Sunday, November 21, 2010

San Diego Real Estate Highlights: Nov 2010

San Diego Market Inventory Levels:  Currently there are approximately 21,025 homes on the market in San Diego. The inventory breaks down as such

38 %  or  8,022 – Short Sale

52% or   13,003 – Traditional Equity or Investor Flips

10% or   2,209 – Bank Owned Foreclosures

Total :    21,025

 

Essentially the market is a 50/50 split between distressed assets and traditional sales.

October Sales Down Sharply   October sales were down sharply on both a month-to-month basis (-7.2%)  and a year over year basis (-17.0 %).    In spite of the last two months of sales softness the year will probably close out with roughly the same amount of sales as last year. 

Months of Inventory Continues to Rise :   Months of Inventory has risen to about 6 months and the market can be considered normal and balanced.   The inventory rise is particularly noticeable at the low end of the market where the rise has been steady for the last 3 months.

August Month-to-Month Prices Fell:   According to the Case – Shiller index for the first time since April of 2009 month-to-month prices fell.  The county wide  rate of month-to-month decline was -0.6%  and all price ranges were affected.

Foreclosure Filing Decline:  Notices of Default (NOD) and Notices of Trustee Sales (NOTS) both declined over the past month. 

Building Permits Mixed:  US building permits continued to decline in a normal seasonal pattern and are somewhat above their low of January 2009.  San Diego building permits rose slightly after a very steep decline last month and are near their all-time lows.

Economic Highlights:

Unemployment Rate Holds Steady:   The unemployment rate held steady at 9.6% while the  hours worked index actually increased a tenth of an hour for an average work week of 33.6 hours. 

Rate of Deleveraging Slightly Slows:  The rate of deleveraging slowed slightly last month but is still at an unprecedented rate.

Posted via email from Justin Brennan Real Estate

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

If heaven had an address, this would be it! Our New Listings In La Cresta Estates Murrieta CA

Asking Price $895,000

Short Sale Opportunity.

4 bedroom 3.5 baths 5 acres of estate land, avocado grove, RV garage and more.

If heaven had an address, this would be it! Imagine yourself with nature’s beauty on the world’s stage before you. Undoubtedly, this one of a kind estate can be yours. This 4 bedroom, 3 and one-half bath Spanish sanctuary features over 4,600 square feet of living space, a private hideaway for grandmother, a first-floor master wing, phenomenal kitchen with great room and massive fireplace. Make sure you take flight to the outdoors as you explore over 5 acres of estate land, lushly landscaped grounds, multiple verandas with an infinity edge pool, elevated spa, built-in barbeque beckoning you to stop, sit and ponder the unsurpassed views. Don't stop now... take advantage of your very own private pond and dock. Are you going camping... then you'll enjoy your very own private RV garage with power hookup and washout. If you are an avid golfer, then you'll love your very own putting and chipping green nestled right next to your very own avocado grove. Come and see this one of a kind estate in La Cresta.

For details Call 619-823-2120. For More Information and MAPS use the link below.

http://www.thelajollalife.com/property/19960_calle_Lobito

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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Bird Rock Real Estate Development Opportunity For A Mansion

What a terrific remodel or build opportunity in Bird Rock La Jolla. You can certainly search all the Bird Rock Homes for sale in La Jolla, but this is a great catch! Every once in awhile a great opportunity for an awesome rehab and build opportunity comes along. This is it. Just across the street from the Pacific Ocean in a great neighborhood of Bird Rock La Jolla  with PANORAMIC VIEWS FROM LIVING RM,DINING RM & DECK ABOVE 2 CAR GARAGE. LARGE ~8300 S.F. LOT, TUCKED SOUTH OF SEA RIDGE DR. - MINIMAL TRAFFIC. GREAT ROOM  w/AMPLE WINDOWS/LIGHT IN FAMILY RM,DINING & LIVING RMs THROUGH THE FAMILY RM & MSTRBR.COVERD PATIO,WET BAR & FIREPLACE.  GRANNY FLAT W/BATH. NEWER HEATER.WALK TO DINING/ENTERTAINMENT.PROBATE SALE,AS-IS,NO REPAIRS OR TERMITE.COURT CONFIRMATION REQRD. Search other La Jolla Homes For Sale

Asking Price is $899,000 - $949,000. Search All Of San Diego, San Diego Foreclosures, La Jolla Foreclosures

