More Tech Jobs in Bay Area Than Anywhere Else

dc6fc sf google building More Tech Jobs in Bay Area Than Anywhere Else The tech sector has had a profound impact on commercial real estate (credit: Apple magazine).

SAN JOSE—Technology’s impact on commercial real estate has been building since the financial crisis of 2008. The trend of start-ups and tech companies occupying large spaces in metropolitan areas is occurring all over North America and especially in tech-vital cities. So says Cushman Wakefield’s annual report, Tech Cities 2.0, that identifies existing and emerging tech centers increasingly driving the North American economy and impacting the commercial real estate sector.

Article source: https://www.globest.com/2018/10/10/more-tech-jobs-in-bay-area-than-anywhere-else/

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

Venture capital: Bay Area’s Lucid Motors, Zoox, Uber scored the most in third quarter

The number of venture capital deals worldwide fell for the first time in about six years in the third quarter, but funding to U.S. companies rose 17 percent to $28 billion, and mega funding rounds reached record levels.

U.S. startups raised six rounds worth $500 million or more and 55 rounds worth $100 million or more, the most of any quarter on record, according to the MoneyTree Report released by PricewaterhouseCoopers and CB Insights on Tuesday.

0955a siliconbeat logo tech news blog Venture capital: Bay Areas Lucid Motors, Zoox, Uber scored the most in third quarterSixteen U.S. companies became unicorns, or saw their valuations rise to $1 billion or more. They included San Mateo-based bike- and scooter-sharing service startup Lime and San Francisco-based software-development company GitLab. There are now 119 private companies worldwide that are valued at $1 billion or more, which is a record.

San Francisco-based startups again led in amount raised, receiving $8 billion in investments, a 35 percent increase from the second quarter. Deal activity fell 20 percent to 229 transactions. Funding to Silicon Valley startups rose 24 percent from the previous quarter, reaching $4.8 billion, while deal activity fell 28 percent.

Investments in auto and real estate technology rose, with some Bay Area-based companies among the top recipients.

Auto-tech funding surged to $1.9 billion from just $56 million the previous quarter. Lucid Motors, an electric-car maker in Newark, scooped up the bulk of that total, scoring a $1 billion investment from the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. Lucid’s funding round tied New York-based WeWork for the largest funding deal in the quarter. A $500 million round went to Menlo Park-based Zoox, an autonomous-driving startup, from investors that included Lux Capital and Blackbird Ventures.

Investment in real estate tech startups increased to $1.2 billion, up from $905 million in the second quarter. Opendoor, a San Francisco-based online real estate marketplace, led the way, raising $400 million from SoftBank.

As of the third quarter, the top five startups by valuation again had Uber at No. 1. The San Francisco ride-hailing company received a $500 million investment from Toyota in the third quarter and is now valued at $72 billion. It is followed by Airbnb ($29 billion), SpaceX ($22 billion), Palantir Technologies ($20 billion), Stripe ($20 billion) and WeWork ($20 billion).


Article source: https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/10/09/venture-capital-bay-areas-lucid-motors-zoox-uber-scored-the-most-in-third-quarter/

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

The World’s Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

With the current stock market bull run reaching nearly 10 years in length, it’s understandable that many investors are nervous about the end of the party coming sooner than later.

However, as UBS notes in its latest report, there is also growing concern about another prominent bubble that’s been in the works since the aftermath of the financial crisis.

Large amounts of easy money have fueled real estate bubbles in the world’s major cities – and the Swiss investment bank now sees the property markets in six global cities as being at risk.

The Bubble Index

In the 2018 edition of the bank’s Real Estate Bubble Index, here are the major cities around the globe that are in or near bubble territory:

9afe7 real estate bubbles The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

Any city with a score over 1.5 is considered at “Bubble Risk”, and right now those include two cities from Canada, one from Asia, and three from Europe.

Hong Kong (2.03) tops the index this year, leaping past Munich (1.99), Toronto (1.95), and Vancouver (1.92) which all remain at bubble risk themselves. Amsterdam and London are the two other cities that score higher than a 1.5 on the rankings.

It’s also very important to note that there are four cities that score just under the 1.5 threshold: Stockholm (1.45), Paris (1.44), San Francisco (1.44), and Frankfurt (1.43).

A Coming Correction?

Investor and writer Howard Marks has noted in recent months that the wider market is in its “8th inning”, and the same case could be made for real estate.

Historically, investors have had to be alert to rising interest rates, which have served as the main trigger of corrections.

