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Posts Tagged ‘homes for sale pleasanton ca’

Buyers abound!

Tuesday, April 16th, 2013

Loan Demand on the Rise

Daily Real Estate News | Wednesday, April 10, 2013 | link

Mortgage applications rose 5 percent last week as interest rates dropped to their lowest levels since January, the Mortgage Bankers Association reports in its weekly mortgage market survey. MBA’s index measures loan demand for refinancings and purchases.

Refinancings — which make up the biggest bulk of applications in the index — rose 6 percent last week. Meanwhile, applications for home purchases, viewed as a leading gauge for future home sales, dropped 1 percent last week compared to the prior week, MBA reported Wednesday.

“Although total purchase application volume fell last week, there was a significant divergence between the conventional and government markets,” says Mike Fratantoni, MBA’s vice president of research and economics.

Fratantoni said that following the Federal Housing Administration’s April 1 increase of mortgage insurance premiums, government purchase applications dropped by nearly 14 percent to the lowest point since February.

On the other hand, applications for conventional purchase loans increased by more than 5 percent, reaching their highest level since October 2009.

MBA reported the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage last week dropped to 3.68 percent from 3.76 percent.

Rethinking remodeling…

Saturday, April 13th, 2013

Home remodeling goes social as startup transforms industry

Pete Carey | Oakland Tribune | March 18, 2013 | link

Home remodeling, one of the biggest industries in the country and one of particular interest to the Bay Area,
is being transformed by the Internet with a push from a fast-growing startup in Silicon Valley.
Until recently, a homeowner thinking about remodeling would have checked out books from the library, read
some design magazines, asked friends for advice and tried to find help on the Web.
But in January, 14 million people turned instead to Houzz, a small Palo Alto company that has grabbed the
$300 billion remodeling industry by the tail and is changing the way homeowners connect with design
professionals and figure out how they want to improve their homes. And it’s taking off just as the housing
market is rebounding and giving homeowners more equity to play with.
It’s the latest example of the way the Internet has disrupted an entire industry, having already transformed
everything from publishing to entertainment. But this is with a twist: Rather than hurting established players
in the remodeling business, sites like Houzz are likely to benefit them by bringing them more business more
efficiently.
“Houzz has had a huge impact in the residential design community,” said Mark Demerly, an Indianapolis
architect and recently chairman of the American Institute of Architects’ custom residential network. “We ask
our clients to seek out things on it they like and that inspire them.”
The Bay Area, with its booming economy, startup culture and older housing stock, is a logical birthplace for
the home improvement site. Created four years ago by Alon Cohen and Adi Tatarko, who were remodeling
their Palo Alto home, it quickly caught on across the U.S. and in Canada.
“Clipping things out of design magazines seemed so antiquated,” Cohen recently recalled. “Today everything
is online. We thought there’s got to be a better way to do this.”
Houzz’s iPad and iPhone apps have been downloaded 6 million times. It has 14 million visitors a month — up
from 1.3 million downloads and 4 million visitors a year ago — who pore over 1.2 million images of
remodeling projects with links to 188,000 architects, designers, and other professionals. In a little more than
two years, it has drawn $48.6 million in three rounds of venture funding.
The revenue comes from advertising by national brands and a professional subscription package launched a
few months ago.
Now competition is emerging. Last month, the Seattle-based home-valuation site Zillow introduced Zillow
Digs, a similar service. Zillow spokeswoman Cynthia Nowak said it’s “a huge market,” citing a study that
found that nearly 25 percent of recent homeowners completed a kitchen or bathroom remodeling project last
year.
The new Zillow Digs iPad app includes cost estimates for many remodeling projects and links to more than
20,000 home improvement professionals and more than 30,000 photos. It’s too new to have any user metrics,
but Zillow’s home-valuation site has 46 million monthly visitors.
“The world is changing as far as design goes,” said Nan Walz, an Alamo interior decorator for two decades.
Walz says she tells clients to go to Houzz and start a library of projects and ideas they like there. “We can
save you money and save me the time trying to guess what they love. People really are enjoying the whole
Home remodeling goes social as startup transforms industry – Inside Bay Area http://www.insidebayarea.com/business/ci_22817543/home-remodeling-…
1 of 2 3/18/2013 5:47 PM
process.”
“It’s addictive, though — be careful,” said Nicole Strauss, an orthopedic surgeon who is using it to get ideas
for remodeling rooms in her San Francisco home. “You can spend hours perusing that website.”
Houzz and Digs give design and remodeling professionals a place to show off their work. Homeowners can
find products, designers and remodeling projects they like, saving photos to share with family, friends and
their architect or designer. They can also network with other homeowners for remodeling tips.
Houzz has made “quite a splash in a few short years,” said Kermit Baker, director of the Remodeling Futures
Program at the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University. “It’s not clear there’s anything
revolutionary in any individual piece of it. What they seem to have done better than anyone else so far is
really integrate all this stuff.”
Tech professional David Hew used Houzz to exchange ideas with San Jose architect Eugene Sakai when he
remodeled his home in Los Altos, partly to get ready for the arrival of a baby. “It was monumentally useful to
use Houzz rather than cut and paste and bookmark things and use a ton of bulky books,” Hew said.
“Everybody I talk to that does a remodel spends close to 10 hours a week on that thing, just flipping through
those pages.”
“It’s really a nice community,” Sakai said. “It’s very active and a great way for even a person on a budget to
get a fair amount of advice.”
When eBay (EBAY) executive Daniela Mielke bought a ranch-style home on eight acres in Half Moon Bay,
she began browsing the Internet for ideas.
“I don’t remember how I found Houzz — probably through a Google (GOOG) search — and then I just started
surfing around. It’s very nice and has a very serendipitous way of searching and seeing things. I would often
go there without a specific thing in mind, just browsing around. I saw this picture of a kitchen I really liked.”
She called the architect, Mark English of San Francisco, and hired him over the phone. Now she has a red,
glossy Italian kitchen with hardwood floors, a high ceiling and some appliances she researched on Houzz.
For some the site is taking the place of magazines and books. “I send all of my clients to Houzz, if they
haven’t been there already,” said Mary Jo Fiorella, a Castro Valley designer. “In the past they would buy
magazines and search through books for ideas to show me things they liked. Now we have a virtual place to
share ideas with each other.”

