San Francisco homes for sale hit a 15-year-high, as deluge of new condos flood the market

San Francisco’s residential real estate market saw brisk activity from July through September with a steep increase in both sales and inventory, as a significant jump in buyers was not enough to keep up with the deluge of new condos and homes flooding the marketplace, according to a new report from the brokerage Compass.

The number of sales rose 30.2% compared to the third quarter last year, climbing from 1,151 to 1,499 transactions. But the number of listings is at a 15-year high, with a 10-month inventory for condos in some neighborhoods. Comparing September to the same month last year, the number of price reductions was up 172% for houses and condos combined. Of the price reductions, 80% were of condos.

“The issue is the inventory is increasing so much faster than the sales rate,” said Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst for Compass. “Any time you have this relatively huge overhang of supply, and demand is stable, you are going to see price reductions.”

The market was bifurcated: single-family homes did better than condos; large homes were more popular than smaller homes; and many downtown high-rise offerings languished while listings in more suburban neighborhoods tended to trade faster and slightly above asking price.

The contrast between the single-family homes and condos was apparent in price, how long a property sat on the market, and whether the asking price had to be cut to attract buyers. The median sales for single-family homes inched up year over year from $1.57 million to $1.66 million while condo prices lagged, dipping slightly from $1.275 million to $1.250 million. Single-family listings sold at an average of 102.5% of listing price while condos went for an average of 97.5% of listing price.

Even within the condo segment there are differences based on neighborhood. There is a 10-month inventory in the downtown neighborhoods whereas a leafier district that includes Cole Valley, Eureka Valley and Noe Valley has a four-month supply, Carlisle said.

The average size of home that sold in the third quarter was 1,997 square feet, compared to 1,890 in the third quarter last year. The change reflects the reality of the pandemic: Wealthier families are keeping their jobs, staying healthy and enjoying robust stock-market returns while less well-off families are more likely to be struggling with unemployment and sickness.

San Francisco saw a 28% increase in sales of luxury homes — those over $2.5 million — year over year, Carlisle said.

“There is no doubt affluent buyers have been making up a larger percentage of people buying homes,” he said. “It speaks to the economic stratification going on.”

In contrast, the entry-level buyer pool, dominated by young tech workers, is more likely to be leaving the city to work from home in more spacious or bucolic settings, Carlisle said.

With so many people looking to sell at once, there will likely be a scramble to unload properties before the market goes into hibernation for the holidays, he said. That means that listings have to be priced correctly out of the gate.

“The properties that sell are selling quickly but there is another group of listings that the market is not reacting to and those are going through price reduction,” he said. “If you don’t grab attention of buyer quickly, you get lost in the shuffle of all the new inventory.”

J.K. Dineen is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: jdineen@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @sfjkdineen

Article source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/realestate/article/San-Francisco-homes-for-sale-at-15-year-high-as-15632382.php

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Bay Area real estate booming in COVID-19 era

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) – If you are thinking about buying a home in the Bay Area suburbs, now is the time. 

Seems like it would be just the opposite due to the impact of COVID-19. 

A pair of realtors explain why that is not the case. 

While the local economy struggles to get back on track during the COVID-19 era, the Bay Area real estate market is hotter than ever.

“My word or phrase is counterintuitive. Who would think in the middle of a shelter-in-place that the Bay Area real estate market would have the highest sales volume in 10-years and that’s what we’re looking at,” William Doerlich said. 

William Doerlich of Realty ONE Group Today says one reason buyers are taking advantage of historically low-interest rates.

“If I can get an interest rate at 3.0 let’s go,” Doerlich said.

Homebuyers, many of whom work in the tech industry, are leaving the city and going to the suburbs.

“If you can pick where you want to live and you know you got a shelter-in-place, and you know you need to work at home and you need that zoom room,” Doerlich said.

Before they get to the suburbs, some home buyers are stopping to look at Oakland, says Sandi Porter of Berkshire Hathaway Homes.

“Interest is hot in Oakland,” Porter said. 

She says that includes fixer-uppers as well as turnkey properties even in deep East Oakland.

“People want to come to deep East Oakland because these are nice neighborhoods, neighborhoods where people thrive,” Porter said. 

The higher-priced Bay Area real estate market is also doing well.

“For example, in the Pleasanton area, Ruby Hill, average days on the market is like 10 to 12 and these are homes that we are looking at in the $2-million range,” Doerlich said.

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Article source: https://www.kron4.com/news/bay-area/bay-area-real-estate-booming-in-covid-19-era/

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Hawaii real estate agents report selling more homes sight-unseen than ever before

Julie Peters, an agent with Island Boutique Realty on the island of Hawaii, said when wildfire season began in August, she was fielding at least one call each day from California residents wanting to escape the area due to smoke and fire danger. “One person wanted to come over immediately and rent in the meantime because she was so done with smoke,” Peters said. “The last five closings I did were sight-unseen. I had rarely done that before.”

