A Review of 2012, San Francisco, Job Growth and Real Estate Market [PICTURES]

Since the year is almost over we want to take a look at what has been happening in 2012 and what we might expect in 2013.  A very special moment in 2012 was Barack Obama’s re-electtion, but there has been a lot going on in San Francisco and finally in the job and real estate market as well.

Almost everyone who lives in San Francisco and gets to visit the city thinks that San Francisco with its charm and foggy glaze is the most wonderful place to live; even though it’s a very costly city. Now it’s official and San Francisco was evaluated by Bloomberg Businessweeks’ annual America’s 50 Best Cities out of 100 of the largest cities in the States as the best place to live. Take a look what the factors have been here America’s 50 Best Cities

But there has been more mention of San Francisco. Forbes listed San Francisco’s Mission District as the second most hipster city in America. In MarketWatch’s The 5 richest cities in AmericaSan Francisco was ranked as the third richest city in the States. This was based on the personal income of 2011, which rose about 5% to from the previous year released by the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis.

This year has been a wonderful year for all Giants fans in the city again. San Francisco was proudly celebrating the San Francisco Giants Championship, turning the City by the Bay to the “Orange City” in 2012 again.

On May 27th the beautiful Golden Gate Bridge turned 75 years being celebrated throughout the Bay and beyond. The 75 Anniversary of the Golden Gate Bridge was celebrated with the most wonderful fireworks in San Francisco. This has been indeed a very special moment for everyone that was part of the celebration; celebrating 75 years of San Francisco most wonderful and historical jewel, the orange bridge that is know throughout the world.

We also want to highlight America’s Cup World Series 2012 that brought some more excitement to the Bay Area. Watch the highlights of the America’s Cup World Series here: http://www.americascup.com/en/events/ac-world-series-2012-2013/san-francisco-us-aug-21-aug-26

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Pictures by P.R. Meyer Photography 

Real Estate Market in San Francisco

It’s been 4 tough years for the real estate market, but after almost four years of house price falls the much-awaited U.S. housing market recovery is finally taking place.

There is an increasing demand in home sales, the house prices are rising again, the construction activities are picking up, the delinquency rate is more and more stabilizing and the foreclosures are finally falling.

Take a look at Robb Fleischer’s The Real Estate Report local market trends San Francisco to have a better overview of what has been going on in the real estate market in 2012 and what we might expect in 2013.

Job Growth

The job growth in 2012 shows a slow recovery as released by the Bureau of Labor Statistic’s monthly jobs report. This shows that the economy is slowly growing, slowly but we are getting there and this might be a great indicator that we can expect a bigger shift in 2013. Take a look at Yahoo Finance’s review of 2012 to read more about the job growth in 2012.

Have you taken a review of your year in 2012?

Are there moments that you are rather happy about or maybe not?

“To be the master of tomorrow’s dreams, you must first be the servant of today’s planning.” ~Vincent Lowry

Well, even though the Myan calendar ends in 2012 there will be a new. The year 2013, a year that will be filled with many more great moments, but moreover a year that seems to promise a shift in the economy and the real estate market. Moreover, there will be a lot going on in the best city to live again. The Americas Cup here in the Bay… ain’t that already something that San Francisco can look forward to again…. and who knows, maybe the city will turn into the “Orange City” again. Wishing you a good ending of 2012 and an even better start into the new year of 2013.

Existing home sales drop 3.8% – Jun. 21, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Sales of existing homes fell in May, as severe weather and high gas prices weighed on the shaky housing market.

Home sales fell 3.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.81 million, down from a revised rate of 5 million in April, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday.

Sales were more than 15% lower than in May 2010

Economists had expected a May sales rate of 4.79 million existing homes, according to consensus estimates from Briefing.com.

“Spiking gasoline prices along with widespread severe weather hurt house shopping in April, leading to soft figures for actual closings in May,” said NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun.

Gas prices surged earlier this year, pinching household budgets and putting a damper on consumer spending. In addition, sales were hurt by tornados and flooding in May that devastated parts of the South and Midwest.

Read more Existing home sales drop 3.8% – Jun. 21, 2011

Foreclosures Off 30% This Year

Foreclosures off 30% this year

By Les Christie, staff writer

April 14, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — On the surface, the foreclosure crisis seems to be easing. The number of foreclosure notices filed during the first three months of 2011 fell 27% compared with the first quarter of 2010, according to a report from RealtyTrac released Thursday.

Only 681,000 properties got hit with some type of filing — a notice of default, a scheduled auction or a foreclosure sale — during the quarter, one for every 191 households.

There were 215,046 borrowers who lost their homes, down 17% year-over-year.

