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Real Estate Market, Valmonte Homes

New Listings are Up, Pending Sales are Down – What does that mean for you?

June 5, 2018
Just Sold! 3205 PV Drive North.

It’s June and the beginning of the “summer selling season” for real estate in Valmonte.  Instead of a bunch of flowery talk about how great everything is about the market, I’m going to go out on a limb and dare to be more realistic than perpetually optimistic.  The local real estate market is setting up for a price correction.  The bigger question, and one I don’t have an immediate answer to, is for how long?  

Let me explain.  Annualized average sales prices in Valmonte have risen steadily since January of 2015 and are up nearly 50% since March 2010.  In that same period, inventory has declined to our current supply levels of approximately 2.5 months supply of homes. (The chart on the following page illustrates this over the last 10 years).  At the same time, the sales price compared to original list price is hovering around 99-100% of list, but that’s where the change is about to happen.  As the message of tight inventory has been spread around in newsletters like this and other media outlets, sellers have increasingly overpriced their homes.  I don’t need to name specific homes, but any recent look at the MLS or Zillow, and you will see what I mean. In the meantime, mortgage rates have risen significantly over the past year and maybe headed to the 5% range for a 30 year mortgage – the highest level in 7 years.  Finally, add into the mix a slate of new homes lined up to hit the market in Valmonte, and we are setting the table for what may quickly shift from a sellers market to a buyers market.  If not a full blown buyers market, then I do think, at the very least, there will be good buying opportunities in late summer and early fall.

This exact scenario has taken place on several occasions over the last 4 years.  After inventory spikes in the summers of 2014, 2016, and 2017, buyers were able to buy homes on average less than 95% of the asking price as the result of a short term supply glut.  In all these cases, the market returned to a seller’s market shortly after, but the short term price correction provided excellent buying opportunities for those in the market for a new home.  Challenges to this model would be a sudden drop in interest rates, or a bevy of new buyers coming to the market, but both are unlikely given the recent economic growth and already inflated house prices.  

What I am suggesting is that, like the stock market recently experienced, it would not be unusual for a short term price correction in local housing prices.  I don’t expect all neighborhoods to be affected the same. In areas like Redondo Beach and Torrance, prices are still relatively affordable compared to other beach cities, and inventory is still trending below 2 months supply in these markets.  But in higher priced areas like Palos Verdes Estates, Hermosa Beach, and Manhattan Beach, prices are already showing signs of weakening.

In the long run, we’ll still see general price growth for the next two years, as long as there aren’t major shocks to the overall economy.  Limited supply is still an issue in most areas throughout Southern California, and until significant building takes place or job growth drastically slows, the market will remain out of balance. To give you further peace of mind, economists at Fannie Mae predict a 4-6% price appreciation in 2018 and 2019, with 30 year mortgage rates hovering in the upper 4% range.

So for now, if you are a seller, you need to be very realistic with your pricing if you hope to sell your home in a reasonable amount of time.  If you are a buyer, I don’t know that sitting back and waiting for a crash is a good idea, but instead, be ready to pounce on some good deals when they come around.

Click here if you would like to download a copy of my most recent I Love Valmonte newsletter or email me to receive a complimentary copy sent to your inbox.

See you in the neighborhood, Kyle

Real Estate Market, Valmonte Homes

2018: Valmonte Real Estate Forecast – Are we in a bubble? What about taxes? And Should I Buy or Sell in 2018?

June 5, 2018
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Spring greetings from our humble abode here in Valmonte.  After a bumpy start in the stock market, I write with the prospects of a great year ahead in both the overall economy, as well as the local real estate market.  The Valmonte real estate market is coming off a strong end to 2017, and a robust start to 2018.  In fact, in the last 24 months, no home in Valmonte has sold for less than $1,000,000! In the last year, homes sold for 98.3% of the asking price, and 1/3 sold over asking!  Across the board we saw the days on market drop, and supply remained around 2 months or lower, especially for homes under $2,000,000. Bottom line: it’s still a seller’s market.

 

Are we in a Bubble?

