Nextdoor launches real estate section in Bay Area and other cities

Bay Area residents looking to buy a new home or strike up a conversation with a local real estate agent now have another resource: Nextdoor.

On Tuesday, the private social network for neighbors said it was launching a real estate section in 10 markets, including the San Francisco Bay Area.

The section, which previously was being piloted, also will be available in Atlanta, Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Portland, Sacramento and San Diego.

“I think the real estate section is another way for people to consume locally relevant content,” said Ali Jafari, Nextdoor’s vice president of business development, in an interview.

It also allows real estate agents to interact with neighbors — who may or may not be looking to buy a home immediately — in a more “authentic way,” he said.

Real estate agents can give advice if users have questions about home-improvement projects, he said, such as kitchen remodeling or landscaping.

Pointing to research by the National Association of Realtors, Jafari noted that referrals — including from neighbors — help drive business to real estate agents. Many sellers also turn to social media to find agents.

The tech firm is allowing real estate agents or brokers to sponsor real estate content in a particular zip code. Nextdoor doesn’t disclose the price for sponsorship, but the prices vary depending on the area.

The new section comes as the competition for housing heats up in the Bay Area and home prices continue to rise. The median price of a single-family home in the Bay Area during June was $779,000, up 9.7 percent from a year earlier, real estate information service CoreLogic reported in July.

But Nextdoor is also competing with other real estate sites such as Zillow, Trulia and Realtor.com. Facebook, which has 2 billion users, also has an ad product for real estate brokers and agents to promote home listings on the social network.

Jafari said that interacting with agents on real estate sites is often “transactional” because people are going there to search for a new home. Nextdoor users might use the real estate section to get a sense of the value of the homes in their neighborhood, find the availability of open houses or get advice from a real estate agent.

Users also will be able to see how many people recommended a real estate agent.

And real estate is a popular topic on Nextdoor in the United States. The company said tens of thousands of conversations about real estate happen daily.

Nearly 25,000 real estate agents have set up local pages on the social network, more than any other profession, according to Nextdoor.

Nextdoor, which also has a partnership with this news organization to provide local news to neighborhood group members, is available in more than 150,000 neighborhoods nationwide.

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/08/08/nextdoor-launches-real-estate-section-in-bay-area-and-other-cities/

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San Jose real estate investors buy mansion-lined San Francisco street

SAN FRANCISCO — The street might as well be paved with gold, and now a couple from San Jose owns it.

Tina Lam and Michael Cheng are the proud owners of super-tony Presidio Terrace — the street itself, the parking spaces and sidewalks, the palm trees and garden islands, all of this just down the hill from the Presidio and near the city’s so-called Gold Coast. They purchased the block-long private street — everything but the 35 mansions that line it — for $90,100 two years ago in an under-the-radar auction after the Presidio Homeowners Association failed to to pay $994 in back taxes, penalties and interest.

It is “the most unique property I’ve come across, by far,” said Cheng, a real estate agent who focuses on investment properties. “I’m talking to my other investors and they’ve never seen anything like this — and they own some weird stuff.”

He and Tam, who live in San Jose’s Berryessa neighborhood, would like to build their own house on the San Francisco property, if there is space and zoning allows it, and move there: “When we saw it was zoned single-family, we started thinking about that — if it can be worked out,” Cheng said. He added, “We’re still trying to figure out what the land-use opportunities are.”

Since buying the gated, oval street in April 2015, the couple has quietly assessed the situation and lately has considered other options suggested to them, including that they should charge homeowners to park on the street which has 120 parking spaces. Their purchase was first reported Monday by the San Francisco Chronicle.

Meanwhile, the homeowners only recently learned of the sale and have sued Lam, Cheng and the city, while asking the Board of Supervisors to rescind the purchase. A hearing has been scheduled for the fall.

Presidio Terrace is an exclusive enclave. It’s the former home of U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and the late mayor of San Francisco, Joseph Alioto.

Early in 2015, Cheng and Tam stumbled upon it while scanning a jumble of parcels that were being auctioned online by the city of San Francisco’s tax office.