Peters said many of her buyers this year were from the Bay Area and the bulk of them hail from the West Coast. From January to June 2020, California residents bought $587.6 million worth of Hawaii property, making up 41% of total sales during that period coming from the U.S., according to Title Guaranty, which owns and maintains the largest real estate database in Hawaii.

“Demand for Hawaii is always there. Everyone wants to invest, retire or vacation here, but it’s just grown exponentially this year,” Peters said. “A lot of people that were already looking toward retirement here sped it up, or people found out they could work from home. We got a rush of that and then the West Coast fires happened.”

Peters said demand from Washington and Oregon has been strong as well.


Randy Antonio, an agent with Keller Williams Realty on Maui, also had clients and potential clients mention the protests and general unrest on the mainland as their reasons for leaving. While prospective buyers may be searching for solace on the island, Maui’s real estate market is seeing some of what mainland cities are experiencing. There’s a glut of condos on the market — new listings of condominiums in August 2020 were up 97% in Maui compared with August 2019, according to the Realtors Association of Maui — while single-family homes are being snapped up much faster than is typical. The total inventory of single homes for sale was down 25% when comparing August 2020 with August 2019.

Many of those condos are in the areas zoned for short-term vacation rental services like Airbnb, which haven’t earned any revenue in six months, Antonio said. Pennell said condos aren’t moving as quickly on Kauai as well.


ade21 1200x0 Hawaii real estate agents report selling more homes sight unseen than ever before

File photo of Waikiki Beach.

Jeff Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

No matter what buyers are interested in, cash offers are more common — and those offers are more likely to go over asking.

We’re seeing many more cash offers,” said Tyler Hinderer, a Redfin agent in Oahu. “I’ve had a number of offers that we lost because [the other buyer] had cash. I just wrote an offer for a client and we went $20,000 over and we were one of 21 offers. You usually have at or above asking on properties, but this is a whole other level. Instead of a couple thousand dollars over, it’s now 15 or 20 or even 30. It almost makes no sense.”

Inventory is low across Oahu, the Big Island, Maui and Kauai, according to Redfin data, with active listings down an average of 15.38% between April and August in 2020 vs. 2019 across all four counties. Inventory is lowest in Kauai County, which was down 19.81% between April and August in 2020 vs. 2019. Honolulu County experienced an 18.51% decline in active listings between April and August in 2020 vs. 2019, while Maui County saw an 8.8% dip in the same time period.

Hinderer said he has far more West Coast buyers now than in any other year, and he’s gotten used to doing extremely detailed virtual tours — even sometimes for buyers that have never been to the island before.

“If you had a buyer that wanted to see it virtually last year that would have been odd. Now it’s totally normal,” he said. “I just sold a very expensive house to a guy from San Francisco who can now telework, and he knew nothing about the area. It’s amazing that he was comfortable doing that.”

Article source: https://www.sfgate.com/hawaii/article/Hawaii-real-estate-market-bay-area-buyers-15625540.php

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Major San Francisco Bay Area Retail Theft Ring Busted; Five Suspects Arrested; $8 Million In Stolen Merchandise Recovered

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — Five suspects were facing a variety of charges and approximately $8 million in stolen merchandise has been recovered after state and local law enforcement officers busted a major retail theft ring, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra announced Tuesday.

Becerra said Edgar Geovany Robles Morales, Isis Vasquez Villanueva, Jose Villatoro, Danny Louis Drago and Michelle Renee Fowler had been arrested and faced charges for allegedly buying stolen goods and reselling them for profit.

The arrests came as a result of a joint investigation by the Division of Law Enforcement’s White Collar Investigation Team, the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office’s Crime Suppression Unit, the California Highway Patrol, and the San Francisco County District Attorney’s Office.

On September 30, during a search and arrest warrant operations in the San Francisco Bay Area, agents seized and recovered approximately $8 million of stolen merchandise from retailers across the San Francisco Bay Area including CVS, Target and Walgreens as well as $85,000 in cash from the suspects’ residences, a warehouse and storage facilities.

“Last Wednesday’s arrests are an example of what can be accomplished when law enforcement agencies partner together to address serious crimes impacting our communities,” Becerra said in a press release. “Combining our officers, investigators and resources paid off. The arrested suspects will now face judgment before a court of law.”

Trailer after trailer, bin after bin, sack after sack — stored on pallets, stacked floor to ceiling, two stories tall. It took a team of 30 people two days to catalog it, mostly merchandise from CVS, as part of ‘Operation Proof’ of Purchase, $8 million dollars worth in all.

“It’s a lot of stuff, sure is,” said Ben Dugan.

Dugan is one of CVS’s top experts on organized crime, and says they’ve been tracking the so-called boosters, professional shoplifters, as they enter their stores and stuff bags with merchandise. The boosters then met up in the Tenderloin and according to investigators, sold the items to so-called “crew leaders” or “street fences”, Villanueva, Villatoro and Morales.

e0d7b theft ring 3 shot Major San Francisco Bay Area Retail Theft Ring Busted; Five Suspects Arrested; $8 Million In Stolen Merchandise Recovered

(CBS)

Detectives say Morales actually posted a photo on social media of trunk full of stolen goods, and a stack of hundred dollar bills.

