Thursday, January 27, 2011

Investing in Real Estate, revising your outlook? - Phil Missig thinks this article might be a good read for you!

2011 May Be a Great Time to Tighten Your Real Estate Portfolio

Posted Tuesday, January 25, 2011 by admin
Filed under: Investing

It is hard to turn around these days without finding someone who over-leveraged themselves in the last real estate boom by taking on an aggressive debt-to-equity ratio while the market was high. Many property owners find themselves “upside down,” owing more on their property than it is currently worth.

However, a percentage of real estate investors have a diverse real estate portfolio, with some performing and some non-performing properties. For these investors, 2011 may be an excellent time to tighten your portfolio.

First, interest rates are “still” low. Prior to these recent amazingly low offerings below 4% and 5%, consumers had not seen interest rates as low since the 1960’s. Close to 30 years. If you have not locked a fixed rate fully amortized loan on your homes and income properties, you will be grateful to yourself for locking them in now.

Second, the next Southern California real estate “boom” is probably at least a decade away. That means any non-performing properties in your portfolio are not going to suddenly start making money simply because of a market rise… soon.

Finally, if you are able to free up equity as you tighten your portfolio, there may be exciting places to reinvest both in real estate and other sectors over the next few years.

If your real estate investment portfolio includes cash flow negative income properties, and you have been wondering whether to sell or hold, first look for a solution that creates cash flow or at least allows you to break even. If such a solution is not available, and you are not comfortable covering the negative cash flow for the next several years, 2011 may be a great time to let that asset go and focus your resources elsewhere.

Joan Weisman, is a fourth generation California native and has been active in Real Estate since 1998. She is SFR Certified with the National Association of Realtors. As your agent, Joan is efficient, effective and on your side.

Ms. Weisman is a past President of her Toastmasters club (July 2009 – Dec 2010) and is currently serving as Area G-5 Governor for Toastmasters International (July 2010 – June 2011). She is a member of the National Association of Realtors, California Association of Realtors, and the Local Southern California Multiple Listing Service.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Phil Missig thinks this is a good sign: Google expanding in Los Angeles, leasing famed Architectural building by Frank Gehry, and bringing jobs to the area; reports the LA Times.

Google leases office complex in Venice

The Internet search giant will take over more than 100,000 square feet in three buildings, including one designed by Frank Gehry. Its lease coincides with an announcement that it would hire more than 6,000 workers this year.

Binoculars

The Frank Gehry-designed structure with sculpture by Claes Oldenburg. (Los Angeles Times)

Google Inc., the ever-expanding Internet search giant, is establishing a beachhead in Venice.

In a rare bright spot for the region's sluggish economy, Google is leasing more than 100,000 square feet of office space in three buildings, including the famed Binoculars Building designed by Frank Gehry. Sitting in front of the building is a huge binocular sculpture created by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, perhaps befitting of the company's search theme.

The move is part of a major expansion by Google in Southern California and could set up a new center of operation in the region.


Google representatives confirmed Tuesday night that the company had signed a lease for the properties, saying its employees would begin moving into the offices this year. Google's new complex of buildings will have more square footage than its current facilities in Santa Monica, where the largest of the three buildings has 45,000 square feet and houses 300 employees.

"Los Angeles is a world-class city with a talented workforce, and we're thrilled to expand our presence as we enter our biggest hiring year in company's history," said Thomas Williams, a senior director of engineering at Google.

Opening a Venice campus is part of an ambitious hiring plan for the Mountain View, Calif., company, which earlier Tuesday announced it would add more than 6,000 workers this year.

The hiring spree comes as Google fights for top talent against upstart rivals including Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. — so a marquee location in Los Angeles could help the company score points with potential hires. In its recruiting efforts, Google has bragged that its Santa Monica offices "are strategically located just a few short blocks from sunny beaches" and benefit from "over 300 days of sunshine."

Although Google would not comment on the precise number of new employees the move would bring to the city, the new space is likely to become a de facto Los Angeles campus, consolidating employees at other nearby locations, according to real estate sources.

The landmark building at 340 Main St., which was completed in 1991, was Gehry's last major project in Los Angeles before the Walt Disney Concert Hall in 2003. First to occupy the building was another friend of Gehry's, ad man Jay Chiat, who headquartered his powerhouse Chiat/Day ad agency in the building. Chiat died in 2002.

