Pandemic Cools San Francisco’s Red Hot Rental Market

SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX) – Rent prices are dropping in pricey San Francisco while the suburbs remain steady. The City is still the priciest place for rentals, but that may not be the case for long.

New numbers were released from Zumper, the apartment search site, which show rent prices continue to decrease in many parts of the Bay Area due to the pandemic.

Zumper will release its official numbers on Thursday. They reveal San Francisco is seeing double-digit percentage drops year-over-year in the August numbers and significant decreases in other parts of the Bay Area.

“We saw prices going down weekly honestly,” said Abhishek Kundy, who recently moved to San Francisco.

Kundy found a 3-bedroom in Pacific Heights for $4895. That was $1000 less than the listing price, plus a free month.

“The inventory is stacking up because there’s so little demand. Units that would usually go in 2-to-4 weeks are still around,” said JJ Panzer of the Real Management Company.

“Now we have this deflationary spiral and everyone’s wondering if the prices will be even less if they continue to wait,” said Panzer.

In San Francisco, the cost of a 2-bedroom rental has dropped an additional 3% month over month, and 12.1% year over year. In San Jose, it’s down 5.7% year over year, but Oakland has seen a 6.6% increase.

“The biggest declines are Mountain View, Menlo Park, and Santa Clara [where] one-bedrooms are down about 16%,” said Crystal Chen of Zumper.

A couple of months ago, Panzer says many tenants were getting 1 month-free rent in exchange for an extension of the lease.

“The one month free rent isn’t enough and I’m finding myself just having to negotiate for lower rents in order from keeping people from moving out or to just get people to sign a lease,” said Panzer.

“It’s a renter’s market right now. Ask questions and it’s OK to make some sort of demands, right now, because there’s so many units available,” said Ricardo De Anda, who moved recently from Oakland to San Francisco.

In Sacramento, August numbers show 1 and 2 bedroom rent prices have increased more than 10% year over year.

Article source: https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2020/07/29/coronavirus-pandemic-cools-bay-area-rental-market/

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San Francisco turned ghost town? Here’s what’s happening with housing, real estate amid pandemic – ABC7 San Francisco – KGO

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — Walking through San Francisco’s South of Market and Financial District feels like a ghost town.

90-percent of the city’s workforce is working from home and people are leaving the city.

The ABC7 I-Team is digging into how this is impacting real estate.

RELATED: COVID-19 creates housing crisis in San Francisco’s Tenderloin

Before the pandemic hit, San Francisco had the highest building occupancy rate in the country. Now, most of the city’s skyscrapers sit empty. How long will it stay that way? Is all this emptiness driving prices down everywhere?

“It went severely over asking… $400,000 over asking,” said Jason and Stephanie Hicks. “We were shocked.”

In the midst of the pandemic, the two newlyweds decided to leave SOMA for a better value in Alameda.

“We are both working from home now,” Hicks said. “We need more space.”

RELATED: Solution to affordable housing in San Francisco could be modular units, construction company says

The Hicks fell in love with a house in downtown Alameda and felt hopeful about the market.

“Ultimately, 85 folks were interested in the same property… We were shocked.”

In this case, it’s a seller’s market in Alameda.

Real estate agents Neil and Daryll Canlas of The Canlas Brothers explain it varies depending on where you look in San Francisco.

“Property values have taken a little bit of a hit, but there are pockets… certain areas that are stronger than others,” said Neil Canlas.

One pocket hit the hardest? South Beach.

RELATED: Building a Better Bay Area: The Housing Shift

According to an ABC7 data analysis of real estate data, there are 147 luxury condos on the market in South Beach.

“Comparing it to the last 5 years, it’s really unheard of… it’s so rare for any to come up,” Canlas said.

In just the last two days, 25 people posted on the Rincon Hill (South Beach) Nextdoor feed stating they are moving out of South Beach citing everything from, “work from home,” “high costs,” and “there’s nothing to do.”

“It’s all about supply and demand,” said Daryll Canlas.

