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FHFA Announces New Fannie, Freddie Short Sale GuidelinesAugust 21, 2012
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced changes today that will align guidelines for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac short sales and allow lenders and servicers to quickly and more easily qualify borrowers for a short sale.
Over the course of the past year and a half, C.A.R. has been working vigorously to address your concerns related to short sale transactions. As a direct result of our efforts, we have made significant improvements through discussions with legislators, housing regulators, and lenders.
Here are some specific changes that are effective Nov. 1, 2012:
• Eliminates current Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac short sale programs and creates a single standard short sale process for both entities (Fannie and Freddie HAFA programs will expire at the end of the year). • Enables servicers to quickly and easily qualify certain borrowers who are current on their mortgages for short sales without waiting for an approval from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac • Offers special treatment for military personnel with Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders. • Standardizes and clarifies foreclosure suspensions on a property with an approved short sale. • May pay borrowers up to $3,000 in relocation assistance. • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will offer up to $6,000 to subordinate lien holders to expedite a short sale.
Additionally, FHFA clarified that a borrower experiencing a hardship must wait at least two years before becoming eligible for a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac loan.
These changes follow FHFA’s announcement in June that established strict timelines for servicers to respond to short sales within 30 days of receipt of a short sale offer, provide weekly status updates to the borrower, and communicate a final decision to the borrower within 60 days of receipt of the offer.
California Association of Realtors, http://www.car.org/newsstand/news/fhfaguidelines
Rent vs. Buy: What the Standard Indices Aren’t Telling You Stan Humphries August 1st, 2012
Rent or buy? It’s a popular topic, and plenty of experts are quick to trot out a simple rent vs. buy index and tell you that if you live in, say, San Francisco, you should be renting, while if you live in Detroit, buying makes more sense.
But is it that easy? Do these simple indices capture everything potential buyers and renters should consider?
From our perspective, the answer is a resounding no. Indices that look only at monthly rents and compare them to mortgage payments for similar units or homes are only looking at a tiny part of the overall picture. So what aren’t these widely-used indices telling you?
The conventional price-rent ratio doesn’t consider any of these pieces of information. Moreover, most analysts compute the simple price-rent ratio by comparing the prices of current for-sale listings or recent sales to the prices of current rental listings. This approach usually leads to comparing very different sets of homes, because homes for sale can differ quite a bit from homes for rent (rental homes are typically of lower quality). As a result, this leaves you really comparing apples and oranges.
What’s a better way to think about the buy vs. rent decision? Zillow has just introduced the “breakeven horizon” which is how many years of homeownership it would take before owning a home becomes more financially advantageous than renting the same home. Zillow’s breakeven horizon is computed at the home level and incorporates all possible costs and benefits associated with buying and owning a home, such as the down payment, purchase costs, mortgage payments, property taxes, utilities, maintenance costs, tax benefits etc., as well as all the costs associated with renting the same home. It also includes expected home value and rental price appreciation.
We compute this on city and metro levels (see interactive data below). It is a much more useful metric for several reasons. First, it’s much more comprehensive since it includes all relevant information. Second, it has a much more intuitive interpretation than the abstract price-rent ratio. Third, if a consumer knows that they want to buy, it allows them to target cities and metros that are appropriate given the length of time that they intend to live in the home. Alternatively, if they are unsure whether they want to buy or rent but they do know where they would like to live and how long they intend to live in their next home, the breakeven horizon offers them guidance on whether to buy or rent.
How much difference can it make looking at a simple versus comprehensive measure? Consider that Concord, NH and Saint Marys, GA have very similar simple price-rent ratios (both 15.3) yet the breakeven horizon for Saint Marys is 2 years versus 6 years for Concord. Two big factors behind these differences are the dissimilarity of the rental and for-sale inventory being used to compute the simple price-rent ratio and the big differences in property taxes between these two cities.
With all of that said, “rent or buy?” may be a simple question, but it doesn’t have a simple answer. A wide range of factors have to be considered before making a decision between the two. Why use a metric that only incorporates a few of these factors?
http://www.zillow.com/blog/research/2012/08/01/rent-vs-buy-what-the-standard-indices-arent-telling-you/
How to Get Your Asking Price as the Housing Market ImprovesMary H.J. Ferrell
Posting the first annual increase in five years, home values rose slightly over this time last year, reports Zillow, the online real estate site. In fact, nearly one-third of the 157 metropolitan areas tracked by Zillow showed annual price increases. This is good news for homeowners who have been waiting to put their houses on the market. Before you do, a few simple spruce-ups can help get your asking price.
