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OLYMPICS: Athletes set to shine at Olympics– Shaun White lives in Rancho Santa Fe

February 12, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment 

OLYMPICS: Athletes set to shine at Olympics

Shaun White, Gretchen Bleiler, Rachael Flatt are names to look for

BY SCOTT BAIR – sbair@nctimes.com | Posted: February 11, 2010 11:54 pm | No Comments Posted | Print

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 OLYMPICS: Athletes set to shine at Olympics   Shaun White lives in Rancho Santa Fe

buy photo OLYMPICS: Athletes set to shine at Olympics   Shaun White lives in Rancho Santa Fe

Nathan Bilow Shaun White of Carlsbad holds up the gold medal he won at the men’s snowboard slopestyle at the Winter X Games 13 last January. (File photo by Nathan Bilow – Associated Press)

160 600 OLYMPICS: Athletes set to shine at Olympics   Shaun White lives in Rancho Santa Fe

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Shaun White, the scrawny redhead from Carlsbad, is undoubtedly the most recognizable winter-sports athlete on the planet. And his popularity should only increase after this year’s Winter Olympics, which start Friday evening in Vancouver, British Columbia.

But White isn’t the only athlete with local ties and a chance to strike gold.

Part-time Carlsbad resident Gretchen Bleiler is the favorite to win the women’s snowboard halfpipe competition, and former Del Mar resident Rachael Flatt enters the women’s figure skating competition riding high after winning the U.S. championships last month.

“It’s going to be fantastic,” Flatt told reporters after her surprise victory. “I’m so excited.”

Bleiler reached favorite status after a solid qualifying run in the U.S. Grand Prix series and an X Games victory over a talented field in late January.

“This is great momentum for me,” Bleiler, a silver medalist at the 2006 Olympics in Turin, Italy, said in an X Games press conference. “Just knowing I’m capable of this is great confidence. Going to Vancouver with these girls, we’re going to try to sweep that podium.”

Medal sweeps is something White is already familiar with.

He began dominating snowboarding and skateboarding competitions at age 15 and has been a celebrity in action-sports circles ever since. When he won the gold medal in snowboarding at the 2006 Olympics, his celebrity reached the mainstream.

Fast-forward four years, and White’s popularity hasn’t waned. The quick-witted snow carver has remained an action-sports icon and a marketing dream, pushing everything from Burton snowboards to Target stores.

Increased wealth prompted a move from Carlsbad to Rancho Santa Fe, but it didn’t stifle his competitive drive. White continues to challenge himself with dangerous maneuvers on the halfpipe and is once again favored to win gold in the 2010 Olympics.

White has been feverishly working to perfect a new signature move, dubbed the Double McTwist 1260, in which he does two head-over-heels flips while rotating 3 1/2 times.

He has landed it several times, but suffered a frightening crash when he under-rotated the move during an X Games practice run. White landed on his head and emerged with a nasty facial abrasion, but that didn’t deter him. He attempted and successfully executed the maneuver in the competition and won X Games gold.

“I was pumped to get it done, to land the trick, to take first tonight and to actually walk away from that plant and still be going to the Olympics,” White said in a post-competition press conference.

The 17-year-old Flatt and fellow American skater Mirai Nagasu will face stiff competition from Korean Kim Yu-Na, Japan’s Mao Asada and others, but an upset is always a possibility in such a technical, often unforgiving sport.

“We need to embrace the challenge, and I’m sure we’re both up for it,” Flatt said after the U.S. championships. “We’re young and spirited.”

That could also easily define White, whose eccentric personality and media savvy made him a magnet for paparazzi during an extended victory tour after the 2006 Olympics. He was seen at Hollywood parties, had his picture on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine and enjoyed a brief flirtation with figure skater Sasha Cohen.

He knows popularity must be validated by performance in the Olympics, which White acknowledges as the biggest competition of his career.