Listing Courtesy of Alta Pacific Realty. Source MLS

To all your success,

Justin Brennan

REALTOR | BROKER

Middleton Associates La Jolla

848 Prospect Street

La Jolla, CA 92037

c: 619-823-2120

www.TheLaJollaLife.com

Justin@TheLaJollaLife.com

Powerful Blog For La Jolla Homes,  San Diego Real Estate News and Short Sale Information:

TheLaJollaHomesBlog.com 

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Friday, October 29, 2010

5 Traits of Today's Young & Hip Home Buyers: NEWS REPORT

A survey by American Lives, a consumer research firm in California, conducted a study for the trade magazine Builder to answer that question. Here are their conclusions:

· They are young. Most are under 45. Half said they had annual household incomes of $75,000 or less. Two-thirds are married.
· They are frugal. They consistently told surveyors they were eager to live a simple lifestyle.
· They are concerned about their financial future. About 70 percent said the economy is “not so good” with 27 percent saying it was getting worse and 27 percent saying it was getting better, and two-thirds saying it would get better in a year. Some 55 percent said they were concerned that they might lose their jobs.
· They see themselves as energy efficient but not necessarily “green.” About 32 percent said they’d pay extra for energy-efficient features but only 16 percent said they’d pay extra for recycled or renewable construction materials.
· Neighborhood is important. Ninety-five percent said they thought the community was as important as the home itself. Seventy-nine percent wanted the most square footage they could afford, but 69 percent said they’d consider a smaller home in the right neighborhood.

Source: Inman News, Mary Umberger (10/27/2010)

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Monday, October 25, 2010

La Jolla Home Prices October 2010

Sales Activity: Sales activity in La Jolla remains consistently active.  There were 51 closed sales during the past month, raising the total number of closings year-to-date from 332 a month ago to 383.  The number of homes in escrow decreased slightly from 103 a month ago to 97 on September 15th. Subtracting the number of closed sales the previous month, there were 45 new net escrows reported open.

Inventory levels: The total number of homes listed for sale remained virtually the same, increasing to 495 from 491 a month ago.   The inventory level is slightly above a 10-month supply, remaining near the lowest level since we first reported in June 2009.

The Silver Lining: La Jolla’s supply/demand ratio has continued to improve since we started reporting and continues to hover at about a 10-month supply. This remains good news for both the buyers and sellers.  Buyers still have a variety of homes to consider, and sellers are finding that with competitive pricing they have the opportunity to sell their home within a reasonable marketing period.

Justin Brennan

Realtor | Broker | Investor

Middleton Associates Real Estate

848 Prospect Street

La Jolla, CA 92037

619.823.2120

Justin@TheLaJollaLife.com

www.TheLaJollaLife.com

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Charitable Gift Reverse Mortgage With My Alma Mater Pepperdine University

The Vice Chancellor of my Alma Mater at Pepperdine University recently wrote to me detailing a great opportunity for seniors who desire additional retirement income and want to stay in their homes. To address such needs, Pepperdine University is offering “a charitable reverse mortgage.” Simply stated, senior citizens with little or no mortgage on their homes can donate their residence to Pepperdine, continue to live in the home as long as they wish, plus receive an annuity payment in an amount which is based on their ages and the value of their home. The advantages of such an opportunity are

1)      Retain use of your home

2)      Payments are fixed, partially tax-free and will NEVER decrease

3)      Payments are guaranteed for life

4)      There are no origination fees

5)      No mortgage insurance is required

6)      There is no maximum limit on the value of your home

7)      Individuals retain the option to sell or lease their home without usual increases after tax

8)      The home is removed from one’s estate, reducing exposure to estate taxes

9)      After lifetime, the remainder interest in the home benefits charity, leaving a lasting legacy for the future generations

10)   Pepperdine provides clients at no cost or obligation with documents which project the life income and tax benefit so that individuals can share the proposal with their financial and/or legal advisors to determine whether Pepperdine’s plan is right for them

For more information please call me. 619.823.2120

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A Powerful Blog For La Jolla News, La Jolla Homes, Market Info & More.

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Friday, October 8, 2010

Tips and Tricks For Finding Your New Home By Justin Brennan

Visit houselogic.com for more articles like this.