That improvement was in sharp contrast to other recent housing market metrics, with sales of existing and new homes very weak and home prices still sliding.

“The nation’s housing market continued to languish in the first quarter, even as foreclosure activity fell to a three-year low,” said James Saccacio, RealtyTrac’s CEO.

The explanation for this contradiction is that the foreclosure improvement has been artificial, fueled by banks reacting to paperwork processing issues — the infamous “robo-signing” scandal — by cutting back on filings until they can clean up their procedures.

According to RealtyTrac spokesman Rick Sharga, without the cutback there would have been 900,000 filings during the quarter instead of 681,000. There would have been 280,000 to 300,000 bank repossessions instead of 215,000, he added.

Houses: What a million dollars buys

Fewer homes were repossessed even though banks are modifying fewer loans to make them more affordable. Hope Now, a coalition of servicers, community groups and mortgage investors working to stem foreclosures reported last week that its members had modified 87,000 loans in February compared with 110,000 in December 2010.

Hope Now’s director, Faith Schwartz, said fewer mods hardly means that the foreclosure crisis is clearing. “In the midst of all the disruptions, it’s difficult to pinpoint a trend,” she said.

The big positive that Schwartz cites is the significant month-over-month drops in both new foreclosures and in the number of borrowers who are 60 days or more late with payments. If fewer borrowers are entering the foreclosure process, fewer should eventually lose their homes.

On the other hand, said Schwartz, the severity of the delinquencies is increasing, with these borrowers falling 527 days past due, on average.

In New York and New Jersey, according to Sharga, it’s more than 800 days now between when a typical delinquent borrower first receives a notice of default to when the home goes to a sheriff’s sale.

“It’s likely that most of those are not making any mortgage payments” during that period, he said.

The drop in foreclosures is widespread. RealtyTrac reported that filings dropped in each of the 20 hardest-hit metro areas. Year-over-year declines reached as high as 59% in Cape Coral, Fla., for the quarter. Even in Las Vegas, ground zero for the mortgage meltdown over the past few years, filings fell 8%.

Nevada, Arizona and California continued to rank as the states with the highest foreclosure rates. They came in 1-2-3 both for the quarter and for the month of March. The Fourth Horseman of the Foreclosure Apocalypse, Florida, has dropped down in the standings, to eighth place for the quarter and ninth for the month.

Las Vegas is once again the highest ranked metro area in per-capita foreclosures. One of every 31 homes absorbed a filing during the quarter, about six times the national norm. Modesto, Calif. (one in 46), Stockton, Calif. (one in 47), Vallejo. Calif., and Phoenix (both one in 48) filled out the top five.

http://money.cnn.com/2011/04/14/real_estate/foreclosures_first_quarter_2011/index.htm

Americans Doing More Home Improvement Projects

Americans Doing More Home Improvement Projects

Homeowners, feeling more secure in their jobs, are tackling maintenance projects delayed during the recession. That’s lifting the fortunes of the home-improvement industry.
By Sandra M. Jones April 13, 2011
Reporting from Chicago—

After several years of perusing real estate listings and spending Sunday afternoons at open houses, Denise Majeski decided to stay put and fix up her 25-year-old Gurnee, Ill., home.

As the housing market languished even as the economy improved, Majeski determined the financially prudent course would be to fix up the house a little at a time, starting with replacing the windows and renovating the bathrooms.

“Initially we were thinking about moving,” said Majeski, 55. “But that would require a mortgage and additional amounts of money. We can do a home improvement at a pace that we can afford.”

It is a choice more homeowners are making these days and one that is lifting the fortunes of the long-suffering home improvement industry.

Seasonal hiring at Lowe’s Cos., the nation’s No. 2 home improvement retailer, is up 15% this spring as homeowners, feeling more secure in their jobs, tackle maintenance projects delayed during the recession.

And Home Depot Inc., the largest home improvement retailer, in February reported its first annual sales increase since 2006, before the housing market crashed. The home improvement business is stabilizing despite the continued weakness of the housing market, Home Depot Chief Executive Frank Blake said at the time.

“People are doing what it takes to be happy where they are,” said Jack Horst, retail strategist at Kurt Salmon, a consulting firm. “They are more likely doing maintenance and replacement than big fundamental changes.”

A few buckets of paint, brighter lighting and some new door handles are enough to make Rebecca and Bill Klies happy in their new home. The couple, in their 30s, bought their first condo last October in a short sale, in which a lender allows a homeowner to sell a property for less than the amount owed on the mortgage.

Now the Klieses spend weekends at Home Depot and Lowe’s getting ideas on how to fix up their West Loop loft without spending a fortune. They’ve swapped out light fixtures, recaulked the shower, put up new towel racks, installed a ceiling fan in the bedroom, bought new light switch plates, painted several rooms and touched up the molding.