“It’s just a monster event,” White said after the 2006 games. “It’s worldwide, and it was fun to be a part of it. It meant a lot to me now that I’m older to wear U.S. on my chest. It was heavy. It wasn’t like rolling into X Games on my own. I was representing the whole country.”

On that international stage, you could say that White and the others will be representing North County, too.

Posted in Olympics on Thursday, February 11, 2010 11:54 pm Updated: 12:01 am. | Tags: Top, Nct, Sports, Olympics,

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Posted via web from tamaras’s posterous

Marketing Perspective: Prudential’s Luxury Properties Division

February 9, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment 

 Marketing Perspective:  Prudentials Luxury Properties Division
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Prudential California Realty held its annual Luxury Properties Division meeting at the St. Regis in Monarch Beach, CA.  This year marks the third year of the meeting of the group of agents (of which I am one) who specialize in the luxury residential market and, once again, the conference was rich with creative ideas and suggestions to effect better results for our clients, as well as presentations of market conditions delivered by the most respected real estate professionals in the industry.

Ron Peltier, CEO, Home Services of America (the division of Berkshire Hathaway, which owns Prudential CA Realty), delivered the yearly market perspective.  Ron is an outstanding speaker and commands a wealth of knowledge and insight.  In summary, he said:

There are 4 major factors controlling the real estate market today:

High Unemployment, which will continue through 2010.  Not only do we have high unemployment, but also under employment.  And, as employment drives the buying market, recovery can only start with job growth.

Foreclosures, which numbered 1.50 million in 2008 and 2.0 million in 2009, are projected to be 2.5 million in 2010 and staying at 2.5 for 2011. Also, of the 55 million mortgages in the US,     8 million (approximately 16%) are delinquent–delinquent being defined as 90+ days late in payment). Obviously, delinquency is the first step toward foreclosure.

Consumer Confidence is historically low.  When the equity market collapsed, Americans lost 10 years in gains.  Additionally, real estate, tradionally considered a “haven” lost approximately 25% of its value. Combined, the “wealth destruction” totaled $7 trillion.  People NOW know that real estate is volatile.

Inventory is high.  Historically, the 10 year average is 2.5 million properties  on the market; today we have 3.7 million homes on the market–40% more than normal.  Plus, 8 million homes are in distress.  Distressed homes  are driving prices down.

Where is the “Silver Lining” for the market? Buyer or Seller?

Essentially, the positive factors are:  Affordability has  NEVER been better (Buyer)

Interest Rates are Very Low (Buyer)

Inventory presents Great Choices (Buyer)

and, finally, Mr. Peltier believes that price destruction will end after the 1st half of 2010,  a celebration for SELLERS.

 Marketing Perspective:  Prudentials Luxury Properties Division

Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

February 8, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment 

Up to date Market Statistics for Rancho Santa Fe. If you would like specific neighborhood information or have questions, call us at 858-756-0593.

7-day stats for Single Family properties in
RANCHO SANTA FE, CA as of February 5, 2010
Median List Price $3,395,000 Average List Price $4,348,079
Total Inventory 253 Price per Square Foot $542
Average Home Size 6,192 Median Lot Size 86,249
Average # Beds 5.09 Average # Baths 5.52
Homes Absorbed 9 Newly Listed 9
Days on Market 304 Average Age 18

Median List Price is holding and we expect to see more inventory coming on the market now that January is behind us.

 Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

Median Price for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is $3,395,000

 Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

Inventory for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is 253

 Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

Average Days on Market for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is 304

 Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

Median Price Per Sqft for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is $542

When you look at the charts.... the overall reduction in price per square foot is dramatic. The buyer can get A TON for his $$$$$.

 Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

Building Plans for Upscale Properties Begin to Gain Momentum -San Diego Business Journal

February 8, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment 

Posted date: 2/8/2010
Market Stabilization Brings Renewed Interest in High-End Homes

REAL ESTATE: Building Plans for Upscale Properties Begin to Gain Momentum

The market for high-end homes costing more than $800,000 has slipped since the end of the housing boom, but builders say there are increasing signs of a turnaround.

