Silicon Valley’s housing market is so dire, a burned-out home just sold for $938000

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    •  Silicon Valleys housing market is so dire, a burned out home just sold for $938000

      Diana Olick serves as CNBC’s real estate correspondent as well as the editor of the Realty Check section on CNBC.com.

Article source: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/10/burned-out-house-in-silicon-valley-sells-for-938000.html

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The best profession in the San Francisco Bay Area may not be what you think

?SAN FRANCISCO —

We often talk about tech as the most lucrative gig in the Bay Area, but real estate agents might give developers and project managers a run for their money.

The reasons for this should be obvious to anyone who lives in the Bay Area. Housing is expensive — the median home price reached a record high of $820,000 in March — and the housing stock is low. Seven-figure houses sell like hotcakes in a land where cash offers and overbids are commonplace.

To confirm what we already know, WalletHub created a new ranking of the best places to be a real estate agent. No surprises here: Bay Area cities claimed the top spots.

Standard real estate agent salaries are nothing to write home about; the average real estate agent wage in San Francisco is $74,460, according to WalletHub, but that’s not including commission. Experts estimate the typical real estate agent takes just under a 6 percent cut on sales, and San Franciscan real estate agents sell an average of 60 homes a year. You do the math.

WalletHub looked at 170 U.S. cities and evaluated each on the health of the real estate environment. While San Francisco ranked in the top overall spot, thanks to the highest median price, it tied with both San Jose and Seattle for fewest days on the market.

Four Bay Area cities made the top five, but one Pacific Northwestern outpost wedged its way to the No. 2 spot. That would be Seattle, of course, the headquarters of Amazon and a burgeoning tech capital. The coastal city’s housing market shattered records of its own in March, with the median home price hitting $777,000.

Even Santa Rosa, a city on the northern outskirts of the Bay Area, made the top 10, ranking seventh overall. The revelation provides support for a recent regional trend: People are pushing farther and farther away from San Francisco and the heart of Silicon Valley to more inland and suburban areas.

The health of the market has been on a lot of people’s minds, especially those who remember well the collapse that triggered the Great Recession. But all signs — continued population growth, shortage of available housing, growing interest rates and the continued rise in housing values — indicate the market will keep up as it has, at least for the foreseeable future.

Methodology here.

Daniel Demay, a SeattlePI staff writer, contributed to this report.

Michelle Robertson is an SFGATE staff writer. Email her at mrobertson@sfchronicle.com or find her on Twitter at @mrobertsonsf.

Article source: http://www.wbaltv.com/article/the-best-profession-in-the-san-francisco-bay-area-may-not-be-what-you-think/20197849

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Single women account for more real estate purchases than single men

It’s the gender gap you don’t hear so much about: Single women are buying homes and condos at what may be more than twice the rate of single males, and the trend appears to be accelerating.

Consider:

?Single women accounted for 18 percent of all home purchases last year compared with just 7 percent by single males, according to survey data from the National Association of Realtors. This makes single women the second-largest segment in the entire home-purchase marketplace, behind married couples.

?Citing data from the most recent U.S. Census Current Population Survey, which covered 60,000 households, Ralph McLaughlin, chief economist for consulting firm Veritas Urbis Economics, found that the share of home purchases by single women in 2017 — including never-married individuals, widows and divorcées — hit 22.8 percent, the highest on record. The gap between single women and single men was not as dramatic as in the Realtor study, however.

?Home builders have picked up on the trend and increasingly are designing homes and subdivisions to appeal to women’s preferences, including singles. Pat McKee, president of McKee Homes, a builder active in four North Carolina markets, has found that in some of the company’s developments, significant percentages of the homes — upward of 50 percent in one case — were purchased by single women in their 30s, 40s and older, so this is not just a phenomenon limited to younger singles. Many of these buyers, he told me, “are tired of living in apartments and now feel confident enough to buy a new home.”

?Single female purchasers tend to be more likely to see buying a home as an investment, according to Jessica Lautz, director of demographic and behavioral insights for the National Association of Realtors. Single women pay slightly more on their purchase, on average, than single men — $185,000 compared with $175,000 — and are more likely to have children younger than 18 in their households.

?Rising rents appear to be a hotter button for single women than for men. In a recent tracking study conducted by research and publishing firm Builders Digital Experience, 23 percent of single women cited rising rents as a “trigger” motivation behind a home purchase, well above the 16 percent average for all recent buyers.

Colleen Fleming of Chicago illustrates some of the aspects of the single-female buyer trend. She’s an instructional design program manager for the American College of Surgeons and, working with a Re/Max broker in the city, recently bought her first home — a two-bedroom, two-bath condo with parking space in an uptown neighborhood. The condo cost $307,000 — more than she had originally planned — but far below what comparable units would command in the hyper-expensive San Francisco Bay area, where she previously lived.

“I found it more feasible to buy” than expected, Fleming said in an interview. She “definitely looked at it in investment terms,” but most important of all, “I had gotten to the point where I wanted having a place that’s really mine, where I could make the changes I wanted. Now financially it was a possibility.”