Copyright 2010 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

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Thursday, September 16, 2010

Foreclosure Relief: Good For Banks, Not So For Borrowers

Foreclosure Relief: Good For Banks, Not So For Borrowers

 

Justin Brennan Real Estate, Foreclosures

Foreclosure Relief: Good for Banks, Not So For Borrowers
DailyFinance | August 28, 2010 | 10:10 AM EDT
Home sales are hitting new lows, the number of homeowners behind on their mortgages is again climbing, as is the number of foreclosures. Housing market misery is widespread—but particularly intense for the troubled homeowners relying on the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), the federal foreclosure relief program.

Criticized both by those who argue for more aid and those who think the lackluster program only delays a needed bank reckoning, HAMP stumbles along, more often simply prolonging the pain of foreclosure than providing a solution.

The dismal new housing numbers—sales of existing homes are 27% lower than a year ago, new-home sales have fallen even more—underline just how little demand there is for all the properties that banks are foreclosing on.

Real Estate Mortuary’s Waiting Room

In extending the process, foreclosure relief in many cases simply stretches out borrowers’ slow bleed of resources. By keeping borrowers in limbo while letting lenders delay repossessing houses they can’t sell, foreclosure aid is now benefiting borrowers less than the lenders who created the mortgage mess. For lenders, mortgage modification is the waiting room in the mortuary, a convenient place to hold borrowers while the banks deal with the overflow of houses already repossessed.

Of some 3 million homeowners behind on their mortgages, only about half are eligible for HAMP. Most of the rest, ironically, don’t qualify because their income is too low to handle even a modified mortgage. For those that do qualify, HAMP offers little immediate respite: Homeowners have to immediately start making payments on a trial modification plan.

Some 1.3 million borrowers have gotten the trial modifications, which last for at least three or four months (though many banks have stretched this out for longer). But 600,000 of those have already dropped out, unable to make payments in the trial stage. Another quarter-million are in modification limbo, sending checks to the bank as they wait to know if they’ll get permanent adjustments. (Detailed numbers are available in the modification program’s monthly reports, here.)

What Happens After Gaining Relief Is Worse

If the wait for a modification is trying, though, what happens to homeowners who do manage to get relief is worse. Most borrowers behind on their mortgages are already overburdened with other debts. After the mortgage reduction, the typical modification recipient, despite an average $513 drop in monthly payments, has to devote 63.5% of his or her income to mortgage payments, other debt, and taxes.

It’s not clear how many will default a second time. Treasury officials recently had to withdraw the government’s numbers on mortgage modification success rates after they were shown to seriously understate re-defaults. One independent estimate from Barclay’s Bank is that 60% of homeowners granted loan modifications will eventually default again.

So does HAMP really benefit anyone but the few borrowers who are able to run the foreclosure aid gauntlet, climb out from under their debts against tough odds and get back to making regular payments on their (still-underwater) mortgages? It does. If HAMP fails to make much of a dent in homeowners’ troubles, it does mitigate a real problem for the banks: There are many more houses in foreclosure than today’s market can absorb.

Strategic Non-Foreclosure”

One of the foreclosure cascade’s not-so-hidden secrets is that the banks and investors who hold millions of busted mortgages are in no hurry to kick debtors out of their homes. The markets hardest hit by the foreclosure crisis are already stuck with an enormous and growing inventory of repossessed houses, now estimated by Lender Processing Services, which tracks foreclosures, at 1 million to 1.2 million bank-owned homes nationwide.

Banks have steadily slowed down the foreclosure process: The average homeowner in foreclosure now is an amazing 461 days behind in his payments. (You can see that last stat in this report, on page 13). Barry Ritholtz of financial blog The Big Picture calls banks’ reluctance to take over houses “strategic non-foreclosure.” Taking a leisurely path to repossession lets lenders avoid the costs of maintaining properties they can’t sell in a market that remains in free fall in much of the country.

However, there’s a limit: Lenders must eventually make good on the threat of repossession or face an epidemic of homeowners who stay in their houses without making payments. Many houses have been in foreclosure for so long that the banks have little choice but to act, and repossessions are rising.

Mortgage modification lets banks put a brake on the process, keeping up the pressure on borrowers (most of whom will eventually be foreclosed on anyway) without adding to the banks’ inventory of foreclosed properties. As they sit in this antechamber, instead of simply writing off their mortgages, the strapped borrowers, given the gift of reduced payments, are likely to squeeze out whatever they can manage in a last effort to keep their homes. It’s a study in what Rortybomb’s Mike Konczal trenchantly calls the credit “sweatbox” — under the guise of foreclosure aid.

