Friday, May 29, 2009

Insiders Guide to New Developments



Utilizing my 7+ years of new construction and development experience in consulting, sales and management of sales offices, I've prepared a four part guide to new developments for your benefit. Here's Part I, with subsequent parts coming in the following week:

Part I - Visiting the office

Many people that visit a sales office think they're heading into enemy territory, like a car dealership. In actuality, it's not a scary place where you're going to get bamboozled into the Pinto of condos. There's no way the sales office is going to convince you to buy a half million dollar plus home you don't want, regardless of how good they are as agents. Instead, go in looking at the sales team as the agent for the developer, knowing that they work exclusively for the developer, just like an existing, resale property. Take what they say with a grain of salt, and dig beneath what they say to find the information you need to make an informed decision.

What to expect:

When you first enter the office, they will ask you to fill out a registration form. They will ask for your contact information, some demographic questions, and how you heard about the development (for marketing purposes). Don't feel nervous about filling it out; most agents don't do anything with the information, especially if you say you're not interested at the end of the visit. If you are interested, a good agent will usually follow up and help you when you're ready to buy, and not be pushy about it.

If the building is complete (or nearly), you will probably be taken on a guided tour. If not, they will show you pictures, renderings, floor plans, and potentially a mockup of a model unit in the office.

A good agent will ask questions...lots of them. Don't get offended if the agent asks you what you do for a living, how much you make, or what you like to do in your spare time. The truth is that agents see upwards of 20 groups of people per week; we have a general idea of who is the right buyer for the project based on reoccurring demographics (and yes, income) of A and B prospects. The agent is just cutting to the chase, saving you time, and getting to know you in the process. If you can't get financing, it's best to find out up front before you get excited about a place you can't afford or qualify for a loan. During my years in management at sales offices, I've had my fair share of people say "that's none if your business", or "why does that matter". But I've become good friends with prospects who didn't buy at my buildings because I got to know them pretty well (and quickly).

If you have specific questions in mind, bring them and ask them throughout the tour. If not, don't worry. You'll think of them as you walk. The main thing to focus on is getting to know the vibe of the building and neighborhood.

Do I need an agent?

The short answer is no. If you don't, the sellers agent will act as your agent as well. But the long answer is more complicated.

We'll pick up on that in Part II - Ready to buy.

If you have any specific questions that haven’t been answered here, please feel free to email me at HighRiseSF@gmail.com. Answers to the most relevant questions will be posted in Part IV – Your Questions.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

New home sales increase, inventory at lowest level since 2001; initial jobless claims drop

Sales of new U.S. single-family homes rose slightly in April, while fewer workers filed for first-time jobless aid last week, raising hopes the worst of the deep economic recession was likely over.

The Commerce Department said Thursday that new home sales climbed 0.3 percent in April from March to a 352,000 annual unit pace, while prices rose 3.7 percent, the biggest monthly advance since November.The inventory of homes available for sale in April fell 4.2 percent from the prior month to 297,000, the lowest level since May 2001. At April's sales pace, that represents a 10.1 months' supply, the smallest backlog in nine months.

Sales, however, were down 34 percent compared to April last year, a reminder of how steeply the market had been falling. The sales pace appears to have bottomed in January when it hit a record low 329,000 unit pace.

"Together they draw a picture that tells us that the housing market is finally bottoming out and that conditions are beginning to improve," said Bernard Baumohl, chief global economist at The Economic Outlook Group in Princeton.
Also, initial jobless claims dropped:
A separate report from the Labor Department showed initial claims for state unemployment insurance benefits dropped by 13,000 to 623,000 in the week ended May 23, a second straight weekly drop.

The reports were the latest in a series suggesting the intensity of the 17-month old downturn, characterized by severe job losses and plunging asset prices, was losing momentum and the economy could return to growth later this year.

"The data are consistent with the notion that the worst of the recession is behind us. We haven't hit bottom yet, but seem to be nearing it. ... I see positive growth in the fourth quarter," said Mark Vitner, a senior economist at Wachovia Securities in Charlotte, North Carolina.
SOURCE: Reuters via Forbes

Price of entitled land in SF drops with economy

Paging developers with cash...now's the time to plan your developments for the next 5 years:
The price of San Francisco land entitled for condo towers is sinking fast — to the point where some developers question whether it is worth anything at all.

