Price Declines Equals Investor and First Time Buyer Opportunities
Friday, January 7, 2011
An article in the Los Angeles Times mapped out House price declines from data provided by Research Institute for Housing America, the Mortgage Bankers Association, and the Census Bureau in the Los Angeles Times . The Vallejo-Fairfield area had an average house price drop over three years from 2006-2008 of over 62%. and was ranked third nationally. Stockton was number one. Modesto was number 2. For the 4th highest drop you have to travel all the way over to Cape Coral-Fort Meyers, Florida. S&P Case-Shiller home price indexes for October noted that San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego all had positive price increases in the past year. However, not all areas are experiencing price increases, for example : Boston dropped .02% over the past year. Michelle Lodge, CNBC.com Writer reported on CNBC that Boston Properties owner Mort Zuckerman is pessimistic about residential real estate. I don’t agree with Mr. Zuckerman as it relates to residential property outside of Boston. I don’t think Boston home values have dropped as much as California values have dropped as Boston isn’t even in the top 32 cities that have lead the decline in home values for the past three years.
What does this mean for the investor or first time home buyer? O_P_P_O_R_T_U_N_I_T_Y!
Positive cash flows can be had on residential properties given the near record low interest rates. For buyers that’s like buying a home for a 1991 price! Remember when we thought gasoline was high at $1.15 gallon in 1991?
Here is an example of an approved potential short sale in Vallejo, California: 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garagewith RV parking-no rear neighbors-immaculate inside and out. Only $150,ooo! It should rent for no less than $1500-$1800. Payments would depend on the down, but call your lender to run the numbers and you’ll soon see it has a positive cash flow with depreciation and potential equity growth ,….its almost a sure thing. There’s more than one property available, too.
The median price is slowly moving upward again. Once winter is over, I expect it to continue to move up as the economy improves. The year 2011 is expected to be slow and steady in the number of home sales per California Association of Realtors” Leslie Appleton-Young, Chief Economist. She further stated that the median price of homes is also expected to move up about 10%. (assuming no sudden shock to the economy) Meanwhile, the supply of homes that are available for under $300,000 is shrinking to less than a five month supply. Homes over a million have a 10 month supply. There is no hidden inventory or shadow inventory per Bill Quinn, Home Loan Manager of Bank of America. They are processing foreclosures as quickly as they can in California.
In summary, if you have been waiting for the bottom of the market. It looks like you missed the opportunity, but its pretty close, and your timing might still be near enough to the bottom, along with historically low interest rates if you take action now.
Related articles
- Will Housing Prices Rise in 2011? (fool.com)
- Name The City Where 28% Of Homes And 62% Of Businesses Are Vacant(businessinsider.com)
- Housing: Still a Buyer’s Market (mint.com)
- Call for house price stability(lv.com)
- Home Inventory Dwindles Into The New Year(movephilly.blogspot.com)
- Hot Real Estate Market in Benicia, California? (rdillion.com)
- Housing Inventory Declines(blogs.wsj.com)
- California home prices increase slightly in 2010(fresnobeehive.com)