There’s plenty of supply in Soma, South Beach, and Mission Bay. Of the more than 1,300 active listings in San Francisco, nearly one-third are in those areas.

With inventory high, prices are taking a slight dip.

RELATED: Planning groups get creative as demand for affordable Bay Area housing rises

Before COVID-19, the average listing price for a two-bedroom condo in South Beach was around $1.95 million. Now, the average price has dipped down $30,000 to $1.92 million. For one bedroom condos, the average price is down $15,000.

“We’ll continue to see a vacancy rate, because people don’t need to live in the city,” Canlas said.

No need to live or work in the city, especially as some companies are gone for good.

We know that from San Francisco’s building vacancy rate.

ABC7′s data analysis shows at the end of last year, vacancy rates were 5.4 percent.

Now, vacancy rates are nearly 10 percent.

To put those rates in perspective, San Francisco’s building vacancy is comparable to other major cities like Seattle and Boston.

f5e65 6341293 pic2web San Francisco turned ghost town? Heres whats happening with housing, real estate amid pandemic   ABC7 San Francisco   KGO

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“It probably seems much worse than it really is,” said Robert Sammons, a senior researcher with commercial real estate group Cushman and Wakefield. “Most of these spaces have leases in place, long-term leases from very well-funded companies… that’s the good part.”

Sammons said most of the 7,500 companies leasing building space in the city and county have been able to keep their lease agreements during the pandemic. But, not all of them are as well-funded as others and these leases are six to seven-year commitments.

The question is – how much longer will those tenants last?

“That’s the tough question,” said Sammons. “Without a vaccine, without other things in place…we just don’t know.”

Assuming there’s progress with a COVID-19 vaccine, Sammons anticipates companies (big and small) could start allowing 25 percent of employees back in the office by the fall. But, it will be gradual and depend on guidance from the city.

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Article source: https://abc7news.com/realestate/sf-turned-ghost-town-heres-how-empty-the-city-really-is/6341378/

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Coronavirus: Bay Area rents drop, but it’s not just the pandemic

Chuck Hattemer broke his lease in San Jose for temporary and remote shelter during the pandemic.

Hattemer, the co-founder of property management startup Onerent, returned to his parents in San Diego for a rent-free stay.

Last month, Hattemer and his girlfriend, Michelle Lovato, drove to Seattle to live with an aunt and uncle for a few more weeks. On the way, he said, they camped and met several other couples taking the same approach to remote work — heavily emphasizing “remote.”

“A lot of people were on the same journey,” Hattemer said in an interview from Seattle. “A lot of people are going remote.”

Moves like Hattemer’s have contributed to some — but not all — of the sharp ups and downs of rents in core Bay Area cities during the COVID-19 pandemic, real estate experts say.

Prices for one-bedrooms in techie hives near major Silicon Valley companies have plummeted from last July: San Francisco fell 11.8 percent, Mountain View dropped 15.1 percent, Menlo Park fell 13.5 percent, San Jose slid 8 percent, and Cupertino 15.7 percent, according to rental website Zumper.

974a4 SJM L MOVE 0712 90 01 Coronavirus: Bay Area rents drop, but it’s not just the pandemicAnd one-bedroom leases in cities with historically cheaper rents and larger spaces have seen rising prices: Oakland jumped 4.5 percent, Walnut Creek edged up 1.3 percent, and Concord rose 2.3 percent, according to Zumper data.

Despite anecdotes about techie friends breaking leases or ditching roommates in San Francisco to hang out in Tahoe, hiking and rock climbing between Zoom calls, economists doubt lifestyle changes are the only reason behind plummeting prices.

Two other big forces have changed the supply-and-demand equation in the housing-short Bay Area: owners of short-term rentals, including Airbnb vacation stops and furnished corporate housing, are now listing those units as long-term rentals, adding new supply. And surveys and interviews suggest many renters are taking shelter-in-place seriously and extending their leases rather than risking a move, quelling demand. The increased supply and falling demand have pushed down prices.