“The market in my mind has stabilized,” said longtime San Diego builder Bill Davidson, president of Davidson Communities. “It is not falling like it was last year, and that is very important. No one wants to buy a house when they think the market is falling.”

With prices stabilizing, Davidson has begun to prepare for a real estate rebound.

“We are actively trying to buy more land now because we can price our homes profitably,” he said.

His company has upscale production homes under construction in La Costa and Del Sur in North County. They range in price from the $700,000s to more than $1 million. Tight credit has made it more difficult for upper-end buyers to secure loans, however. Conditions were much different just a few years ago, when loan underwriting standards were looser and customers bought big homes “with all of the gadgets and luxuries that we could pile on,” Davidson said. Since the recession hit, high-end buyers have been seeking smaller, simpler dwellings.

At McCullough-Ames Development Inc., Principal Monty McCullough typically builds custom $1 million, estate-style homes on 1-acre lots. Most of the firm’s recent projects are in North County, near the coast and along the state Route 56 corridor, between the Del Mar area and Poway. Even these buyers are looking for ways to stretch a dollar. McCullough presses his subcontractors for the best prices and passes the savings along to customers.

“Everybody has been hit by the recession,” he said. “… I felt my business starting to tail off by the summer and fall of 2004. Since the spring of 2009 we have built 15 homes, under contract or just finished.”

empty Building Plans for Upscale Properties Begin to Gain Momentum  San Diego Business Journal

Scaling Back On Size

Like Davidson, McCullough said his customers are downsizing a bit.

“The average home is right at or under 5,000 square feet,” he said. Not long ago, 6,000-square-foot to 9,000-square-foot homes were common in the custom market.

Custom builder Terry Wardell of Wardell Builders Inc. estimates that the size of the upper-end market had declined by about 50 percent from its peak. Wardell builds most of his homes in La Jolla, Del Mar, Rancho Santa Fe, Point Loma and Mission Hills.

“I think 2010 will be stronger than 2009, but it is still going to stay pretty flat,” he said. “Construction prices probably are 25 percent off their peak.”

Analyst Russ Valone, president and CEO of the MarketPointe Realty Advisors research firm, has been tracking $800,000-plus home sales. In 2005, such homes made up 49 percent of the detached housing market here. In 2006, the percentage was 44 percent. Last year, the share was down to just 20 percent.

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next arrow Building Plans for Upscale Properties Begin to Gain Momentum  San Diego Business Journal

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Great Videos of The Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines

February 1, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment 

First — Memorable Moments from past tournaments at Torrey Pines

Second — A recap of this years Farmers Insurance Open 2010

With Tiger out and Phil finishing at 19th — Ben Crane wins the Farmers Insurance Open by a stroke

February 1, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment 

150x100 With Tiger out and Phil finishing at 19th    Ben Crane wins the Farmers Insurance Open by a stroke
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Crane started off with three birdies in his first five holes, with the highlight coming at at the par-3 3rd hole where he dropped a 46-foot birdie bomb. On the back nine, Crane went up by three strokes on the field after a 47-foot birdie bomb at the par-3 11th hole, but bogeys at the 13th and 17th holes dropped the lead to a single stroke. Crane missed the fairway at the par-5 18th hole, but he laid up his second shot and his approach found the first cut only 4-yards away from the cup. He was able to two-putt from there to win his first tournament since 2005 US Bank Championship. The win is the third career victory for Crane on the PGA Tour and the championship has earned him an invitation to this year’s Masters and PGA Championship.

 With Tiger out and Phil finishing at 19th    Ben Crane wins the Farmers Insurance Open by a stroke

Housing Prices Buck Trend

January 28, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment 

 Housing Prices Buck Trend

A home in the Allied Gardens neighborhood of San Diego on Jan. 27, 2010 indicates it has a buyer despite the slowdown in the economy. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index shows housing prices continue to climb across the nation.

 Housing Prices Buck Trend

San Diego County, where housing prices rose and fell ahead of most of the country, was one of only four areas nationally to see an upturn beginning late last year, according to a widely watched housing index released yesterday.

Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller Home Price Index for November showed San Diego-area prices up nearly 0.4 percent from both October 2009 and November 2008. On a seasonally adjusted basis, it was up 1 percent from October and up 0.4 percent year over year.

The only other markets to be up year over year were Dallas , Denver and San Francisco .

However, the 20 metro areas in the index collectively were down over the same period — off 0.2 percent for the month and 5.3 percent year over year — an indication that any housing recovery is uneven around the country. At the extremes, prices in Dallas were up 1.4 percent and those in Las Vegas were down 24.5 percent from November 2008.

The index was set at 100 for all areas as of January 2000, based on a three-month, rolling average of single-family resale homes involving the same property over time.

San Diego’s index for November was 156.06, meaning that prices here were up roughly 56.1 percent from 10 years ago. The index rose as high as 250.34 in November 2005, before falling to a low of 144.43 in April. Since then the index has risen steadily and, when seasonally adjusted, is up 6.9 percent from the trough.

The Case-Shiller index, limited to certain transactions and averaged in three-month chunks, has risen a bit slower than the MDA DataQuick monthly median price report that include all sales. Its November median for single-family resale homes was $365,000, up 1.4 percent from October and 9 percent from November 2008.

David M. Blitzer, S&P index chairman, said in a statement that despite four metro areas being up, there were four others that set index lows since the housing boom peaked.

“On balance, while these data do show that home prices are far more stable than they were a year ago, there is no clear sign of a sustained, broad-based recovery,” Blitzer said.

David Goldberg, an analyst for UBS, predicted that prices could fall between 3 percent and 5 percent before unemployment levels out.

“We’re probably in the latter stages of seeing home price declines,” Goldberg said.

S&P reported indexes in all metro areas except Detroit were higher than where they stood in January 2000, not factoring in inflation. Detroit’s index stood at 72.59, meaning its prices are roughly 27 percent below their 2000 starting point. Washington, D.C., with an index of 179.2, had the highest index value among the 20 areas; it fell from a peak 251.07 to 165.93 before rising again.

As further signs of a seesawing housing market, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said yesterday that its price index, based on mortgages, was up 0.7 percent from October to November, after having revised the October figure down. First American CoreLogic, a data firm, reported a decline of 0.2 percent in its November report issued last week.

Analysts said the apparent slowdown in housing recovery may be connected to a burst of activity last fall, when buyers rushed to close escrow to take advantage of an $8,000 federal tax credit for first-time home buyers. The credit was extended and expanded in November, reducing the urgency to buy until the next deadline, April 30.

Norm Miller, a housing expert at the University of San Diego and vice president for analytics at the CoStar Group , a commercial real estate company, said the future is uncertain because of an expected rise in foreclosures, which could depress prices, and interest rates, which could hurt affordability.

But San Diego may not feel much of a backslide because of the relative shortage of homes for sale.

“We’re one of the least-affordable markets in the country on a long-term basis,” Miller said. “When things become more affordable (as they have since 2005), there’s more a sense of urgency than in Cincinnati . OK, prices are down (there) a little bit, but here they’re three times down as much as in the Midwest. So, gosh, now’s a good time to buy.”

Miller said San Diego is likely to continue seeing a sluggish upper-end market as owners refrain from listing their homes for sale because they hope prices will return to their previous highs and buyers hope for additional bargains.

But for buyers, Miller said now may be an opportune time to get a property, even if prices might dip a bit over the next few months, because any rise in interest rates would wipe out any marginal drop in prices.

“If you can get interest rates at 10 percent less than a year from now, that means more than missing the bottom of the housing cycle,” he said.

Posted via web from slcorp’s posterous

Home Prices: Now May Be The Time To Buy Luxury Real Estate

January 21, 2010 by admin · 1 Comment 

4037104393 c6cdbe16f7 300x225 Home Prices: Now May Be The Time To Buy Luxury Real Estate   A million dollars doesn’t buy you what it once did. In most U.S. neighborhoods, it now gets you a lot more.

