$1.195M house in a quiet corner of the Bay Area you may never have heard of


  • c6d63 920x920 $1.195M house in a quiet corner of the Bay Area you may never have heard of

    Briones- an East Bay town of rolling fields, forest, and farmland, offers this mini-estate for $1.195M

    Briones- an East Bay town of rolling fields, forest, and farmland, offers this mini-estate for $1.195M


    Photo: Christian And Ally Thede

  •  $1.195M house in a quiet corner of the Bay Area you may never have heard of

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Briones- an East Bay town of rolling fields, forest, and farmland, offers this mini-estate for $1.195M

Briones- an East Bay town of rolling fields, forest, and farmland, offers this mini-estate for $1.195M



Photo: Christian And Ally Thede


On three acres in Brinoes, you could live an upscale rural life in this home, which comes with separate artist studio, chicken coop, and tiki bar, plus a rooftop deck on the main home- all for $1.195 million.

The home


The main house on the property is a three-bedroom, two-bathroom of 1,609 square feet.

It was built in 1975, but has enjoyed updates since, most noticeably in the gleaming kitchen and new bathrooms.

The layout here is an open one, with living and dining areas flowing into the kitchen, and out to a large deck.

On top of the house, a roof deck awaits for taking in views of the acerage.

The land

Access to this property starts with a long tree-lined driveway, giving onto a courtyard and front area with gardens, fruit trees, and chicken coop.

Bonus outbuildings include an artist’s studio and a two-stall barn.


Further away from the main house are fields ripe for the home farmer’s attentions, as well as a creek. Alongside the creek (because, why not?) is a tiki bar.

The location

Briones is an East Bay community with a commute of 30 minutes to Oakland, and about 50 minutes to San Francisco  (traffic allowing).

Briones Regional Park, which this home is close to, offers 6,255 acres of recreation and tranquility.

Potential

The level nature of much of this land means development opportunities abound. And certainly, anyone who wants to grow anything would have ample resources on such a large lot.

The deal

Ready to trade city life for life in the country? Bidding for 300 Bear Oaks Lane starts at $1.195 million.

See the full listing here.

Anna Marie Erwert writes from both the renter and new buyer perspective, having (finally) achieved both statuses. She focuses on national real estate trends, specializing in the San Francisco Bay Area and Pacific Northwest. Follow Anna on Twitter: @AnnaMarieErwert


Article source: https://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/Trade-city-life-for-a-1-195M-home-on-3-acres-in-13386409.php

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With Prop 10 dead, what’s next for California renters?

Rising rents, a growing renter population, and heartrending stories about evictions and displacement meant this should have been a good year to ask Californians to loosen restrictions on rent control.

But the measure allowing greater protections for renters, Proposition 10, failed miserably at the polls.

What now?

Advocates haven’t given up. They see a political ally in newly elected Governor Gavin Newsom and strength from an expanding coalition of groups supporting tenant rights.

Pressure on tenants remains intense in the Bay Area, where rents have soared 46 percent in San Jose and 50 percent in San Francisco since 2010, according to Zillow.

“Just because Prop 10 lost doesn’t mean the problems tenants face disappear,” said Assemblyman David Chiu, D-San Francisco. “We have to do something.”

Tenant advocates say the movement still has momentum, despite the clear rebuke from voters. Landlord and real estate investor groups say there’s room to negotiate — but further rent control measures may be off the table.

The next step could be to reform — not repeal — the state rent control law known as Costa-Hawkins, which was targeted by Prop 10. The law limits a city’s power to place rent control on new construction. A repeal would have given cities the choice to impose strict regulations on rent increases on apartments, condos and rented single family homes.

Housing advocates are optimistic Newsom will bring renewed attention to the state’s shortage. Newsom opposed Prop 10, but supported more renter protections.

Newsom said “]in a post-election news conference that housing is a top priority — building more units for low and middle-income residents, preserving affordable neighborhoods and preventing displacement. “You’re going to hear a lot more from me on housing and transportation, because I see the two as the same,” he said.

Both sides are hopeful Newsom will foster a new, more robust housing policy. He set a goal of creating 3.5 million units of housing by 2025 — a pace six times faster than home construction during the last decade.