"The housing market's recovery continues to show tremendous variation market by market. Sixty-nine of the 157 markets covered by the Zillow Home Value Forecast are expected to see increases in home values over the next year, with the largest increases expected in the Phoenix metro (9.9 percent) and the Miami metro (6.1 percent)," said Zillow on its website. "We believe that 96 out of the 157 markets have already hit a bottom in home values, including Boston, Miami and Phoenix."
Improve the view. No matter where you live, it pays to keep your home well-maintained. Curb appeal is the first thing to consider. As the saying goes, you don't get a second chance to make a first impression. Look at your entryway. Is the paint peeling or faded? Are your shrubberies overtaking the sidewalk? Take the time to scrape away any old paint and apply a new coat. Sherwin-Williams Duration Gloss, our top-rated semi-gloss is the only one in our exterior paint tests that has a primer built-in. After the equivalent of nine years' worth of exposure, the Sherwin-Williams was still looking very good and would be a good choice for painting a front door.
Whack the weeds. As for that overgrown walkway, a capable string trimmer can help you vanquish the vines and weeds in no time. In Consumer Reports' string trimmer tests, the top-rated gas models were best at slicing through tall grass and weeds. But if you don't like the hassle of a gas-powered unit, several light duty electric models, including the Homelite UT41110, at $30 a CR Best Buy, were very good or better at this job.
Neutralize garish rooms. Sprucing up the paint inside the house also makes your home more attractive, especially if you've painted some rooms bright colors that might not appeal to the average buyer. The best course of action is to choose white, off-white or another neutral color. "Safe colors like this will appeal to most people, increasing the odds that your home will sell," advises the Paint Quality Institute. And it'll cost you well under $100. Check our top-rated interior paints for the best choices.
Brighten the bathroom. Outdated kitchens and bathrooms are typically the chief complaint of prospective home buyers. But you don't have to invest in an entire remodel to improve their appearance. Here again paint can do wonders but so can replacing the countertops, sink or floor. Bathrooms have replaced kitchens as the most remodeled room in the home because they tend to be smaller and you don't have to buy all those appliances. As we reported in our Bathroom remodeling guide, small details can make a big difference. Stain-resistant grout, framed mirrors and a heated towel bar are just some ideas.
Kick the kitchen up a notch. For the kitchen, you don't need a bottomless budget to get a top-notch kitchen. In the Luxury look for less, we suggest top-rated affordable alternatives to priceyappliances, countertops, flooring and more. But be forewarned, poor planning and shoddy workmanship are two of the costliest mistakes homeowners make when undertaking a remodeling project. If you're about to embark on one, best to invest a few months going to showrooms and talking to professionals.
Copyright © 2006-2012 Consumers Union of U.S., Inc. http://homes.yahoo.com/news/how-to-get-your-asking-price-as-the-housing-market-improves.html
Shadow Inventory: It's Not as Scary as It LooksBy Nick Timiraos
The housing market is improving because there are more buyers chasing fewer homes. Skeptics of a housing bottom, however, often point to a scary set of numbers: the “shadow inventory” of potential foreclosures—the millions of mortgages that are either in foreclosure or in default.
It’s true that home prices are unlikely to see brisk gains once they do hit bottom because it will take years to absorb this glut. But will this phantom inventory derail the incipient housing bottom? Maybe not, say a number of housing analysts.
There are several reasons why the shadow inventory isn’t as scary as it sounds: It’s concentrated in a handful of markets—it isn’t inherently a national phenomenon. It is being offset by improved demand, particularly from investors. And the housing vacancy rate is low, a product of very little new home construction over the past few years that could counterbalance continued high inventories of foreclosed homes.
We’ll address each of those in subsequent posts. But first, let’s examine the actual size of the shadow inventory. While the shadow is very large, one often-overlooked fact is that the shadow isn’t nearly as large as it was two years ago.
There are a wide range of estimates of shadow inventory. A common measure are loans that are either in the foreclosure process or that are three months or more delinquent. These are mortgages that are among the most likely to ultimately become bank-owned properties.
