Listings Plummet in San Francisco as Coronavirus Takes Hold of the Real Estate Market

The impact of the coronavirus on San Francisco’s housing market cannot be fully measured yet, but supply has plummeted since the city and state of California issued shelter-in-place edicts, according to a report released Thursday by Compass.

In March, a time when supply should be increasing, the number of active listings dropped by close to 50% compared to the previous month, the report found.

There were 1,016 active listings as of the week beginning Feb. 24, and just 535 as of the week beginning March 30. For luxury properties—those priced at $2.5 million and above—there were 225 listed as of Feb. 24, but only 124 listed as of March 30. 

Click to read more San Francisco luxury real estate news

“Spring is usually the most active selling season and often sees the highest median sales prices of the calendar year, due to both the level of buyer demand and the seasonal surge in the luxury home market,” Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst at Compass, wrote in the report.

At the same time, hundreds of listings have been removed. More than 200 were taken off the market the week beginning March 16 alone, according to the report. The city’s shelter-in-place mandate was issued March 17.

The number of new listings is also down, the data showed. Only 22 properties went on the market the week of March 30. More than 120 were listed the last week of February.

California has reported 18,309 cases of the virus as of Thursday afternoon. Close to 500 fatalities have been reported. San Francisco has seen 724 cases and 10 deaths.

From Penta: Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey Sets Up $1 Billion Fund, With Initial Focus on Covid-19 Relief

Sales prices remained essentially flat, but most of those deals were reached before the lockdown.

“Almost all of the sales price data we have, as of the first week of April, still reflects the market before the shelter-in-place rules went into effect,” Mr. Carlisle wrote. “In virtually all Bay Area counties, first quarter and March median sales prices were quite strong.”

Indeed, the median sales price for a single family home was $1.65 million in March, up from $1.61 million in February, according to the report. The median price for the first quarter was $1.6 million, up from $1.55 million during the same time period in 2019.

Prices were also up for condos in San Francisco. The median sales price was $1.25 million in the first quarter, compared to $1.18 million for the first three months of last year.

Article source: https://www.mansionglobal.com/articles/listings-plummet-in-san-francisco-as-coronavirus-takes-hold-of-the-real-estate-market-213930

Posted in SF Bay Area News | Tagged | Leave a comment

Bay Area couple lived in a van for two years to save up for their dream home in the Oakland Hills



  • ff592 920x920 Bay Area couple lived in a van for two years to save up for their dream home in the Oakland Hills

    The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.

    The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.


    Photo: Open Homes Photography

Caption

Close

The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.

The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.



Photo: Open Homes Photography


A Bay Area couple came up with a very novel way to try out different areas before deciding where to put down roots. For two years, Jessica and Bryan Ausinheiler lived in a van as a way to quickly pay off their student loans and save up enough money for their eventual dream home.

Their temporary four-wheeled abode was mainly a cost-saving measure, but exploring different neighborhoods was a nice side benefit, according to their agent, Deidre Joyner.


“The van allowed them to stay a few nights in different neighborhoods to ‘test out’ living there,” she said. “They kept working their professional jobs in physical therapy and consulting, bike commuting from their moving home base to their jobs. When they parked in the hills and would go hiking on the trails in the morning, they knew they wanted to live in the East Bay.”



The couple’s first thought was to build their own “tree house” on a steep wooded lot, but the “creativity-crushing building codes” put that idea out of contention, Joyner said. If they couldn’t build their own home, they knew they wanted something architecturally unique. They checked out everything from industrial downtown lofts to character homes in the hills but they just couldn’t find “the one.”


One day Bryan was sitting in their van home when he heard about 26 Eastwood Court, an A-frame on a private wooded lot in the Oakland neighborhood of Montclair. The home had been designed by an architect to be his personal residence in the late 1960s and had changed hands only a few times in the intervening years.






When Bryan went to see the home, he loved that many original design details were still intact, particularly the wood-paneled great room with its high ceiling and huge front window. The woodsy view “evoked feelings of freedom from constraint and connection to nature,” Joyner said, a good fit for this outdoorsy and nontraditional couple.


They bought the property in 2013 for $620,000.

In the past seven years, the Ausinheilers have had two children and concentrated their renovation efforts on the home’s exterior, where they created more usable space in the hilly terrain by building a terrace. They also put in a greywater irrigation system, planted native plants and added a chicken coop and pergola.