Shoshana Godwin, who is single and works as a real estate agent for brokerage company Redfin in Seattle, bought a condo close to downtown — a two-bedroom, one-bath unit that cost her $285,000 two years ago. Comparable units in her building are now selling for $500,000 in Seattle’s crazy-hot market, confirming her impression that buying instead of renting would be a good investment. She says she encounters “lots of other” single women who are actively seeking the same: a place they can call their own that also will prove to be a productive use of their financial resources.

So what’s with the single guys out there? Why aren’t they doing what smart single women are doing? There appears to be less survey research available on that subject compared with women, but builder Pat McKee says that at least anecdotally from discussions he’s had, “planting roots just doesn’t seem to have the same priority” for single men as for single women.

Godwin, who works extensively with singles of both genders, notes that in markets such as Seattle, where job transfers at high-tech companies are commonplace, single men appear to be more concerned than women about having to relocate. “They are a little more afraid” to make commitments in real estate but seem to be fine with living in a nice, well-located rental.

Ken Harney’s email address is harneycolumn@gmail.com.

Article source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/single-women-account-for-more-real-estate-purchases-than-single-men/2018/05/08/0f3cee66-521e-11e8-a551-5b648abe29ef_story.html

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Health Rehab Niche Grows in Rural Areas

Health Rehab Niche Grows in Rural Areas

| By Lisa Brown

A rehab property is very profitable despite the low census of 55% prior to the marketing period and the recent transaction allowed for the in-state operator to lessen its exposure to the Texas Panhandle.

Article source: http://www.globest.com/2018/05/07/health-rehab-niche-grows-in-rural-areas/

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Real Estate Startups Streamline Sales, Cut Closing Costs

SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX) — Most homes in the Bay Area sell pretty quickly, often for more than the asking price.

That realty reality has some sellers wondering if paying a standard five to six percent commission is worth it. Now, a crop of companies are offering new and — they claim — less expensive ways to sell a home.

David Bellagamba knew he wouldn’t have any trouble selling his home in San Jose’s Rose Garden district.

“I’ve watched houses in this area sell in a heartbeat,” Bellagamba said. Instead of using a traditional, full-service real estate agent, Bellagamba tried Faira, a start-up that claims to save the average seller about $20,000.

Faira provides some services for free, and founder Kamal Jain says much of the process is done online.

“It’s a different model, we remove all the complexity,” Jain said.

Faira takes photos, lists the home, does an inspection and holds open houses for free. Sellers who want more can choose to work with a Faira agent, who charges a one percent commission.

After providing a credit card number, interested buyers can place bids on the seller’s dashboard. Offers are automatically declined when a higher bid comes in. The buyer who places the highest bid has five days to commit to the deal and if they back out, Faira charges them $500. Faira says this insures that bidders are serious.

“Here’s the thing, no buyer wants to lose money,” Jain tells KPIX.

If the deal comes together, the seller pays a three-percent commission to the buyer’s agent and Faira collects a half-percent from the buyer. In all, Bellagamba paid about $32,000 and said he thinks he saved “somewhere around $30-40,000.”

Faira and other start-ups are trying to change the way homes are sold by taking advantage of technology and reducing realtors’ commissions. Redfin, the largest of these start-ups, also promises to save sellers thousands of dollars.

Redfin realtors earn a salary and receive benefits, not commissions. However, Redfin agent Miriam Westberg said they do earn bonuses.

“I’m not going to push you to take an offer or write an offer on a property that might not be the right fit,” Westberg said.

“Because we’re not commission-based, we’re not incentivized to close the deal in a certain amount of time or take the first offer that we receive,” she adds.

Up-Nest, which is based in Burlingame, has agents compete to sell homes by submitting proposals to sellers that include how much commission they’ll accept.

“We’re the only website where consumers can essentially comparison-shop for a realtor,” Upnest founder Simon Ru said.

Knock bills itself as a property exchange company. It buys a homeowner’s house directly and moves them into a new home of their choosing before putting the homeowner’s old home on the market.

Some full-service real estate brokers are skeptical of these startups. Mark Lederer is a full-service broker at Red Oak Realty in Berkeley who’s been selling homes in the Bay Area for 16 years.

Lederer says the startups are “not incentivized to get the best result — they’re incentivized to get the project sold and done. The value that we create supersedes the amount of commission that would be saved in a transaction.”

Lederer also warns that a lot can go wrong in a residential real estate deal that less-experienced or lower-paid agents might not be equipped to handle.

“There are always pieces of the process that are new and challenging in every transaction,” Lederer said.

Lisa Tichenor is another veteran Bay Area real estate agent who, after working with buyers and sellers for 15 years, thinks the traditional business model offers something special — personal relationships.

“I think that every deal is made or broken by relationships: agent relationships, principal relationships, all sorts of things,” Tichenor said.

“You can’t sell a house online, you’ve got to live it, breathe it, be in it, I feel, to sell it well.”

Even so, Bellagamba said his experience using Faira was positive and his deal went smoothly. His home was only on the market for eight days and sold for more than $300,000 over asking price — money he’s happy to have now that he’s moving on and out of the Bay Area.

“I think we did a real good job,” Bellagamba said.

WEBLINKS:

Article source: http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2018/05/06/startups-home-sales-realtor-consumer/

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