Remote work has made it easier for techies and Silicon Valley professionals to dump roommates, break leases and move to cheaper, bigger apartments in distant suburbs or indulge in lifestyle make-overs.

Migration caused by the boom in remote work is “a real trend,” said Chris Salviati, housing economist at Apartment List. “But I don’t think it’s the main driver of the trend” of lower rents.

A national survey by Apartment List in June found 17 percent of renters more likely to move this year because of the pandemic, while 30 percent were less likely to move. Renters said their top reason for staying put was feeling it was unsafe to move during the pandemic.

About 1 in 3 renters said they were more likely to move because they needed to save money and find something cheaper, while only 1 in 5 said they planned to work remotely.

Anth Georgiades, CEO of Zumper, believes the rent turbulence is largely due to a migration known as “The Brooklyn Effect.” The hypothesis: The Bay Area is experiencing a shift in rental habits much like New York City has undergone in recent years. Manhattan residents have given up their small, pricey apartments for cheaper, larger flats in Brooklyn, driving up rents in their new neighborhoods.

In the Bay Area, Georgiades believes the Zumper data shows a connection between falling demand in tech hubs like San Francisco, Menlo Park and Mountain View, and rising demand and prices in Oakland and throughout the East Bay. Higher prices in outlying suburbs suggest renters are looking for more space, and less concerned about a daily commute as remote work becomes more accepted.

Several major tech companies have told employees to expect work-from-home to be a larger part of their culture even after pandemic restrictions are lifted. Facebook expects as many as half of its employees to switch to remote work during the next decade. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey told workers most could clock-in from home permanently. Google is still working out its plans.

“The story is not apocalyptic — everyone is not leaving the Bay Area,” Georgiades said. Zumper has seen website search traffic grow to record levels, suggesting a still-robust demand for apartments.

Onerent has seen a shift in demand for its services, Hattemer said. The San Jose-based startup manages about 1,500 residential properties, mainly single-family homes, in several western states.

The company has seen a few major changes during the pandemic in renter behavior, Hattemer said. In June 2019, about 35 percent of tenants in the Onerent portfolio renewed their leases. A year later, about 85 percent of tenants signed up for an extension on their current lease. “I think people are just hunkering down,” he said.

Onerent also has seen an influx of short-term rentals — converted Airbnb rooms and corporate housing — reach their platform during the pandemic. Hattemer said conversions from short-term to long-term rentals typically made up less than 10 percent of their new business, but recently have been about one-third of new listings.

The pandemic has diminished leisure and work travel, forcing Airbnb to lay off one-quarter of its workforce in May and postpone plans for a public offering.

On a personal side, Hattemer sees the value in spending more time with family, saving money, and working wherever he can find a quiet spot and WiFi. But at some point, he wants to cut back on the video conferences and see his friends and colleagues face to face.

Even the startup’s small office, he said, he misses.


Article source: https://www.mercurynews.com/coronavirus-bay-area-rents-drop-but-its-not-just-the-pandemic

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Bay Area home sales plummet during coronavirus, but prices rise

Bay Area home sales plummeted in May, falling by more than one-third in most counties and by nearly half in San Francisco as COVID-19 fears chilled buyers and sellers.

But the slowdown in transactions did little to slow prices — median sale prices rose noticeably in Santa Clara, Alameda and Contra Costa counties, according to Zillow data. The median home sale price for seven counties came in at $866,900.

Bay Area demand for scarce homes remained strong despite the shutdowns and constraints caused by the pandemic. “These numbers are pretty impressive. Pretty striking,” said Zillow economist Jeff Tucker.

The smaller pool of Bay Area house hunters shrugged off historic job losses, an ever-lengthening health crisis and economic uncertainty to snap up the few homes for sale at rates not seen since the peak of the market in 2017. Even limited in-person home tours and less personal meetings with brokers did not discourage these buyers.

The lure of record-low interest rates — hovering around 3.1 percent — has also encouraged many to start shopping.

