Los Angeles hopes Snap’s IPO will seed a tech wealth boom

LOS ANGELES — Blaine Lourd has long helped the movie stars, professional athletes and heiresses in Los Angeles manage their wealth. During the past few years, he has also noticed millionaires who made their money in technology begin to dot the west side of the city.

“What we have not had is our Google moment,” Lourd said, referring to Google’s initial public offering in 2004, which produced a horde of new millionaires in Silicon Valley.

Now such a moment may be upon Los Angeles. Next month, Snap, the parent company of the disappearing-message app Snapchat, which is based in the Venice neighborhood, is set to go public — and in the process mint a wave of tech millionaires and billionaires in a city better known for its well-paid Hollywood stars.

That prospect has Angeleno real-estate agents, money managers and luxury-goods purveyors excited for a potential business windfall, akin to what their Silicon Valley brethren 375 miles to the north have seen time and again with tech IPOs.

“When it comes to tech companies, for the wealth managers and real-estate guys, no one has really rung the register like the Snap thing that’s about to happen” to Los Angeles, said Lourd, whose wealth-management firm, LourdMurray, is based in Beverly Hills. “My theme is that Snapchat is the moment.”

Last week, Snap said it was aiming to sell its stock for $14-$16 a share, putting the company’s value at $19.5?billion to $22.2?billion. That would make Snap among the biggest public tech companies by market capitalization to have its headquarters in the Los Angeles area.

At that valuation, Snap’s two young founders, Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy, would walk away with holdings worth more than $3?billion each. Timothy Sehn, Snap’s senior vice president for engineering, would own shares valued at as much as $110 million. And dozens of other Snap employees could become overnight millionaires.

To capture some of these soon-to-be wealthy techies, Los Angeles real-estate agents, lawyers and wealth managers have bought targeted search and Facebook ads, they said. Others are trying to spread word of their services through their networks of contacts. Tech employees are feeling the effects — some said they had been bombarded with LinkedIn messages from companies that find clients for these service providers.

“It will be amazing to see the tech industry take off,” said Lee LeGrande, a residential real-estate agent at LeGrande Beach Homes, which sells property in Manhattan Beach and Hermosa Beach. In anticipation of new money from Snap workers and Silicon Valley techies, he said, he is building some luxury beach homes.

“When Snap goes public, I hope people see these towns are hard to beat for proximity to LAX and the clean beach,” he said.

Snap is trying to help its 1,900 employees prepare for the scrum for their money. One Snap employee, who asked to remain anonymous because the details were confidential, said the company had discussed bringing in academics from Stanford University to explain the effect that the IPO could have on their lives. Google used a similar strategy for its employees when it went public.

A spokeswoman for Snap declined to comment.

In the meantime, wealth managers and others are preparing their advice. Howard Rowen, a financial adviser at Bank of America in Los Angeles who manages money for entrepreneurs and tech workers, said techies who made fortunes at a startup might think they would hit the jackpot again. Instead, he said, that often does not happen and coders, engineers and others should regard the IPO as a once-in-a-lifetime event.

They should also diversify their assets, Rowen said. “Entrepreneurs have strong emotional ties to their companies and their stock, but things don’t always go right,” he said. “It’s hard to convince them that they need to invest in something other than their own company.”

Snap has changed the face of Venice, a once bohemian beachside section of Greater Los Angeles. When Spiegel and Murphy moved Snap to the area in 2013, they put the company in a single beach bungalow near the Venice Beach boardwalk. Now Snap’s employees have more than tripled from 600 people at the end of 2015, and the company owns and leases several buildings tucked discreetly amid shops and homes.

Snap is part of a growing tech scene in Los Angeles. For the past few years, tech workers have flocked to local startups like Dollar Shave Club, which Unilever acquired for $1 billion; Maker Studios, which Disney bought for $500 million; and Riot Games, which Tencent purchased for an undisclosed amount.

Venice, once home to mom-and-pop shops and dive bars, is now home to $9 juice bottles from Kreation Kafe and a $7 slice of toast with ricotta and jam at Superba Food Bread. Upscale clothing and home-goods stores dot the main commercial drag.

Property values have risen 13 percent during the past year, according to the property website Trulia, with the average price per square foot for a home at $1,257 — higher than San Francisco’s Mission District, also a tech enclave, and comparable to Palo Alto in Silicon Valley.