During the housing boom, prices rose so high and so fast that even cookie-cutter homes in the paved suburbs of South Florida and California could cost a cool million. In Santa Clara, Calif., a high-tech hot spot, the median price hit $836,780 in 2007.

That was a long way from the days when a million-dollar home evoked images of marble columns and swimming pools with vanishing edges. Subprime loans allowed more people than ever to buy houses that were once above their means. Higher demand fueled ever-higher prices until the spigot of cheap money was turned off and the housing bubble burst. The recession forced many well-heeled buyers into unemployment lines. And sales of homes over $1 million cratered by more than 50 percent from the peak four years ago.

“Everyone has less money than they once had,” said Amy Wright, an agent with The Real Estate Office in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. “That has certainly affected the nouveau riche, and that’s definitely in that $1 million price point.”

For people who do have the money, however, it’s the best time in years to buy luxury real estate.

Rancho Santa Fe is a luxury enclave in San Diego County that has over the years lured the likes of Howard Hughes and Bill Gates. Equestrian trails border golf courses, and the most expensive home on the market is listed for $29.9 million.

A couple of years ago, the idea of getting a house in Rancho Santa Fe for a paltry $1 million was laughable. Now, foreclosures and financially distressed homeowners account for about 15 percent of sales, and home prices are down 30 percent.

In one golf-course community in the town, a 2,200-square-foot home is listed for $800,000. Residents live in a gated community where Spanish style homes surround a 250-acre Rees Jones-designed golf course and an accompanying 35,000-square foot clubhouse.

In the 20 largest U.S. metro areas, about 2,800 homes sold for more than $1 million in July – down by more than half from July 2005, according to MDA DataQuick. Nationwide, overall home sales were down about 27 percent, according to the National Association of Realtors.

In the month of August, sellers with homes priced above $2 million were cutting prices by an average of 14 percent, compared with the national average of 10 percent, according to Trulia.com.

The good news for luxury homebuyers is that they’re getting about 20 percent “more house” than they did two years ago, and the prestige of owning a $1 million home is returning, said John Brian Losh, CEO of luxuryrealestate.com.

That is, if they can afford the payments.

On Friday, the average interest rate for a 30-year “jumbo loan” (defined as a mortgage over $729,750) was 6.18 percent – about a point higher than a conventional fixed-rate mortgage, according to Bankrate.com. That means the mortgage payment for a $1 million home (with a down payment of 20 percent) would run about $4,900 a month, not including property taxes.

A buyer would have to earn at least $200,000 a year to make the payment plus taxes – and only about 4 percent of Americans fall into that tax bracket, 2007 Census data shows.

In Fort Myers, Fla., Pat and Dennis Tyeryar are trying to sell their four-bedroom, 3,795-square-foot house on three acres for $999,700. The property is a rare slice of lush Old Florida, with moss cascading off shade trees and views of a river and lagoon.

The property, valued at $1.4 million four years ago, is unique for the area because it sits on a peninsula: Every room in the house has a water view.

So far, no offers.

In a recession-battered place like Saginaw, Mich., however, a person can scoop up almost 18 houses for $1 million. Or, a buyer can get a 6,360-square-foot, two-story brick palace that sits on a five-acre estate.

The house is priced at $995,000. It has an indoor swimming pool and six bedrooms, but the property has been a hard sell in a market where a 2,300-square-foot home can go for $160,000, real estate agent Bruce Shaw said.

Shaw said the home would have been listed for about $1.3 million during the boom.

“It’s not like I get a lot of calls on it, not unless someone is moving from Southern California,” he said.

In Toledo, Ohio, agent Nancy Kabat has two listings that add up to $1 million – a six-bedroom, $635,000 house in suburban Ottawa Hills, and a three-story, two-bedroom condo on the Maumee River for $360,000.

The house has detailed crown molding and a renovated kitchen with granite countertops. It’s also near good schools. The condo has a view of Toledo’s landmark Anthony Wayne Bridge and is a short ride to an area with upscale restaurants and a vibrant nightlife.