“These are simple little fixes that make a big difference overall,” Rebecca Klies said.

At the same time, home improvement stores are getting an extra sales boost as homeowners dig out from a winter of lengthy cold spells. The severe weather has left shingles, gutters and downspouts in need of repair and lawns littered with broken shrubs and damaged trees.

“These are the have-to-do projects,” said Jim Kane, president of Home Depot’s northern division. “We’ve just come through a tough winter, and the winter has just taken its toll on all those things.”

Maintenance and repairs account for about 40% of Home Depot sales, up sharply from recent years when home sales slowed, said Daniel Binder, an analyst at Jefferies & Co., in a report last month.

Spending on home remodeling is expected to rise 9.1% in the first quarter to $125.1 billion from the same period a year ago, according to a widely followed index from Harvard University‘s Joint Center for Housing Studies. The last time remodeling activity for a three-month period topped $125 billion was the second quarter of 2008.

The center predicts the industry to gain momentum this spring with sales jumping 12.7%, to $132.9 billion, in the second quarter from a year ago, before tapering off to a 6.5% gain, to $123.5 billion, in the third quarter.

More homeowners are tackling basic house projects on their own instead of using general contractors, bringing in electricians or plumbers only for the toughest jobs, said Rich Cowgill, Chicago-area chapter president of the National Assn. of the Remodeling Industry.

Cowgill said he had noticed an increase in the size of the do-it-yourself classes he teaches as a volunteer at ReStore for Habitat for Humanity as more homeowners try to lay tile, replace windows or put up drywall.

“People are dressing up their homes because they’ve come to the realization with housing devalues that they’re not going to move,” said Cowgill, who also owns a home remodeling business.

Kris and Dennis Cortes of Flossmoor, Ill., are typical of the post-recession home remodelers, industry experts said. The parents of five children said they chose to stay in the home they bought 20 years ago and to give the house a face-lift. They are adding a couple of gables to the roof, installing a new garage door and updating the landscaping.

“We could buy the megamansion, but we choose not to,” said Kris Cortes, 46. “We’re choosing to allocate our resources more toward education, charity and savings. I do think the country at large is headed in that direction.”

smjones@tribune.com

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-home-improvement-20110413,0,7527522.story

Buying a Home in Today’s Market

Buying a Home in Today’s Market

As a first time homebuyer you probably have many questions. Besides how to get a mortgage and finance your new home, you should consider whether buying in today’s market makes sense for YOU and what price you should pay in order to get to the home of your dreams.

When is the best time to buy?

There are many factors and aspects to consider before anyone can say when is the best time to buy. All in all today, being a buyers market gives you leverage when buying a home. Low home prices result from this excess of supply over demand. What is essential is that you make your decision after having considered both the real estate/housing market and the mortgage market. Currently low home prices combined with low interest rates make purchasing real estate a viable and good decision.

Want to know more about the mortgage market outlook? Then read The Real Estate Report from AMSI Broker, Robb Fleischer for local market trends in San Francisco http://rereport.com/sdc/print/RobbFleischerSF.pdf

Ultimately, the best time to buy is when you are personally ready to settle in, when your finances are in order and when the home prices are low. (…and in today’s market, when interest rates are low, and with the availability of inventory it does make perfect sense).

How to qualify to buy a home?

 

Before you start your search for your home, you should get pre-qualified, to find out if you do qualify to take on such a significant purchase, but also to find out how much you can afford. The first step should be to get your finances in order and get pre-approved for a mortgage, so you know the types of loans, financing and rates extended to you.

Want to know more about how to qualify to buy a home? Then read our article on “How to qualify to buy a homehttp://amsires.blog/2011/03/02/699/

 

How to know which price to pay?

 

Buying a home is a process one must learn, whether you are a first time buyer or a savvy investor. Each transaction is unique and differs from another. It is important that you work with a professional expert or good team so the entire process is efficient.

Working with a real estate professional is important; not only he or she will make the process smooth for you but also check all disclosures, and make sure you do not pay more than the current market value of the house of your choice. A real estate agent knows how to evaluate a property but also how to negotiate the best price, which will satisfy both you as the buyer and the seller, and ultimately make you the new homeowner!

Want to know more about real estate sales? Then visit our website www.amsires.com

Median Home Price Bounces Back

After hitting a two year low in January, the median price for single-family re-sale homes tacked on 4.9% in February from January. Year-over-year? Not so good. The median price was off for the sixth month in a row, falling 7.2%.

Home sales fell to their lowest level since January 2009. The 116 home sales last month were 5.7% lower than last February.

Click here to read more Median Home Price Bounces Back