Los Angeles city officials welcomed the news.

"I am ecstatic that Google will be opening offices in Venice," said Councilman Bill Rosendahl, whose district includes the properties, in a statement. "I am particularly happy that its large number of employees will be contributing to our local economy. This should be a huge boon to the restaurants and shops on Main Street, Rose Avenue and Abbot Kinney Boulevard."

Google opened its Santa Monica office in 2003 with a few dozen employees. That outpost has grown into one of the company's biggest, with hundreds of employees spread out over several buildings.

Over the last decade, Southern California has played a frequent role in the 12-year-old company's story of growth and expansion. In 2003, Google spent $102 million for Santa Monica-based online ad start-up Applied Semantics Inc., which helped launch AdSense, a program through which advertisers bid on specific keywords. The following year, Google bought Pasadena-based Picasa Inc., which makes photo management software.

Google's continued interest in the region was fueled by the presence of the entertainment and media industries, as well as a steady supply of technical talent from local universities.

Google is expanding on both coasts. Its New York office got its start with a single person working out of a Starbucks on 86th Street in 2000. Today it has more than 2,000 employees there, and the company in December shelled out a record-setting $1.77 billion in cash for 111 8th Ave., where it was already the largest tenant with 550,000 square feet. Google, which also has offices in New Jersey, is expected to dramatically expand its headcount there in coming years.

david.sarno@latimes.com

jessica.guynn@latimes.com

roger.vincent@latimes.com

Phil Missig asks: Is this the beginning of the real estate turn around?

December Sales and Price Report

 

For release:
January 21, 2011

C.A.R. reports California home sales rise in December, posting seven-month sales high

LOS ANGELES (Jan. 21) – California home sales rose in December, posting their highest level since May, according to data from the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.).  The statewide median price increased from November, but was down from a year ago.

“December’s sales increase reflects buyers taking advantage of rock bottom interest rates and improved affordability since the first half of the year, when prices were higher,” said C.A.R. President Beth L. Peerce.  “Most of December’s sales opened escrow in October and November.  Rates hit their absolute lowest in October but began edging higher in November, prompting buyers to get off the fence,” she said.

Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 520,680 in December, according to information collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations statewide.  December’s sales were up 5.9 percent from November’s revised pace of 491,590 but were down 6.8 percent from the revised 558,840 sales pace recorded in December 2009.  The statewide sales figure represents what would be the total number of homes sold during 2010 if sales maintained the November pace throughout the year.  It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

Following three consecutive monthly declines, the median price of an existing, single-family detached home sold in California increased 1.7 percent from a revised $296,690 in November but was down 1.6 percent from the revised $306,860 median price recorded for the same period a year ago.

“While sales rose in December, the sales pace in the second half of the year was lower than the first half as the housing market weaned itself off home buyer tax credits,” said C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young.  “For 2010 as a whole, sales reached 494,900 homes sold, down 9.5 percent from the 546,860 homes sold in 2009.  However, the statewide median price increased 10.2 percent to reach $302,900 for the year, up from the $275,000 recorded in 2009,” she said.

Here are other highlights of C.A.R.’s resale housing report for December 2010:

• A greater than usual drop in listings combined with the sales increase caused C.A.R.’s Unsold Inventory Index to decline more than one month.  The Unsold Inventory Index for existing, single-family detached homes was 5.0 months in December, down from 6.2 months in November.  The index was 3.8 months in December 2009.  The index indicates the number of months needed to deplete the supply of homes on the market at the current sales rate. 
• Thirty-year fixed-mortgage interest rates averaged 4.71 percent during December 2010, compared with 4.93 percent in December 2009, according to Freddie Mac. Adjustable-mortgage interest rates averaged 3.31 percent in December 2010, compared with 4.31 percent in December 2009.
• The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home was 57.5 days in December 2010, compared with 35.1 days for the same period a year ago.
Regional MLS sales and price information are contained in the tables that accompany this press release. Regional sales data are not adjusted to account for seasonal factors that can influence home sales.  The MLS median price and sales data for detached homes are generated from a survey of more than 90 associations of REALTORS® throughout the state. MLS median price and sales data for condominiums are based on a survey of more than 60 associations. The median price for both detached homes and condominiums represents closed escrow sales.

