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Posts Tagged ‘DC Real Estate’

From the Washington Business Journal:

The number of homes sold in Northern Virginia was up 10.55 percent in July over the same month last year, with units spending less time on the market.

A total of 2,053 homes worth $946.04 million were sold in Northern Virginia, according to Rockville-based market research firm Metropolitan Regional Information Systems Inc.

Homes spent an average of 62 days on the market — far less than the 91-day average in July 2008. Median prices rose slightly to $410,000 from $399,00 in 2008.

District homes spent 88 days on the market, far longer than Northern Virginia units. Though 28 percent more homes were sold in D.C. in July, compare to the sane month last year. The median price of $386,000 for the 648 units was an 8.57 percent dip from 2008.

In Maryland, Prince George’s County saw a sharp rise in the number of units sold – 720 homes compared to 409 units a year earlier, but despite the spike in sales, homes spent an average of 138 days on the market compared to 127 days a year ago. Median home prices were down 24 percent from $283,000 in July 2008.

Montgomery County home sales were up 30 percent from 2008 with 1,130 units sold in July. Though median sales prices were down to $375,000 from $408,000 a year ago, there was little change in the average days on the market. The average time was 93 days.

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The nation’s capital leapfrogged London this year as the world’s best city for real estate investment. With the federal government on a path to grow bigger and increase spending, the new programs will need offices and its employees will need homes.

Forbes magazine turned to the Association of Foreign Investors in Real Estate for the list of where its member investors are finding the best opportunities around the world.

In normal times, financial capitals, New York City and London, vie for first place. Today, both may even be a little grateful to come in second or third. “There used to be a rivalry between New York and London,” says Kenneth Patton, divisional dean of the New York University Schack Institute of Real Estate. “The subject has shifted to the fact that we’re both in the same lifeboat, and maybe it’s leaking.”

Here is the list of the world’s 10 best place for real estate buys:
Washington, DC
London
New York City
Tokyo
Shanghai
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Paris
Houston
Singapore

- NAR

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Some cities that were hardest hit by the real downturn are experiencing mini sales booms.

Las Vegas real estate properties are down 28 percent in price, but sales of homes are up 15 percent.

Motivated buyers accounted for 64 percent of Las Vegas sales in October, says Radar Logic, a derivatives firm. That’s the highest rate in the country.

“There’s a pretty active housing market, it’s simply at a lower-priced inventory,” says Michael Feder, chief executive of Radar Logic. “And there are now bidding wars taking place over homes in foreclosure.”

Phoenix and San Diego are reporting similar experiences.

“We’re clearing out the bad news,” says Kiva Patten, a director at Merrill Lynch specializing in housing derivatives.

“By the end of 2010 – that’s where we’re calling the bottom in the forward market. You’re going to get a small price appreciation in 2011,” says Patten. “It’s not like the turn is 10 percent per year, it’ll be something like 3 percent or 4 percent.”

Here are the cities where experts say it makes the most sense to buy now.
Las Vegas
Sacramento, Calif.
San Diego, Calif.
Los Angeles
Detroit
Phoenix
San Francisco
Washington, D.C.
San Jose
Atlanta

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Congratulations to the following RE/MAX Associates that are in the Top 100 US Associates through October 2008.

Individuals

15. Willie H. Colston, RE/MAX Allegiance, Virginia Beach, VA

20. Anand Barnes, RE/MAX Allegiance, Ashburn, VA

58. Thomas S. Buerger, RE/MAX Allegiance, Washington, DC

Teams

8. Vicki Nellis, RE/MAX Allegiance, Burke, VA

56. Patricia A. Fales, RE/MAX Allegiance, Burke, VA

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Interest rates are at 4.5 year lows. Financing is available with little or no money down. Inventory is high with builders and sellers willing to negotiate. A good time to buy? I think so! Worried about appreciation? You should not be as long as you’re looking at your home purchase as a long term investment (not to mention the warm shelter it brings from the elements and tax breaks too). Appreciation in Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia has consistently out-gained the national average. Time to get off the fence!

House Price Appreciation by State

Five Year Appreciation
Virginia: 50%
Maryland: 57%
DC: 64%
US: 29%

Since 1980
Virginia: 353%
Maryland: 403%
DC: 522%
US: 269%

Percent Change in House Prices Period Ended September 30, 2008
source: Federal Financing Finance Agency

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RE/MAX Allegiance conducted 843 transactions in September and 722 in October. These stats may not seem like a big deal, but they may be. See, that is two months in a row that we had an increase in the number of transactions compared with the same months last year. That is the first time this has happened in years. Considering we have fewer Associates than we did last year, this is quite an accomplishment and may point to  the beginning of market improvements.

