Once red hot, Bay Area housing market still simmers

Bay Area home sales sagged in December from a year earlier, but — continuing a nearly five-year trend — the median price of a single-family house continued to climb.

For the nine-county region, the median price was $680,000 in December, up 3 percent from December 2015, according to CoreLogic, the real estate information service. Discounting a single month — March 2016, when the price remained flat — it was the 57th consecutive month of year-over-year gains.

4c1c4 sjm housing 0201 web Once red hot, Bay Area housing market still simmersFor 2016 as a whole, the median price paid for a single-family house rose 4.5 percent to $700,000 from $670,000 in 2015.

As Bay Area home prices increase — along, lately, with mortgage rates — families seeking to move up to larger homes can face steep financial challenges. But homeowners who move out of the region have the potential to pocket significant profits on their home sales, for now.

The upshot is that the Bay Area’s once red-hot market has settled into a simmer. With buyers competing for a notoriously tight supply of homes, prices keep rising, though not at the same clip as in previous years: “The overall trend this past year has been toward a moderation of price growth and at least a modest decline in sales,” said Andrew LePage, a research analyst with CoreLogic.

Despite national reports about a surge of buyers getting off the fence as mortgage rates began to rise after the presidential election in November, LePage wondered if the effect was less powerful here.

“It’s possible,” he said, “that in the Bay Area, where homebuyers face some of the highest prices and mortgage payments in the country, rising mortgage rates in November 2016 had a net negative impact on the number of home sales recorded in December 2016.”

December sales were down on a year-over-year basis through most of the region: by 5.4 percent in Contra Costa County, 7.7 percent in San Mateo County, 8.9 percent in Santa Clara County and 9.1 percent in Alameda County.

Home sales in the year-earlier period may have been artificially inflated, LePage said, as new federal mortgage rules had delayed some deals into December 2015 that otherwise would have closed sooner.

Looking at 2016 in its entirety, sales were down 2.6 percent in the nine counties from the year before.

“There’s nothing on the market,” said Kevin Swartz, a Saratoga-based agent with the Sereno Group. He cited just 594 active listings in December for all of Santa Clara County. “That is incredibly low,” he said.

The flip side of the situation is that most of what is available sells — and at a good price.

After eight years in Sunnyvale, Swartz’s clients Nancee Braddock, a retired registered nurse, and her husband Jim Gurney, a videographer, sold their 1,570-square-foot home for $1,725,000, about $25,000 over the asking price. There were four bids on the property, which was on the market for barely a week.

Why move?

“To get away from the traffic,” said Braddock, who previously lived with Gurney in Los Altos Hills. “The traffic is just unbelievable, especially in the last four years — bumper to bumper down El Camino. So we were looking for some place not so congested and not so rushed, where there’s not always somebody behind you who’s late for something.”

The couple, whose children are grown, moved to Port Townsend, Washington: “You just feel like you can breathe here,” Braddock said.

The cost of their 2,300-square-foot house in Washington: just under $500,000.

Compare that with the median prices for Bay Area homes in December: Contra Costa County was comparable at $498,500, up 8.4 percent from a year earlier. But the median price was $700,000 in Alameda County, up 3.2 percent; $865,000 in Santa Clara County, up 1.2 percent; and $1,155,000 in San Mateo County, up 5 percent.

Those home prices were down from November.

(CoreLogic’s aggregated December sales and price figures for the Bay Area as a whole were estimates because it said data for San Francisco County were not yet available).

Anecdotally, agents mentioned a softening of the high-end market: “Almost no transactions at all,” said Alain Pinel’s Mark Wong, who is based in Saratoga. “But at the entry level, it’s very active, often with multiple offers and well over asking.”

Wong mentioned a house in San Jose — about equidistant from the Municipal Rose Garden and Santa Clara University — that listed “at $499,000 and got 40 offers, and they ended up with $750,000. You’re talking about a quarter million over asking,” he said, sounding amazed, “and this is a total fixer-upper and tear-down. You cannot live there.”

In the East Bay, agent Kevin Kieffer, based in Walnut Creek with Keller Williams, noted too many buyers for too few properties: “Demand’s super-high, inventory is super-low, and buyers are being more prudent and not as willing to overbid,” he said. “We’re in a worse inventory situation than we were last January. Still, one listing comes up and we’re getting multiple offers — kind of unusual for the rainy season.”

