Posts Tagged ‘San Francisco’

Asking prices rise for third consecutive month in April

Asking prices on for-sale homes rose 0.5 percent in April compared with March on seasonally adjusted basis, according to the latest report by Trulia’s Price Monitor. Together with increases in March and February, asking prices in April rose nationally 1.9 percent quarter over quarter, seasonally adjusted.

Within the largest metro areas, asking prices rose year on year in some neighborhoods, but fell in others. Rents, however, rose in nearly all parts of these major metropolitan areas.

In Los Angeles, asking prices increased only in the downtown area. Prices fell elsewhere throughout the region, most of all in Long Beach, where rents also fell.

In the San Francisco Bay Area, prices rose most in San Francisco and fell furthest in Alameda County.

http://www2.realtoractioncenter.com/site/R?i=F10BM-OoTom4wqVohXwzHA

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U.S. home values flat in November

Home values in the United States were essentially unchanged in November, decreasing a marginal 0.1 percent from October, according to this month’s Zillow Real Estate Market Reports. Annually, the Zillow Home Value Index fell 4.6 percent from November 2010 to $147,800 and has returned to late 2003 levels.

Regionally, home values appreciated or remained flat from October to November in 60 percent of the 165 housing markets covered by Zillow, compared with 24 percent the year prior. Major metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) that experienced flat or increasing home values include Los Angeles, Washington, Miami-Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., San Francisco, and Detroit. On an annual basis, the median home value is down for nearly all (90 percent) of the 165 MSAs covered by Zillow, although the rate of annualized depreciation has slowed significantly in the majority of the markets.

“Even with the anticipated increase in foreclosures, look for 2012 to be a transitional year in which home values fall modestly followed by a prolonged period of flat home values,” said Zillow Chief Economist Dr. Stan Humphries. “We’re still three to five years away from ‘normal’ housing market conditions.”

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Million Dollar Homes at Half Off

By Erika Riggs, Zillow.com

Apr 5, 2011
Provided by:

If you’ve dreamed of owning a million-dollar home, the time is now. According to the Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI), high-end homes in the U.S. are now listed for 27 percent less than their prices at the peak of the market in June 2006. That translates into hundreds of thousands of dollars in savings – and the possibility of buying a million-dollar home for, say, $500,000.

Los Angeles real estate agent Gary Gold of Hilton & Hyland confirms most of the homes in the million-dollar bracket are selling for a third less than the peak market price – and that many of his clients are taking advantage of the discount.

 

“The [luxury] market is solid; people are buying for sure,” he said. “In general there aren’t too many people that say ‘let’s wait until prices get lower.’ “

Gold emphasized that not all real estate markets are the same. While average prices are down 30 percent across the U.S., some of the higher-end homes in New York or San Francisco are still selling at strong 2006 prices, and properties elsewhere can be found listed for even lower prices – up to 50 percent off.

“Real estate is very local and every neighborhood is different. Every situation is different. There are certain things that are selling from zero to 50 percent [off] depending on the situation,” said Gold.

Why such a significant drop in prices? According to Gold, these homes may have been overpriced when they sold in 2006, or they are now located in a real estate market that is no longer considered high-end. Below are seven homes currently found on Zillow that were once priced in the million-dollar price bracket when they sold in 2006 but are now listed at prices 48 to 52 percent less. And no – these are not distressed sales (foreclosures or short sales).

 

This Myrtle Beach, SC home is 50% off its last sale price.
Photo: Zillow

 

Myrtle Beach, S.C.
1511 Serena Dr., Myrtle Beach, SC 29579
2006 sale price: $3,100,000
Current list price: $ 1,550,000
Price cut: 50%

Golf lovers: Here’s your dream property. This 6,000-sq ft home in the prestigious Grande Dunes neighborhood in Myrtle Beach, SC, overlooks Grand Dunes’ 18-hole course. Inside, the house opens with an arched rotunda, supported by four columns. A custom two-story mahogany library includes wall-to-ceiling shelves and a wrought-iron staircase and book ladder. An elevator leads to the second floor which holds a home theater and private master suite. The midpoint home value in Myrtle Beach is $111,500, so this home is still a pricey piece of Myrtle Beach real estate.

