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	<title>homesmillbrae.com &#187; University Of Southern California</title>
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		<title>Median Bay Area Home Prices Jump At Record Rates As Inventory Remains Tight</title>
		<link>http://homesmillbrae.com/2327/median-bay-area-home-prices-jump-at-record-rates-as-inventory-remains-tight/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Jul 2013 21:27:42 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[SF Bay Area News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Lepage]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[SAN FRANCISCO (CBS/AP) – The real estate tracking firm DataQuick said Thursday that the median price for homes in the nine-county San Francisco Bay area reached $555,000 in June, an increase of 6.9 percent over the previous month. The real &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/2327/median-bay-area-home-prices-jump-at-record-rates-as-inventory-remains-tight/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<p>SAN FRANCISCO (CBS/AP) – The real estate tracking firm DataQuick said Thursday that the median price for homes in the nine-county San Francisco Bay area reached $555,000 in June, an increase of 6.9 percent over the previous month.</p>
<p>The real estate data firm is reporting the median year-over-year price paid for a Bay Area home rose at its fastest pace on record in June.</p>
<p>DataQuick said Thursday that the rise was the result of disappearing distress sales, an improving economy and mortgage rates remaining low.</p>
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<p>However, the number of homes sold dropped 7.5 percent to 7,897 in June. DataQuick attributes the decrease to the number of homes for sale falling short of demand and an easing of purchases by cash and investor buyers.</p>
<p>The real estate information service says last month’s sales were 20.9 percent below the June average of 9,993 sales.</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.dqnews.com/Articles/2013/News/California/Bay-Area/RRBay130718.aspx" target="_blank">See the full DataQuick report and County-by-County sales breakdown </a></li>
</ul>
<p>Home prices in the Bay Area are through the roof according to a new study by Data Quick.</p>
<p>Back in 2009, during the depths of the recession, the median price of a home was $290,000. Now that figure is $555,000; six percent higher than last month and 33 percent higher than one year ago.</p>
<p>Data Quick Analyst Andrew LePage said it’s a matter of supply and demand. We’ve seen sales fall on a year-over-year basis for the last five months in a row.</p>
<p>Richard Green with the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of Southern California said much of it is the shortage of homes for sale.</p>
<p>“Inventories are very small,” he said adding that there are many more all cash transactions than ever, which drives up the market for higher-end homes and drives up sale prices.</p>
<p>Speculators have said that things could ease with fewer homes underwater, prompting sales and increasing supply. In addition, developers are also starting to build new homes again.</p>
<p>(Copyright 2013 by CBS San Francisco. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
</p>
<p><a href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/CBS.NATIONAL/news;tag=post;tag=medianbayareahomepricesjumpatrecordratesasinventoryremainstight;tag=business;tag=local;tag=bayarea;tag=homeprice;tag=homes;tag=realestate;tag=sales;tag=leftmiddlefeature;tag=sf;;tile=22;pos=22;sz=440x50;ord=?" target="_blank"><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/7cca4_news%3Btag%3Dpost%3Btag%3Dmedianbayareahomepricesjumpatrecordratesasinventoryremainstight%3Btag%3Dbusiness%3Btag%3Dlocal%3Btag%3Dbayarea%3Btag%3Dhomeprice%3Btag%3Dhomes%3Btag%3Drealestate%3Btag%3Dsales%3Btag%3Dleftmiddlefeature%3Btag%3Dsf%3B%3Btile%3D22%3Bpos%3D22%3Bsz%3D440x50%3Bord%3D" alt=" Median Bay Area Home Prices Jump At Record Rates As Inventory Remains Tight"  title="Median Bay Area Home Prices Jump At Record Rates As Inventory Remains Tight" /></a></p>
<p>Article source: <a href="http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2013/07/18/median-bay-area-home-price-jumps-again-as-inventory-remains-tight/">http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2013/07/18/median-bay-area-home-price-jumps-again-as-inventory-remains-tight/</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay</title>