The short answer is NO!  Prices have risen for 5 straight years, but even in Valmonte, the price per square foot is only 1.4% more than previous highs set in 2007.  But this market is different; here’s why….

  1. Relative Affordability – Despite the seemingly high prices, housing affordability is 2 to 3 times higher today than during the last market peak in 2006/07.  Adjusted for inflation, the average sales price in Valmonte is still nearly $100k less than the last market peak.
  2. Buyers have skin in the game – The last market peak was supported by no-money down and stated income loans.  Not this time; lenders typically require buyers to have 20% down payments.
  3. Low unemployment – Job growth is outpacing new housing starts, and even without new jobs, there is still a lack of supply to meet the demand for housing.  
  4. Interest rates are still historically low – In fact, interest rates are 2 to 3 points lower in this market cycle than they were in 2006 and 2007.  Keep in mind that buyers are buying a payment more than they are a house.
  5. Renting is expensive – Expensive rents are one of the primary drivers motivating first time homebuyers.  Even with the reduction in deductible home ownership expenses in the new tax plan, first time buyers are motivated to buy a home.

What can we expect for 2018?

After a wild run to start the year in the stock market, followed by some crazy volatility, here are our predictions for the coming year.

  1. Interest Rates – Interest rates will continue to rise, but gradually.  This is sort of a no-brainer, as it’s been predicted for the last several years.  But higher rates are pushing hesitant buyers to get off the fence.
  2. Tax Reform – The effects of the newly passed tax reform won’t stifle home buying and selling as some have warned, but it will likely exert downward pressure on supply.  Limited supply will make it more challenging for move-up buyers until baby boomers are ready to cash in on their equity.
  3. Price growth – Consumer confidence is at the highest level in over 17 years, and the consensus from economists is that home prices will increase moderately at around 4% in 2018.  We expect higher growth at the entry level homes in the neighborhood while the top end will remain relatively flat – so far in 2018 this is the case.
  4. Support from the Bottom Up – The growth that led us out of the  market bottom started on the high end with wealthier neighborhoods seeing massive price growth in 2013 and 2014.  While those markets level off, the lower priced neighborhoods will continue to push the market up.
  5. Buy Investment Property – The new tax laws won’t hurt landlords; and in fact, it will likely help them.  If rising rates and lower inventory reduces the number of first time buyers, landlords will continue to be able to raise rents.  Even with a limited supply of multifamily properties and lower overall returns, owning investment property still remains a solid hedge on inflation and is a great way to diversity your portfolio.

If you are wondering how the changing economy affects you and your real estate, give me a call, I’m happy to help!

See you in the neighborhood, Kyle

Real Estate Market

Mid-Summer Musings on Valmonte Real Estate

July 26, 2017
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Market climate – Valmonte

  • There are currently 16 homes on the market, approximately double the amount year-over-year, and near the highest level in the current market cycle
  • The absorption rate is 4.7 months, and nearing the peak of 6.4 months supply in October 2014  
  • Prices on a square foot basis are near record highs ($734/ft)
  • Days on Market for the last quarter are at record lows (41 days)
  • On an annual basis, median sales prices have leveled off in Valmonte ($1.5m)  
  • Homes in Valmonte are selling generally within 1% of the list price

Lot’s of inventory, price drops on the way?

After 5 years of appreciation, the market is showing signs of leveling as the market transitions from a seller’s market to a buyer’s market.  The increasing supply is indicative of a “me too” selling climate where sellers are trying to take advantage of higher prices while the good times are around.  If the inventory levels hold, I expect prices to decline slightly into the Fall and Winter months when buyer activity tends to dip.  On the buyer front, interest rates remain stable around 4%, but the consensus is that rates will rise slightly over the next 6-18 months.

How does Valmonte compare to the rest of PVE?

Valmonte is a micro market compared to the larger Palos Verdes Estates market and for the most part, the trends lines parallel one another across the board.  The exception is prices on a per foot basis tend to be higher in Valmonte  than that of the entire city, due mostly to the smaller homes and generally tighter supply.