Median prices for single family homes rose, year-over-year, in five of seven counties in May, according to Zillow. The median price for a home in Santa Clara County rose 4.6 percent to $1.25 million, grew 2.4 percent to $660,900 in Contra Costa County, increased 2.1 percent to $889,700 in Alameda County, jumped  5.9 percent to $462,100 in Solano County, and climbed 2.9 percent to $646,300 in Sonoma County.

Prices fell in the region’s two most expensive spots, but provided no bargains. The median sale price in San Francisco fell about one percent to $1.53 million and dropped 1.6 percent to $1.45 million in San Mateo County, according to Zillow.

Data for Marin and Napa counties was not available.

The market for condominiums in core Bay Area counties continued to crumble, with price drops nearing 15 percent in Santa Clara County, and smaller declines in San Francisco, San Mateo, Alameda and Contra Costa counties.

Tucker said the appeal of single-family homes — with yards and private space — has grown during the pandemic. Many condo units now have limited access to common areas, community gyms and outdoor spaces, and tighter living conditions could be a turn-off for some buyers.

Agents say buyers remaining in the market are serious and prepared to move. Some are reporting bidding wars for Silicon Valley properties, with low inventory fueling the market. And despite the growing reliance on remote work, few have noticed a run for distant suburbs with lower prices and bigger spaces.

Core Silicon Valley communities, including Palo Alto, Mountain View, Cupertino, Sunnyvale and Saratoga, have seen growing interest and sales over listing prices.

Compass agent Mark Wong of Saratoga said business remained brisk with motivated buyers. During the pandemic, he’s seen several clients looking to move from San Francisco high rises to single-family homes in the South Bay.

The tech economy has also remained solid, he added. “People are still buying and selling every single day, ” Wong said. “They seem to be bullet-proof on their income.”

Buyers are shopping online and making quick decisions, he said, with offers being accepted as quickly as a day after a property has been listed. “Buyers just can’t wait,” he said.

Agent Tina Hand, president of the Bay East Association of Realtors, said demand remains strong along the I-880 corridor. Low mortgage rates have boosted buying power. “It’s free money,” she said.

Realtors have adapted to new rules, staggering home showings in one-hour intervals because open houses have been banned. The inventory of homes for sale in the East Bay has fallen, like the greater Bay Area.

The pandemic has changed some buyers’ habits. “People are now seriously looking at traditional single-family homes,” she said. “They’re looking for yards again.”

48eeb SJM L HOMES O711 90 01 Bay Area home sales plummet during coronavirus, but prices rise


Article source: https://www.mercurynews.com/bay-area-home-sales-plummet-during-coronavirus-but-prices-rise

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Real estate market in the Mission appears to recover, for now

The real estate market in the Mission District and San Francisco appears to be on its way to recovering from the shutdown in March, according to several real estate agents, although some parts of the market remain sluggish.

“The market is holding up pretty strong, but it depends on the segment,” said real estate agent Ruth Krishnan. “Condos and high-rise buildings are the softest. I would say people aren’t super stoked about getting in an elevator. And people have decided that they really, really value outdoor space and greenery.”

Krishnan said her agency recently sold a condo in the Mission District on Shotwell Street.

“It did very well, but it had this beautiful private garden,” she said. “With condos, definitely the ones that are doing the best, selling the quickest, and selling for the highest prices have outdoor space. That’s a big thing for people right now.”

“Most of the stuff sitting right now, it just doesn’t have any yard space,” she added.

Krishnan said that, typically, March is the busiest month for real estate in San Francisco, but this year all listings were pulled when the shelter-in-place order was announced. That didn’t keep things down for long, though. The city added real estate to the list of essential businesses on March 31, and Krishnan immediately started seeing business pick up.

“I was shocked. Right coming out of [March], people were already writing very aggressive offers. I was like, ‘Wait, what? Really? Right now?’” she said.

The monthly median house sale price in San Francisco set a new record of $1.8 million in June, according to the monthly report from the Compass real estate brokerage. “But it’s just a single month,” added Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst for Compass.