“You could have a house in the suburbs for the winter and have a condo on the river in the summer and use your boat,” Kabat said.

If that approach doesn’t work, a buyer can pursue a three-bedroom, Mediterranean-style home in Toledo for $969,177, according to realtor.com. The 4,800-square-foot property was built in 2007 and has a three-car garage and upscale kitchen appliances like a stainless steel refrigerator and a dual-temperature wine cooler.

“We don’t have that many million dollar houses here, so it seems that they’re holding their value,” said Betty Lazzaro, an agent with Sulfur Springs Realty Inc.

Posted via web from slcorp’s posterous

 Home Prices: Now May Be The Time To Buy Luxury Real Estate

Southern California housing market strengthens in December

January 20, 2010 by admin · 1 Comment 

Southern California housing market strengthens in December

In a typically sluggish month, the median sale price rises 4% over the same period a year earlier, and sales jump 12.1%. The pace of sales is the best since 2006, aided by tax credits that end soon.

51739521 Southern California housing market strengthens in DecemberA house in Long Beach has a buyer. One driver of sales is the April 30 expiration of tax credits for home buyers. Low mortgage rates are also a factor. (Nick Ut / Associated Press / December 17, 2009)
  • Rock-bottom interest rates and stronger sales in higher-priced neighborhoods helped Southern California’s housing market post robust gains in the typically sleepy month of December, new data show, and experts say the momentum is continuing — ushering in an early start to the spring home-buying season.
  • The median price paid for a Southland home rose 4% to $289,000 last month from December 2008, the first time the closely watched figure has posted a year-over-year gain since the region’s real estate market took a nose dive 2 1/2 years ago, according to data released Tuesday by MDA DataQuick, a San Diego real estate research firm.

    Rebounding home prices could help the Southern California economy recover from its slump, as a stronger housing market could lead to hiring on construction sites and in real estate sales, title and escrow offices, said Esmael Adibi, director of Chapman University’s A. Gary Anderson Center for Economic Research.

    “The worst is behind us for sure,” he said. “For the economy, the implication is, at least on the residential side, we don’t expect more layoffs, and you might actually see some pickup in employment.”

    But Adibi noted that those gains could be tempered by continued weakness in the commercial real estate market, which includes office buildings, retail centers and hotels.

    The increase in December home prices follows a dismal 2008. Even with the rise, the median price was still 42.8% lower than its $505,000 peak during several months in 2007, underscoring the steep decline in the latter part of the last decade. The median is the point at which half the homes sold for more and half for less.

    Still, December’s sales pace was the best since 2006, capping a year in which strong government support of the housing market helped stabilize prices for most of the last year and brought more buyers back into the market.

    “It’s time for me to move,” said Soosan Saedi, 43, who is looking to sell her three-bedroom, 1,300-square-foot Woodland Hills house and trade up to something bigger. “I need the space, the mortgage rates are low, and fortunately I am not having trouble with loans, so it is time for me to buy.”

    The housing market’s recovery began last year as first-time buyers and investors competed for steeply discounted foreclosed homes. Now foreclosure properties are making up a smaller part of the mix. The gains in December also reflect a more diverse market, experts said, as prices were bolstered by increased sales in many mid- to high-priced communities.

    Part of that trend shows the increased affordability of high-end properties as more are taken back by banks or are sold “short,” for less than what is owed on their mortgages, real estate professionals said.

    “They have come down a lot,” said Syd Leibovitch, president of Rodeo Realty in Bel-Air. “I think the sellers dug in for a while, and now they are accepting the reality that prices have dropped, and they are being a lot more flexible.”

    Beverly Hills, Santa Monica and Newport Beach were among the affluent areas notching healthy sales gains, according to DataQuick. Conversely, areas hard hit by foreclosures — including Moreno Valley, Lake Elsinore and Palmdale — saw a drop-off.