BayRock Residential has slashed the price of its approved condo site on Sutter Street from $18 million six months ago to $8 million, an indication that central San Francisco land prices are catching up with the decline in housing prices the city has seen.
BayRock also owns the entitled land on Market Street at Octavia, next to the SF LGBT Center. Great location for a developer and just two blocks from the new Prado Group condo/Whole Foods building planned for Market at Dolores, the site of the S&C Ford bldg.

UPDATE: Looks like I have a magic real estate development mind: drove past the site next to the Center and there's construction activity! First in over 3 years, on the same day I posted this. Looks like BayRock will be keeping the land and starting construction...now!

SOURCE: SF Biz Times

April home sales up, prices down

The National Association of Realtors said Wednesday that home sales rose 2.9 percent to an annual rate of 4.68 million in April from a downwardly revised pace of 4.55 million in March. Sales were 4.6 percent below April last year, without adjusting for seasonal factors.

Compared with January, the lowest point in the housing recession, April sales were up nearly 4 percent. But compared with the peak in September 2005, sales are still down 35 percent.

Nationally, however, the number of unsold homes on the market at the end of April rose almost 9 percent from a month earlier to nearly 4 million. That's a 10-month supply at the current sales pace, and was particularly troubling to economists.
SOURCE: AP via Yahoo Finance

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Consumer confidence posts large gain - back to Sept 08 levels

Great news, since 2/3rds of the economy is driven by consumer spending (vs B2B):
Stocks surged Tuesday after the Conference Board said consumer sentiment rose in May to the highest level since September. All the major stock indicators rose more than 2 percent, including the Dow Jones industrial average, which jumped 200 points.

The research group's Consumer Confidence Index vaulted to 54.9 from 40.8, soaring past the 42.3 that economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters expected.

Investors watch the indicator for signs of whether consumers might start shopping more or making bigger purchases such as cars and homes. Spending by consumers makes up more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.

Jim King, chief investment officer at National Penn Investors Trust Co., said the improvement in consumer confidence surprised investors. With unemployment still high and expected to go higher, many market watchers thought the mood on Main Street would remain gloomy.
Further evidence to back up my argument earlier today about unemployment rates leveling off in SF. As consumer confidence rises, so does consumer spending, which leads to increased B2B spending, which leads to decreased layoffs, more people remaining in their homes (less foreclosures), and confidence to purchase a first or move-up home.

Keep in mind Sept '08 was the beginning of the financial crisis, when Lehman went under and Merrill was bought by BofA.

SOURCE: AP via Yahoo Finance

Housing prices fall 19.1% YOY, down 32.2% from 2006 peak nationwide

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller National Home Price index reported home prices tumbled by 19.1 percent in the first quarter, the most in its 21-year history.

Home prices have fallen 32.2 percent since peaking in the second quarter of 2006 and are at levels not seen since the end of 2002.

The 20-city index fell by 18.7 percent in March from the year before and the 10-city index lost 18.6 percent. Those declines were a bit better than February's and marked the second straight month the indexes didn't post record drops...

All 20 cities showed monthly and annual price declines, with nine setting annual records. Fifteen cities posted double-digit drops and three cities -- Phoenix, Las Vegas and San Francisco -- all recorded declines of more than 30 percent.
Keep in mind, the 30% decline in SF is city-wide. The biggest drops have been in District 11 (Excelsior, Bayview/Hunters Point), while desirable neighborhoods have dropped 15-20%, to 2005 prices.

And following what Barbara Corcoran said last week,
Charlotte, North Carolina, and Denver home prices had the best performance in March over February, both edging up less than 1 percent. Home prices in Dallas were flat in March.
SOURCE: S&P via Yahoo Finance

Accurate assessment of housing market, or more Chronicle fear-mongering?

Yet another front-page story in the Chronicle about the housing market this morning, purporting to spell "more trouble ahead".

Let's break it down and see if there's meat to the story.
-- Rising unemployment. It doesn't take an economist to realize people will not buy homes if they're worried they might lose their jobs.