Venture capitalists from Silicon Valley firms like Institutional Venture Partners and Lightspeed Venture Partners are regularly spotted with entrepreneurs around Venice. Google and Facebook have moved in, turning industrial lots into campuses in nearby Playa del Rey.

“Southern California now has more venture capital and angel investors than it has ever had before,” said Rowen, the financial adviser. “It’s not Northern California, but there is a real phenomenon.”

The Snap public offering portends future wealth for venture investors in Los Angeles as well.

“The next three to five years will be an absolute renaissance,” said Mark Suster, founder of Upfront Ventures, a venture-capital firm in Santa Monica.

Given events like Snap’s IPO, “we’ll see those employees recycle their capital back into the ecosystem,” he added. “There will be an explosion of startups.”

Noting that Silicon Valley venture investors have long held Los Angeles in low regard, Suster said more were coming south. “There is a lot of money flowing into the community,” he said.

Not everyone is happy with the changes. Gentrification has pushed artists and working families out of Venice. Some restaurants have shut down because they can no longer pay soaring rents. In response, some politicians and residents in Venice have pushed for density restrictions, said Emil Schneeman, a real-estate agent at Berkshire Hathaway Home Services.

How much the wealth from a Snap IPO will trickle out across broader Los Angeles is harder to ascertain. The city has long been a destination for the rich and famous and is flush with cash from the entertainment and banking industries.

But it is still an exciting time for the people who can help Snap employees spend and invest.

“The real-estate guys are pumped because the first thing people usually buy is a house or a dream home,” Lourd said. “This is a good environment to be working in.”

Article source: http://www.seattletimes.com/business/technology/los-angeles-hopes-snaps-ipo-will-seed-a-tech-wealth-boom/

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Fed renews crackdown on cash buyers of luxury real estate

153e4 Downtown Miami Dollar Fed renews crackdown on cash buyers of luxury real estate

The downtown Miami skyline (Credit: Lonny Paul)

The federal government renewed its geographic targeting order of luxury residential purchases in six major markets, including South Florida, New York and Los Angeles. 

The Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network targeting order, which was set to expire this week, requires title insurance companies to disclose the true owners of companies that paid all cash for homes priced at $1 million and up in South Florida. The order becomes effective on Friday and will again last 180 days. It has been in effect in Miami-Dade County and Manhattan since March 2016.

In July, FinCEN expanded the tracking of high-end, all-cash luxury home purchased to include Broward and Palm Beach counties, as well as all boroughs of New York City, Los Angeles County, the San Francisco bay area, San Diego County and Bexar County in Texas, which includes San Antonio.

FinCEN said in Thursday’s announcement that in about 30 percent of the deals covered by the order, the buyer has been “subject of a previous suspicious activity report. Critics have said the reporting requirements are an ineffective method for catching money launderers, and the actual impact on luxury sales has been tough to determine in South Florida. Real estate agents have also said that the Panama Papers investigation had more of an effect on the market.

A seminar titled “Avoid the Treasury Trap with Foreign Buyers” held last year at the Miami Association of Realtors showed real estate agents how to help their foreign clients avoid the rules.

The American Land Title Association released a statement following Thursday’s announcement, praising the renewal. “Our members have collected this information for more than a year and the good news is those efforts appear to be beneficial to the government’s work identifying money laundering schemes and the illegal purchase of real estate,” said Michelle Korsmo, ALTA’s chief executive officer.

Article source: https://therealdeal.com/miami/2017/02/23/fed-renews-targeting-order-in-for-cash-buyers-of-luxury-real-estate/

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Zephyr Real Estate’s President Delivers Annual State of the Company Address

SAN FRANCISCO, CA–(Marketwired – February 23, 2017) – Last week, Randall Kostick, President and CEO of Zephyr Real Estate, delivered his annual State of the Company address to over 300 Zephyr agents and staff. He spoke glowingly of the company’s success in 2016 and of the outlook for 2017.

In 2016, Zephyr’s gross sales volume was over $2.2 billion, an increase of 47 percent over the past five years in a market that grows aggressively more competitive each year. Total transactions closed showed a five-year increase of five percent.