– UBS Report

According to UBS, the cracks are already starting to show at the top end of the market, with housing prices declining in half of last year’s list of bubble cities. Some of the worrying factors include rising interest rates, as well as growing political tensions as the crisis of affordability makes it harder for average people to live in these global financial centers.

Here is annualized growth in percent over the last year, as well for the last five years for cities in the index:

9afe7 housing bubbles growth rates The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

As you can see, some of these cities have had negative growth over the last 12 months, including New York, Toronto, Sydney, London, and Stockholm.

Charting Specific Markets

In Hong Kong, you need to work 22 years to afford a 645 sq. ft (60m²) apartment, when that took just 12 years just a decade ago. In recent years, Hong Kong’s ascent to becoming one of the biggest real estate bubbles has become very evident, especially when juxtaposed with Singapore:

9afe7 hk singapore The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

In Canada, the two cities in the index are starting to go in alternate directions, although recent signs also point to a potential slowdown in Vancouver:

9afe7 canada The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

Finally, the U.S. market – which felt the pain of the housing crash in the late 2000s – is home to zero cities in the bubble risk category, according to UBS.

9afe7 usa The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

Whether it is a bubble or not, many people agree that San Francisco’s housing situation is still a crisis. In the Bay Area hub, 60% of all rental units are in rental-controlled buildings, and the median single-family house price is a hefty $1.7 million.

9afe7 footer email The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

9afe7 vc twitter The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018
9afe7 vc facebook The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018
9afe7 vc linkedin The Worlds Biggest Real Estate Bubbles in 2018

Article source: http://www.visualcapitalist.com/biggest-real-estate-bubbles-2018/

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

Hudson Pacific Properties (HPP), Allianz Real Estate Report Acquisition of Ferry Building in Downtown San Francisco …

As you were browsing www.streetinsider.com something about your browser made us think you were a bot.

If you are interested in www.streetinsider.com content, APIs are available. Please contact us here http://www.streetinsider.com/signup_content.php

To request an unblock, please fill out the form below and we will review it as soon as possible.

Article source: https://www.streetinsider.com/Management+Comments/Hudson+Pacific+Properties+%28HPP%29%2C+Allianz+Real+Estate+Report+Acquisition+of+Ferry+Building+in+Downtown+San+Francisco%2C+CA+for+%24291M/14683115.html

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

1 in 3 Bay Area renters have less than $1000 saved

Nearly a third of Bay Area renters are one financial emergency away from missing a rent payment — and potentially getting slapped with an eviction notice, according to a recent survey.

Twenty-nine percent of renters in the San Francisco metro area don’t have enough money saved to cover an unexpected expense of $1,000 or more, according to new data from real estate website Zillow.

The small-sample survey provides further evidence that as Bay Area rents swell, tenants are struggling to pay, leaving them with little or no savings. One mishap — such as a broken-down car or surprise medical bill — is enough to cause many tenants to miss their rent payments and risk losing their homes.

Zillow surveyed 216 renters in San Francisco, Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo and Marin counties as part of a nation-wide survey of 4,323 renters.

“Folks do not have savings. There’s no cushion,” said Amy Price, program manager of the Eviction Defense Collaborative’s Rental Assistance Disbursement Component, which provides loans and grants to low and middle-income tenants in San Francisco who fall behind on their rent.

Price blames the region’s high housing costs, which she says have overshot tenants’ salaries. The median price to rent a studio apartment in San Francisco is nearly $2,900, according to Zillow. In San Jose, it’s almost $2,500, and in Oakland it’s nearly $1,900.

One of Price’s clients recently had a stroke, leaving him unable to work and his family unable to make the $3,400 rent payment that’s due Oct. 15.

“A lot of our clients are walking a tightrope,” Price said.

Zane Burton, 64, of Oakland, is one of those Bay Area renters who feels as if one small misstep could send him plunging from that tightrope. Burton, a mental health worker for the city of San Francisco, just had his car serviced and is not sure he can afford both the mechanic’s bill and his $1,225 rent payment.

“Right now I’m trying to do some odd jobs or something of that nature to really make ends meet,” Burton said.

It’s even worse in the rest of the country. Nationwide, 48 percent of renters said they could not cover an unexpected expense of $1,000.

“A lot of people aren’t in a financial position to be able to afford unexpected expenses,” said Sarah Mikhitarian, a senior economist with Zillow.

And rising rents are pushing tenants from their homes. In the San Francisco metro area, 56 percent of renters who moved in the last year blamed a rent increase.

The Zillow figures aren’t the first to illustrate the massive rent burden crushing many tenants.

 

Article source: http://www.record-bee.com/1-in-3-bay-area-renters-have-less-than-1000-saved-2

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