Archive for July, 2009

Market Stats Show Inventory Decreasing

Our market analysis this month shows inventory continues to decrease across the board in Central Austin, and prices appear to have stabilized, and even increased in some submarkets in Austin.  Low interest rates and the $8,000 First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit have combined with a general perception that home prices have bottomed out in Austin overall.  Most transactions we are seeing are first time buyers and “move up’s”.  While many move up’s have a difficult time accepting that their house may be worth less than at the peak of the market in 2007, most are excited to make up that discount and then some on the purchase of a more expensive home, all while trading down to a lower interest rate.  A perfect example was a client that recently sold their existing home and purchased a new one which cost 14% more, but after locking a lower interest rate their monthly PITI only increased by $20.

The summer season, however, is the busiest time of year for Austin real estate, and so the tell tale sign of a recovery will be to watch what happens later this year.  We are anticipating a busier than usual fall and winter season as the $8,000 Tax Credit deadline approaches December 1st.  It’s possible the government may extend that deadline, but if they opt to extend it likely occur at the last minute.

And so that brings us to the market segments.  As usual, lower prices directly correlate with lower inventory.  If there is any question whether the Home Buyer Tax Credit is working, look no further than South Austin (10N and 10S), between Ben White and Slaughter.  There, the median home price hovers around $177,000 and the inventory is an extraordinarily low 2.3 months.  Buyers looking in this area practically have to submit an offer the day a home comes on the market.  But buyer’s confidence that prices AND interest rates are “as low as they’ll go” are showing effects across all strata of Austin’s housing market.  Westlake and Old West Austin (Tarrytown, Clarksville, Brykerwoods), the most expensive pockets of Austin, continue to have the most inventory with over 9.5 months available, however this is a significant decrease from last winter.   Tarrytown, for example, sold more million dollar homes in May than in January, February and March combined.  Great discount buying opportunities still reside in the luxury home market for well qualified buyers over $500,000.

Circle C continues to be a strong performer due to its relative affordability and proximity to downtown and major employers such as AMD.  Sales have sharply increased in Steiner, although transactions in the Jumbo Mortgage realm (loans greater than $417,000) continue to have difficulty passing underwriting, and we have seen many homes undergo a multiple offer bidding war, only to fall out of escrow because the buyer could not get the loan approved.  Days on Market continue to

Mueller and Allandale are both on fire.  The numbers for Windsor Park and Mueller don’t tell the whole story.  Builders such as David Weekly are rapidly selling homes with little to no incentives, so much so that recently they only have had 1 or 2 homes available at any given time.  Compared to last winter when a buyer could have their choice of 15 -20 move-in ready homes, there is a drastic difference.  Allandale has very little available and good listings are seeing multiple offers within days coming on market.

The condo sector continues to remain healthy overall, although the downtown market will likely see price declines in projects under construction as those buildings are opened for residents and the additional units are absorbed through 2010 and 2011.  The Shore recently established, however, that a large contingent of buyers remains for downtown condos when there is a perception of a great value.  By lowering prices and offering builder closeout specials, the Shore successfully sold over 50 units in less than 2 months.

Overall, I still believe the worst is past us, and local job growth will be the determining factor in whether home prices remain level or begin to appreciate over the next 24 months.

Sage on South Lamar on Auction Block

Sage Condos - Click for Slideshow

Sage Condos - Click for Slideshow

The Sage has also announced they will auction their 23 remaining units.  10 of those units will not have a reserve price and will sell regardless of the high bid price.  JP King will call the auction August 22nd at the Hyatt on Lady Bird Lake.

The Sage is a townhome community built by local firm Avera Development.  They are located just north of Mary Street on South Lamar and are near downtown, Zilker Park, restaurants along Barton Springs and the Alamo Draft House.  The units are 2 and 3 story townhomes with 2 car attached garages.  Units are finished with hardwood flooring in the living and dining areas, carpet in the bedrooms, ceramic tile baths, granite countertops and stainless steel appliances with gas cooking and heating.

I like the location of the property.  The proximity to downtown, eateries and parks is excellent.  The community, however is on a busy section of Lamar and backs to a commercial shopping center.  Overally, it’s a great property in a great location, and I believe the units are a good value below $175/SF.  Contact us for more information on specific floor plans or to schedule a tour of the property prior to the auction.

Auction details

Broker Registraction Form

Belair to Auction Remaining 25 Units

Belair Kitchen

Belair Kitchen - Click for Slideshow

Kennedy Wilson has announced they will auction the remaining 25 units at Belair on August 9th at 1:00PM at the Hilton Hotel downtown.  Starting bids will range between $90,000 and $130,000.  The units were originally priced between $273,000 and $399,000.  Winning bids will require a 4% buyer premium added to the sales price, with an earnest money deposit within 24 hours of the auction.  Interested bidders must register in advance with the auction company and submit a $2,500 refundable deposit to Heritage Title.

