll soon close on.
Their competition: real estate investors. In that area, absentee buyers snatched up 32 percent of properties in the under-$300,000 range from January to June.
“My Realtor said (there were) about 13-16 offers on this house,” said Barrios, who increased his bid by $25,000 to increase the chances of being accepted. It worked.
“You gotta have a lot of patience and need to be willing to walk away from things” when they don’t work out, he said. “If you didn’t get it, then there’s a better house out there.”
Alternatively, today’s intense competition could bode well for home sellers.
“For sellers, every property is vetting multiple offers, usually above asking price,” said Gendlin, of CT Homes. “They don’t negotiate with you because there’s no inventory ... they’re being aggressive with offers.”
A challenge that remains for potential sellers is loss of wealth. U.S. homeowners lost $7 trillion of home equity between 2005 and 2007 and some are waiting for that value to return.
Ultimately, what does recent absentee activity mean for the local market?
Miller, the USD real estate professor, believes the effect is positive.
“Anything that can take property off the market is a good thing,” he said. “The worst thing is (to have) abandoned properties … It’s important that someone turns them around.”


Friday, August 24, 2012

California home prices near 4-year high

August 20th, 2012, 1:00 am ·

posted by

California home sale prices came close to a 4-year high in July, with the pace of sales year-over-year growing for the fourth month in a row, the California Association of Realtors says.
“It’s hard to generalize the state of California’s housing market because the markets are so diverse and are performing so differently,” LeFrancis Arnold, the association’s president, said.
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“REO-dominated areas (of homes seized by banks) such as those in the Inland Empire and Central Valley are experiencing sales constraints due to an extreme shortage of available homes,” he said. “On the other hand, a robust economy in the San Francisco Bay area and a relatively larger inventory at higher price levels is helping to fuel sales and prices.”
The July median price was the highest since August 2008, when it was at $352,730. July also marked the 5th straight month that the state’s median home price saw both month-over-month and year-over-year gains.
The report says:
  • The median price of an existing single-family home (or price at the midpoint of all sales) was $333,860 last month, up 4.2% from $320,540 in June and nearly 13% from the state’s July 2011 median of $296,160 . During the housing crash, the state’s median price got as low as $245,230.
  • July sales rose  to an annualized pace of  529,230 homes – that is,  homes that would sell if transactions were to occur for a year at July’s sales pace. That’s an increase of 15.3 percent over the pace in July 2011 – 459,140 homes.
  • California’s housing inventory was pretty much flat in July, with the index of existing, single-family homes at 3.4 months compared to 3.5 months in June. However, July’s inventory was down from a revised 5.6-month supply in July 2011. The index indicates the number of months needed to sell the supply of homes on the market at the current sales rate.  A seven-month “inventory” of homes for sale is considered normal.
In Orange County, prices slipped slightly, while sales had a dramatic increase. The association reported:
  • The median house price was $551,160   in July, barely down from $551,510 the year before and down about 3% from June. The low since the housing crash was $442,170 in January 2009, CAR spokesperson Lotus Lou said in an interview.
  • House sales in O.C. were up 32.1% from year-ago levels.
  • The county’s “inventory” of homes for sale was at a 4-month supply, down a bit from 4.2 months in June and plunging from 7.5 months in July 2011.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Pending home sales in California decline

By Alejandro Lazo

Contracts signed for previously owned California homes took a dip in June, indicating that the decline in foreclosures is slowing the Golden State sales recovery.

The California Assn. of Realtors said Tuesday that its index for pending homes fell 3.8% from the prior month. The index posted a 4.7% increase from the same month a year prior.

Contracts are an early indicator of where sales are headed. Sales often close six to eight weeks after contracts are signed so a decline in June could mean weakness when July and August sales statistics are reported.

In a healing market, sales should be accelerating as buyers gain confidence that their investments won’t be worth less in the future than what they pay today.

But as The Times previously reported, a lack of inventory has become a critical dynamic of the market. And perhaps more important than the sales statistics released Tuesday are the figures from the association showing a decline in the number of foreclosed homes selling.

Bank-owned homes helped fuel the sales market earlier this year as big and small investors stormed into California’s market.

Last month, foreclosed homes made up just 20.2% of all pending sales last month, a decline of 22.6% from May and 29.2% in June 2011. There were similar declines for foreclosures in closed sales, as The Times reported last week.

The California Assn. of Realtors blamed the drop in pending sales in part on the slowing economy. But as Times staff writer Ricardo Lopez reported last week, California’s economy appears to be accelerating. Nevertheless, fears of a sluggish economy and tight credit also probably play some role in the summer sales slowdown.

Friday, August 10, 2012

CAR sees state housing market improving, housing prices at 2010 high

LOS ANGELES -

California's housing market exhibited signs of continuing improvement in June, with home sales showing solid gains and home prices reaching their highest level since August 2010, the California Association of Realtors reported today.

"Although home sales throughout the state continued to improve compared with a year earlier, we did see a modest dip compared with May," said CAR President LeFrancis Arnold.

"Potential home buyers are frustrated by limited number of homes on the market for sale
and growing discouraged by signs that the economy is slowing. Closed escrow sales of existing single-family detached homes in California annualized rate of 518,460 in June, according to Los Angeles-based CAR declined 8.6 percent from May's revised 567,330 to a seasonally adjusted June sales rose 8.5 percent from June 2011's revised 478,040 pace.

The statewide sales figure, which is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales, represents what would be the total number of homes sold during 2012 if sales maintained the June pace throughout the year.

Home prices also continued to improve, with the median home price -- $320,540 in June for an existing single-family detached home in California -- posting month-over-month and year-over-year gains for the fourth straight month, according to a CAR statement.

June's price rose 1.3 percent from a revised $316,410 in May and 8.1 percent from a revised $296,41 recorded in June 2011, CAR reported. The June 2012 figure was 30.7 percent higher than the cyclical bottom of $245,230 reached in February 2009. The median price posted above the $300,000 level in June for the third straight month The median price posted above the $300,000 level in June for the third straight month after remaining below that mark for 15 months, according to CAR.