    Christopher Cortazzo, a Coldwell Banker agent in Malibu, said he sold a home for $12 million in December, roughly $3 million below its listing price, and closed out the month with $26.5 million in sales, one of his best months of the year. Cash-rich buyers looking to capitalize on lower prices have rushed into the market in recent weeks, he said, and the sales pace has continued through January.

    “Spring season is going to start early,” Cortazzo said. “We are having a lot of cash deals, so there is a lot of money out there, and there is amazing opportunity and great deals to be had.”

    One thing driving sales is the April 30 expiration of tax credits for home buyers. First-time home buyers can get up to $8,000 in credit on their federal income taxes, and current homeowners can qualify for up to $6,500.

    Low mortgage rates are also a factor. Thirty-year fixed-rate loans were below 5% through most of December and haven’t risen much.

    The role of the federal government in the housing market remains key. Some experts worry that once certain policies and programs wind down — among them low interest rates, tax incentives for buyers and an increased accessibility of mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration — the housing market could falter.

    Christopher Thornberg, principal of Beacon Economics, predicts home prices will drop once those policies and programs expire.

    “The bounce in the housing market is due to government policy, not due to fundamentals,” he said. “None of these programs fix the underlying problem. They only delay the solution — they only delay the healing process.”

    The percentage of Southern California homes that sold for more than $500,000 rose to 20.2% of all sales in December from 16.5% a year earlier, DataQuick said. That is well off the 52% level reached before the credit crunch hit in 2007, which made large mortgages difficult to obtain.

    Richard Green, director of the USC Lusk Center for Real Estate, said buyers have sensed more security in Southern California’s real estate market in recent months and have begun to get off the fence.

    “We are getting a little bit of what we had six or seven years ago, where people are worried if they don’t get in now they are going to miss out on an opportunity,” Green said. “In a decent neighborhood, in the half-a-million-dollar range, we are back to lots of offers.”

    A total of 22,328 new and resale homes sold last month in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties, up 16.4% from November and 12.1% from December 2008, DataQuick said.

    Still, uncertainty lingers. Unemployment and a potential wave of homes headed for sale because of foreclosure or delinquency loom over the U.S. housing market. Both could slow Southern California’s progress toward recovery should the Obama administration fail in its efforts to aid struggling borrowers. California’s budget woes could also bode poorly for the state.

    “The fiscal picture is still really bleak, and that makes me worry,” Green said.

    The home-buyer tax credit motivated Jennifer Scholte, 31, to close on a Lakewood home in December. The teacher said she and husband Eric, 34, saved up for a 20% deposit on the $361,000 property.

    “We are first-time home buyers, and with that credit, that was a big push,” she said.

    To take advantage of similarly minded buyers, Leibovitch of Rodeo Realty said he has hired 40 to 50 people in the last three months, including secretarial, marketing and administrative staff, to prepare for what he predicts will be one of the strongest sales years on record. Escrow of the West, a Beverly Hills company, said it would open a Sherman Oaks branch Thursday, creating 25 jobs.

    Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

     Southern California housing market strengthens in December

    Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions January 15th, 2010

    January 19, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment 

    Up to Date Market Conditions in Rancho Santa Fe.

    7-day stats for Single Family properties in
    RANCHO SANTA FE, CA as of January 15, 2010
    Median List Price $3,295,000 Average List Price $4,276,428
    Total Inventory 258 Price per Square Foot $542
    Average Home Size 6,074 Median Lot Size 86,249
    Average # Beds 5.07 Average # Baths 5.46
    Homes Absorbed 14 Newly Listed 10
    Days on Market 294 Average Age 18

    Text and HTML that you enter here will be displayed below the stats table

     Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions January 15th, 2010

    Median Price for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of January 15, 2010 is $3,295,000

     Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions January 15th, 2010

    Inventory for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of January 15, 2010 is 258

     Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions January 15th, 2010

    Average Days on Market for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of January 15, 2010 is 294

     Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions January 15th, 2010

    Median Price Per Sqft for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of January 15, 2010 is $542

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