In a separate report covering more localized statistics generated by C.A.R. and DataQuick Information Systems, 97 of the 329 cities and communities reporting showed an increase in their respective median home prices from a year ago.  DataQuick statistics are based on county records data rather than MLS information.  DataQuick Information Systems is a subsidiary of Vancouver-based MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates.  (The lists are generated for incorporated cities with a minimum of 30 recorded sales in the month.)

Note: Large changes in local median home prices typically indicate both local home price appreciation, and often, large shifts in the composition of housing market activity.  Some of the variations in median home prices for November may be exaggerated due to compositional changes in housing demand.  The DataQuick tables listing median home prices in California cities and counties are accessible through C.A.R. online at
http://www.car.org/marketdata/historicalprices/2010medianprices/dec2010/.>

• Statewide, the 10 cities with the highest median home prices in California during December 2010 were:  Beverly Hills, $2,180,000; Los Altos, $1,300,000; Calabasas, $1,175,000; Laguna Beach, $1,105,000; Manhattan Beach, $1,085,500; Newport Beach, $1,000,000; Santa Monica, $921,000; Cupertino, $904,500; Rancho Palos Verdes, $849,000; Los Gatos, $840,000.

• Statewide, the cities with the greatest median home price increases in December 2010 compared with the same period a year ago were:  Beverly Hills, 54.3 percent; Calabasas, 39.1 percent; Poway, 25.5 percent; Ridgecrest, 23.3 percent; San Juan Capistrano, 19.2 percent; Compton, 17.5 percent; Laguna Hills, 15.7 percent; Santa Cruz, 14.1 percent; Gilroy, 14.1 percent; La Habra, 13.2 percent.

(Editors’ note:  C.A.R. will no longer publish localized Dataquick numbers beginning with the January 2011 home sales news release to be issued next month.  Also, C.A.R. will begin issuing a Pending Sales Index news release beginning in late February.)

Multimedia:

• Visit http://videos.car.org/mediavault.html?menuID=1&flvID=14 to view a video of C.A.R. Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young discussing highlights of the December sales and price report.

• Visit http://car.org/media/ppt/Dec_UII.ppt to view Unsold Inventory by price point.

• Visit http://car.org/media/ppt/Dec_pk_trough.ppt to view a data table comparing current prices with trough prices in areas throughout the state.

Leading the way...® in California real estate for more than 100 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States, with more than 160,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles.

December 2010 Regional Sales and Price Activity*
Regional and Condo Sales Data Not Seasonally Adjusted

 

Median Price

Percent Change in Price from Prior Month

Percent Change in Price from Prior Year

Percent Change in Sales from Prior Month

Percent Change in Sales from Prior Year

 

Dec. 10

Nov. 10

 

Dec. 09

 

Nov. 10

Dec. 09

Statewide

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Calif. (sf)

$301,850

1.7%

 

-1.6%

 

5.9%

-6.8%

Calif. (condo)

$246,540

0.0%

 

-8.8%

 

19.3%

-9.1%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Region

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

High Desert

$125,480

0.7%

 

3.7%

 

13.2%

-19.6%

Los Angeles

$340,200

-0.4%

 

-3.8%

 

21.9%

-8.6%

Monterey Region

$319,490

0.0%

 

3.5%

 

13.7%

-17.3%

  Monterey County

$244,900

0.0%

 

-2.0%

 

17.7%

-19.1%

  Santa Cruz County

$503,250

-7.1%

 

-8.5%

 

5.8%

-12.9%

Northern California

$235,340

-2.5%

 

-4.5%

 

15.1%

6.0%

Northern Wine Country

$335,890

1.8%

 

-9.6%

 

10.9%

-0.6%

Orange County

$458,700

-8.7%

 

-7.5%

 

15.1%

-5.6%

Palm Springs/Lower Desert

$177,540

8.7%

 

3.0%

 

26.5%

1.3%

Riverside/San Bernardino

$183,540

-1.1%

 

1.3%

 

20.8%

-11.5%

Sacramento

$179,040

3.0%

 

-5.3%

 

6.3%

-8.5%

San Diego

$375,790

-2.5%

 

-1.7%

 

25.5%

-9.5%

San Francisco Bay

$537,520

-2.9%

 

0.3%

 