His clients Simon Yee and Tamara Corduck recently sold their Dublin house — four bedrooms, two baths, about 1,350 square feet — for $722,000. The couple, who work in tech, bought it about eight years ago for $540,000, but were looking for something larger now that they have two children.

“Buying a home was pretty hard because the supply was so limited in the Tri-Valley area,” Yee said. “We looked for over a year, put it on hold for a bit and then started back up.”

Eventually, they bid on a house that listed for $1,095,000 in Danville’s Greenbrook neighborhood: four bedrooms, three baths and about 2,275 square feet. The schools are good. The yard is decent. The house needs some upgrading: “New colors, and the cabinets might need some change,” Yee said.

They bought the house at a slight reduction: $1,072,000.

“We bided our time,” he said. “You have to be patient. And we discovered it’s best not to sweat the little things; you have to see the big picture. You’re not going to get your perfect home, which is hard to accept when you’re spending over $1 million. Once we got past that — that it could be 80 percent perfect — it was a little bit easier to pull the trigger.”

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/01/31/bay-area-real-estate-home-sales-dip-prices-rise/

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Bay Area real estate: Too many buyers, not enough houses

Bay Area home sales sagged in December from a year earlier, but — continuing a nearly five-year trend — the median price of a single-family house continued to climb.

For the nine-county region, the median price was $680,000 in December, up 3 percent from December 2015, according to CoreLogic, the real estate information service. Discounting a single month — March 2016, when the price remained flat — it was the 57th consecutive month of year-over-year gains.

478a4 sjm housing 0201 web Bay Area real estate: Too many buyers, not enough housesFor 2016 as a whole, the median price paid for a single-family house rose 4.5 percent to $700,000 from $670,000 in 2015.

As Bay Area home prices increase — along, lately, with mortgage rates — families seeking to move up to larger homes can face steep financial challenges. But homeowners who move out of the region have the potential to pocket significant profits on their home sales, for now.

The upshot is that the Bay Area’s once red-hot market has settled into a simmer. With buyers competing for a notoriously tight supply of homes, prices keep rising, though not at the same clip as in previous years: “The overall trend this past year has been toward a moderation of price growth and at least a modest decline in sales,” said Andrew LePage, a research analyst with CoreLogic.

Despite national reports about a surge of buyers getting off the fence as mortgage rates began to rise after the presidential election in November, LePage wondered if the effect was less powerful here.

“It’s possible,” he said, “that in the Bay Area, where homebuyers face some of the highest prices and mortgage payments in the country, rising mortgage rates in November 2016 had a net negative impact on the number of home sales recorded in December 2016.”

December sales were down on a year-over-year basis through most of the region: by 5.4 percent in Contra Costa County, 7.7 percent in San Mateo County, 8.9 percent in Santa Clara County and 9.1 percent in Alameda County.

Home sales in the year-earlier period may have been artificially inflated, LePage said, as new federal mortgage rules had delayed some deals into December 2015 that otherwise would have closed sooner.

Looking at 2016 in its entirety, sales were down 2.6 percent in the nine counties from the year before.

“There’s nothing on the market,” said Kevin Swartz, a Saratoga-based agent with the Sereno Group. He cited just 594 active listings in December for all of Santa Clara County. “That is incredibly low,” he said.

The flip side of the situation is that most of what is available sells — and at a good price.

After eight years in Sunnyvale, Swartz’s clients Nancee Braddock, a retired registered nurse, and her husband Jim Gurney, a videographer, sold their 1,570-square-foot home for $1,725,000, about $25,000 over the asking price. There were four bids on the property, which was on the market for barely a week.

Why move?

“To get away from the traffic,” said Braddock, who previously lived with Gurney in Los Altos Hills. “The traffic is just unbelievable, especially in the last four years — bumper to bumper down El Camino. So we were looking for some place not so congested and not so rushed, where there’s not always somebody behind you who’s late for something.”

The couple, whose children are grown, moved to Port Townsend, Washington: “You just feel like you can breathe here,” Braddock said.

The cost of their 2,300-square-foot house in Washington: just under $500,000.