 

Uncategorized

Realistic Pricing? At Least for a Couple Months Anyway

July 6, 2017
PVE sign along Via Valmonte Drive

2017 started off great.  13 homes sold in the first quarter within 97% of the asking price.  But, as in the past, sellers are starting to feel confident and as a result we are seeing “optimistic” pricing.  I don’t blame sellers.  I, like many realtors, am an optimist (you sort of have to be in order to survive in this career).  We tell our clients “prices are rising,” or  “there’s no inventory!” and the “buyers are hungry.”  In fact, I took most of these statements from blog posts and articles I’ve written over the past 12 months.  Some of it is definitely true.  Prices are at record highs in Valmonte and elsewhere – see the chart below.

Buy buyers aren’t dumb, nor irrational.  You can make the argument that as prices climb, buyers become more discretionary.  When you look at homes over the 6 or 12 month median, buyers have more choices and more things to consider.  Take a look at the inventory/supply chart below.  It’s based on month’s supply of inventory and compared to last year, inventory is definitely rising.  Turnover in Valmonte is the lowest of all the neighborhoods in PV, and the normal scarcity of homes helps push the prices up.  Why the recent increase in inventory? The increase is more likely due to a seasonal increase and won’t likely be sustained.  Several of the homes on the market are the result of divorce, job relocations, and retirements, as opposed to people moving out of the area because they don’t like it.

There’s some good news in the tea leaves.  Price strength is supported from the bottom up.  So far to date, the lowest priced home sold was $1,070,000  (3700 PV Dr North). There have been more homes sold over $2m than ever before.  But the question everyone is asking, “can it keep going up?”  In the chart below, the median sales price (weighted over 12 months) has plateaued in Valmonte while it has continued to rise in all of Palos Verdes Estates.  Going beyond the numbers alone, the increase in PVE v Valmonte could be due to the larger homes and new construction in the areas of the city outside of Valmonte like Montemalaga and Lunada Bay.  Those areas boast average lot sizes of 14,000′ allowing much larger homes to be built.  In fact, in 2017, the average home sale in Montemalaga is $2.7m.  However, on a price/foot basis, Valmonte actually exceeds the median price/foot for the entire city.

Median Price/Foot (12 month rolling average – click to select a specific month)

The litmus test: The fundamentals remain – buyers still want to move to nice neighborhoods like Valmonte, and sellers are reluctant to sell until they have to.  This creates a supply and demand imbalance that continues to favor the seller, and it doesn’t seem to be changing too quickly.

For more about the real estate market, I encourage you to listen to the Chief Economist at the California Association of Realtors in her recent Q&A at the Teles Properties Headquarters in Beverly Hills.  She had some great insights to the current market, what the future looks like, and how the market has changed in the recent cycle.

Real Estate Market, Valmonte Homes

Say what? This one sold grossly under market!

February 4, 2016
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4033 Via Valmonte sold for $1.12m in January

You’ve heard me say it before, 2015 was a great year in real estate in Valmonte.  Prices were up and the number of sales was the best in nearly 20 years.  So with all this great news, how did a move-in ready home with views sell for $1850/foot under the average price?  The story gets even more interesting when I add the fact that when I contacted the agent on behalf of my client, he informed me there were multiple offers within the first two weeks of being on the market.  Yes it was over the holidays, but how do you sell for $1.12m a 2,367 square foot 4 bedroom, 3 bath  home with mountain views and a nicely landscaped backyard, when a similar sized, albeit more updated, home sold less than 3 weeks prior for $1.625m?  This just smells fishy.  I know I sound like I’m whining, but I have a point.  The agent was not a local agent, and the sales price reflects this.  I hate to see good people get ripped off.  This house should have sold over asking and a lot closer to $1.4 million.  So if you are thinking of selling, please, I beg you, interview a local expert before you fall victim to an agent that doesn’t have his/her client’s best interests in mind.  Okay, I’m off my soapbox.