14.5%

-2.8%

San Luis Obispo

$355,950

1.7%

 

-6.8%

 

5.2%

-7.9%

Santa Barbara County

$420,000

10.9%

 

-5.6%

 

9.9%

-14.0%

     Santa BarbaraSouth Coast

$778,500

-10.0%

 

-7.9%

 

27.5%

-8.3%

     NorthSanta Barbara County

$247,920

0.0%

 

-3.5%

 

-6.3%

-18.9%

Santa Clara

$560,000

-5.1%

 

0.0%

 

11.2%

-5.3%

Ventura

$441,570

-2.7%

 

3.2%

 

2.9%

-6.6%

 

 

* Based on closed escrow sales of single‑family, detached homes only (no condos).  Movements in sales prices should not be interpreted as measuring changes in the cost of a standard home.  Prices are influenced by changes in cost and changes in the characteristics and size of homes actually sold.

 sf = single‑family, detached home

Source:  CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS ® 

Median Price by Region

 

 

Dec. 10

Nov. 10

 

Dec. 09

 

Statewide

 

 

 

 

 

Calif. (sf)

$301,850

$296,690

r

$306,860

r

Calif. (condo)

$246,540

$246,630

 

$270,300

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Region

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

High Desert

$125,480

$124,580

 

$121,010

 

Los Angeles

$340,200

$341,650

 

$353,560

 

Monterey Region

$319,490

$319,510

 

$308,570

 

  Monterey County

$244,900

$245,000

 

$250,000

 

  Santa Cruz County

$503,250

$542,000

 

$550,000

 

Northern California

$235,340

$241,340

r

$246,450

 

Northern Wine Country

$335,890

$330,100

 

$371,430

 

Orange County

$458,700

$502,170

 

$496,070

 

Palm Springs/Lower Desert

$177,540

$163,270

 

$172,320

 

Riverside/San Bernardino

$183,540

$185,650

 

$181,130

 

Sacramento

$179,040

$173,870

 

$189,140

 

San Diego

$375,790

$385,490

 

$382,230

 

San Francisco Bay

$537,520

$553,620

 

$536,070

 

San Luis Obispo

$355,950

$350,000

 

$381,940

 

Santa Barbara County

$420,000

$378,570

 

$445,000

r

     Santa BarbaraSouth Coast

$778,500

$865,000

r

$845,000

 

     NorthSanta Barbara County

$247,920

$248,000

 

$256,940

 

Santa Clara

$560,000

$589,980

 

$560,000

 

Ventura

$441,570

$453,610

 

$427,890

 

 

 

 

 

r = revised

Source:  CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS ® 

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Foreign investors warm to U.S. real estate

By JONATHAN LANSNER

Global real estate investors are warming to investment in the United States again. So says 19th annual survey of property money managers with worldly outlooks by the Association of Foreign Investors in Real 
Estate and the Graaskamp
 Center 
for 
Real 
Estate at the U. of 
Wisconsin. Highlights:

  • 72% of those polled plan 
to 
invest 
more 
in 
the 
U.S. 
in 
2011
 vs. 
in
 2010.
  • When asked the best market for appreciation, surveyed investors overwhelmingly named the U.S. more often than even the second-place nation -- China.
  • 40% were more optimistic about U.S. opportunities vs. the start of 2010; 55% said they felt about the same.
  • New
 York was the top American target for these investor, followed by 
D.C.; Boston
; San 
Francisco and Los 
Angeles. Both New York and D.C. grabbed triple the voting of any other U.S. city.
  • What assets did they like for 2010? In order: Apartments; retail; hotel; office then industrial.
  • James Fetgatter, AFIRE chief executive: "As the fear of a double-dip recession has faded, investors are becoming more enthusiastic about the prospects for the U.S. economy and are taking aim at real estate investment opportunities in the U.S. ... However, their strategy is more akin to a rifle than a shotgun. Except for multi-family housing, they are not scattering their interest throughout the U.S., but rather narrowly targeting it to New York City and Washington, D.C., to an even greater extent than in previous years.”

New River Boss

Los Angeles River Revitalization Corporation Names First Executive Director

by Roselle Chen
Published: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 4:45 PM PST
DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles River Revitalization Corporation today announced the appointment of the organization’s first executive director to helm its restoration plan for the Los Angeles River.

