California – Consider earth quake insurance for your home after Mexico shake; CEA has a tool to estimate

Insurers in California were required to offer earthquake coverage along with general homeowners insurance when the Northridge quake occurred. After Northridge, premiums for quake coverage soared, coverage was restricted and insurers balked at being forced to write new policies.

That led the state Legislature to create the CEA, whose participating insurers now include State Farm, Allstate, Mercury, Progressive, Farmers and Liberty Mutual.

Initially, the CEA’s policies were expensive and somewhat skimpy, including only $5,000 for replacing personal property (in addition to the replacement cost of the structure) and only one deductible of 15%.

Today, however, the CEA personal-property coverage is up to $200,000, and the “loss of use” coverage — for living expenses while a home is being repaired or rebuilt — is up to $100,000. Condo policies can cover damage assessments levied by homeowner associations.

Premiums vary depending on where the house is located, its age, style of construction and soil conditions, to name a few factors. But overall, the CEA says premiums on its policies have dropped by more than 50% since the authority was created. (The CEA website has a tool that shows coverage options and estimated cost.)

Also, the deductibles on CEA policies now range from 5% to 25%. And the CEA notes that another fear about earthquake insurance— that homeowners and renters must come up with the money to pay deductibles — is unfounded because the deductible is subtracted from the claim payment.

read more at: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-agenda-earthquake-insurance-20171002-story.html

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Is house flipping dying out?

High home prices cause house flippers to pull back

  • After two straight years of gains, the rate of home flipping flattened in the second quarter of this year.
  • The number of homes flipped fell to 5.6 percent, down from 6.9 percent in the previous quarter.
  • Home flippers saw an average gross return of $67,516 in the second quarter, representing a 48.4 percent return on investment. That is down from 49 percent in the previous quarter.

House flipping has seen a huge run-up in the past few years, as investors take advantage of tight supply in the market and fast-rising home prices. Popular television shows glorifying the process have also turned regular Joes and Joannas into real estate renegades. Those high prices, however, are now taking their toll.

After two straight years of gains, the rate of home flipping, defined as buying and selling a home in the same calendar year, flattened in the second quarter of this year, according to a new report from Attom Data Solutions. Nationwide, 53,638 single-family homes and condos were flipped in the second quarter, which is 5.6 percent of all home sales during the period. That rate was down from 6.9 percent in the previous quarter and unchanged from a year ago.

Why the slowdown? A drop in profits.

read more at: https://www.cnbc.com/2017/09/14/high-home-prices-cause-house-flippers-to-pull-back.html?__source=realestate%7Cnews%7C&par=realestate

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San Diego – August’s Median Home Price Drops

The San Diego County median home price decreased for the second month in a row in August to $535,000, real estate tracker CoreLogic reported Tuesday.

Despite the break in rising prices, most experts caution that tight supply — fewer homes are for sale in 2017 compared to last year — should continue to keep prices high.

The half-a-million-dollar price tag for a home is still far off what houses were going for during the housing boom before the crash. The November 2005 peak of $517,500 equates to more than $644,000 in today’s dollars when adjusted for inflation.

A slowdown in August, a 0.5 percent decrease in price, is common after stronger sales in February through May, said Dana Kuhn, real estate lecturer at San Diego State University, and it is unlikely the median price would reach June’s peak again before the end of the year.

 

Read more at: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/real-estate/sd-fi-median-home-price-20170919-story.html

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