		<link>http://homesmillbrae.com/2196/bay-area-housing-recovery-spreads-from-silicon-valley-to-east-bay/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 09 May 2013 08:48:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Click photo to enlarge The Bay Area&#8217;s overheated housing market is restoring thousands of homes to their pre-crash peak values in a ZIP-code-by-ZIP-code recovery that is rapidly spreading from Silicon Valley to the East Bay. Thirty-four of 185 ZIP codes &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/2196/bay-area-housing-recovery-spreads-from-silicon-valley-to-east-bay/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="articleEmbeddedViewerBox"><span class="clicktoenlargephoto">Click photo to enlarge</span><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/c3cec_20130425__0426recover%7E1_VIEWER.JPG" width="200" height="134" title="Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" alt=" Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" /><span class="footer" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/c3cec_20130425__0426recover%7E1_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" alt=" Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/c3cec_20130425__0426recover%7E2_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" alt=" Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/c3cec_20130425__0426recover%7E3_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" alt=" Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/72596_20130425__0426recover%7E4_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" alt=" Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" /></span><span /><span /><span />
<p class="bodytext">The Bay Area&#8217;s overheated housing market is restoring thousands of homes to their pre-crash peak values in a ZIP-code-by-ZIP-code recovery that is rapidly spreading from Silicon Valley to the East Bay.</p>
<p>Thirty-four of 185 ZIP codes in five counties have regained or surpassed their bubble-era peak home value or are less than 1 percent from it, according to this newspaper&#8217;s analysis of February median values for all homes from online real estate site Zillow. </p>
<p>Another 49 ZIPs are within 15 percent of their previous highs, including 18 in the East Bay. A year ago, only part of leafy Palo Alto had regained the value it lost after Bay Area home values crested in 2006-07.</p>
<p>&#8220;Seven or eight years ago, there was really a bubble,&#8221; said Richard Green, director of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of Southern California. &#8220;Now it&#8217;s just good real estate where values are returning to near past peaks.&#8221;</p>
<p>Every part of the Bay Area has seen  gains in the past year, with Silicon Valley leading the way. But parts of Contra Costa and Alameda counties, where subprime lending was heavy, are still far below their peaks.</p>
<p>The recovery has pulled many homeowners out from underwater &#8212; when houses are worth less than the mortgage &#8212; and convinced others it may finally be time to sell and move to bigger homes. They&#8217;re diving into a fast-moving market in which homes can sell in a day for more than the asking price.</p>
<p>Mike and Lois Lee </p>
<p>sold their Danville home for $780,000 in two days this month, after their real estate agent, Mark Kennedy of Empire Realty, told them their house was again worth more than they paid for it. They made $10,000 on the sale, the result of the past year&#8217;s rise in home values.
<p>&#8220;I had no idea the market had corrected that much,&#8221; Mike Lee said.</p>
<p>Kennedy said the couple tried to sell in 2011 but there were no takers, and it might have resulted in a short sale. &#8220;I would say that in a year they went from losing money to making money,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>In one Sunnyvale ZIP code that surpassed its bubble-era peak in December, Greg and Daisy Biggers decided in January it was time to make a move. Their family &#8212; four children &#8212; was outgrowing the home and the market timing looked right. In fact, it couldn&#8217;t have been better.</p>
<p>The Biggers family sold their home in less than a week, with all offers above asking price. Then they bought a home in Orinda, paying above the asking price. The whole process, from the decision to move to the purchase of the Orinda home, took eight weeks. Both homes are in escrow, and agents declined to reveal the sales prices before closing. </p>
<p>&#8220;When we started looking at the market, we picked up on this </p>
<p><span class="articleImage"><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/72596_20130425__0426recover%7E5_300.JPG" width="300" height="200" alt=" Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" border="0" title="Bay Area housing recovery spreads from Silicon Valley to East Bay" /></span><br />