Most importantly, Zephyr maintains its position as Number One in San Francisco’s market share, outdistancing larger brokerages such as Coldwell Banker and Pacific Union. Zephyr agents are among the top producers in the Bay Area.

Accomplishments for 2016 included a dramatic remodeling and revitalization of their offices, creating a cohesive look for all, while maintaining the individuality of each. The Marin office, after only a year and a half, has expanded again and continues to grow with an agent roster 45 strong.

Zephyr, well known for its history of giving back to the community, contributed to a large number of local charities and causes in 2016, following the passion and direction of Zephyr agents and staff through matching funds and event sponsorships.

Zephyr agents continue to support the industry through leadership roles on the San Francisco Association of Realtors: Matt Fuller, Tara Donohue and Michael Barnacle; and the Marin Association of Realtors: Mark Machado and Chris Backer.

A new, expanded website was launched in August with advanced features such as “Invite a Collaborator” and “It’s a Match.” The property search feature expanded into five more counties: San Mateo, Sonoma, Napa, Alameda and Contra Costa with the same wealth of information available in San Francisco and Marin Counties. Also in 2016, Zephyr’s first digital magazine, The Collection, was instituted to support luxury sales.

Zephyr’s marketing and technology continues to set the pace and raise the bar in the industry. The company has just launched its new Listing Service Suite, an all-inclusive, concierge-style property marketing package for new listings.

“The real estate industry continues to evolve and present new challenges, and we are competing in an environment of new technologies, new approaches and limited inventory,” commented Kostick. “Zephyr will survive and thrive in the future for two reasons: We are paying attention; we are adapting.”

About Zephyr Real Estate
Founded in 1978, Zephyr Real Estate is San Francisco’s largest independent real estate firm with nearly $2.3 billion in gross sales and a current roster of more than 300 full-time agents. Zephyr’s highly-visited website has earned two web design awards, including the prestigious Interactive Media Award. Zephyr Real Estate is a member of the international relocation network, Leading Real Estate Companies of the World; the luxury real estate network, Who’s Who in Luxury Real Estate; global luxury affiliate, Mayfair International; and local luxury marketing association, the Luxury Marketing Council of San Francisco. Zephyr has six offices in San Francisco, a new office in Greenbrae, and two brokerage affiliates in Sonoma County, all strategically positioned to serve a large customer base throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. For more information, visit www.ZephyrRE.com.

Image Available: http://www.marketwire.com/library/MwGo/2017/2/22/11G131059/Images/Randall-Kostick-Zephyr-2017-6c21bfc4af93916195e6f1ea44a1e67d.jpg

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/zephyr-real-estates-president-delivers-170000014.html

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How To Buy Your First Home In San Francisco

Preparing to buy a home can be an intimidating prospect, especially in an extremely competitive market like San Francisco. With a median sales price of $1.18M, hitting close to $1000 per square foot, prospective buyers have to be aware of all real estate nooks and crannies, both in terms of neighborhoods that best suit their needs, as well as market differences – the best first piece of advice? Find a great agent.

Find a Hyperlocal and Hyperaware Agent

“San Francisco is a different beast,” says Greg McDaniel, realtor in the Bay Area. “The MLS is wacky; some deals are done without ever hitting the market, etc. You really need a hyperlocal agent – someone with their finger on the pulse of what’s taking place in the market in the next couple months.”

Finding a great agent is a multi-tiered step as the research for your guide determines how well the home-buying experience will go. Here is a list of questions to ask real estate agents.

“The other thing I always recommend is that they need to get on some sort of listing feed like Trulia or get a direct MLS feed from their real estate agent so that they can get in tune with what’s on the market,” Alexander Clark, San Francisco agent adds. “The agent can also be aware of what you want and can give you the right expectations beyond the listings with their resources and network of brokers. But Trulia is an excellent source of listings as they get into the market.”

Assuming you’ve found a realtor that fits your needs and an idea of the kind of home you’re looking for, their first question to you should be, “have you been pre-approved?”

Pre-Approval and Buying Power

Your agent should know what you can afford and how to infiltrate the market, but you have to do a bit of research as well. Get a pre-approval letter from an established lender showing your capabilities as a buyer.