Chiu, who co-sponsored an unsuccessful bill to repeal Costa-Hawkins this year, is also optimistic about housing reform in Sacramento. Options could include new protections from evictions, and smaller modifications to state rent control laws. Lawmakers are already discussing bills, he said.

“We’re looking at a wide range of ideas,” Chiu said.

Property owners are now confident voters do not want government price controls to guide the relationship between landlords and tenants.

Debra Carlton, senior vice president for public affairs for the California Apartment Association, said the vote was a “resounding no” on expanded rent control. The association, which represents the largest commercial investors in residential real estate, could find common ground with tenant groups on pro-development measures, she said.

Reform of local development policies could encourage more construction of apartments, homes and condos, offering renters more choices. “You can’t let cities off the hook,” Carlton said.

Sid Lakireddy, a Berkeley landlord and incoming president of the California Rental Housing Association, said the vote should not stall efforts to compromise. He believes the message from voters on Prop 10 was that rent control would not solve the housing shortage.

“We’ve been under-producing housing since the 1980s,” Lakireddy said. “There’s no silver bullet. There’s no magic solution.”

Lonnie Vidaurri, director of investments at StarPoint Properties in Los Angeles, said the state could encourage more multi-family developments through tax breaks and other incentives for new construction in poor communities. State policy makers understand the need for more development, he said, because “the housing shortage in California is so intense and acute.”

Supporters of the repeal effort expected a difficult campaign. Well-funded opposition from landlord and real estate investors outspent the Yes campaign by 3 to 1 in the run-up to the election, according to public filings.

“It’s a disappointing outcome, but I don’t think anyone should read into it for the future of tenants rights,” said Jeffrey Buchanan of Working Partnerships USA, based in San Jose.

“Prop 10 was a very uphill fight from the start,” said Randy Shaw, tenant rights activist in San Francisco and author of “Generation Priced Out.”

Shaw said the organizing efforts — bringing tenant groups together from grassroots to a statewide campaign — will help on future local and statewide battles. He added that it would also force lawmakers in some districts to “feel like they have to do something.”

Housing advocates say the lessons learned can be used to push tenant issues, such as making evictions harder, protecting older and disabled renters — into local and state discussions. Local cities still have the authority to enact rent control.

Damien Goodmon, a tenant rights activist in Los Angeles and former director of the Yes on 10 campaign, said the ballot initiative brought more attention and energy to renter issues than any event in at least 30 years.

Renter groups gained size and experience from the campaign, Goodmon said. “They’ve put on notice the elected leaders in both parties,” he said. “Every member of the housing justice community feels there’s a lot to build on. This was truly a spark.”


Citations

https://www.sos.ca.gov/campaign-lobbying/cal-access-resources/measure-contributions/2018-ballot-measure-contribution-totals/17-0041-expands-local-governments-authority-enact-rent-control-residential-property-initiative-statute/

http://www.hcd.ca.gov/policy-research/plans-reports/docs/California’s-Housing-Future-Main-Document-Draft.pdf

 


Article source: https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/11/20/with-prop-10-dead-whats-next-for-renters/

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4 Reasons To Sell Your Stocks Today

Information about Facebook stock shares is displayed on a monitor as traders and financial professionals work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the closing bell, November 19, 2018 in New York City.Getty

Stocks have plummeted since the beginning of October. And that decline is a predictor of economic troubles ahead for the U.S. economy.

If you need the money from your stocks in the next five years, you should sell them before they lose even more value. If you have a longer time horizon, grit your teeth and suffer patiently.

Some day stocks will bottom out and keep rising — if you have the stomach for it, their decline will create a great buying opportunity — until the next market collapse.

When you see Warren Buffett offering to finance GE’s debt, you’ll know the bottom is in sight.

Just how bad is the market carnage? The SP 500 has lost 8.2% since its late September high of 2,930 and the NASDAQ has fallen 13.3% from its August high of 8,110.

Meanwhile, tech bellwethers have plunged: Facebook trades down 40% from its July 2018 high of $217.50 and Amazon has fallen 26% from its September high of about $2,040.

Does this have any effect on the U.S. economy? After all, the U.S. GDP grew 3.5% in the third quarter and household wealth increased to a record $106.9 trillion in the second quarter of 2018, according to the Federal Reserve — driven by a $1.7 trillion increase in the value of financial assets and a $496.1 billion increase in household real estate.