Daisy Biggers, left, her husband, Greg, and son, Jeffrey, 11, pack some of their belongings that were stored in the garage of the house they recently sold in Sunnyvale on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. They sold their house in less than a week, and bought one in Orinda. The whole process, from the decision to sell, took only eight weeks. Housing values have staged a big comeback and are rapidly accelerating around the Bay Area, with the biggest recovery so far in the Peninsula and Silicon Valley. (Patrick Tehan/Bay Area News Group)<br />
 (<br />
Patrick Tehan<br />
)up-trend in prices,&#8221; Biggers said. &#8220;We quickly decided that if we&#8217;re going do it, now is the time. We had much higher demand than we had hoped for, which is great. And things are moving really, really quickly.&#8221;
<p>Some pricier parts of Berkeley, Pleasanton, Oakland and Orinda are 10 percent or less below their earlier peaks. Not far behind are San Ramon, Moraga, Alameda, Danville and Fremont.</p>
<p>&#8220;Property in Dublin is selling at prices you would more commonly associate with some parts of the Peninsula,&#8221; said Lanny Baker, president and chief executive of ZipRealty. Baker said prices should hold even as more homes come on the market.</p>
<p>The market is so hot that sales in a week are not unusual. According to the real estate company Redfin, 24 percent of Alameda County listings in March were pending in a week; the numbers were 32 percent in Contra Costa County, 19 percent in San Mateo County and 26 percent in Santa Clara County.</p>
<p>Ally Yang bought a home in Mountain View in a day after losing another home to a higher offer. Her agent, Mark Wong of Alain Pinel Realty, &#8220;sent me the listing. I said let&#8217;s go check it out. I walked in, it&#8217;s a single family, I know the value, I think it&#8217;s a good deal.&#8221; </p>
<p>She made an offer of $705,000 that afternoon, and it was accepted. &#8220;I think in this kind of market you just have to know what you want and go after it,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>Up the Peninsula in a Burlingame ZIP code that surpassed its bubble-era peak in August, Dianna Herrmann decided it was time to downsize and put her historic, 6,000-square-foot home on the market for $3.98 million. </p>
<p>&#8220;I watch the real estate market a lot,&#8221; Herrmann said. In February, she called her real estate broker. &#8220;I said things are overheated, inventory is low, prices are moving up and rates are low. Is this a good time to sell?&#8221; </p>
<p>The answer was yes.</p>
<p>Fifteen days later, the house was sold in an all-cash deal for over the asking price.</p>
<p>&#8220;The market is faster than ever,&#8221; said Burlingame broker Jennifer Tasto. &#8220;When a place sells, there&#8217;s one person who gets it and two other people replacing that buyer.&#8221; </p>
<p>The recovery is in full bloom in San Francisco. The Mission Bay neighborhood, where new luxury condominiums are about all that&#8217;s for sale, edged past its prior peak in January, and other parts of the city are nearing their previous highs.</p>
<p>&#8220;San Francisco has recovered incredibly,&#8221; said Leslie Bauer, an agent who specializes in the South Beach, Yerba Buena and Mission Bay districts. &#8220;I would say we&#8217;re recovered beyond when the market fell.&#8221;</p>
<p>But the data also reflects the stark contrast between the tech-heavy South Bay and Peninsula, where many areas are surpassing their pre-crash peak values, and the far reaches of the East Bay, where home values in some places are 50 percent or more below peaks that were inflated by subprime lending.</p>
<p>Antioch, Pittsburg, Richmond and a ZIP code in East Oakland have a long climb ahead of them. There, values still hover near their bottoms.</p>
<p>Fifteen ZIP codes in Contra Costa County and three in Alameda County are more than 50 percent below their peak median home value, according to Zillow&#8217;s data. In one Antioch ZIP, the median value of a home was $177,700, only 18 percent up from an October 2009 bottom of $149,800 and 62 percent below its peak of $473,400 in January 2006.</p>
<p>&#8220;We have a ways to go before we recover,&#8221; said Luis Salas, a real estate agent in Antioch. &#8220;We&#8217;re far from the city and there was so much construction the prices went down a lot in Antioch &#8212; in some cases more than 50 percent from the peak. But it&#8217;s recovering.&#8221; </p>
<p>As prices rise in Antioch, some short sales are drawing offers over asking price and becoming regular equity sales, according to Joy Di Ricco, an Antioch real estate agent who has specialized in short sales since the market crash.</p>