But as much as the family loves the two-bedroom, two-bath home and its nearly 6,000-square-foot lot, a new adventure was calling. The couple are the project leads for the Caracol Basin Restoration Project and are currently planning a move to the rainforests of Panama. “If Bryan and Jessica were not moving out of the country, they would not be selling 26 Eastwood Court. They adore this home and space,” said Joyner.


The international move has been pushed back a bit due to the coronavirus pandemic, but the family was still ready to go ahead and put the home on the market with an asking price of $929,000. The family has already moved out and the agent has been arranging private tours of the home, but only after prospective buyers jump through a few safety hoops first.

Viewers first need to look at the photos and 3D walkthrough on the property site. They must then sign a CoronaVirus Property Entry Advisory and Declaration form, which explains the risks of viewing properties during shelter in place.

The tour can only take place with no more than two buyers plus the buyers’ agent, all while practicing strict social distancing rules and wearing masks and gloves. “Since real estate is now deemed essential buyers can view the property in person before making an offer, but much of the initial interest and legwork is done remotely to minimize the access,” Joyner said.

She anticipates the home will sell quickly, despite the restrictions. “Having access to the wrap-around front deck off of the living room, access to the outdoors from both bedrooms and the level backyard are rare for Montclair properties,” Joyner explained. “The open concept living space is something that many current homeowners are trying to achieve with renovations and this space already has that.”

Emily Landes is a writer and editor obsessed with all things real estate.

Article source: https://www.sfgate.com/ontheblock/article/Couple-lived-in-a-van-for-two-years-to-save-up-15216165.php

Posted in SF Bay Area News | Tagged | Leave a comment

Bay Area couple lived in a van for two years to save up for their dream home in the Oakland Hills



  • e07d0 920x920 Bay Area couple lived in a van for two years to save up for their dream home in the Oakland Hills

    The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.

    The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.


    Photo: Open Homes Photography

Caption

Close

The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.

The A-Frame is still largely the same as it was when it was built in 1968.



Photo: Open Homes Photography


A Bay Area couple came up with a very novel way to try out different areas before deciding where to put down roots. For two years, Jessica and Bryan Ausinheiler lived in a van as a way to quickly pay off their student loans and save up enough money for their eventual dream home.

Their temporary four-wheeled abode was mainly a cost-saving measure, but exploring different neighborhoods was a nice side benefit, according to their agent, Deidre Joyner.


“The van allowed them to stay a few nights in different neighborhoods to ‘test out’ living there,” she said. “They kept working their professional jobs in physical therapy and consulting, bike commuting from their moving home base to their jobs. When they parked in the hills and would go hiking on the trails in the morning, they knew they wanted to live in the East Bay.”



The couple’s first thought was to build their own “tree house” on a steep wooded lot, but the “creativity-crushing building codes” put that idea out of contention, Joyner said. If they couldn’t build their own home, they knew they wanted something architecturally unique. They checked out everything from industrial downtown lofts to character homes in the hills but they just couldn’t find “the one.”


One day Bryan was sitting in their van home when he heard about 26 Eastwood Court, an A-frame on a private wooded lot in the Oakland neighborhood of Montclair. The home had been designed by an architect to be his personal residence in the late 1960s and had changed hands only a few times in the intervening years.






When Bryan went to see the home, he loved that many original design details were still intact, particularly the wood-paneled great room with its high ceiling and huge front window. The woodsy view “evoked feelings of freedom from constraint and connection to nature,” Joyner said, a good fit for this outdoorsy and nontraditional couple.


They bought the property in 2013 for $620,000.

In the past seven years, the Ausinheilers have had two children and concentrated their renovation efforts on the home’s exterior, where they created more usable space in the hilly terrain by building a terrace. They also put in a greywater irrigation system, planted native plants and added a chicken coop and pergola.

But as much as the family loves the two-bedroom, two-bath home and its nearly 6,000-square-foot lot, a new adventure was calling. The couple are the project leads for the Caracol Basin Restoration Project and are currently planning a move to the rainforests of Panama. “If Bryan and Jessica were not moving out of the country, they would not be selling 26 Eastwood Court. They adore this home and space,” said Joyner.