“I never would have guessed that we would see this sort of rebound around the Bay Area, in the midst of one of the greatest health and economic crises in U.S. history,” Carlisle said.

Although the rebound in San Francisco is dramatic, it’s the smallest of the Bay Area, he said. Other counties — including more rural areas like Sonoma, Napa, Monterey, and Santa Cruz counties — have all seen spikes that “may be higher than at any time in history, in terms of offers being accepted.”

The rebound in San Francisco might not be as pronounced, perhaps, because the city has stricter shelter-in-place rules, Carlisle said, or perhaps because it’s the most densely populated region of the Bay Area.

“The Mission remains popular and strong,” said real estate agent Jennifer Rosdail. “The shutdown slowed it down at first, but people have figured out how to get their transactions done, and it’s accelerating a little bit.”

Since April, Rosdail said sales started coming back and have improved each month. “I’ve seen that in every segment I’ve checked — except for the luxury homes over, like, $2.5 million,” she said.

There aren’t many of those more expensive single-family homes in the Mission, but in a neighborhood like Noe Valley, the pattern is striking, Rosdail said. Single-family homes priced lower than $2.5 million there are moving much more quickly than those above $2.5 million, and more appear to be entering the market than are being sold.

“I think that dichotomy is interesting. I see a deceleration in the luxury homes” in Noe Valley, Rosdail said.

Taking the city as a whole, Carlisle’s analysis shows luxury single-family homes priced above $3 million are increasing in price — but that’s based on properties that have accepted offers, while Rosdail is also examining the growing supply of inventory in Noe Valley.

By and large, Carlisle said he prefers not to look at individual neighborhoods.

“When you look at a specific neighborhood, the sales numbers are so low, it’s hard for the data to be statistically reliable,” he said. “I generally try to look at them only on an annual basis.”

But, even with small sample sizes, it remains the only tool we have.

Crunching the numbers for the Mission, Rosdail said things were picking up in terms of volume and price — but that didn’t mean losses had been fully recovered, especially for condos. Comparing the median price of a two-bedroom condo that sold in May this year with the same time period last year, the price had dropped from $1.25 million to $1.05 million — or about 16 percent less. But, again, prices have gone up since then.

“April was a terrible month to sell your home. May wasn’t so bad. June was pretty good,” Rosdail said. “I don’t think we’re going to experience a summer slowdown this year; I think we already had it in April. People are just going to keep charging forward.”

The pandemic has also shifted what many people normally think of as in-demand neighborhoods.

“Outer Richmond is hot right now. The Sunset is doing great, because people want more space, they want to be away from each other,” Rosdail said.  Meanwhile, condos in SoMa haven’t been moving as quickly.

“A lot of renters have become buyers,” observed real estate agent Kevin Ho. “All the talk of exodus — that’s the headline-grabbing news — but the real news is that a lot of buyers have a little more affordability. And a little more balance to the market allows them to own a piece of San Francisco.”

Ho said more of the buyers right now seem to be people who want to live in the home they’re purchasing, rather than using it as an investment. He said some of the recent changes to the law around tenant protections and rent forgiveness might be having an impact, and investors “don’t necessarily want to assume that risk.”

In San Francisco, the market for apartment buildings has also changed. For buildings with six or more apartments, Ho said the market had “quieted down, with not much movement.”

“For four units or under, we’re seeing good activity, because it’s more manageable,” he said. “Bigger buildings with multiple units, we’re seeing that market kind of take a pause as they wait and see how this pans out, because of all those changes” to rental laws.

Not all real estate agents Mission Local spoke to were convinced prices would continue to climb. An agent familiar with the Mission District, but who did not wish to be quoted by name, conveyed skepticism that the rush the city had seen over the past few months would be sustainable. Buyers may become choosier before submitting an offer on a less-desirable property, they argued, which could lead to more houses than buyers.

Analyzing numbers can tell us how the market has performed so far, but predicting the future remains as elusive as ever.

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Article source: https://missionlocal.org/2020/07/real-estate-market-in-the-mission-appears-to-recover-for-now/

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