Investors – two sides of a story…

Monday, April 8th, 2013

Housing investors buy in bulk, aim to profit in hard-hit areas

Alejandro Lazo | Los Angeles Times | March 16, 2013 | link

Invitation Homes bought one of its first fixer-uppers in the San Fernando Valley just last May, a three-bedroom steps from a sought-after school in north Granada Hills.

More than 200 homes later, the company’s Dodger Blue “for rent” signs are a fixture in the Valley — markers for a massive Wall Street wager on the housing recovery.

Created last year by private equity titan Blackstone Group, Invitation Homes has spent about $3.5 billion buying 20,000 houses in nine U.S. markets, including Southern California. It’s a new business model emerging from the misery of the mortgage meltdown.

Blackstone and a handful of other firms believe prices fell too far in the hardest-hit markets. So they’re racing to buy up the bargains, rent them for short-term profit and hold them for long-term price appreciation. These firms say they’ve invented a new investment strategy that also serves the public good by fueling the housing recovery and sprucing up homes.

The company is creating jobs and providing quality homes for families, said Mark Beisswanger, Invitation Homes chief operating officer.

“We feel good about being able to fix up what is generally one of the worst houses on the street,” he said.

But some experts challenge the business model, and critics call it profiteering at the expense of neighborhoods and families who want to buy the same affordable homes. John Husing, an economist who studies the Inland Empire, notes the irony in Wall Street buying up Main Street.

“They create the problem — and now they are taking advantage of the problem,” Husing said.

In all, major investors have raised between $6 billion and $9 billion to buy single-family homes, according to a recent analysis by investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. The goal is to bring corporate scale and efficiency to what has historically been a mom-and-pop, single-family-home rental business.