Unemployment also will spur supply. While the first wave of foreclosed-upon homeowners comprised people who could not afford their homes from the get-go, as more people lose their jobs, they are likely to lose their homes because they no longer have enough income to make the payments.
Verdict: truth nationwide, but here in the Bay Area, firms sending out pink slips seem to have leveled off months ago. See this link from the EDD that shows a decrease in unemployment in SF County from March to April, down to 8.8%
-- No "move-up" buyers. In a normal real estate market, about 80 percent of buyers are "moving up" or "moving across" - people who sell one home before buying another, said Mark Hanson, principal of Walnut Creek's the Field Check Group, a mortgage consultant. Remaining purchasers are split between first-time buyers and investors.

In today's market, about half of buyers are first-timers and a third are investors, leaving just 15 percent of what he calls "organic" buyers. Those first-timers and investors all troll for bargain-basement foreclosures - leaving few buyers who are interested in the homes being sold by "Ma and Pa Homeowner." That, in turn, leaves Ma and Pa unable to move up to a nicer home. "The organic seller is left out in the cold," he said.
Verdict: IMO, the first-time buyer numbers are accurate, or even higher than 50%, but they certainly aren't exclusively "trolling for bargain-basement foreclosures". Sure, it would be nice to buy a one-bedroom condo in Noe Valley for $300,000, but that simply doesn't exist. If you know of one, let me know, because I have a pocket-full of first-time buyers who would love to buy it.
-- Tight credit. Even people who do want to buy a home can't necessarily find someone willing to give them a mortgage. The standards of 20 percent down payment; solid, provable income; and good credit are back in force. While that more-stringent underwriting represents a return to classic values that should avoid future delinquencies, it leaves quite a few potential borrowers out in the cold. Most notably, self-employed workers - even ones with high income, such as doctors - are finding a less-cordial reception from lenders.
Verdict: True, but none of my buyers are having any problem getting approved for loans. Even excluding those without 20% down payments (which is inaccurate because my lenders can do 10% down now) there are still plenty of first-time buyers ready to buy.
-- Homes still overpriced. Home values have plunged nationwide. The authoritative Case-Shiller index shows prices nationwide at 158, down from a spring 2006 peak of 226. (That compares to a base value of 100 in January 2000.)

So that means homes are now affordable, right? Not so, say many analysts who believe prices are still wildly inflated compared to historic appreciation rates. From 1950 to 2000, home prices grew 4.4 percent a year, modestly outpacing inflation, said Andrew Schiff, a spokesman for Euro Pacific Capital in Connecticut. Following that metric, the Case-Shiller index should be at 132. "We're still way above where we should be in a normal market," he said.
Verdict: From 226 three years ago, to 158 now, with a metric of 132 as "where we should be in a normal market". So let me get this straight: 68 basis point drop already, yet only 26 points from "normal" is "wildly inflated"? If 68 points equated to a 15% drop in SF (which I've seen in prime neighborhoods), 26 points would mean a further 5-6% drop. Possible, but with plenty of first-timers in the market and deals galore for move-up buyers as well, we'll see.

On the plus side for the Chronicle, they're setting up the next round of "housing bubble" articles about affordability and price metrics from which to write many tens or hundreds of stories in the coming years.
-- High end taking a hit. Until recently, most of the market activity and price drops have been among lower-cost homes. Homes under $350,000 have had the most severe price drops, while those above $750,000 have remained relatively stable. That appears to be changing, as foreclosure woes spread to the upper end. The difficulty of getting "jumbo" loans to buy pricey houses has exacerbated the situation to the point where unsold inventories of high-end homes are swelling.

"The mid- to upper-end housing market is sitting on the exact precipice that the lower-end market was sitting on in early 2008," Hanson said.
Verdict: This is just wildly inaccurate and shows a lack of understanding from the Chron and this writer. If Ms. Said thinks that price drops of 15-20% on homes over $1M is "remain[ing] relatively stable", I'm not sure she's qualified to speak on this subject. But prices have dropped across the board, at all price points, since last summer. This paragraph is flatly untrue. Taking that into consideration, any effect this paragraph was intended to have has already been factored into the market, many months ago.

And since this posting is getting rather lengthy, I'll sum up the other 5 points (out of 6) under the "supply likely to surge" section as such: not in SF. There is no secret, massive supply of foreclosures waiting to come on the market in SF; at least not in any neighborhood my buyers would want to live (maybe in Hunters Point, but not Hayes Valley). My professional opinion is that barring any further doomsday economic news, which has leveled off in the past few months, the supply of workers in SF will remain mostly employed, and anyone facing hardship will dispose of their property in the normal fashion. Will some people lose money by having to sell below what they paid a few years ago? Yes, but those price decreases are already factored into the market as a whole and likely won't pull down the greater market in SF.