There were all sorts of “random, scrappy properties, including underwater properties, a very eclectic mix,” Cheng said. “In the midst of all this was just this odd property in a great location; the parcel number told you generically what it was: part of Pacific Heights, the right location, land in a good neighborhood. We took a chance.”

He and Lam bought it sight-unseen, he said, competing against 73 other bidders: “It was a pretty lively bidding. We just got lucky.”

And here’s the back story: The city’s tax office, the couple discovered, had put the property up for sale because the homeowners association hadn’t paid an annual $14 tax bill for three decades. All that time, it seems, the bill had been mailed to an accountant who stopped working for the homeowners in the 1980s.

The street — one of 181 private streets in San Francisco — has been managed by the homeowners since 1905.

Asked to comment on the situation, Scott Emblidge, the association’s attorney, provided a statement from the organization’s board. It calls Lam and Cheng “savvy real estate professionals” who waited for over two years to approach the homeowners’ group, “presumably so the property sale would be more difficult to rescind.”

Cheng and Lam “would like to exploit a bureaucratic oversight to their advantage,” the statement says. “This isn’t about choosing not to pay property taxes; residents of Presidio Terrace pay their individual property taxes each year. Tax bills for the common area were sent to the wrong address and no notice of delinquency (for) the sale was made to any residents of Presidio Terrace. This is purely an oversight that needs to be corrected and we are working with the City to correct this unfortunate situation.”

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Bay Area housing: Priced out of California? Try Tennessee

You pay for the view out here. Five of the nation’s 10 least affordable counties are in the Bay Area or along the Central Coast between Santa Cruz and San Luis Obispo.

77441 sjm l pricey 0805 90 Bay Area housing: Priced out of California? Try Tennessee

Marin County tops the list of pricey housing markets. The percentage of one’s average annual wages needed to purchase a median-priced home there is 126.4 percent, according to a second quarter report from Attom Data Solutions, which compiles nationwide property data.

Thinking of moving because you can’t afford a house? Try Tennessee, which is filled with affordable counties. In Roane County, part of the Knoxville metropolitan area, just 10.1 percent of one’s annual income will get you into a median-priced house. Average annual wages there are $60,294 and that median-priced home costs $85,000.

Compare that with Marin County, where average annual wages are in the same ballpark — $67,223 — but the median price of a home is $1,160,000.

Santa Cruz County is third on the list of least affordable counties — a mere 112.3 percent of an individual’s wages are needed there — while San Francisco ranks seventh (90.3 percent). San Luis Obispo County is ninth (89.1 percent) and Monterey County is tenth (88.4 percent).

The “combination of accelerating home price growth and slowing wage growth, along with mortgage interest rates that are up nearly 50 basis points from a year ago, eroded home affordability nationwide to the lowest level in nearly nine years,” said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at Attom Data Solutions, in a statement. He added that those factors had “pushed the highest share of markets beyond the threshold of normal affordability in nearly eight years.”

Other pricey counties include Napa (where 86.5 percent of annual wages are needed to buy a median-priced house), Sonoma (82.0 percent) and San Mateo (83.6 percent).

Relative bargains further down the list are Alameda County (75.2 percent), Contra Costa County (65.5 percent) and Santa Clara County (57.9 percent).

Attom Data’s methodology assumes a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and a three percent down payment, including property taxes and insurance. The fact that affordability is so low — even with such a minimal down payment — in so many California markets is a testament to the unsustainable price growth that has occurred in much of the state as the job corps expands and housing supply remains badly cramped.

In more detail, here’s how the numbers play out in three counties in the second-quarter report.

In Marin County, keep in mind that $1,160,000 median price, as well as the average monthly mortgage payment of $7,081. The county’s year-over-year median price appreciation was 15 percent, while the average weekly wage grew just 3 percent on a year-over-year basis. Average annual wages in Marin County are $67,223. And once again, 126.4 percent of annual wages are needed to buy a median-priced home.