Barclays Capital estimates that at the end of May there were around 1.8 million mortgages in the foreclosure process and another 1.45 million where borrowers have missed at least three payments. That puts the total number of properties that could be repossessed and resold by banks at around 3.25 million mortgages.
If those homes hit the market all at once, housing would be in deep trouble. Last year, for example, there were 4.4 million sales of previously owned homes. The figure is still higher than any time before June 2009.
But it is down from a peak of 4.25 million in February 2010. And unless mortgage delinquencies begin to accelerate sharply, the shadow inventory won’t be growing. Barclays estimates that at the current rate, this figure could fall to around 2.4 million loans.
“The concept of a huge shadow inventory is preposterous,” says Christopher Thornberg, a housing economist with Beacon Economics in Los Angeles. “The number of mortgages in distress is way down from one year ago. It’s clear there are fewer distressed properties out there.”
Housing analyst Ivy Zelman has a slightly larger estimate of shadow inventory—around 6.3 million homes at the end of last year—that includes more newly delinquent mortgages and potential re-defaults. She says that in a normal market, there’s a comparable shadow inventory of 2.9 million homes. So the key figure—the excess level above the historical trend—is around 3.4 million homes.
Ms. Zelman published an in-depth research note earlier with the title: “Shining a bright light on the shadow: Why what’s lurking doesn’t concern us.” In it, she explains how it’s more important to focus on the pace at which foreclosures are being liquidated, and not the absolute number.
“Just like the Wizard of Oz, shadow inventory is not very intimidating once you pull back the curtain,” the report said. That isn’t to dismiss the magnitude of the problem and headwind it will continue to pose for any housing recovery, she wrote. “The bathtub is almost full, but the water has stopped rising, and we are most concerned with how fast it drains.”
Certainly, there are many other risks to housing. There are at least 11 million homeowners that are underwater, owing more than their homes are worth. There are even more than that who don’t have enough equity to make a 10% down payment on their next home, plus pay a real-estate broker’s sales commission, in order to trade up to a bigger home or downsize to a smaller one. And it’s still very difficult to get a mortgage.
But the shadow inventory is often the big trump card used to quiet any housing-happy talk. Tomorrow, we’ll offer a deeper look at how demand factors into this equation, and how the shadow is being disposed.
http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2012/08/14/shadow-inventory-its-not-as-scary-as-it-looks/
Santa Barbara Real Estate: Rebounding RivieraKen Harney
It’s probably no surprise that roller-coaster real estate markets like Phoenix and Miami are in roaring rebound mode this year, but Santa Barbara?
Who knew? Sometimes called the “American Riviera” for its red tile-roofed estates overlooking the Pacific, year-round great climate, active cultural life and its movie star residents, Santa Barbara took a significant though little publicized hit during the real estate bust, with median home list prices plunging from $1,667,500 in September 2007 to $649,000 this May.
But here’s the latest news: this May’s median list price in Santa Barbara – low as it may appear compared with the peak — was actually 30 percent higher than the same month last year, and nearly one-fifth higher than April of this year. Total home sales in May were double the year earlier. Pending contracts were up by nearly 80 percent.
Numbers like these rank Santa Barbara as the second hottest metropolitan real estate market in the U.S. after only Phoenix, according to a new survey by Realtor.com, based on data from hundreds of local Multiple Listing Services around the country. Local real estate brokers say the market is so fast-paced that virtually any realistically priced home that’s listed is being snapped up. New listings are selling 20 percent faster than they were a year ago.
So what’s going on in Santa Barbara? Probably several things simultaneously. For starters, there’s a severe scarcity of inventory. The number of homes listed and available for sale in May was down by 34 percent compared with the year earlier. Unlike 2005 and 2006, when sellers stood in line to list at seven figure asking prices, there aren’t so many houses for sale today in Santa Barbara.
Another factor: Although its median list price puts it behind only San Francisco ($699,000 median) among California’s largest luxury markets, there is a recognition that Santa Barbara is a very special place, and that underlying real estate values very likely will rise faster here in an improving economy than elsewhere. Not only is Santa Barbara special locationally and in cultural terms, it’s also special – at least for California – in terms of employment. Metropolitan Santa Barbara’s unemployment rate is nearly 3 percentage points lower than the California statewide rate (8.2 percent in May compared with 10.8 for California as a whole.) Consumers with good local jobs can afford the $649,000 current median asking price for homes, and they are signing contracts to buy a piece of this jewel by the sea.