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View from the second floor balcony looking towards the Hollywood Hills

Valmonte Homes

Valmonte Remains a HOT Market

April 2, 2014

G06-086_F_Palos-Verdes-photoThings aren’t showing any signs of slowing down here in the Valmonte real estate market. In just the last few weeks we’ve seen most new listings go into escrow with multiple offers.  The sweet spot seems to be move-in ready homes under $1.6 million. Houses in need of significant repairs or updates seem to be lingering around longer until there is a notable price drop. In the last week we saw 3908 Via Picaposte show up with a for sale sign in front and it was quickly in escrow at a price indicated as “over asking” by listing agent Ginni Lee of RE/MAX. Meanwhile, 4109 Via Picaposte was under contract again after a $100k price drop. Considering it closed in January 2013 at $1,060k, a new price of $1.299m isn’t a bad return for a hold and flip. Lastly a nicely upgraded family home, 4304 Via Nivel, had multiple offers and is reportedly on its way to closing over asking.  So far, our micro market is on pace with the general market in Southern California, albeit at a higher priced entry point to move in.

2014 So Far   Since the new year, 5 homes have closed at prices between $1.296m and $2.15m at a price per square foot of $547.  2 of those sold homes have closed over the asking suggesting that competition for homes in Valmonte is tough.  Currently there are 6 homes available in Valmonte priced from $1.13m on the low end to $2.48m on the high end going into the selling season.  What’s on the horizon?  While time will certainly tell, for now, if you are a buyer, I would find a solid rate with a good mortgage banker and be ready to write a strong offer when your dream house is on the market.  If you are considering selling?  Well, of course, I would suggest you call me to get your home sold while the market is hot!

For more tips on buying or selling a home, please go to my website at www.kyledanielsrealestate.com or feel free to email directly at surfrealtor@gmail.com.

Uncategorized

Irrational Exuberance?

February 13, 2013

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If you followed Alan Greenspan during his tenure as chairman of the Federal Reserve then you are probably quite familiar with the term “Irrational Exuberance.”  This term often used by the chairman refers to a “heightened state of speculative ferver” as explained by economist Robert Shiller (widely known from the Case/Shiller home price index).  While the numbers are too few at this point to confirm this irrational exuberance in the current Valmonte market, there are signs that certainly point in this direction.  With only two listings currently on the market and many buyers combing the MLS for new listings, there is clearly evidence of demand far outpacing the supply.  If the party-like atmosphere at this weekend’s open house on Via Solano is any indicator, then we certainly are on our way to a speculative ferver.  How long this will last is anyone’s guess.  Human nature tells us that when something is hard to get, we tend to want it more.  And when we feel that something is scarce, we tend to act more irrationally than when there is a feeling that time is on our side and we have multiple options to chose from.  My advice, take a deep breath before you go plunging off the cliff and make hasty decisions.  Patience is typically rewarded.  While it may not seem like it today, there will be other homes for sale.  This will be especially true if prices continue to rise – as there are emotions stoked by scarcity, there are emotions provoked by the opportunity to make money.  Good luck.

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4125 Via Largavista on the market

December 19, 2012

If you gage the real estate market by walking around a neighborhood, you would certainly call Valmonte sleepy based on the general absence of for sale signs in the front yards.  This reality can be seen a few ways.  Maybe you can call it the Holiday calm; who wants to have people touring your home while you’re trying to enjoy the special time that is the holiday season?  It could be that everyone loves Valmonte and no one wants to sell.  Or, it may just be that the market isn’t signaling that it’s ready to roll and sellers are hesitant to sell.  I like to think it’s a combination of all of these factors.  Valmonte is a popular place these days (you can argue that it has been for many decades), and there certainly are many families looking to move to this great neighborhood.  However, qualifying for a home is a challenge, and prices here aren’t exactly low.  And after 6 years of a bearish real estate market, sellers ARE slow to accept that the ball is back in their court.  But facts are facts, and in 2012, of the 40 homes that sold in the Valmonte area, the average home sold in approximately 3 months at 97% of the asking price.  Not bad when only a few years ago the sky was falling and chicken little was running around with his head in his hands.  