The international move has been pushed back a bit due to the coronavirus pandemic, but the family was still ready to go ahead and put the home on the market with an asking price of $929,000. The family has already moved out and the agent has been arranging private tours of the home, but only after prospective buyers jump through a few safety hoops first.

Viewers first need to look at the photos and 3D walkthrough on the property site. They must then sign a CoronaVirus Property Entry Advisory and Declaration form, which explains the risks of viewing properties during shelter in place.

The tour can only take place with no more than two buyers plus the buyers’ agent, all while practicing strict social distancing rules and wearing masks and gloves. “Since real estate is now deemed essential buyers can view the property in person before making an offer, but much of the initial interest and legwork is done remotely to minimize the access,” Joyner said.

She anticipates the home will sell quickly, despite the restrictions. “Having access to the wrap-around front deck off of the living room, access to the outdoors from both bedrooms and the level backyard are rare for Montclair properties,” Joyner explained. “The open concept living space is something that many current homeowners are trying to achieve with renovations and this space already has that.”

Emily Landes is a writer and editor obsessed with all things real estate.

Article source: https://www.sfgate.com/ontheblock/article/Couple-lived-in-a-van-for-two-years-to-save-up-15216165.php

Posted in SF Bay Area News | Tagged | Leave a comment

How Will Coronavirus Lockdowns Impact the US Housing Market? First Data Points Are Out. They’re Ugly

And it’s just the first inkling of what’s in store for home sales.

By Wolf Richter for WOLF STREET:

Most of the housing market data that we’re going to see over the next month or two – such as median price indices and sales volume indices — or four-plus months for the Case-Shiller Index – will reflect the era before the Covid-19 fallout. But on Tuesday last week, March 19, the real-estate world changed brutally. The five-county San Francisco Bay Area went into lockdown, followed in some form or other by the states of California, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, Indiana, Florida, Louisiana, and many others, each in its own way, more or less stringent.

Today, about one-third of the US population is under some kind of lockdown directive. And even in places where there are no official lockdowns, more and more people have started to practice some sort of “social distancing.”

For many workers, employment has already ended, and for gig workers, the hours have plunged or disappeared, at least temporarily. Commissions and tips have evaporated from one day to the next. There has been such a sudden surge in unemployment applications that state unemployment offices have fallen way behind in processing them; and official data won’t reflect the true numbers until state unemployment offices catch up. Household finances face huge question marks.

Today, a little over one week into the first chapter of the lockdown saga, we got the first inkling of what this may do to the housing market. And this is truly just the first inkling.

Mortgage applications to purchase a home plunged in states where lockdowns went into effect, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported today. And those lockdowns aren’t even fully reflected yet as they went into effect during the last part of that reporting week, ended March 20, or just after the reporting week, and what you see here is the prelude. This is the drop from the prior week, seasonally adjusted:

  • California: -23%
  • State of New York: -35%
  • State of Washington: -17%.

Across the US, purchase mortgage applications dropped 15% in the week ended March 20, from the prior week, the MBA reported. And this is just the first few days into the lockdowns:

5d24b US mortgage applications purchase 2020 03 25 How Will Coronavirus Lockdowns Impact the US Housing Market? First Data Points Are Out. Theyre Ugly

During the same week, ended March 20, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 3.82%, according to the MBA. This was up sharply from the record low two weeks earlier due to the turmoil in the mortgage-backed securities market that caused four mortgage REITs to collapse this week. But it was still much lower than the 5% mortgage rates in late 2018.

Before the coronavirus fallout, low mortgage rates late last year and this year had caused a surge in purchase mortgage applications. From October 2019 through March 13, purchase mortgage applications had soared year-over-year in the 10%-range each week, peaking at a decade high at the end of January. But this reporting week, ended March 20, purchase mortgage applications dropped 11% year-over-year.

Given “the widespread economic disruption and uncertainty over household employment and incomes,” the MBA’s report said, “potential homebuyers might continue to hold off on buying until there is a slowdown in the spread of the coronavirus and more clarity on the economic outlook.”

Mortgage applications to refinance existing mortgages (refis) went through spectacular gyrations. As mortgage rates plunged to historic lows a few weeks ago, refis spiked to the highest level since 2003, having multiplied sixfold from a year earlier.