Bottom line: Don’t be surprised if Santa Barbara prices keep moving up faster than most other markets. And if you’ve ever wanted to live there or purchase property, this could be one of your last shots in a long while to pick up real estate coming out of a deep cyclical low.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/realtorcom/2012/07/03/santa-barbara-real-estate-rebounding-riviera/
Southland Home Sales Up Again From 2011; Median Price Nears 4-Yr High
August 14, 2012
La Jolla, CA---Southern California home sales rose above the year-ago level for the seventh consecutive month in July despite continued declines in low-end distress sales. Increased activity in move-up and high-end submarkets also contributed to a significant rise in the region’s median sale price, which neared a four-year high, a real estate information service reported.
The median price paid for a home in the six-county Southland rose to $306,000 last month, up 2.0 percent from $300,000 in June and up 8.1 percent from $283,000 in July 2011, according to San Diego-based DataQuick.
July’s median was the highest since the median was $308,500 in September 2008. The median has risen month-to-month for six consecutive months and has increased year-over-year for the past four. July’s 8.1 percent annual gain was the highest for any month since July 2010, when the median rose 10.1 percent.
Greater demand, partially triggered by historically low mortgage rates, and a thinner inventory of homes for sale help explain recent gains in the median price. But the increases also stem from a sharp drop in foreclosure resales, which often sell at a steep discount and are concentrated in lower-cost areas, as well as a substantial increase in the portion of sales in mid- to high-end neighborhoods.
It appears that about half of the 8.1 percent year-over-year gain in July's median sale price can be attributed to the shift in market mix. In July, price levels for the lowest-cost third of Southern California's housing stock rose 4.9 percent year-over-year, while they rose 4.8 percent in the middle and dipped 0.8 percent in the top third.
“Even adjusting for changes in market mix, there’s growing evidence prices have crept up in areas where more demand has met a shrinking number of homes for sale. But we’re approaching the peak of the traditional spring-summer home-buying season. Whether these trends hold into the fall and winter isn’t clear. If they do, then logically the number of homes on the market would eventually rise to meet the demand. More owners will be interested in selling, knowing their homes are likely to fetch a higher price, and more people will shift from a negative to at least a slightly positive equity position, enabling them to sell. Home builders could rev up operations and lenders could push more distressed properties onto the market sooner. It would tame any price appreciation,” said John Walsh, DataQuick president.
In July, a total of 20,588 new and resale houses and condos sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties. That was down 6.7 percent from 22,075 in June, and up 13.8 percent from 18,090 in July 2011.
Last month’s sales were 19.4 percent lower than the average sales tally of 25,545 for all the months of July since 1988, when DataQuick’s statistics begin. The low for July sales was 16,255 in 1995, while the high was 38,996 in July 2003.
The number of Southern California homes sold in July for less than $200,000 fell 5.8 percent from a year earlier, while the number that sold for $200,000 to $400,000 rose 13.4 percent. Sales between $300,000 and $800,000 – a range that would include many move-up buyers – increased 22.0 percent year-over-year. Sales over $800,000 rose 7.2 percent from July 2011.
Last month 22.5 percent of all Southland sales were for $500,000 or more, down from 23.1 percent in June and up from 20.7 percent a year earlier.
Distressed property sales – the combination of foreclosure resales and short sales – made up 39.7 percent of last month’s resale market. That was the lowest level since the figure was 36.0 percent in January 2008.
Foreclosure resales – properties foreclosed on in the prior 12 months – accounted for 21.0 percent of the Southland resale market last month, down from a revised 24.4 percent the month before and 32.6 percent a year earlier. Last month’s figure was the lowest since foreclosure resales were 18.8 percent of the resale market in November 2007. In the current cycle, the figure hit a high of 56.7 percent in February 2009.
Short sales – transactions where the sale price fell short of what was owed on the property – made up an estimated 18.7 percent of Southland resales last month. That was up from an estimated 17.7 percent the month before and 17.4 percent a year earlier.
There were no signs of a major easing of credit conditions last month but the share of purchase loans in the “jumbo” category did inch up again, holding at its highest point since December 2007.