“Explore options that can help you increase your affordable price range,” Ed Craine, a San Francisco real estate financing expert, shares. “Line up gift funds from family, sell things, address credit issues, etc. Just pay off as much debt as you can.”

Clark also makes this a top priority for a buyer. “You need to know what you can and can’t afford: based on an online mortgage calculator you can afford a million-dollar home, but that may be more or less in reality due to interest rates or simply what a lender can offer you.”

Refining your search down to your financial capabilities will keep you sane as you enter this competitive market. Assuming you find the home of your dreams or even one that will keep you happy for the next few years, you’ll know whether or not you can put an offer and feel confident in your decision to move forward or move on.

Making an Offer

After an agent has narrowed down your list of needs and wants in your new home, and understood your buying power, s/he can start showing you homes and preparing you for the aggressive market of San Francisco.

“In the Bay Area, the first offer may not be the best offer,” McDaniel describes how the market differs. “If there’s a deadline of offers the seller has dictated, let’s say 5 p.m. on Monday, then your agent should call at 4:30 p.m. that day and determine how many offers the seller’s agent has and try to squeeze out any additional information so that your offer is the best, and also within your means.”

McDaniel shares that often times a buyer is overly excited about prospective home or neighborhood and simply offers the listing price. In the past, that may have worked, but with more information, an agent can determine how far off listing price you may want to go.

“If there are no offers, you put all of your eggs in one basket, when you may have been able to offer a little less. If there are five offers, as it usually is here in the Bay Area, you will want to go above listing and discuss with your agent how high you’re willing to go,” McDaniel explains.

Also, make sure to remember that the price of a home and the cost are two different numbers. The cost refers to maintenance, property taxes, HOA dues, and unforeseeable events that could increase your overall spending significantly.

Choosing the Appropriate Purchase Loan

There are many types of loan options but a good agent will work directly with your lender, depending on the type of loan that is best for you.

“Most first-time buyers don’t expect to be in their first home for very many years. At this stage, most expect to expand their immediate family and to be moving to a new home after five or seven years. The typical adjustable rate loan that is fixed for the first five or seven years is perfect for them,” suggests Nina Hatvany, agent with Pacific Union International. Knowing this information when choosing your financing can help you get approved for more money, which may help your offer.

The San Francisco Market

Although prices have skyrocketed over the last few years and have leveled off at an all-time high for both buyers and renters, experts are seeing a price correction hit this year in San Francisco.

Specifically, “charming older condominiums and single-family homes will continue to be in very short supply,” Hatvany states frankly, making the San Francisco market unique against the bay area real estate backdrop.

In comparison to other competitive markets, San Francisco will continue to stand out as a “wacky” city, where a lot of research and preparation is needed to ensure success, but once in, you may just want to stay there forever.

Article source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/trulia/2017/02/21/how-to-buy-your-first-home-in-san-francisco/

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

How to Buy Your First Home in San Francisco

Preparing to buy a home can be an intimidating prospect, especially in an extremely competitive market like San Francisco. With a median sales price of $1.18M, hitting close to $1000 per square foot, prospective buyers have to be aware of all real estate nooks and crannies, both in terms of neighborhoods that best suit their needs, as well as market differences – the best first piece of advice? Find a great agent.

Find a Hyperlocal and Hyperaware Agent

“San Francisco is a different beast,” says Greg McDaniel, realtor in the Bay Area. “The MLS is wacky; some deals are done without ever hitting the market, etc. You really need a hyperlocal agent – someone with their finger on the pulse of what’s taking place in the market in the next couple months.”

Finding a great agent is a multi-tiered step as the research for your guide determines how well the home-buying experience will go. Here is a list of questions to ask real estate agents.

“The other thing I always recommend is that they need to get on some sort of listing feed like Trulia or get a direct MLS feed from their real estate agent so that they can get in tune with what’s on the market,” Alexander Clark, San Francisco agent adds. “The agent can also be aware of what you want and can give you the right expectations beyond the listings with their resources and network of brokers. But Trulia is an excellent source of listings as they get into the market.”

Assuming you’ve found a realtor that fits your needs and an idea of the kind of home you’re looking for, their first question to you should be, “have you been pre-approved?”

Pre-Approval and Buying Power

Article source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/trulia/2017/02/21/how-to-buy-your-first-home-in-san-francisco/

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