All in all, the story is accurate on a nationwide, macro scale, but probably won't mean much for San Francisco's micro real estate market. Only time will tell.

SOURCE: SF CHRON
UPDATE: Looking at the actual figures from Case-Shilling, San Francisco's index is 117.77, well below the 132 metric stated by the Chron. So when will we see articles saying SF is undervalued??

Saturday, May 23, 2009

San Francisco "on verge of rebound", says Barbara Corcoran

Economic slowdown leading to downsized development plans for SF


A plan to remake one of the last large tracts of San Francisco's waterfront likely will be more modest than originally imagined and bring the cash-strapped Port of San Francisco less money than once hoped.

The Port Commission today will decide whether to allow port officials to negotiate exclusively with a team that wants to construct a neighborhood on a 16-acre tract that has been used as a parking lot for AT&T Park...

As it stands, the project would produce approximately 10 commercial and residential buildings, including two towers near 200 feet and another taller than 300 feet. The area would be broken into 12 small city blocks and would feature 8 acres of open space, including the waterfront park.
SOURCE: SF CHRON

Turnberry calls it quits on SF

As reported last month here on HighRiseSF, Turnberry had been shopping their lot on Lansing Street, looking to exit the SF market after an ambitious plan to build super luxury condos. Well, now San Francisco Business Times confirms that Turnberry will be packing up and heading back to Miami:
Rincon Hill developer Turnberry Associates has canceled its 40-story deluxe condo tower at 45 Lansing St., and asked the city to refund an $8.4 million affordable housing fee it paid when the building permit application was filed in 2007.

In a letter dated May 4, land use attorney Andrew Junius said the building permit for the 227-unit tower “will be withdrawn immediately by the project sponsor.”

The cancellation is a significant blow to the future of highrise development in Rincon Hill and other downtown neighborhoods. Turnberry bought the property in September, 2006, near the height of the market, paying $30 million, or $130,000 per buildable unit. At the time Turnberry President Bruce Weiner told the Business Times that the project would cost $230 million to $240 million and would be the most upscale development Rincon Hill has seen, with “exotic marble baths, Italian Snaidero cabinetry, Gaggenau cooking appliances, Jacuzzi hydrotherapy tubs with built-in TVs, individual security systems and 12-foot penthouse ceilings.”

SOURCE: SF Biz Times

Socketsite round-up

Always a wealth of information on Socketsite, run by HighRiseSF's friend, Adam Koval. Here are the highlights from the past few weeks, as it relates to development and real estate in SF:

113 New Apartments Planned around Main/Beale

Values continue to drop at 235 Berry St

Pending US Home Sales on the rise

One Rincon Hill selling...SLOWLY

According to Socketsite, One Rincon Hill (ORH) is
at around 70 percent sold which would suggest almost no net-new contracts since October of 2008 when roughly 30 percent of Tower One inventory had yet to close.
Having worked for the same sales and marketing firm when the building first commenced sales, it seems as though sales have fallen backwards consistently since their "record-breaking" first week of sales. From roughly 330 homes sold then to roughly 250 now. Was/is this building just an investment property? Judging from the number of attempted flips and insider knowledge of staff buying multiple units for themselves, I think the answer is clear: This ain't no Infinity.

SOURCE: SOCKETSITE

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Bad news for One Rincon Hill owners

According to Socketsite,
Originally seeking $849,000 as a resale, the listing for One Rincon Hill #2307 was reduced down to $749,998 and then withdrawn from the MLS after 200+ days. Returning to the MLS [73] days ago asking $699,000, the list price for the northeast corner and 819 square foot 425 1st Street #2307 was [then] reduced to $649,000. The resale ... closed escrow on 4/17/09 with what appears to be a "confidential" sale price according to the MLS. Public records via the Chronicle report a sale price of $560,000 ($684 per square foot). And if tax records and the Chronicle are correct, that’s roughly 22% under what the seller had paid to the sales office ($873 per square).
Ouch. Glad I didn't buy one during the first week of sales.

SOURCE: SOCKETSITE

Friday, May 1, 2009

Open House tours this weekend


The weather's beautiful...a great weekend to go look at new homes. Enjoy!