These firms are also exploring ways of packaging rental income streams into securities, similar to the way mortgages were bundled during the boom years. Those mortgage bonds — often packed with risky home loans that produced mass defaults — turned into the toxic assets that helped bring down major banks during the financial crisis.

The Blackstone shopping spree has extended into several Southern California areas, including the city of Oxnard, South Los Angeles, the Antelope Valley and the Inland Empire, according to property records tracked by the real estate firm DataQuick. In some cases, the company has swarmed neighborhoods once ravaged by foreclosed homes. In a single ZIP Code in the Inland Empire, Fontana’s 92336, the firm has bought 74 homes in less than a year.

The firm has also invested in Northern California. Statewide, Blackstone has poured close to $740 million into California real estate through January, according to DataQuick figures. Nationally, the firm has invested in seven other regions: Atlanta, Phoenix, Charlotte, Seattle, Las Vegas, Chicago and multiple cities in Florida.

The investors have played a major role in recent home-price surges. Southern California’s median home price has jumped 21% over the last year, with more than a third of buyers last month paying cash. In the process, financial firms — including Oaktree Capital Management, Colony Capital and the Alaska Permanent Fund (which manages that state’s investments) — are rapidly staking claims as the new landlords of the suburbs.

On paper, the buy-and-hold calculus makes sense. The foreclosure crisis destroyed home values — but drove up rents, as repossessions created a new wave of rental demand from would-be owners with ruined credit. Fresh demand from young workers, a short supply of newly built rental units, and stricter mortgage requirements have also made the rental market competitive.

Last year, the Federal Reserve advocated renting out foreclosed homes as a strategy for banks to limit losses. Government-controlled mortgage giant Fannie Mae initiated a pilot program selling foreclosed homes in bulk, raising investors’ hopes of buying at discounts from big institutions.

But the jury is out as to whether the smartest guys in the room can create prominent national brands in a historically labor intensive, low-margin business. An acute inventory shortage — particularly in Western markets, where demand for cheap homes is so high — has made the acquisition of houses increasingly competitive.

“If the prices move ahead too fast — before you have a big enough portfolio — the opportunity could disappear,” said Jade J. Rahmani, the lead Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst on the industry report.

That sense of urgency has led some firms to begin buying regular homes alongside bank-owned properties, competing with everyday home buyers and small-time home flippers who renovate properties to sell.

The big investors are creating “auction fever” and driving up prices, said Nick Halaris, co-founder of AH Capital, a company that renovates and resells foreclosed homes in South Los Angeles. He remains skeptical that these firms will be able to manage these rentals effectively. Costs of regular maintenance and serving tenants add up.

“I think it’s crazy, their strategy, especially in L.A. or major markets, because we have managed portfolios of single-family rentals in different places,” Halaris said. “The expense ratios are out of control, so I am not sure these plans are going to pan out.”

Consumer and community advocates are also skeptical that big financial players will make the best neighborhood stewards. Invitation Homes has amassed 80 homes in just two ZIP Codes of South Los Angeles — 90047 and 90044 — buying in both middle-class and low-income areas.

An Invitation Homes for-rent sign recently popped up next to Albert Ramos’ West 69th Street duplex, where he lives with his wife and two children. Ramos has been a homeowner for three years. He would prefer to have another homeowner move into the orange stucco house next door.

“The people that rent it might be here for just a few months, then leave,” Ramos, 31, mused as he puffed on a cigarette on his front steps.

About a mile and a half away south on Normandie Avenue, prospective renter Brenda Browning, 59, stood in the yard of another Invitation Homes property for rent, peering through its windows.

“I love everything about it — the hardwood floors, the landscaping — it’s just beautiful,” Browning said. “And it’s in, what seems to be at least, a quiet neighborhood. I live on 105th and Figueroa right now, and I wouldn’t wish that on anybody. I hate it.”

Vulnerable South Los Angeles neighborhoods do not need more investors looking to buy low and sell high, said Earl Ofari Hutchinson, founder of the Urban Policy Roundtable.