Let’s do that same set of numbers for Santa Cruz County, where the median home price is $717,500 and the monthly payment is $4,443. Year-over-year price appreciation was 5 percent, compared with a 2 percent decline in the average weekly wage. Average annual wages in Santa Cruz are $47,476 — and 112.3 percent of annual wages are needed to buy a home.

Finally, these are the numbers for Santa Clara County. The median home price is $960,000 and the monthly payment is $5,697. Year-over-year price growth was 7 percent, while the average weekly wage grew just 1 percent. However, annual wages in the heart of Silicon Valley are $118,131 — far higher than in Marin or Santa Cruz — and, as a result, 57.9 percent of annual wages are needed to buy that median-priced home.

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/08/04/least-affordable-real-estate-bay-area-and-central-coast-homes-dominate-nation/

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Bay Area real estate: Priced out of California? Try a home in Tennessee

You pay for the view out here. Five of the nation’s 10 least affordable counties are in the Bay Area or along the Central Coast between Santa Cruz and San Luis Obispo.

bff33 sjm l pricey 0805 90 Bay Area real estate: Priced out of California? Try a home in Tennessee

Marin County tops the list of pricey housing markets. The percentage of one’s average annual wages needed to purchase a median-priced home there is 126.4 percent, according to a second quarter report from Attom Data Solutions, which compiles nationwide property data.

Thinking of moving because you can’t afford a house? Try Tennessee, which is filled with affordable counties. In Roane County, part of the Knoxville metropolitan area, just 10.1 percent of one’s annual income will get you into a median-priced house. Average annual wages there are $60,294 and that median-priced home costs $85,000.

Compare that with Marin County, where average annual wages are in the same ballpark — $67,223 — but the median price of a home is $1,160,000.

Santa Cruz County is third on the list of least affordable counties — a mere 112.3 percent of an individual’s wages are needed there — while San Francisco ranks seventh (90.3 percent). San Luis Obispo County is ninth (89.1 percent) and Monterey County is tenth (88.4 percent).

The “combination of accelerating home price growth and slowing wage growth, along with mortgage interest rates that are up nearly 50 basis points from a year ago, eroded home affordability nationwide to the lowest level in nearly nine years,” said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at Attom Data Solutions, in a statement. He added that those factors had “pushed the highest share of markets beyond the threshold of normal affordability in nearly eight years.”

Other pricey counties include Napa (where 86.5 percent of annual wages are needed to buy a median-priced house), Sonoma (82.0 percent) and San Mateo (83.6 percent).

Relative bargains further down the list are Alameda County (75.2 percent), Contra Costa County (65.5 percent) and Santa Clara County (57.9 percent).

Attom Data’s methodology assumes a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and a three percent down payment, including property taxes and insurance. The fact that affordability is so low — even with such a minimal down payment — in so many California markets is a testament to the unsustainable price growth that has occurred in much of the state as the job corps expands and housing supply remains badly cramped.

In more detail, here’s how the numbers play out in three counties in the second-quarter report.

In Marin County, keep in mind that $1,160,000 median price, as well as the average monthly mortgage payment of $7,081. The county’s year-over-year median price appreciation was 15 percent, while the average weekly wage grew just 3 percent on a year-over-year basis. Average annual wages in Marin County are $67,223. And once again, 126.4 percent of annual wages are needed to buy a median-priced home.

Let’s do that same set of numbers for Santa Cruz County, where the median home price is $717,500 and the monthly payment is $4,443. Year-over-year price appreciation was 5 percent, compared with a 2 percent decline in the average weekly wage. Average annual wages in Santa Cruz are $47,476 — and 112.3 percent of annual wages are needed to buy a home.

Finally, these are the numbers for Santa Clara County. The median home price is $960,000 and the monthly payment is $5,697. Year-over-year price growth was 7 percent, while the average weekly wage grew just 1 percent. However, annual wages in the heart of Silicon Valley are $118,131 — far higher than in Marin or Santa Cruz — and, as a result, 57.9 percent of annual wages are needed to buy that median-priced home.