Omar Brownson, who currently serves as chairman of the Liberty Hill Foundation advisory board, a Santa Monica based charitable organization that gives grants to groups in support of social action and change, started his new job on Jan. 17.

“The L.A. River represents one of the city's greatest opportunities for connecting recreation, urban revitalization, and economic development,” Brownson said in a statement. “I am tremendously excited about building the River Corporation platform and bringing to fruition the vision of the L.A. River Revitalization Master Plan along with our numerous River supporters and friends.”

The RRC began in 2009 as a nonprofit corporation to redevelop the area along the banks of and around the river.

Brownson’s immediate plans for the RRC are to explore fundraising opportunities for the land surrounding the river and manage projects for ongoing real estate developments.

The revitalization plan was approved in 2007 by the Los Angeles City Council to open up the 32 miles of waterfront space by the river for parks, businesses, housing, bike paths and more. The space was previously unavailable to the public due to rail yards and other industrial uses.

Contact Roselle Chen at roselle@downtownnews.com.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Contemporary Beverly Hills house has Old-World flair

Built for gossip columnist Rona Barrett and later owned by singer Luther Vandross, the Harold Levitt-designed Modernist home reimagines a European villa.

A verdant acre in the residential heart of Beverly Hills is the setting for a contemporary home with Old World flair designed by architect-to-the stars Harold "Hal" Levitt.

Levitt's design combines modern elements such as geometric skylights, generous sheets of glass, touches of concrete and an open floor plan in reimagining a European villa.

Levitt, who died in 2003, designed the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences building in Los Angeles. He's better known, however, for the striking home plans he created for Lew Wasserman, Steven Spielberg, Quincy Jones and Dean Martin, to name a few of his high-profile clients.

This house was built in 1983 for Hollywood gossip columnist Rona Barrett and was later owned by singer-songwriter Luther Vandross. The current owners have made a number of improvements with an eye toward preserving Levitt's Modernist vision.

Set behind gates, the home is hidden from the street. The entrance is on the second floor, with the lower level built into the sloping hillside. Dense walls of vegetation surround a stone-and-concrete motor court and manicured gardens at the front of the house. Stucco walls draped with ivy give way to a pair of 12-foot-tall doors painted hunter green. Beyond those outer doors is a Levitt trademark: a courtyard entry. The space has a limestone path and a small garden on either side.

A second set of green doors opens to the home's entry hall with a patterned limestone floor. In the center of it is a round opening about 10 feet in diameter with a glass-and-steel railing. A large circular skylight centered above the opening brightens the entry hall as well as a round sitting room directly below on the lower level.

A rectangular great room occupies the center of the upper floor and features inlaid wood floors in a weave pattern and a masonry fireplace with an antique carved stone mantel. One section functions as a sunroom, with a slanted rectangular skylight and windows on three sides with views of the backyard. Double glass doors lead to a broad limestone terrace on two sides of the house. The terrace widens at one point to accommodate an outdoor dining area.

Black granite floors and countertops and maple cabinetry adorn the kitchen, which features two islands. The kitchen has two skylights, one of them above the breakfast area. An office built in recent years off the kitchen is the only part of the structure that is not original.

The master bedroom is also on the upper floor of the house. It has a sitting area, a fireplace with a limestone mantel and a pair of glass doors leading to the terrace. The suite includes an attached library with built-in maple cabinetry, dentil moldings and a mirrored wall. There is also a private patio off the master bedroom that has a stone spa with a waterfall. The remodeled master bathroom has floors, walls and counter tops of blue-veined white marble. The divided space has twin marble tubs, a pair of glass-walled showers and a sauna. A walk-in closet with skylight connects the two sides.

In addition to the sitting room, the home's lower level has four bedroom suites and a large den or media room with a custom wood entertainment cabinet with room for three television sets.

A blue Roman pool is at the center of a backyard, which is a study in shades of green. Mature pines, palms and eucalyptus, flowering shrubs and a towering forest of bamboo create walls of privacy on three sides.

To submit a candidate for Home of the Week, send high-resolution color photos on a CD, caption information, the name of the photographer and a description of the house to Lauren Beale, Business, Los Angeles Times, 202 W. 1st St., Los Angeles, CA 90012. Send questions to homeoftheweek@latimes.com.