<p>She said one client&#8217;s home was $100,000 below the amount of the mortgage six months ago. </p>
<p>&#8220;I told them hold off,&#8221; Di Ricco said. &#8220;Sure enough, I think in another 30 days we may have an equity sale.&#8221; </p>
<p class="taglinejb">Contact Pete Carey at 408-920-5419 Follow him at <a href="http://Twitter.com/petecarey">Twitter.com/petecarey</a>.</p>
<p><span /></p>
<p>Article source: <a href="http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_23107869/bay-area-housing-recovery-spreads-from-silicon-valley">http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_23107869/bay-area-housing-recovery-spreads-from-silicon-valley</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Lake Oswego man dies in speedboat collision with San Francisco passenger ferry</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Feb 2013 00:03:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[View full size Harry B. Holzhauer   A Lake Oswego man died Saturday after a high-speed crash between a motorboat and a passenger ferry on San Francisco Bay. Harry B. Holzhauer, 68, a prominent real estate analyst and consultant, was &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/2016/lake-oswego-man-dies-in-speedboat-collision-with-san-francisco-passenger-ferry/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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       <img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/d9a45_blank.gif" class="lazy" alt="d9a45 blank Lake Oswego man dies in speedboat collision with San Francisco passenger ferry"  title="Lake Oswego man dies in speedboat collision with San Francisco passenger ferry" /><span class="photo-data"></p>
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<p>          <span class="caption">Harry B. Holzhauer</span><br />
          <span class="byline" /><br />
       </span><br />
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<p>A Lake Oswego man died Saturday after a high-speed crash between a motorboat and a passenger ferry on San Francisco Bay. </p>
<p>Harry B. Holzhauer, 68, a prominent real estate analyst and consultant, was aboard a 22-foot motorboat that collided around 4:30 p.m. with a Golden Gate ferry carrying 500 passengers from Sausalito to San Francisco. Holzhauer was pronounced dead at 5:22 p.m., according to U.S. Coast Guard reports. </p>
<p>Three others on the motorboat were not seriously injured. None of the ferry passengers was hurt. </p>
<p>Cause of the crash remains under investigation. The ferry crew has returned to work, but the captain has been placed on administrative leave, pending outcome of the investigation. </p>
<p>Holzhauer worked as a real estate analyst since 1978 in California, Florida, New Mexico and Washington, specializing in complex property valuations. He was a member of the Appraisal Institute, and was qualified as an expert witness in courts federal and state courts. </p>
<p>Most recently, Holzhauer was working as director of litigation services for Integra Realty Resources in Portland, providing real property valuation and counseling. He previously worked for AREA in Orlando, Fl., providing property valuation for litigation support. </p>
<p>Holzhauer formerly owned and operated The Reliance Group in Oxnard, Calif., and taught real estate classes at the University of California Riverside and Saddleback Community College, Mission Viejo, Calif. He served as a member of the advisory panel for the masters degree program in real estate appraisal at University of Southern California and served on the California Community Colleges Real Estate Education Curriculum Committee. </p>
<p>Holzhauer moved to Lake Oswego last summer from Rio Rancho, N.M., with his wife, Mary. </p>
<p><i>The Associated Press contributed to this report.</i><br /> </p>
<p>&#8211; Rick Bella     <a href="http://twitter.com/southnewshound" class="twitter-follow-button">Follow @southnewshound</a><br />
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<p>Article source: <a href="http://www.oregonlive.com/lake-oswego/index.ssf/2013/02/lake_oswego_man_dies_in_speedb.html">http://www.oregonlive.com/lake-oswego/index.ssf/2013/02/lake_oswego_man_dies_in_speedb.html</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>City National Bank Hires Charlie McGann and Deven Mays as Senior Vice &#8230;</title>