“It’s easy pickings down there — you had a lot of foreclosures over the last years, people are economically challenged and have lost their homes, and you can get properties on the dime at fire-sale prices,” Hutchinson said. “Does that really benefit the area? Essentially, no.”

Executives at Invitation Homes counter that they can boost neighborhood fortunes and make a profit at the same time. Beisswanger, a former home builder, envisions hundreds of neighborhoods across the country dotted with his Dodger Blue signs.

On a recent tour of some of the company’s San Fernando Valley homes, Beisswanger strode through a single-story Canoga Park property, quickly assessing its bones and making note of what might have to go: the popcorn ceiling, dated walls, flooring, kitchen countertops, appliances, doors, light fixtures, bathroom vanities, maybe even the electrical system.

An illegal apartment built out of the home’s garage revealed kitchen walls smeared with grease, an undersized bathroom door and a moldy skylight.

“It is every code violation,” Beisswanger said with disdain. “We will provide a nice house for a family to rent; we are providing jobs; and we are potentially fixing dangerous situations.”

Whether these big investors will achieve the scale they need to make their businesses work remains an open question. Rick Sharga, executive vice president for Carrington Mortgage Holdings — which is partnering with private equity firm Oaktree to purchase homes for rent — said his company has taken a bit of a “breather” and is waiting for prices to “settle down a little bit.”

One of the biggest issues is that the government and big financial institutions have not sold off their foreclosed homes in large portfolios, as had been expected after Fannie Mae concluded its pilot sales. That has meant that investment firms have had to compete at local foreclosure auctions and on the open market — making those properties increasingly expensive.

At a recent rainy auction in front of the San Bernardino courthouse, Roger Zapata, an individual investor, said he had lost out to a bigger player.

“They are going really, really high.… The investors are getting pretty desperate,” he said. “I don’t know how long this is going to last. It’s a big question mark.”

Why buy? The dollars and cents…

Friday, April 5th, 2013

California is second-most expensive state for rents, report says

Andrew Khouri | Los Angeles Times | March 11, 2013 | link

California is the second-most expensive state for rental housing, a new report says.California is the second-most expensive state for rental housing, a new report says. Above, apartments are available in 2012 in Berkeley. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images / June 15, 2012)

 

A minimum wage worker in California must toil about 130 hours a week in order to feasibly  afford a two-bedroom rental, a new report found.

Wage earners must take home $53,627 annually, or $25.78 an hour, to afford a two-bedroom home, making California the second-least affordable state behind Hawaii, the National Low Income Housing Coalition said Monday in its annual Out of Reach report.

The coalition said that in no state can minimum wage workers do a typical 40-hour work week and spend less than 30% of their income on a two-bedroom unit. Washington, D.C., also was less affordable than the Golden State.  There, a worker must make $27.15 per hour to afford a two-bedroom home.

“Households are forced to spend the majority of their income on housing costs,” said Megan Bolton, research director for the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “This makes it very difficult for families to save for emergencies.”

In California, a worker earning the state’s $8-per-hour minimum wage must work 129 hours a week in order to spend under 30% of their income on a two-bedroom unit, the report said. A two-bedroom rental at fair market value costs $1,341 per month in California, according to the U.S.  Department of Housing and Urban Development.

In Los Angeles County, a minimum wage worker would have to put in 137 hours per week, the report said. In Orange County, that figure climbs to 156 hours.

Six California counties were among the 10 most expensive: San Mateo, San Francisco, Marin, Orange, Santa Clara and Santa Cruz.

Nationally, renters needed to earn $18.79 per hour to spend less than 30% of their income on a two-bedroom home. That is significantly more than the $7.25 federal minimum wage.

Battle against secondhand smoke comes home…

Wednesday, April 3rd, 2013

California bill would ban smoking in multi-unit housing

Jill Sanders | Sacramento Bee | February 28, 2013 | link

Millions of Californians would not be able to smoke tobacco inside their own homes under new legislation that would raise the bar nationwide for fighting secondhand smoke.