Then two things happened: Mortgage rates snapped back as all heck broke loose in the MBS market, and the coronavirus threw uncertainty over everything. Refis in the reporting week, ended March 20, plunged 34% from the prior week and 41% from the phenomenal spike two weeks ago:

01924 US mortgage applications refi 2020 03 25 How Will Coronavirus Lockdowns Impact the US Housing Market? First Data Points Are Out. Theyre Ugly

This data is based on a weekly survey by the MBA that covers over 75% of all US retail residential mortgage applications at nonbanks, banks, and thrifts.

Purchase mortgage applications are not a great indicator of home sales because a portion of buyers, including investors, buy homes without obtaining a mortgage. Large investors pay cash and borrow at the institutional level. Foreign nonresident investors often pay cash as a way to get money out of the country. If foreign buyers borrow, they may do so offshore. Also, some people who’re tired of earning nothing on their money while paying interest on a mortgage are paying cash.

But purchase mortgage applications are a gauge of local demand by regular folks. That demand had been strong, and is now collapsing under the lockdowns.

Over the next few weeks, more states and cities will impose lockdowns. And demand for purchase mortgages will hit horridly low levels: It is difficult to shop for a home in areas under lockdown, and home sellers are reluctant to show homes to people who are potentially infected. There will be some activity, sure, including via online platforms, such as open-house videos. But much of the activity will come to a halt. And mortgage applications will be early data points that document this trend.

In good Financial Crisis manner, stuff blows up despite the Fed’s effort to stem the chaos. Now hoping for taxpayer bailouts. Read... Four Mortgage REITs Collapse After Chaos Hit Markets for Residential Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities

Enjoy reading WOLF STREET and want to support it? Using ad blockers – I totally get why – but want to support the site? You can donate. I appreciate it immensely. Click on the beer and iced-tea mug to find out how:

01924 BeerMug2 How Will Coronavirus Lockdowns Impact the US Housing Market? First Data Points Are Out. Theyre Ugly

Would you like to be notified via email when WOLF STREET publishes a new article? Sign up here.


Article source: https://wolfstreet.com/2020/03/25/how-will-coronavirus-lockdowns-impact-the-us-housing-market-first-data-points-are-out-theyre-ugly/

Posted in SF Bay Area News | Tagged | Leave a comment

Did Google Just Stop Talks For Over 2M SF Of Bay Area Real Estate?

The sudden economic slowdown has reportedly put a serious damper on the real estate plans of one of the Bay Area’s biggest companies.

Google’s parent company, Alphabet, has stopped talks to buy or lease more than 2M SF in the Bay Area, including a potential 1.5M SF-plus lease at San Francisco’s Pier 70, The Information reports.

The combination of a recession and remote-work feasibility has signaled a softening office market, and Google’s retrenchment alone could decrease market demand. 

Outside of its 3M SF Mountain View headquarters, Google has a footprint that includes well over 1M SF across San Francisco’s pricey office market, from its ownership of 88K SF at 188 at the Embarcadero to an over 400K SF lease at nearby Hills Plaza.

By late last year, Google was in talks to lease the entire office portion of Brookfield Properties’ nearly 2M SF development at San Francisco’s Pier 70 site, the San Francisco Business Times reported in December. That lease would top Facebook’s grab of Park Tower as S.F.’s largest lease ever.

In Mountain View, Google has also stepped back from a verbal agreement to buy a portfolio of office buildings owned by NortonLifeLock, a cybersecurity company previously known as Symantec, The Information reports. Since January, Cushman Wakefield has marketed a 10-building, 707K SF portfolio that once served as Symantec’s headquarters.

Neither Google nor Brookfield Properties responded to requests for comment. 

Elsewhere in the Bay Area, the search giant still has active — albeit delayed — plans to lead a transformation of San Jose’s downtown. Downtown West, its planned transit village around Diridon Station, is now tentatively scheduled to go before city council in early 2021.

Part of a larger Diridon Station Area plan being drafted by the city, Downtown West would include about 6.5M SF of office space for Google

Designed by SITELAB urban studio, Pier 70 has been underway since May 2018.

Article source: https://www.bisnow.com/san-francisco/news/commercial-real-estate/google-piece-104031

Posted in SF Bay Area News | Tagged | Leave a comment