There are four reasons that this does not mean the recent decline is a buying opportunity.

1. Reverse Wealth Effect

These economic statistics reveal a critical connection between stocks, real estate and human psychology.

When stock prices rise, those who own them feel confident in bidding up the price of real estate. What’s more, when interest rates are low, they don’t mind borrowing lots of money to buy the houses.

Conversely, when stocks fall, it does not take long for people to suffer from a reverse wealth effect. As Robert Samuelson wrote about a decade ago

The “wealth effect” refers to the tendency of people to adjust their spending as their wealth — concentrated heavily in housing and stocks — changes. When wealth rises, spending strengthens; when wealth falls, spending weakens. Now the wealth effect is reversing. As stock and home values drop, Americans are scrambling to increase savings and curb spending. The  economist Nigel Gault of IHS Global Insight estimates that every dollar’s change in wealth causes people to change their spending by 5 cents. If so, the hit to consumer spending would be $450 billion ($9 trillion times .05).

Think this is ancient history? Consider the sudden reversal in the country’s priciest real estate market — the San Francisco Bay Area.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, in San Francisco, the number of homes with a price cut in October 2018 nearly doubled, to 238 from 124 last October. In Santa Clara County the number of price cuts rose six-fold to 818 in October 2018.

The decline in technology stocks is an important factor. Tracy McLaughlin, a real estate agent in Marin County and Natalie Kitchen, a Realtor in San Francisco told Bloomberg that the decline in tech stocks were to blame. As Kitchen said, “I think it’s more about that feeling of generally being poorer than you thought you were.”

Sadly it’s not clear why technology stocks are dropping so much. To be sure, Apple is suffering from a slowdown in iPhone sales and Facebook is getting bad publicity about its mismanagement. But Amazon and Netflix are doing well.

My guess is that algorithms — which account for some 50% of trading volume — are driving a shift in capital out of tech stocks.

2. Trade War and Tariffs

Fund managers seem spooked by trade war and tariffs — indeed Jared Woodard, global investment strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch told the Wall Street Journal that investors were surprised that the “The tech sector, especially in the U.S. is more exposed to political and regulatory risk than a lot of investors were prepared for.”

The November BAML Fund Managers survey revealed the largest drop in allocation to tech in October since the financial crisis — likely to cause more pain for investors. As Woodard told the Journal, “The trade conflict is a tech arms race and something not likely to be resolved in any major way in the near term. We suggest more pain for financial markets is likely.”

3. Corporate debt

Compared to the Bush-era financial crisis, the locus of institutional debt has shifted. According to the Wall Street Journal, in 2005 nonfinancial corporate debt was relatively small — at the lowest relative to GDP since 1993. Mainly banks and the financial sector were overleveraged.

Today, banks have solid liquidity buffers while “nonfinancial companies have been on a borrowing spree fueled by cheap money,” according to the Journal. Indeed corporate debt stood at a record 45.5% of GDP, surpassing a level it last reached in 2008 as the economy was entering a recession, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

This brings us to GE – which at $122 billion in debt is the biggest corporate borrower. If GE debt — which remains three rating notches above junk — gets downgraded, the effect on the overall financial markets could be particularly harsh, according to the Journal.

And GE’s decision not to provide financial guidance earlier this month is doing nothing to alleviate fears of such a downgrade.

4. Lowered earnings growth

Rapid earnings growth makes stocks attractive. So when earnings are expected to grow more slowly, stocks ought to adjust downward.

Indeed earnings are expected to slow down. For all of 2018, analysts expect the SP 500 to report 23.2% earnings growth according to Yardeni Research. Sadly, growth is expected to decelerate to 9% in 2019.

Given the reverse wealth effect, the uncertainty regarding the trade war, and the risk in the corporate debt market, that 2019 earnings growth rate sounds optimistic to me.

If GE debt gets downgraded, look out below. And should Warren Buffett strike a deal with GE, that could mark a buying opportunity.

Article source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/petercohan/2018/11/20/4-reasons-to-sell-your-stocks-today/

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Sound Off: Which proposition will have the greatest effect on the Bay Area’s real estate market?

A: Proposition 10, a ballot measure to expand rent control in California, was rejected by voters on Tuesday. With Proposition 10’s failure, a statewide ban on most new forms of rent control will remain in effect. The campaign to expand rent control was brought about to voters as housing has become less affordable throughout the state. Had the initiative passed, local governments would have been free to add new restrictions on rents.