		<link>http://homesmillbrae.com/1835/city-national-bank-hires-charlie-mcgann-and-deven-mays-as-senior-vice/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Nov 2012 20:18:22 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[LOS ANGELES, Nov. 7, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) &#8212; City National Bank today announced that real estate veterans Charlie McGann and Deven Mays have joined the real estate team in the Bay Area. McGann is a senior vice president and regional &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/1835/city-national-bank-hires-charlie-mcgann-and-deven-mays-as-senior-vice/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<p>LOS ANGELES, Nov. 7, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) &#8212; City National Bank today announced that real estate veterans Charlie McGann and Deven Mays have joined the real estate team in the Bay Area.</p>
<p>
 McGann is a senior vice president and regional manager of Northern California real estate for the bank, focusing on lending to developers and investors in the region. McGann will work closely with the bank&#8217;s commercial real estate clients, including home builders and commercial real estate developers, providing them with construction, bridge and permanent financings. McGann will report to Mark Forbes, executive vice president and manager of the Real Estate Division at City National.</p>
<p>
 &#8220;We are pleased to have such veteran real estate bankers join our team in the Bay Area,&#8221; said Forbes, who noted that for the third quarter, City National&#8217;s average balances for commercial real estate loans were up 27 percent from the previous year. &#8220;We are seeing much opportunity in many sectors of the real estate market, and the Bay Area is clearly leading the industry&#8217;s recovery in California.&#8221;</p>
<p>
 With more than 15 years of industry experience, Deven Mays is a senior vice president for real estate in the Bay Area and he reports to McGann. He was a senior vice president and team leader of real estate with Wells Fargo&#8217;s real estate division and formerly with Greater Bay Bancorp., which was acquired by Wells. Mays received his bachelor&#8217;s degree from California State University at San Jose and attended graduate school at the University of Southern California. Mays is active in his local community having served as traffic coordinator for the City of Orinda and as a youth soccer coach.</p>
<p>
 Prior to joining City National, McGann has spent nearly two decades involved in the real estate industry. He most recently served as regional manager of real estate for Union Bank and before that was with Carr Capital Corp., in Washington, D.C., and with Montgomery Securities in San Francisco. McGann earned his bachelor&#8217;s degree from Trinity College and his master&#8217;s degree in finance from the University of California at Berkeley.</p>
<p>
 (For an image of McGann: https://www.cnb.com/PublishingImages/Charlie-McGann.jpg)</p>
<p>
 (For an image of Mays: https://www.cnb.com/PublishingImages/Deven-Mays.jpg)</p>
<p>
        <b>About City National</b>
      </p>
<p>City National Bank is the wholly owned subsidiary of City National Corporation (NYSE:<a href="http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/cyn">CYN</a>). It is backed by $26.3 billion in total assets, and provides banking, investment and trust services through 78 offices, including 16 full-service regional centers, in Southern California, the San Francisco Bay Area, Nevada, New York City, Nashville and Atlanta. The company and its investment affiliates manage or administer $56.7 billion in client investment assets, including $38.0 billion under direct management.</p>
<p>The City National Bank logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=3143</p>
<pre>CONTACT: Media Contact:
         Debora Vrana, City National Bank, 213.673.7631
         Debora.Vrana@cnb.com</pre>
<p>
        <img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/e41cb_3542.jpg" title="City National Bank Hires Charlie McGann and Deven Mays as Senior Vice ..." alt="e41cb 3542 City National Bank Hires Charlie McGann and Deven Mays as Senior Vice ..." /></p>
<p>Source: City National Bank<br /><span class="copyright"></span></p>
<p>Article source: <a href="http://www.nasdaq.com/article/city-national-bank-hires-charlie-mcgann-and-deven-mays-as-senior-vice-presidents-of-real-estate-in--20121107-01131">http://www.nasdaq.com/article/city-national-bank-hires-charlie-mcgann-and-deven-mays-as-senior-vice-presidents-of-real-estate-in--20121107-01131</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash</title>