No state ever has ventured into personal bedrooms and living rooms with its smoking restrictions, but California is going even further than that by targeting owner-occupied residences as well as rental units.

Specifically, the measure would prohibit lighting up a cigarette, cigar or pipe in condominiums, duplexes and apartment units.

The push would extend a lengthy list of places where smoking already is barred, including restaurants, workplaces, playgrounds, public buildings and cars containing young kids.

“Californians should be able to breathe clean air in their own homes,” said Assemblyman Marc Levine, a San Rafael Democrat who introduced the legislation, Assembly Bill 746.

Standalone homes would not be affected because Levine is taking aim at health hazards of secondhand smoke in residences that share walls, ceilings, floors or ventilation systems.

One-third of California’s residents live in multiunit housing, and secondhand smoke endangers everyone it touches, Levine said. “Whenever a neighbor lights up, everyone in the building smokes with them.”

Landlords already have authority to prohibit smoking in their rental units, through a law implemented last year, but Levine’s bill would impose a mandatory ban statewide.

The California Apartment Association has taken no position, but its officials question who would enforce AB 746, how, and what impact the bill would have on habitual smokers or people with disabilities.

“I’m not justifying the practice, but somebody in a wheelchair who smokes in the late evening, for example, is going to have to go in the dark to a place off-site,” spokeswoman Debra Carlton said.

Residents of a Sacramento public housing project, south of Broadway, have mixed feelings.

“You’re paying the rent, so you should be able to smoke a cigarette when you want to – have a coffee break, enjoy yourself,” said Palmer Beverly, a 27-year-old student.

“Are they going to knock on my door and say, ‘Are you smoking in here?’ ” he asked. “That would be awkward. That would be weird. I wouldn’t even open the door.”

But Debra Woldridge, 54, applauded the proposed smoking ban. Adults have the right to endanger their health if they want to, but “children shouldn’t have to suffer our consequences.”

Woldridge predicted that such a ban would be largely ignored. “People don’t abide by the rules they already have,” she said.

California has about 3.6 million smokers, whose habit can affect others by increasing risk of lung cancer, heart disease, stroke, chronic lung problems and other diseases, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Nationwide, cigarette smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke causes one of every five deaths, statistics by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show.

Levine’s goal is to eliminate secondhand smoke that can be harmful when drifting through windows, walls, crawl spaces, ventilation systems, light fixtures, plumbing, ductwork, baseboards and wiring gaps.

Violations would be an infraction, punishable by a fine of up to $100. Various cities and counties have passed similar measures.

AB 746 does not identify who would respond to complaints or write tickets.

“We hope this is self-enforcing, but it’s a code enforcement issue where it’s an infraction or a fine, (so) it’s really for local jurisdictions to figure out,” Levine said.

Brian Augusta, of the Western Center on Law and Poverty, said that targeting multifamily units disproportionately affects low-income people who can’t afford standalone homes.

“If smoking is an addiction, and it clearly is, are we telling people that they have to quit smoking – without support – or leave their homes?” he said.

But Kimberly Amazeen, of the American Lung Association in California, which is sponsoring AB 746, said that failure to pass the bill would have disproportionate impacts, too, on others with nowhere to turn.

“The real discrimination is against low-income families who can’t escape exposure to deadly secondhand smoke, and they can’t find another place to live because of their income or health,” she said.

Levine’s bill would permit outdoor smoking near apartments or condos, but only in a clearly marked area that is at least 20 feet from any housing unit and 100 feet from a playground, school or pool.

Landlords, property managers, building owners or homeowners associations would select the outdoor smoking area. Condominium neighbors collaboratively would choose a site.

“Neighbors usually work together to figure those things out,” Levine said.

The bill is specific to tobacco products and would not affect marijuana smoking.

Private property restrictions are nothing new: State law already bars homeowners from playing their radio loud enough to bother neighbors, for example, and logs can’t be lit in fireplaces on certain days, Levine said.

“There are many instances where we seek to protect public health and safety,” he said.

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