“They pay those thieves approximately $1 or $2 an item. And then they sell it to an illicit wholesale operation,” said Dugan.

From there, investigators say Drago, their distributor, A.K.A. the Medicine Man, buys the stolen items.

e4442 theft ring bust trunk Major San Francisco Bay Area Retail Theft Ring Busted; Five Suspects Arrested; $8 Million In Stolen Merchandise Recovered

(CBS)

Video from a police stake out shows Drago unloading trunkloads full of merchandise at one of his warehouses — mouthwash, cleaning supplies, shampoo, foot spray, over the counter medicine, and more than $1 million dollars worth of razors. Drago allegedly directs the boosters to steal small, compact items, with long expiration dates, and high resale value.

“Based on our reconnaissance, they were going across the Bay, they were going into San Francisco, and it just got larger and larger, and more people were getting involved,” said Captain Mark Duri with the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Department.

Captain Duri realized bad guys know no boundaries, so he called in the cavalry: The California Highway Patrol-Golden Gate Division’s multi-agency Organized Retail Crime Task Force made up of investigators from CHP, SFDA, SFPD and the United States Postal Inspection Service along with CHP Cargo Theft Interdiction Program investigators.

CHP Lt. Kevin Domby heads it up.

“Any one of these police departments is not going to be able to connect the dots on their under-$1000 theft. Retailers know they’ve had ten stores hit throughout Northern California. They might have 10 different law enforcement agencies working on those smaller crimes, but the retailer knows they’re connected to something larger,” said Lt. Domby.

Working with the task force, investigators tracked the stolen goods to 16 different storage lockers, warehouses and homes across the Bay Area. Much of the goods were then sold online through what law enforcement says was a shell company run by Drago, called D-Luxe OTC.

e4442 theft ring 2 shot Major San Francisco Bay Area Retail Theft Ring Busted; Five Suspects Arrested; $8 Million In Stolen Merchandise Recovered

(CBS)

When law-enforcement raided the home of Drago and his wife, they found cash, a high-speed bill counting machine, and multiple vehicles. At the home of Edgar Morales, the crew boss, behind the picture frames they found stacks of hundred dollar bills. Drago’s money was laundered through real estate transactions and other businesses.

The stolen goods eventually find their way to Ebay, Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace and Amazon, where they are sold at a steep discount. Dugan says there’s a big societal cost to saving a few bucks.

“I don’t think anyone would intentionally further a criminal enterprise you know most people are good and don’t want to contribute to anything illegal, but, like everyone else everyone’s looking to get what they need at the lowest price so certainly it’s understandable. And even though the price may look good, you might be contributing to something bigger that you don’t understand,” said Dugan.

The suspects have all been charged with criminal profiteering, money laundering, conspiracy to commit a felony, possession of stolen property and organized retail theft.

The San Mateo District Attorney has filed the charges against the suspects in San Mateo County Superior Court.

Over the course of the investigation, which began in April, investigators also uncovered evidence exposing the international scope of the theft ring. The suspects allegedly transported, stored and sold stolen goods in other countries and laundered the money back to the United States.

CVS estimates organized retail crime costs California about $40 million in lost sales tax revenue. That means each family pays $500 more per year in increased prices. Meanwhile funding for the Organized Retail Crime Task Force ends July 2021. With much more work ahead, the hope is that it will be renewed.

Meantime, if you or someone you know has been the victim of fraud, learn more about what to do and report it here: https://oag.ca.gov/consumers.

Article source: https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2020/10/06/major-san-francisco-bay-area-retail-theft-ring-busted-five-suspects-arrested-8-million-in-stolen-merchandise-recovered/

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Rents in San Francisco Drop Even More, But…

14e1f San Francisco Aerial 2019 Rents in San Francisco Drop Even More, But…

Having slipped to just under $3,600 last month, the weighted average asking rent for an apartment in San Francisco has since dropped another 5 percent to $3,425, which is now down 20 percent on a year-over-year basis and 23 percent below a 2015-era peak, driven by a sharp increase in vacancy rates.

As such, the average asking rent for an average apartment in the city, which measures 2.4 bedrooms when counting a studio as having one, is now 16 percent ($675) cheaper than just seven months ago with the average asking rent for a one-bedroom in the city having just dropped to under $2,900 a month (which is down from closer to $3,700 at peak).

At the same time, offers of complimentary rent and cash concessions still haven’t waned, driving effective rents down even more.

And rents in Oakland are now dropping as well, with the average asking rent for a one-bedroom in Oakland having just dropped to under $2,200 a month (versus closer to $2,500 at peak).

All that being said, we’ve seen a pull-back in listing activity for apartments in San Francisco over the past week, a pull-back which could help moderate the rate of decline in local rents – which has been averaging around 3.5 percent per month – if it holds.  But if the local labor force continues to drop

We’ll keep you posted and plugged-in.

Article source: https://socketsite.com/archives/2020/09/rents-in-san-francisco-drop-even-more-but.html

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