Jumbo loans, mortgages above the old conforming limit of $417,000, accounted for 20.2 percent of last month’s purchase lending, up from 20.0 percent the prior month and 17.8 percent a year ago. In the months leading up to the credit crisis that hit in August 2007, jumbos made up about 40 percent of the market.
The use of adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) slipped last month. ARMs made up 6.2 percent of home purchase loans in July, compared with 6.7 percent in June and 8.9 percent a year earlier. Since 2000, a monthly average of about 34 percent of Southland purchase loans were ARMs.
The most active lenders to Southland home buyers last month were Wells Fargo with 10.0 percent of the market, Bank of America with 2.9 percent and Prospect Mortgage with 2.7 percent. Combined market share for the top 10 lenders was 28.1 percent, down from 34.2 percent a year ago. Wells Fargo's share of the market a year ago was 11.0 percent, Bank of America's was 8.3 percent and Prospect Mortgage's market share was 3.0 percent.
Absentee buyers – mostly investors and some second-home purchasers – bought 27.1 percent of the Southland homes sold last month. That was down from 27.3 percent the prior month and up from 23.9 percent a year earlier. The record was 29.9 percent in February this year, while the monthly average since 2000 is 17.3 percent. Last month’s absentee buyers paid a median $230,000, up 7.0 percent from a year earlier.
Buyers paying with cash accounted for 31.0 percent of July home sales, down from 32.3 percent the month before and up from 28.7 percent a year earlier. Cash purchases peaked at 33.7 percent of all sales this February, and since 2000 the monthly average is 14.9 percent. Cash buyers paid a median $235,000 last month, up 9.3 percent from a year ago.
Government-insured FHA loans, a popular low-down-payment choice among first-time buyers, accounted for 27.2 percent of all purchase mortgages last month. July’s FHA level was down from 27.8 percent the month before and 31.4 percent a year earlier. July’s FHA share was the lowest since August 2008, when it was 26.8 percent.
DataQuick monitors real estate activity nationwide and provides information to consumers, educational institutions, public agencies, lending institutions, title companies and industry analysts.
The typical monthly mortgage payment Southland buyers committed themselves to paying last month was $1,106, compared with $1,102 the month before and $1,154 a year earlier. Adjusted for inflation, last month’s typical payment was 52.9 percent below the typical payment in the spring of 1989, the peak of the prior real estate cycle. It was 61.5 percent below the current cycle’s peak in July 2007.
Indicators of market distress continue to move in different directions. Foreclosure activity, while above long-term averages, has been trending downward this year and is far below peak levels. Financing with multiple mortgages is very low, and down payment sizes are stable, DataQuick reported.
Sales Volume | Median Price | |||||
All homes | Jul-11 | Jul-12 | %Chng | Jul-11 | Jul-12 | %Chng |
Los Angeles | 6,193 | 7,091 | 14.50% | $320,000 | $330,000 | 3.10% |
Orange | 2,455 | 3,087 | 25.70% | $437,500 | $450,000 | 2.90% |
Riverside | 3,288 | 3,546 | 7.80% | $190,000 | $210,500 | 10.80% |
San Bernardino | 2,378 | 2,434 | 2.40% | $151,000 | $165,000 | 9.30% |
San Diego | 3,041 | 3,565 | 17.20% | $325,000 | $342,000 | 5.20% |
Ventura | 735 | 865 | 17.70% | $360,000 | $361,250 | 0.30% |
SoCal | 18,090 | 20,588 | 13.80% | $283,000 | $306,000 | 8.10% |
Source: DQNews.com Media calls: Andrew LePage (916) 456-7157
Copyright 2012 DataQuick. All rights reserved.
I wanted to share this article from the LA Times with you because it accurately reflects our local market here along the Santa Barbara Coast. On a personal note: Just last week I was speaking with a client who asked me how the market here was doing. I responded by sharing that Santa Barbara hit bottom late last year; it's been doing quite well. Since this client lives in Florida, she thought I may have been indicating that the entire state was recovering. I was not. The truth is that as a whole, California and the rest of the nation still have a ways to go. But the Santa Barbara coast is a phenom in real estate terms.
Santa Barbara and its sister cities of Carpinteria, Summerland, Montecito, Hope Ranch and Goleta are where investors purchase nearly as much as those who reside full time. So what happens when there is effectively only enough inventory for one or the other? I have seen it play out over and over again during the last 7 months. Bobby home buyer has been waiting until the bottom of the market to purchase and has finally found the perfect home. But, he has to overbid because there are multiple offers and his loan contingency is less favorable than the other cash offers. So he asks me, "How can I pay too much for a house?! This is supposed to be a horrible market."