So seeing a new listing hit the market is a welcome sight and 4125 Via Largavista listed at roughly $1.649m by Raju Chhabria of Shorewood Realtors is one to watch.  Located on one of the best streets in Valmonte this 3 bed, 3 bath 2400′ home on a 9400′ lot was extensively updated in 2006.  The house last sold in 2004 for $1.425m and if you know the neighborhood, not too many come up for sale on this family friendly street.  My guess for 2013 is that we will continue to see demand outpace supply but prices are going to be challenged by buyer’s ability to qualify for loans at continued low rates.  It’s certainly getting better, but we’re not out of the woods just yet.

Happy Holidays!

 

 

Neighborhood News

An edible garden grows at a school in Palos Verdes Estates – Los Angeles Times

October 18, 2012
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Here’s an article from the LA Times talking about a cool project going on at Valmonte Elementary school.

A Palos Verdes Estates garden aims to help kids dig veggies

Volunteers convert a hillside plot into the Valmonte Farm and Nature Garden, the latest project in nonprofit group’s effort to teach youngsters about healthful food.

September 16, 2012|By Martha Groves, Los Angeles Times

Teacher Lauren Citrowski, 28, center, and students Estefani Hernandez,… (Irfan Khan, Los Angeles…)

The temperature had soared to nearly 100 degrees by late morning in Palos Verdes Estates, making it a fine day to cool off at the beach or a water park.  Instead, Chloe Solandt, her face pink from heat and sun, was sanding boards and stomping through dirt as she and 150 or so other volunteers built an edible garden on a one-acre hillside plot at Valmonte School, an early learning center.  “I’m really interested in agriculture and food sustainability,” said Solandt, 17, a senior at Palos Verdes High School. “I’ll be going to each station.”  She had plenty of sweat-inducing tasks available to her. At the various stations, volunteers of all ages wielding paintbrushes and battery-powered tools could assemble redwood picnic tables, construct an arbor or a small-scale red barn, fill wheelbarrows with wood chips or plant fruit trees.

The occasion was a “community garden build day,” and a community indeed turned out to create the Valmonte Farm and Nature Garden. Dave’s Tree Service kicked in a mini-mountain of mulch. Kellogg Supply sent heaps of soil amendments and compost. The Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy donated native plants.

And Tomas O’Grady good-naturedly assumed the role of project foreman.  O’Grady, 45, who grew up working his family’s small farm in western Ireland, immigrated to the United States 20 years ago and retired about five years later after making a fortune in real estate. Last year, O’Grady unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Tom LaBonge for his Los Angeles City Council seat.

Fourteen months ago, in an effort to give back to the society that enriched him, he started Enrich LA. The nonprofit group’s mission is to establish school gardens, primarily in low-income areas. The aim is to help youngsters learn about where food comes from and about environmental stewardship, conservation and nutrition. Enrich LA gardens demonstrate that “home-grown” can be as tasty as burgers and fries.

“We’ve done gardens at schools along the 110 corridor where the chain-link fences are topped by barbed wire, an extra touch to get that prison vernacular,” O’Grady said. “In most cases, we’re ripping up asphalt to put in gardens.”

His first project was at Thomas Starr King Middle School, a Los Feliz magnet, which his daughters Eireann, 13, and Lauren, 11, attend. “After I built the garden, I saw the changes it brought,” he said. “It was a visual announcement that the school was mending itself.” O’Grady helped found an environmental studies magnet program at the school, where student activists two years ago kicked off an effort to ban plastic foam trays in the cafeteria. In August, the Los Angeles Unified School District switched to money-saving recyclable paper trays for all its schools.

Palos Verdes Estates is hardly an economically challenged area, O’Grady acknowledged, but Diana Heffernan-Schrader, a parent activist, “called us up and insisted.” Once O’Grady saw the site, which years ago had been a garden but had been long neglected, he was on board. Heffernan-Schrader, whose two daughters attend Valmonte, said she envisions edible gardens at every school in the Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified School District.

martha.groves@latimes.com

via An edible garden grows at a school in Palos Verdes Estates – Los Angeles Times.