Opponents of the measure argued that expanding rent control would increase the state’s housing shortage, exacerbate overall affordability issues and hurt the investments of single family homeowners. Instead of rent control, some economists contend the primary solution is to build more homes and have the new supply force prices down. But that would be hard to achieve, and other researchers contend that rent control is the only way cities can keep costs down cheaply and immediately.

Either way, despite Proposition 10’s defeat, rent control is likely to remain in the spotlight.

Kathleen Daly, Coldwell Banker, 415-519-6074, kdaly@cbnorcal.com; Lisa Lange, Coldwell Banker, 415-847-7770, Lisalange@coldwellbanker.com.

A: The defeat of Proposition 10 by a large margin is a good thing. The long-term impact of lifting rent control on all properties would discourage development and reduce the value of both homes and investment properties. This scenario would lead to less available housing.

San Franciscans are owning up to taking responsibility for solving our housing shortage. A NIMBY approach to housing is no longer acceptable. Thanks to the efforts and a $7 million contribution from Salesforce’s Marc Benioff the voters passed Proposition C 60 percent to 40 percent.

Proposition C will charge corporations with revenues of more than $50 million approximately one-half percent in gross receipts tax, raising $250-$300 million for homeless services and housing. Yes, there will be legal challenges. Press on.

Passage of these measures to solve the homeless problem are positive, said Michael Gallin of Vanguard Properties, primarily because “Mayor London Breed vows to take a good look at the homeless programs to determine what is working and what is not. She aims to make sure that there are no give away programs that do not insure results.”

Vanguard C.E.O. James Nunemacher, who also donates big time to Home for Home and other projects addressing San Francisco’s housing needs, said, “I am pleased that the election is behind us. I look forward to robust winter and spring markets.”

Anne Lawrence, Vanguard Properties, 415-533-6980, annelawrence@vanguardsf.com.

A: Tuesday’s elections brought many changes. Two proposals that would have had great impact on housing, Propositions 5 and 10 brought mixed results. Proposition 5 was defeated. This initiative would have allowed seniors, disabled and victims of natural disasters to sell their homes and be able to transfer their tax basis.

With the defeat of this, many homes that could be offered for sale now will be held as in many cases not only is there disincentive to sell, many owners can’t afford to sell and then purchase another home without incurring the current tax rates which prices out many on fixed incomes.

Proposition 10, an initiative that would have repealed the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act, was defeated. Had this passed, protections homeowners have enjoyed for more than 20 years would be removed and the housing crisis would have been further fueled by making it more expensive and harder for renters to find affordable housing.

Mary Fenton, Level 5 Real Estate, 415-205-5218, mary@level5realestate.com.

Article source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/realestate/article/Sound-Off-Which-proposition-will-have-the-13406306.php

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Real Estate’s Constant Conflict

So what do you do? The only thing you can. Draw up a list of pros and cons, just as real estate agents often suggest.

HOW LONG WILL YOU STAY? If it’s one or two years, then rent. The costs to buy and sell the house — like that pesky 5 percent to 6 percent brokers’ commission — will make it hard for you not to lose money, Chris Herbert, managing director of Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, pointed out. But if it’s more than five to seven years, buy. Even if the housing market falls in value, your home is likely to rebound, at least to the price you paid, by the time you’re ready to sell. And you get to live there and accrue equity from paying down the mortgage.

ARE YOU SETTLED? If you have small children who want outdoor space to play — or you’re tired of bundling them up and taking them to the playground when you really just want to read the paper — a house with a yard probably looks appealing. You’re settled and are likely to be in the same place for a while, dream as you might for that carefree city life of your single days.

WEIGH THE COSTS Homeownership is more cost-effective than renting. Rent rises with inflation. You can potentially lock in your mortgage payment for the next 30 years. While rates rise, you have nothing to worry about. But if they drop below what you’re paying, you can refinance and pay less.

YOU HAVE FREEDOM You can do what you want with your home. “You get to paint the walls the color you want,” said Christopher J. Mayer, co-director of the Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate at Columbia Business School. “You get to have the funky granite countertop that no one else but you likes.”

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/16/business/real-estates-rent-or-buy.html

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