The Belair is located on South Congress approximately a half mile south of Ben White.  View a map here.  The area is still transitioning, as the community is surrounded by self storage facilities, used car lots and warehouses.  Belair was the first residential project constructed south of Ben White along the Congress corridor, but several tracts of land nearby are owned by developers and permitted for future projects.  Local developer Richard Coons is building the Village on Congress nearby, an approximate 140 unit mixed use community.  Pricing at the Village ranges from around $125,000 – $325,000 for 673 SF to 1828 SF.  On average, the Village is asking approximately $180/SF.  Also, the mixed use design center at Penn Field was constructed just north of Ben White a few years ago, and more recently the Soco Lofts apartments opened for leasing.

We believe this stretch of Congress will continue to develop over the next 10 years due to its proximity to St. Edward’s and major employer centers.  Plus as real estate prices begin to appreciate in the next boom, it’s likely development will continue to push further south along Congress.

Belair price list

In my personal opinion, I think the Belair units would be a good value under $150/SF and an excellent value under $125/SF.  My thoughts are that as the economy regains its strength in the next 5 – 10 years, construction prices and land prices will begin to rise again and it will be cost prohibitive to deliver new product at a price that could compete with a unit at re-sale.  If you would like our thoughts on which specific units and floor plans offer the best long term potential and would like representation at the auction, feel free to call us.

Download the auction package: Bel_Air_Brochure_Auction

Need a job? Forbes says “Go to Austin.”

Michael Shires, associate professor in public policy at Pepperdine University, and Joel Kotkin, a Forbes weekly columnist and presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University, have compiled their fifth annual list of the best places for job growth. The study is based on job growth in 333 regions–called Metropolitan Statistical Areas by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which provided the data–across the U.S. The analysis looked not only at job growth in the last year but also at how employment figures have changed in these areas since 1996. Wary of overemphasizing recent data, the authors strive to provide a complete picture of the potential a region has for job-seekers. According to their data, these are the top 10 big cities for jobs.

No. 1: Austin-Round Rock, Texas

Of the 10 large cities with the best employment prospects, Austin is the leader. Job growth between 2004 and 2008 was a whopping 14.8%–and even between 2007 and 2008, overall growth remained in the black. In some areas, Austin is representative of nationwide changes in employment. For example, manufacturing waned; between 2000 and 2008, jobs in that sector decreased by a third. But service sectors like education and health, leisure and hospitality, and others grew tremendously. Job growth stagnated in 2008, but avoiding net losses was enough propel this city to the top of the list.

See the full article here:

Austin poised for the quickest re-bound

Given the real estate activity we’ve seen in the last three months, this isn’t surprising to us.  But it is nice to see that someone else is saying it too. 

From Forbes - 

WASHINGTON – The three most important things in real estate: location, location, location.

It’s true for recovery from a real estate bubble too. Overall, many economists expect the national economy to return to growth later in 2009, perhaps as soon as this summer. But that won’t be the case everywhere. While some cities are poised for a quick rebound, others face a slog to recovery that could take years.

Poised for swift recovery are many Texas cities, such as Austin, San Antonio, Dallas and McAllen. These areas did not see the massive real estate bubble that formed in states like California, Nevada and Florida. The economy is diverse, with heavy growth coming from education and health care in recent years.

Many of the cities with the longest road to recovery are California cities, where home prices rocketed out of control, and entire economies were supported largely by a real estate bubble. Fresno, Modesto, Salinas, Bakersfield, Stockton and Los Angeles all saw home prices soar to unsustainable levels and then begin their inevitable plunge. The collapse of the housing markets pushed unemployment rates in these cities above 10 percent.

Even as a flood of foreclosures makes home prices look affordable again, a sign that some of the worst real estate markets may be finding their bottom, it will still take years for unemployment rates as high as 16.8 percent in Modesto or 15.5 percent in Fresno to return to healthy levels.

According to Forbes, here are cities that should turn around sooner rather than later

Austin-Round Rock, Texas

Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, Ark.

Boulder, Colo.

Huntsville, Ala.

San Antonio, Texas

Complete list

To find the 10 cities that look best poised for recovery (and the 10 cities likely looking at the longest climb back), we examined estimates from data provider Moody’s Economy.com of the projected gross domestic product of metropolitan areas across the U.S., as well as unemployment figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and home prices, incomes and affordability data from the National Association of Home Builders. Because, in general, healthy cities were not victims of as severe a housing collapse, home prices were not used in ranking the cities poised for recovery.

The analysis also shows the importance of a city’s economic make-up. Manufacturing has been battered by the recession, leaving cities like Detroit and Flint, Mich., or Youngstown, Ohio, with bad unemployment and a changing economy that’s unlikely to replace the lost jobs. Moody’s projects the economy in Flint, for example, will decrease by 16 percent from the start of recession to the end of 2010. (One commonly cited rule of thumb for depression is a decline of 10 percent.) Flint might never return to its original size.

New York City, too, once the capital of finance, is now saddled with Wall Street-induced unemployment and homes that are completely unaffordable for most of the region’s residents. The NAHB’s Housing Opportunity Index reports that only 14 percent of homes in the New York-White Plains-Wayne area are affordable on the area’s median income — by far the least affordable region measured by NAHB.

Cities with robust technology sectors are poised for stronger recoveries than manufacturing or finance centers. Cities with high-tech capabilities like Seattle, Huntsville, Ala., or Boulder, Colo., could see quick recovery in coming months.


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