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/08/04/least-affordable-real-estate-bay-area-and-central-coast-homes-dominate-nation/

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Redfin, other discounters bang on real estate industry’s door

Redfin, other discounters bang on real estate industry’s door



August 5, 2017
Updated: August 5, 2017 2:36pm

  • e8bda 920x920 Redfin, other discounters bang on real estate industrys door

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Investors are betting the time has finally come for real estate agents touting low commissions and high technology to mount a serious challenge to traditional brokerage firms.

How else to explain the success of Redfin’s initial public offering? The Seattle company, which calls itself a “next-generation real estate brokerage,” went public July 28 at $15 per share. It quickly shot through the roof, topping $31 on Wednesday before settling down to close at $25.85 on Friday.


At Friday’s price, Redfin’s market value is just over $2 billion, compared with $4.7 billion for Realogy, the largest publicly traded residential real estate brokerage firm. Re/Max Holdings, the second largest, has a market value of $1.1 billion or $2 billion (depending on how you count its shares outstanding). Yet Redfin is just a fraction of their size.

More by Kathleen Pender

Agents working for Realogy brands — Coldwell Banker, Century 21, ERA, Sotheby’s International Realty and Better Homes and Gardens — handled almost 1.5 million transactions for buyers and sellers last year. Re/Max said it handled “more than a million” domestically. Redfin agents handled about 26,000.

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Redfin has positioned itself as a tech company and is growing much faster than the big guys, and for some investors that’s more important.

Redfin is often compared to Zillow because both have popular house-hunting websites. But Zillow is not a brokerage firm; it sells premium placement on its sites (Zillow and Trulia) and apps to real estate agents.

Redfin uses its site and app to attract clients for its brokerage business. Yet it differs from traditional brokerage firms in several ways.

In a traditional firm, agents are independent contractors and usually handle the entire deal themselves, with some back-office support.

In a typical transaction, the seller pays a commission equal to 5 to 6 percent of the purchase price, with half going to the seller’s agent and half to the buyer’s. Agents give a percentage of their commission — 30 percent is average — to their firm and keep the rest. Agents must pay their own expenses, including most costs associated with marketing a home, out of their share.

Redfin agents are employees. Website referrals are directed to “lead agents” based on location and workload.

When Redfin represents buyers, it collects the usual 2.5 to 3 percent commission from the seller but refunds part of it — $3,500 on average — to the buyer. When it represents sellers, it charges them only 1 to 1.5 percent of the sales price, but recommends they pay the buyer’s agent the usual 2.5 to 3 percent.

The lead agent works with clients and negotiates the deal, but is assisted by people who might handle showings, photography, marketing and closing paperwork.

Some traditional high-volume agents operate in much the same way. But Redfin says it’s more efficient and productive because all employees must use the same technology.

Redfin pays lead agents a salary, which makes up about a quarter of their pay, plus a bonus based on customer satisfaction, transaction value, benefits and expense reimbursement.

7e47f 920x1240 Redfin, other discounters bang on real estate industrys door

When Redfin can’t help a customer because it’s too busy or doesn’t serve their area, it refers them to outside partner agents who rebate part of their commission to Redfin. It also might refer clients to partners if the home is below its minimum price, which varies by city and time of year. In San Francisco, the cutoff is $600,000.

Redfin is the biggest company challenging the status quo, but hardly the only one.

Reali, based in San Mateo, operates only in the Bay Area. When it represents buyers, it collects the usual commission from the seller, then rebates all but $4,950 to the buyer. When it represents sellers, it charges the standard commission and gives half to the buyer’s agent, then rebates all except $4,950 of the seller’s commission to its client.

“We don’t work harder to sell a $5 million house than a half-million-dollar house,” said Amit Haller, the firm’s CEO. “There’s no reason to pay more for the same service.”

Reali taps technology to lower costs, Haller said. For example, instead of staging a house with real furniture, sellers can use “visual staging” to show buyers what the house would look like with modern, midcentury, traditional or transitional decor.

Haller won’t say how many deals his firm has closed, but it has 25 employees and has raised $6 million.