Compare that with the median prices for Bay Area homes in December: Contra Costa County was comparable at $498,500, up 8.4 percent from a year earlier. But the median price was $700,000 in Alameda County, up 3.2 percent; $865,000 in Santa Clara County, up 1.2 percent; and $1,155,000 in San Mateo County, up 5 percent.

Those home prices were down from November.

(CoreLogic’s aggregated December sales and price figures for the Bay Area as a whole were estimates because it said data for San Francisco County were not yet available).

Anecdotally, agents mentioned a softening of the high-end market: “Almost no transactions at all,” said Alain Pinel’s Mark Wong, who is based in Saratoga. “But at the entry level, it’s very active, often with multiple offers and well over asking.”

Wong mentioned a house in San Jose — about equidistant from the Municipal Rose Garden and Santa Clara University — that listed “at $499,000 and got 40 offers, and they ended up with $750,000. You’re talking about a quarter million over asking,” he said, sounding amazed, “and this is a total fixer-upper and tear-down. You cannot live there.”

In the East Bay, agent Kevin Kieffer, based in Walnut Creek with Keller Williams, noted too many buyers for too few properties: “Demand’s super-high, inventory is super-low, and buyers are being more prudent and not as willing to overbid,” he said. “We’re in a worse inventory situation than we were last January. Still, one listing comes up and we’re getting multiple offers — kind of unusual for the rainy season.”

His clients Simon Yee and Tamara Corduck recently sold their Dublin house — four bedrooms, two baths, about 1,350 square feet — for $722,000. The couple, who work in tech, bought it about eight years ago for $540,000, but were looking for something larger now that they have two children.

“Buying a home was pretty hard because the supply was so limited in the Tri-Valley area,” Yee said. “We looked for over a year, put it on hold for a bit and then started back up.”

Eventually, they bid on a house that listed for $1,095,000 in Danville’s Greenbrook neighborhood: four bedrooms, three baths and about 2,275 square feet. The schools are good. The yard is decent. The house needs some upgrading: “New colors, and the cabinets might need some change,” Yee said.

They bought the house at a slight reduction: $1,072,000.

“We bided our time,” he said. “You have to be patient. And we discovered it’s best not to sweat the little things; you have to see the big picture. You’re not going to get your perfect home, which is hard to accept when you’re spending over $1 million. Once we got past that — that it could be 80 percent perfect — it was a little bit easier to pull the trigger.”

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/01/31/bay-area-real-estate-home-sales-dip-prices-rise/

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Handyman charged in killing of ex-Cupertino school board member

  • 82989 920x920 Handyman charged in killing of ex Cupertino school board member

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The onetime handyman for a prominent Silicon Valley community member was charged Monday with strangling his employer and burying the body in a shallow grave in remote foothills in the Central Valley, officials said.

Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith called the slaying of former Cupertino school board member Gin Lu “Tommy” Shwe “callous and cold-hearted” while announcing the arrest of the suspected killer at a news conference.


Christopher Ellebracht, a 38-year-old Cupertino resident with a history of recent arrests in the South Bay, was arraigned Monday in Santa Clara County Superior Court on murder, financial elder abuse and forgery charges.



“We are shocked and saddened that my father’s life story has come to such a tragic end,” said Shwe’s adult son, Huei-Saint Shwe. “It is incomprehensible for us how something like this could happen to someone who was as kind and giving as our father.”

Gin Lu Shwe, a 70-year-old real estate agent and respected member of the Chinese community in the greater Bay Area, had hired Ellebracht at times over the past two years to work on his businesses, said Lt. Julian Quinonez, a detective with the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office.

That work relationship, though, came to an end sometime around Jan. 17 when Shwe’s family reported him missing.

Detectives were tipped off on Ellebracht after learning he had recently deposited a $10,000 check from Shwe into his bank account through an ATM in Morgan Hill.

Then on Jan. 20, California Highway Patrol officers found a van registered to Ellebracht ditched on the side of a rural road in the mountains outside Three Rivers (Tulare County). Inside the van, investigators found “items of evidence that implied possible foul play,” Quinonez said.

There was no sign of Ellebracht, but two days later police in nearby Visalia picked him up after they said he pulled a knife on someone near a fast-food joint. Ellebracht, police said, had Shwe’s wallet on him when he was arrested.