This was a horrible market, but signs of recovery have investors back to the closing table. The bottom of the market is slipping away with huge bursts of activity. So what's my advice for the next Bobby home buyer? Find an agent you feel you can trust. If it happens to be me, my biggest concern is that you are able to pull the trigger with confidence and then know your outs.
My crystal ball is foggy, but if you're in the market for a good deal you should cut yourself a piece of Santa Barbara paradise pie before the rest of the nation heats up.car loans for bad credit rating
Golden State on the Rise: Top 10 metros with rising median list pricesInman News Thursday, July 19, 2012
Three California metros -- Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, San Francisco and Oakland -- shot to the top five of metros with the largest year-over-year percentage median list price jump, according to Realtor.com data through June 2012. They also claim the highest list prices in the top 10 (outside of Washington, D.C.-Md.-Va.-W.Va.(D.C.)'s $425,000) with June 2012 median list prices of $699,000, $725,000 and $379,000, respectively.
Median list prices in the country are on the rise, too.
For the sixth month in a row, median list prices of for-sale U.S. homes -- at $195,000 as of June -- have increased from the previous month, according to Realtor.com's June 2012 real estate report. This trend, along with a 20 percent drawdown in inventory -- and close to 10 percent fewer days of for-sale homes on market -- from a year ago, indicate to some that U.S. housing is in the gentle stages of a recovery, on the upcurve of its long, low bottom.
Data Point | Percent Change, June 2011 to June 2012 | Value |
Median List Price | 2.68% | $195,000 |
Number of Listings | -19.35% | 1.89 million |
Median Age of Inventory | -9.67% | 84 |
Source: Realtor.com
The U.S.-wide median list price rose to $195,000 in June, 0.05 percent higher than May's median list price and 2.68 percent higher than last June's. Throughout the country, median list prices have held steady for roughly the last two years, after experiencing a precipitous slide from a high of $250,000 in 2007, when Realtor.com first started tracking them.
However, this six-month stretch of consecutive month-over-month median list price increase through June 2012 is the longest sustained stretch of growth this chart has seen.
Source: Realtor.com
Another indicator of a general housing recovery -- for-sale inventory is down 19.35 percent from June 2011 to 1.89 million homes. And it's fresher -- down 9.67 percent to a median 84 days on market from a 93-day mark a year ago.
Also, this month's data begins to solidify a geographical boom-to-bust-to-recovery trend: a hard-hit-area comeback. The inventory drop and simultaneous median list price jump that occurred in Florida during the last half of 2011 has shifted to California (and Seattle, Phoenix and Atlanta) in the first half of this year where seven of the top 10 metros for year-over-year (June 2011 to June 2012) inventory drop occurred.
Hard-hit Detroit is also slowly climbing the ranks; it now ranks No. 16 for median list price increase on a yearly basis and stands at No. 4 of the top metro median list price growth from May 2012 to June 2012. Still, it's the only one of the 146 metros tracked by Realtor.com with a sub-$100,000 median list price in June 2012 with $99,000.
Railroad tracks in Detroit image via Shutterstock
In another sign of the California-heavy nature of the current housing recovery, nearly half of the metros in the top 20 for month-over-month (May 2012 to June 2012) median list price increases, by percentage increase, are in California.
Top 10 metros, in order, for May 2012 to June 2012 median list price increases, by percentage of growth:
Source: Realtor.com
Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, Calif., and the San Francisco Bay Area metros of San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose -- all in the top 12 now for year-over-year median list price increase (by percentage increase) -- were not in the top 20 in January. In fact, no California cities cracked the top 20 for year-over-year median list price increases (by percentage growth) that month.
Santa Barbara now tops all 146 metros Realtor.com tracks for year-over-year percentage median list price increase, followed by Phoenix-Mesa, Ariz., at No. 2, and its NorCal big cousin, San Francisco, at No. 3.
See the rest of the top 10 here.