Srinidhi Thirumala and his wife bought a home in Mountain View through Reali after seeing its ad on Facebook. “There’s quite a bit (of information) out there through Zillow, Redfin,” he said. Thirumala had bought homes before and “didn’t see much value” in a buyer’s agent. “We thought we would have to do all the work,” he said, but he was “really blown away” by the service they got.

Open Listings represents buyers only. It is based in Los Angeles, but also operates in the Bay Area. It’s designed for buyers who are comfortable managing the entire process online. “We do not refer them to an agent,” CEO Judd Schoenholtz said. But the company does have a team of experts who can help value the property, decipher inspection reports and provide other services. It rebates half of the usual 2.5 percent buyer’s agent commission to buyers, subject to a $5,000 minimum fee.

Schoenholtz said his company is closing about two homes per day in California, including one per day in the Bay Area. Most of its clients here work in the tech industry, but “we think that reflects the overall mix of buyers and purchasers” in the Bay Area, he said.

Other startups working to undercut traditional firms include Rex Real Estate of Woodland Hills (Los Angeles County), RezList of San Diego and Purplebricks, a British flat-rate brokerage that plans to enter the U.S. market this year, starting with California.

Whether companies can make money at discounted prices is a big question mark. “Traditional real estate brokerages are a low margin business,” research firm Zelman Associates said in a report.

Redfin, in 10 years of operation, has never turned an annual profit.

Discounters have been challenging traditional brokers for decades, with limited success. Help-U-Sell has been around since 1976 (despite going bankrupt during the recession) and Assist2Sell since 1987.

In 2004, amid the last housing boom, Emeryville’s Zip Realty went public and by December that year its market value was $365 million. But the company suffered during the recession, eliminated its discount and was purchased by Realogy for $166 million in 2014.

Why has this industry been so hard to disrupt?

Consumers understand that buying and selling a home is something they do very infrequently, that it’s complex and getting worse (especially in California), and that if you make a mistake, “it could haunt you for a long time,” said Steve Murray, president of Real Trends, a research company.

Many traditional agents will discount their commissions, he said; they just don’t advertise it. Since 1990, the average commission has fallen from 6.1 to 5.1 percent, but not in a straight line. It goes up when there are lots of homes on the market and down when inventory is tight.

Geoff McIntosh, a broker in Long Beach and president of the California Association of Realtors, said Redfin “has arguably the best technology package on the market.” A lot of his clients use Redfin’s website to find homes, but come to his firm when they are ready to buy. Most people “want more local market expertise, more handholding, someone who has been through the process a bunch of times, a skilled negotiator.”

With some of the new models, “you work with one agent and at a certain point, they hand you off to someone else.” That’s fine for some people, but feels to him like a car dealership. “When I get shifted from sales to the finance manager, I don’t feel so good about it anymore.”

Brandon Dobell, an analyst with William Blair, said companies like Redfin will “change the landscape” for brokers. “People who embrace technology, or work at firms that have the wherewithal to invest in technology, will end up doing all the business,” he said. “The only agents who can avoid embracing technology wholeheartedly are the ones who have been around a long time and get the majority of their business from repeat customers and referrals.”

The incumbent brokerage model could also be upended by companies such as HomeSmart, Realty One and eXp World Holdings, which let agents keep up to 100 percent of their commissions, then charge them a fee for services that can be managed better at scale, such as technology and errors and omission insurance. If structured correctly, high-volume agents can make more money this way than with a traditional split commission structure, Dobell said.

If there is an off-the-fairway threat, Dobell said, it’s Amazon. “Everybody trusts the brand, everybody trusts the technology. What if Amazon tomorrow said, you know what, we are going to be the home buying and selling marketplace? Everyone would say, of course they should.” Dobell called Amazon “the 800-pound gorilla hiding in the closet.”

Kathleen Pender is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: kpender@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @kathpender

David versus Goliath?

Newly public Redfin has nearly half the market value of real estate giant Realogy, but is tiny by other measures.

*Excludes 9,482 transactions referred to outside partner brokers

**By dollar value of transactions

Article source: http://www.sfchronicle.com/business/networth/article/Redfin-other-discounters-bang-on-real-estate-11735711.php

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