On Wednesday, search teams and canines fanned out in the remote area where Ellebracht’s van was found and eventually discovered Shwe’s strangled body buried in a shallow grave.

Investigators were working to determine a motive and pinpoint where Shwe was killed, but Smith on Monday said they don’t think he was killed in Cupertino.

“Any loss of life is tragic, but the strangulation and soulless burial — in an effort to cover and evade the pursuit of justice — is especially troubling,” she said.

Officials said the suspect was captured on surveillance video buying a shovel at a Home Depot the morning Shwe was reported missing.

“We believe Mr. Ellebracht took a trip to Visalia to complete what he started in Santa Clara County,” Quinonez said.

Shwe was the first Chinese American elected to the Cupertino school board, serving from 1985 to 1993.

Those in the Cupertino community who worked with him, meanwhile, were still reeling from the shocking loss of their friend and colleague.

“This is a very sad time,” Cupertino Mayor Savita Vaidhyanathan said. “We have lost a beloved resident and community leader who was devoted to making the life of our residents better.”

Evan Sernoffsky is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: esernoffsky@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @EvanSernoffsky

Article source: http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Suspect-nabbed-in-killing-of-former-Cupertino-10893844.php

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Nation’s 10 hottest real estate markets include San Francisco, San Jose — and Vallejo?

A new national “Hotness Index” is once again top-heavy with Bay Area real estate markets. No surprise there.

Because of the region’s housing supply (low) and demand from buyers (high, like always), the San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward metro area is No. 1 on the January list from realtor.com, and the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara metro area is No. 2.

More of a surprise is that the Top 10 includes several not-so-distant metro areas where homes are still relatively affordable.

We’re talking about Vallejo (No. 3), Sacramento (No. 6), Yuba City (No. 7), Stockton (No. 9) and Fresno (No. 10).

Those markets — less than chic, until recently — are among the 10 hottest in the entire country, according to realtor. com. Its “Hotness Index” identifies where houses are selling most quickly — and which markets are generating the most listing views on realtor.com.

In November, the Mercury News spoke with Jonathan Smoke, realtor.com’s chief economist, who noted some dissonance underlying the index. While Northern California markets have continued to dominate the index, he said, they are in some ways not nearly as hot as they once were. They are simultaneously “hot” and “cooling,” he said, because the rate of price appreciation has decreased across the Bay Area.

“The actual prices on closed homes are decelerating in relation to the unsustainable prices we’ve seen in the past year or two,” he said. “So the unsustainable places are still hot — but relative to the last couple of years, they’re not as hot as they once were.”

Tuesday, the Mercury News plans to report on the state of the Bay Area housing market when CoreLogic, the real estate information service, releases its new analysis of sales and median prices across the nine counties.


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Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/01/30/nations-10-hottest-real-estate-markets-include-san-francisco-san-jose-and-vallejo/

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#NotInOurName: Protesters Oppose Trump’s Travel Ban at San Francisco International Airport

Some immigrants have reportedly been held at San Francisco International Airport since Saturday morning following President Donald Trump’s recent executive order, banning entry to the U.S. from certain Muslim-majority countries.

That decree prompted flocks of protesters to converge on the airport’s arrival area and the international terminal to voice frustration with the new statute. Those groans turned to some cheers later in the evening after word came down that a temporary stay would prevent people with valid visas being held at airports from being deported.

The protesters gathered at 3 p.m. at SFO after news broke Friday that Trump’s order had taken effect immediately, with refugees and people from affected nations being stopped and detained at airports.

Police at first kept the protesters on the sidewalk, but as the crowd grew they spilled into the street blocking all traffic at the international arrivals terminal. They later swarmed into the terminal as immigration advocate attorneys tried to access people detained inside. The protesters chanted, “Let the families out, let the lawyers in.”

