Category Archives: Real Estate

Wall Street’s New Get Rich Quick Scheme with Residential Housing

Over the last year and a half, Wall Street hedge funds and private equity firms have quietly amassed an unprecedented rental empire, snapping up Queen Anne Victorians in Atlanta, brick-faced bungalows in Chicago, Spanish revivals in Phoenix. In total, these deep-pocketed investors have bought more than 200,000 cheap, mostly foreclosed houses in cities hardest hit by the economic meltdown.

Wall Street’s foreclosure crisis, which began in late 2007 and forced more than 10 million people from their homes, has created a paradoxical problem. Millions of evicted Americans need a safe place to live, even as millions of vacant, bank-owned houses are blighting neighborhoods and spurring a rise in crime. Lucky for us, Wall Street has devised a solution: It’s going to rent these foreclosed houses back to us. In the process, it’s devised a new form of securitization that could cause this whole plan to blow up—again.

Since the buying frenzy began, no company has picked up more houses than the Blackstone Group, the largest private equity firm in the world. Using a subsidiary company, Invitation Homes, Blackstone has grabbed houses at foreclosure auctions, through local brokers, and in bulk purchases directly from banks the same way a regular person might stock up on toilet paper from Costco.

In one move, it bought 1,400 houses in Atlanta in a single day. As of November, Blackstone had spent $7.5 billion to buy 40,000 mostly foreclosed houses across the country. That’s a spending rate of $100 million a week since October 2012. It recently announced plans to take the business international, beginning in foreclosure-ravaged Spain.

Read more at: http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/11/wall-street-buying-foreclosed-homes

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

San Diego County Median Home Price Down

San Diego County’s housing market continued to slow in October, with the median price of a home falling $9,250 from the month before.

It was the biggest drop in month-to-month values since prices fell $16,000 from December 2012 to January 2013, generally considered the slower time of the year.

Has your home gone down in value?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

Still, the median value of a home, now $412,750, is up 17.9 percent from last October’s median $350,000, real estate tracker DataQuick reported Tuesday. However, the October figure is well below the 24.1 percent gain San Diego County housing prices saw from June 2012 to June 2013, which is considered peak buying season. The highest county median price was $517,500 in November 2005.

John Walsh, DataQuick president, said in a statement that low inventory, low mortgage rates, and higher levels of investor purchases pushed up the previous annual gains of 20 percent.

“In recent months each of those drivers has reversed somewhat,” he said.

Mark Goldman, a loan officer and real-estate lecturer at San Diego State University, said the market is decelerating, as yearly gains of 20 percent were unrealistic.

“The buyers are cooling a bit,” he said. “There was very limited inventory and people were bidding up prices and realized they overshot the market of what the properties were worth.”

read more: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/nov/12/dataquick-real-estate-housing-mortgage-value/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Cost of Flood Insurance Rises

MIAMI — Sharp increases in federal flood insurance rates are distressing coastal homeowners from Hawaii to New England and are starting to hurt property values and housing sales in areas just beginning to recover from the recession, according to residents and legislators.

In recent weeks, the hefty flood insurance rate increases brought about by a 2012 law have stoked widespread alarm and uncertainty, prompting rallies, petitions and concern among state governors. Mississippi has sued the federal government to try to block the law. The issue has even garnered the attention of lawmakers, otherwise mired in the acrimonious government shutdown. A bipartisan group of senators and House members from Gulf Coast states are pressing for significant adjustments to the law once the Capitol returns to normal.

Have questions about FEMA?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com; their appraisers are certified FEMA inspectors.

The law, officially known as the Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance Reform Act, is being rolled out in stages, with a major part having gone into effect on Oct 1. It removes subsidies that keep federal flood insurance premiums artificially low for more than a million policy holders around the country — a discount that was applied to properties that existed before the drawing of flood insurance rate maps.

An estimated 20 percent of the property owners with federal flood insurance received these subsidies as the new law went into effect, and their premiums will rise, in some cases precipitously, either now, over the next several years or whenever they sell their properties. The exact amount of the increase depends on the home’s elevation above flood level.

Read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/us/cost-of-flood-insurance-rises-along-with-worries.html?_r=0&adxnnl=1&ref=realestate&adxnnlx=1381844596-C0CoHaVCbZn+kKpdUYcOvQ

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only