Montecito: $3,530,000 Hope Ranch: $1,980,000 SB East: $997,000 SB West: $785,000 Goleta: $774,000 Summerland/Carp: $1,490,000
The number of sales for June 2012 is rivaling 2002 and 2004 at 600 for the month. The Median Sale Price for the Jan-June 2012 timeframe ticked down a bit to $785,000 versus $840,000 for 2011 same time period. This is due to the short sales and Bank Owned properties pulling down that Median. We are working through those; in fact, the Notices of Default filed with Santa Barbara County AND the Trustee Sales is dramatically down month over month.
The Santa Barbara County numbers reflected here are inclusive of Santa Maria- a whole different animal with many more Short Sales on the horizon. I believe Santa Barbara proper has worked thru those and we are certainly rebounding nicely. We are experiencing multiple offers on many properties. Consumer confidence is the highest it has been in 5 years.fha loan application online
There were 37 new listings in June, 21 pending sales (went under contract) and 19 closed (sold) transactions. The upper end has definitely come alive in the first half of 2012. The highest priced new listing in June was 308 Ennisbrook Drive, listed at $12,500,000. The highest priced sale was 770 San Ysidro Lane which sold for $5,125,000. This gated 6,000 square foot estate consists of 5 bedrooms, 7 bathrooms, 2 pools and a guest cottage on 1.7 acres in Montecito's Golden Quadrangle.
For a .pdf list of June’s Sold Listings, click here: Montecito June Solds 2012. personal loans in canada
National Association of Realtors WASHINGTON (June 27, 2012) – Pending home sales bounced back in May, matching the highest level in the past two years, and are well above year-ago levels, according to the National Association of Realtors®. Both monthly and annual gains were seen in every region.
The Pending Home Sales Index,* a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, rose 5.9 percent to 101.1 in May from 95.5 in April and is 13.3 percent above May 2011 when it was 89.2. The data reflect contracts but not closings.
The index also reached 101.1 in March, which is the highest level since April 2010 when buyers were rushing to beat the deadline for the home buyer tax credit.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said longer term comparisons are more relevant. “The housing market is clearly superior this year compared with the past four years. The latest increase in home contract signings marks 13 consecutive months of year-over-year gains,” he said. “Actual closings for existing-home sales have been notably higher since the beginning of the year and we’re on track to see a 9 to 10 percent improvement in total sales for 2012.”
The national median existing-home price is expected to rise 3.0 percent this year and another 5.7 percent in 2013.
The PHSI in the Northeast increased 4.8 percent to 82.9 in May and is 19.8 percent above May 2011. In the Midwest the index rose 6.3 percent to 98.9 in May and is 22.1 percent higher than a year ago. Pending home sales in the South increased 1.1 percent to an index of 106.9 in May and are 11.9 percent above May 2011. In the West the index jumped 14.5 percent in May to 108.7 and is 4.8 percent stronger than a year ago.
Low inventory could hold back some contract activity. “If credit conditions returned to normal and if we had more inventory, especially in the lower price ranges, more people would become successful buyers. In an environment of historically favorable housing affordability conditions, it’s frustrating to see some consumers thwarted in the process,” Yun said.
Low inventory results partly from underwater homeowners who are unwilling to list their homes, which would require a lengthy short sale process, or additional cash to complete the transaction. NAR estimates 85 percent of homeowners have positive equity, with 15 percent in an underwater situation.
“Low inventory can be cured by increasing new home construction,” Yun said. He projects housing starts to rise by 26 percent this year and another 50 percent in 2013.
“If housing starts do not rise in a meaningful way over the next two years due to the difficulty in getting construction loans, and barring an unexpected shift in the economy, the steady shedding of inventory could lead to shortages where home prices could get bid up close to 10 percent in 2013,” Yun said.
The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.
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*The Pending Home Sales Index is a leading indicator for the housing sector, based on pending sales of existing homes. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing.
The index is based on a large national sample, typically representing about 20 percent of transactions for existing-home sales. In developing the model for the index, it was demonstrated that the level of monthly sales-contract activity parallels the level of closed existing-home sales in the following two months.
An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined as well as the first of five consecutive record years for existing-home sales; it coincides with a level that is historically healthy.
NOTE: Existing-home sales for June will be reported July 19 and the next Pending Home Sales Index will be on July 26; release times are 10:00 a.m. EDT.
Information about NAR is available at www.realtor.org. News releases are posted in the website’s “News and Commentary” tab. Statistical data in this release, as well as other tables and surveys, are posted in the “Research and Statistics” tab of www.realtor.org.