Protesters Oppose Trump’s Travel Ban at SFO04483 C3S3tGKWAAAeKzg #NotInOurName: Protesters Oppose Trumps Travel Ban at San Francisco International AirportSome immigrants have reportedly been held at San Francisco International Airport since Saturday morning following President Donald Trump’s recent executive order, banning entry to the U.S. from certain Muslim-majority countries. Christie Smith reports. (Published Sunday, Jan. 29, 2017)

The American Civil Liberties Union announced Saturday that it was taking legal action on behalf of two individuals detained in New York under the order. The ACLU said this evening that an emergency stay had been granted by a federal judge, blocking deportations from the order. The National Council for American Islamic Relations said it would be filing suit on behalf of 20 more individuals on Monday.

Trump’s order bans citizens from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the country and blocks any refugees from entering for 120 days. Refugees from Syria are blocked indefinitely.

Lara Kiswani, an organizer with the Arab Resource and Organizing Center, said earlier Saturday, “We have lawyers currently at SFO. What we’re not clear about is who or what type of families are being held, whether they’re from Syria or Iran or other countries, we don’t know for certain.”

Attorney Susie Hwang said there were about a dozen attorneys who arrived at the airport’s International Terminal in response to a call from the International Refugee Assistance Project asking attorneys to help immigrants being detained at airports across the country.

“I’m concerned about the abuse of law and the disregard for the constitution,” Hwang said of Trump’s order.

Hwang said several families have been at the airport waiting for several hours to hear word about whether their loved ones will be allowed to leave the airport or returned back to their countries.

According to Hwang, one woman had been waiting for hours for her 30-year-old son, who arrived at the airport from Iran early Saturday morning. The woman received asylum in the U.S. six years ago and is hoping her son will as well.

“Based on his religion, he is being persecuted and is in grave danger if he does go back,” Hwang said.

Saturday evening, Hwang said customs officials released one woman from Iran with a green card after they held and questioned her.

Mozhgan Sorkhabi of Novato said her father, who lives in Iran and has a green card, was detained in San Francisco for six hours.

“We were really worried they were going to send back,” Sorkhabi said. “He’s not a strong man. He’s 80 years old.”

Palo Alto attorney Buzz Frahn was among several attorneys who volunteered their services to anyone who was stopped at the airport. Officials were not allowing attorneys to speak with any of the people who were reportedly being detained, he alleged.

Promising in an email to “[stand] up for what’s right,” Frahn said, “This blatantly unconstitutional [executive] order, discriminating on the basis of religion, is fundamentally wrong.”

Outrage in the Bay Area reached a fevered pitch Saturday.

Determined to speak out against what they believe is outright unconstitutional, activists organized a #MuslimBan protest at 3 p.m. at the international arrivals section of San Francisco International Aiport. Protesters carried signs that read #NotInOurName, #NeverAgain, END the #MuslimBan and I STAND WITH MUSLIM TRAVELERs.

Witnesses estimated that hundreds of people showed up, forcing police to close the arrivals area. 

“THIS BAN IS RACISM, PURE AND SIMPLE,” organizers, who are known as #TheResistance, wrote on a MeetUp page. “Unadulterated, unapologetic xenophobia, completely unnecessary, Unconstitutional, and Unamerican.”

They expressed dismay at the fact that travelers from largely Muslim countries are being stopped at airports, even if they are permanent residents of the United States. 

That was the case with a Sudanese graduate student from Stanford University, who was stopped at JFK Airport despite being a green card holder, according to university spokeswoman Lisa Lapin.

Lapin said the woman is “still in the New York area getting some rest,” after which she will return to the Palo Alto campus. 

“Yes, it is true she was detained, and, yes, the university has offered her support,” she confirmed.

Politicians with Bay Area ties also pledged their support to those affected by the executive order. California’s Lieutenant Gov. Gavin Newsom, the former mayor of San Francisco, joined the protesters in San Francisco.

“People are happy to see me and they’re pretty pissed off because they want me to get in there and get those people out,” he said regarding the situation involving people being detained at the airport. “Certain things I can do. Certain things I can’t do.”

Ed Lee, the current mayor of the city by the bay, condemned Trump’s order while simultaneously applauding the ruling to block the president’s immigration stance.

“As the son of Chinese immigrants, I am disgusted by the president’s executive order to target the Muslim community and ban immigrants from entering the United States,” he said in a statement. “Our country was built by immigrants in search of religious freedom and a life free of persecution and violence. These actions are a direct betrayal of those American values. We cannot turn our backs on those looking for a better, safer life for themselves and their children.”

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