		<link>http://homesmillbrae.com/1426/bay-area-sees-patchwork-recovery-from-housing-crash/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Apr 2012 06:21:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Click photo to enlarge The Bay Area&#8217;s recovery from the housing crash is proceeding ZIP code by ZIP code, with only a few upscale communities nearing the values they saw before the bubble popped five years ago. It may take &#8230; <a href="http://homesmillbrae.com/1426/bay-area-sees-patchwork-recovery-from-housing-crash/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="articleEmbeddedViewerBox"><span class="clicktoenlargephoto">Click photo to enlarge</span><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/d2389_20120415__recovery%7E3_VIEWER.JPG" width="200" height="134" title="Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" alt=" Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" /><span class="footer" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/d2389_20120415__recovery%7E3_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" alt=" Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/c161d_20120415__recovery%7E1_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" alt=" Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" /><img src="http://homesmillbrae.com/wp-content/plugins/rss-poster/cache/c161d_20120415__recovery%7E2_VIEWER.JPG" title="Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" alt=" Bay Area sees patchwork recovery from housing crash" /></span><span /><span /><span />
<p class="bodytext">The Bay Area&#8217;s recovery from the housing crash is proceeding ZIP code by ZIP code, with only a few upscale communities nearing the values they saw before the bubble popped five years ago.</p>
<p>It may take another three to five years for the entire region to return to a healthy housing market, one that sees prices go up every year in most areas, and has far fewer foreclosures.</p>
<p>According to an analysis by this newspaper of home values by ZIP code, with higher priced homes, such as the core of Silicon Valley and parts of San Francisco, have recovered much of the home equity lost in the crash. The data is for all types of homes: single-family, condos and townhouses. But neighborhoods with low-cost homes, especially those in parts of Alameda and Contra Costa counties, are still far below peak values, hurt by the waves of foreclosures that struck those areas. </p>
<p>The analysis of ZIP code data supplied by the online real estate site Zillow used April 2006 as the approximate peak in Bay Area home values, although different communities reached their highest levels a bit before or after that. After that, values gradually declined until crashing in late 2007.</p>
<p>&#8220;In the Bay Area, it&#8217;s incredibly sensitive to where you are,&#8221; said Richard K. Green, director of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of Southern California. &#8220;Places like Atherton and Palo Alto are just crazy. San Francisco is not all the way back, but it&#8217;s getting there. Oakland </p>
<p>is still dead.&#8221;
<p>Of the 204 Bay Area ZIP codes analyzed, the median loss in value from the peak stands at 30 percent. The top 10 best performing ZIP codes were in Silicon Valley. The bottom 10 were in Alameda and Contra Costa counties.</p>
<p>&#8220;It comes down to whether these are areas with a lot of unemployment or a lot of jobs,&#8221; said Svenja Gudell, senior economist at Zillow. &#8220;Is there a lot of negative equity and an oversupply of homes? That will put downward pressure on prices.&#8221;</p>
<p>The good news is that real estate agents say those low prices are beginning to attract buyers. </p>
<p>Cheryl and Ken Mensing bought their first house this month after 28 years in a mobile home. There were nine bids on the 4-bedroom, 2-bath foreclosure in the Santa Teresa area of San Jose listed at $429,000. The couple won with a bid of $442,000.</p>
<p>Mensing said she and her husband saw prices edging up and decided that the stars were aligned for &#8220;a leap of faith&#8221; into the housing market.</p>
<p>&#8220;The prices finally came into where we could actually afford them and get into the market,&#8221; she said. &#8220;The interest rates were so low, so we thought this is the time &#8212; now or never. We just closed our eyes and jumped.&#8221; </p>
<p>Their agent, Eric Sjoberg of Century 21 in San Jose, said he thinks the South Bay is &#8220;past the tipping point. I&#8217;m starting to see increasing values incrementally in many, many of our markets.&#8221;</p>
<p>But while one neighborhood may be on the road to recovery, others in the same city may still be struggling. The variation between neighborhoods is evident in San Jose, where one ZIP code (95116) bordering the city&#8217;s east side had home values in February that were still 52 percent below the Bay Area&#8217;s peak in April 2006, while another (95129) in West San Jose was only 11 percent under. </p>