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Congratulations to the following RE/MAX Associates that are in the Top 100 US Associates through September 2008.

Indviduals

18. Willie H. Colston, RE/MAX Allegiance, Virginia Beach, VA

21. Anand Barnes, RE/MAX Allegiance, Ashburn, VA

70. Thomas S. Buerger, RE/MAX Allegiance, Washington, DC

Teams

7. Vicki Nellis, RE/MAX Allegiance, Burke, VA

56. Patricia A. Fales, RE/MAX Allegiance, Burke, VA

100. Tom Faison, RE/MAX Allegiance, Washington, DC

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If you’re a homeowner seeing property values plummet, look to the commercial real estate market for solace. It might tell you which areas will recover fastest–and which will likely remain weak.

The Urban Land Institute recently asked 700 real estate professionals to name the best (and worst) places to invest in commercial real estate in the coming year. Those surveyed included private developers, Realtors and Real Estate Investment Trust executives. Their answers also apply to the residential market, since the single-family-home sector typically follows the economy. As wages go up and there are more jobs, more people can buy homes, pushing prices up.

The best cities in which to invest are those that are considered gateways to international investment, have vital downtowns where people can forgo cars, and don’t have a glut of condos or office space.

These traits landed Seattle the No. 1 spot on the list. No city scored above a 6.15 on a scale of one to nine (one being an abysmal place to invest and nine being excellent).

Seattle is “a diversified market, has a good base of business and is becoming a 24-hour city,” says Stephen Blank, senior resident fellow, finance, of the Urban Land Institute. “It’s going to be in a good position to come back.”

Although the city is suffering from the loss of Washington Mutual and the downsizing of Starbucks, Boeing and Microsoft are still relatively strong. Apartment vacancies are low and there aren’t too many new buildings going up, meaning the market won’t be oversupplied. The same is true in the retail space.

San Francisco comes in second with a 6.12. The City by the Bay learned from the tech crash of 2001 not to overbuild. There is a reasonable supply of office and apartment space, which should limit vacancies. San Francisco’s port is also expected to help the city during the downturn as Americans continue to rely on Asian imports.

Washington, D.C., New York and Los Angeles round out the top five.

Of course, there’s no guarantee that an improved commercial market will lead to an improved home market. However, investors have a better chance of seeing home prices rise in fundamentally strong markets like Seattle than in struggling cities like Detroit.

It landed at the bottom of the list, scoring a 2.24. Detroit has been reliant on the car industry, which is rapidly shrinking. Other businesses are unlikely to fill the void in the next few years, which means the city will be hit hard by further economic struggles.

New Orleans also lands near the bottom with a score of 3.33. The city has been losing businesses to Houston, Dallas and Atlanta since Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005.

The other cities at the bottom of the list– Columbus, Ohio, Milwaukee, Wis., and Cleveland–suffer from dying industries and lack of tourist appeal.

Recent attempts to turn downtown Milwaukee into a thriving 24-hour city haven’t been enough to protect it from the coming downturn. Increasingly picky investors are expected to favor higher-quality port cities over Midwest towns.

And while Columbus has the potential to become a major shipping hub for goods traveling cross-country, that revitalization may have to wait for a stronger economy and a government focused on improving the nation’s roads.

For now, prospects are dim.

By Dorothy Pomerantz, Forbes.com

Nov 3rd, 2008

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Bargain hunters and home owners who pulled their properties off the market hoping for better days down the road helped shrink the inventory of available homes in September, according to a Wall Street Journal survey.

The largest year-over-year declines in inventory were 32.1 percent in Sacramento, 27.1 percent in Orange County, Calif., 21.6 percent in Los Angeles, 21.5 percent in Boston, 21.1 percent in Denver, and 20.6 percent in San Diego.

Demand for housing has slowed even as the population has increased, according to Census Bureau figures. Mortgage Bankers Association chief economist Jay Brinkmann blames lack of jobs, noting that young people don’t go out on their own nearly as frequently during tough times.

Source: The Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty (10/28/08)

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Sales of newly constructed homes rose in September, but the median selling price slipped.

The September report from the Census Bureau finds new home sales inched up 2.7 percent from August to an annualized rate of 464,000. Despite the gain, sales are down 33 percent from September 2007, and far below the pace during the boom years.

The median new home sales price in the U.S. for September declined to $218,400, down from $221,900 in August, while the mean selling price was $275,500, up from $263,900.

According to the report, new homes sales jumped 22 percent in the West, which has seen some of the nation’s steepest price drops, while sales in other regions were down or flat. However, sales in the West still are off nearly 38 percent on a year-over-year basis.

The new home sales report followed news last week that sales of existing homes rose in September by 5.5 percent, the largest monthly gain in more than five years.

Washington Business Journal, 10/27/08

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