 

This Scottsdale, AZ home is 51% off its last sale price.
Photo: Zillow

 

Scottsdale, AZ
10040 E Happy Valley Rd, Unit 19, Scottsdale, AZ 85255
2006 sale price: $4,100,000
Current list price: $1,999,900
Price cut: 51%

Billed as an “entertainer’s dream,” this 8,549 square-foot home on the Scottsdale real estate market is almost entirely one level, except for a large, private suite on the second story. The recently remodeled 6-bedroom, 8-bath home sits in a gated community that includes patrolled security and access to a putting course, 13 tennis courts, fitness center, and clubhouse dining. Scottsdale’s median home value is presently $135,200.

 

This Lincoln, CA home is 55% off its last sale price.
Photo: Zillow

 

Lincoln, CA
4200 Monteverde Dr., Lincoln, CA 95648
2006 sale price: $1,673,500
Current list price: $759,999
Price cut: 55%

Interested in doing more than grilling outdoors? This home, which is located in Lincoln, CA – about a 30-minute drive from Sacramento – includes an outdoor kitchen complete with mini-fridge and sink. The 6-bedroom, 5.5-bath house also has mosaic tiled floors, theater room and heated pool and pool house. Current Lincoln, CA home values are presently $256,900 – well below this listing among Lincoln real estate.

 

Even with a nice media room, this Dedham, MA home is 47% off its last price.
Photo: Zillow

 

Dedham, MA
11 Merrall Rd, Dedham, MA 02026
2006 sale price: $2,350,000
Current list price: $1,250,000
Price cut: 47%

Located on 1.3 acres of greenery at the end of a private cul-de-sac, this 5-bedroom, 5.5-bath home includes a media room, floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace and the private suite on the second floor can be used as au-pair quarters or a guest suite. Dedham real estate has seen an 8.5 percent year-over-year drop in values where the ZHVI is now $314,400.

 

This Woodland Hills, CA home is 55% off its last sale price.
Photo: Zillow

 

Woodland Hills, CA
23032 Erwin St. Woodland Hills, CA 91367
2006 sale price: $1,380,000
Current list price: $669,960
Price cut: 55%

There’s truth to saying “location, location, location” and this 1950s Los Angeles ranch-style home proves it. Once sold at $1.3 million, this home is in the high-end West Hills, CA real estate market where the median home value is $490,800. While the 1,797 square-foot, 3-bedroom, 3-bath home includes a pool and spa on over a half-acre, the listing notes that the home needs some “cosmetic updating.”

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San Francisco Bay area home prices, sales are flat

The Associated Press
Published: Thursday, Mar. 17, 2011 – 10:21 am
Last Modified: Thursday, Mar. 17, 2011 – 11:26 am
SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco Bay area home prices and sales remained flat last month as short sales and sales of foreclosed homes accounted for more than half of home resales in the region, a tracking firm said Thursday.

The median price paid in the nine-county region dipped 0.2 percent to $337,250 in February, down from January’s median of $338,000, San Diego-based DataQuick Information Systems reported. Median prices remain down about 10 percent from $375,000 in December.

Home sales in February rose half a percentage point to 4,991 from January sales, the firm said, or about 31 percent lower than the 7,200 sold in December.

Meanwhile, the firm reports both the percentages of absentee investors buying homes and buyers paying all cash are the highest on record. DataQuick’s analysts say traditional homebuyers are waiting to see whether prices have bottomed out.

At the same time, they say home sales in January and February are not typically good indicators of what will happen in the near future.

“Over the next few months we’ll begin to see how much of the pent-up demand will play out during the traditional spring-summer home-buying season,” said DataQuick president John Walsh. “Our sense is that we could see sales jump significantly from today’s subpar levels if the economic outlook improves.”

This winter, investors and cash-only buyers have gone bargain-hunting for distressed homes.

Sales of homes foreclosed on over the past year accounted for nearly 33 percent of the Bay Area’s resale market in February. Short sales, in which the sale price was lower than what the previous owner owed on the property, made up more than 20 percent of resales.

taQuick said just 243 newly built homes sold in the Bay Area in February – fewer than in any other month since they started keeping records in 1988.

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Statewide gas price jumps 6 cents a gallon

Published: Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2011 – 12:00 am | Page 8B

The average price of gasoline statewide rose 6 cents a gallon in the past month, according to the latest monthly AAA Northern California survey released Tuesday.

The state average for a gallon of regular unleaded gas is $3.41, up from $3.35 in the Jan. 11 survey, and 44 cents higher than a year ago.

In Northern California, the average price is $3.42 a gallon, up 7 cents from January. In Sacramento, the average price of $3.38 a gallon was up 6 cents from last month.

AAA said the average price nationwide is $3.12, up 3 cents from last month and 47 cents from last year.

Mark Glover

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