<p>To the north, in the upscale areas from Mountain View to Menlo Park, two Los Altos ZIP codes (94022 and 94024) are 5.6 and 3.7 percent below their highest point. One ZIP (94306) in Palo Alto is back at its peak. Parts of San Francisco are within 15 percent or less of their highest values before the bubble burst. </p>
<p>&#8220;There are two things going on,&#8221; said Jed Kolko, economist with Trulia, an online real estate company. &#8220;There has been stronger job growth in San Francisco and in some of the areas with a lot of high-tech jobs. But more importantly, these are areas that didn&#8217;t see the overbuilding during the boom.&#8221;</p>
<p>The East Bay is more challenged, especially eastern Contra Costa County. One Antioch ZIP code (94531), for example, is 64 percent below its high point. But Lafayette (94549) has regained all but 23 percent of the value it lost in the housing crash.</p>
<p>Mary Chatton Brown, an agent with Prudential California Realty in Orinda, said she has one client doing a short sale and another facing foreclosure. She recently sold a home that fetched a price below its appraisal. </p>
<p>&#8220;I have been in business quite a number of years, and I have been through a lot, but never like this,&#8221; she said. &#8220;This is very unique. That&#8217;s why everybody&#8217;s walking around thinking, what&#8217;s going to happen? When are we going to get through it?&#8221; </p>
<p>Not for a few more years, according to Home Value Forecast, which provides analysis and forecasts of the housing market.</p>
<p>&#8220;In general, the Bay Area&#8217;s held up better than other hard-hit markets around the country,&#8221; said Michael Sklarz, president of Collateral Analytics and contributing author of Home Value Forecast.</p>
<p>&#8220;We think the market&#8217;s hit bottom and we&#8217;re in the midst of a gradual recovery which will start accelerating over the next three to five years,&#8221; Sklarz said. &#8220;What people don&#8217;t understand about real estate markets is they are very long drawn-out cycles.&#8221;</p>
<p>Homebuilders are seeing signs of a modest recovery in some parts of the Bay Area, and are launching new single-family and condo developments. The San Jose metro area is back to its typical level of home building, according to Trulia. </p>
<p>&#8220;We think the recovery&#8217;s going to be ZIP code by ZIP code,&#8221; said Michael Maples, co-founder of Trumark Homes in Danville. Trumark is starting one single-family home development in San Jose this summer, and two in Sunnyvale later in the year, for a total of nearly 250 single-family homes and townhouses.</p>
<p>In anticipation of the recovery, Toll Brothers&#8217; Northern California Division has been acquiring single-family lots over the past year &#8212; 24 east of Walnut Creek, 71 in Brisbane, and 51 in Sunnyvale. </p>
<p>&#8220;We do feel a little bit better about the market,&#8221; said Gary Mayo, Northern California group president of the national homebuilder. &#8220;There are people sitting on the fence not wanting to make that major investment until they can see some positive signs in the economy. We see those signs all over the Bay Area.&#8221;</p>
<p>Also investing in the housing market is San Francisco-based 643 Capital Management, which owns 600 foreclosed houses in the Bay Area and plans to buy more. Gregor Watson, the fund&#8217;s co-founder and managing partner, said he expects &#8220;modest appreciation for four or five years. There&#8217;s light at the end of the tunnel, but that may be a long tunnel,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>At least some builders are counting on tech workers to help spur the housing recovery.</p>
<p>&#8220;My hope is the tech boom that&#8217;s creating all these jobs will spill over into the rest of the nine-county Bay Area,&#8221; said Doug Bauer of TRI Pointe, which plans to open a luxury home development in the San Jose foothills this month. &#8220;As prices of homes become too expensive for somebody making $80,000 a year, they&#8217;re going to have to head back into Contra Costa County. It&#8217;s like we repeat ourselves every 10 years.&#8221;</p>
<p class="taglinejb">Contact Pete Carey  at 408-920-5419.</p>
<p><span /></p>
<p>Article source: <a href="http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_20402461/bay-area-sees-patchwork-recovery-from-housing-crash?source=rss">http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_20402461/bay-area-sees-patchwork-recovery-from-housing-crash?source=rss</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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