Another Cudgel in the Hands of Lenders

The last insult added to this mess comes from Fannie Mae, which has promulgated new rules that lock those who don’t make the effort to modify their mortgages out of the Fannie-backed mortgage market for seven years. So ultimately this comes full circle, and what started as an effort to help borrowers has become another cudgel in the hands of lenders.

If we were to conceive a program to persuade borrowers to stick to their obligations and make every effort, no matter how unrealistic, to avoid foreclosure, we could hardly do better than HAMP. The program probably increases what lenders collect before they eventually foreclose — and may let those lenders slow the process enough to prop up prices as they sell off their inventory.

In this way, it may lead to a more orderly unwinding of the busted housing market. If so, HAMP might accomplish some part of its goal—just not the part that has to do with helping homeowners.

Justin Brennan

Realtor | Broker | Investor

Middleton Associates Real Estate

848 Prospect Street

La Jolla, CA 92037

619.823.2120

Justin@TheLaJollaLife.com

www.TheLaJollaLife.com

Visit my website to set up a FREE search of more than 20,000 San Diego Homes.

www.TheLaJollaHomesBlog.com

News, Updates, Homes, Interior design tips, People, Fun and more....

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Thursday, February 11, 2010

Rates on 30-year mortgages average under 5 pct

Rates on 30-year mortgages average under 5 pct

Rates on 30-year fixed mortgages fell slightly this week, dipping below 5 percent, the mortgage financier Freddie Mac said Thursday. Visit www.TheLaJollaLife.com to set up a FREE property search for over 20,000 listing is San Diego & La Jolla, CA.

The average rate on a mortgage-backed securities to try to keep rates low and make home buying more affordable. That program is set to end March 31.

Low rates also can spur refinancing activity. More than two out of three mortgage applications were for refinance transactions over the first six weeks of this year, according to the 15-year fixed-rate mortgages fell to 4.34 percent from 4.40 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac.

Rates on five-year, adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 4.19 percent, down from 4.27 percent a week earlier. Rates on one-year, adjustable-rate mortgages rose to 4.33 percent from 4.22 percent.

The rates do not include add-on fees known as points. The nationwide fee for loans in Freddie Mac's survey averaged 0.7 point for 30-year mortgages. It averaged 0.6 point for 15-year, five-year and one-year loans. Visit www.TheLaJollaLife.com to set up a FREE property search for over 20,000 listing is San Diego & La Jolla, CA.


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Sunday, February 7, 2010

Ladanian tomlinson signs with new england

Best Regards,
Justin C. Brennan
BROKER REALTOR
MIddleton Associates La Jolla
Keller Williams
(619) 823-2120
DRE lic# 01866398
www.TheLaJollaLife.com
848 prospect st
La jolla, ca 92037

Visit my website and sign up to be a FREE VIP to view over 20,000 listings live.

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Friday, February 5, 2010

Justin's Top 10 Home Staging Tips and Tricks 2010: How to show Value

Show Value:
T
here are two ways to help show value in your home to prospective buyers. 1) Have your home show better than the competition down the street. 2) If you are unable to prepare your home to show better, then price is another great way to show value to buyers. I always recommend # 1 to make your home look and feel better than your competitors. Here are some Tips for Home Staging 

1. Clean your glass windows, doors and mirrors with a mixture of white vinegar and water and wipe with newspaper for a beautiful, streak-free shine.

2. Freshen your garbage disposal by putting a lemon wedge in and running the disposal. This will neutralize odors and create a fresh, lemony scent. Fresh lemon can also be used to scrub kitchen counters and salt can be added as an abrasive for stubborn stains.

3. Remove crayon from walls with toothpaste (not the gel type). Simply put a small amount of toothpaste on a damp sponge and wipe gently, then wipe away any remaining residue with a clean sponge.

4. Refresh watermarks on wood surfaces by rubbing in a little mayonnaise and then buffing out the mark.

5. Remove candle wax from fabric by hardening it first with an ice cube and then by chipping away the hardened wax.

6. Repair small, noticeable scratches on hardwood floors with wood stain magic markers, available at most hardware stores. Be sure to choose the stain color that most closely matches your current floor stain color, fill in the scratch with color and buff with a soft cloth to blend. Wax pencils in many wood stain colors are also available for repairing similar scratches on wood furniture.

7. Shine stainless steel appliances with a small amount of olive oil. Simply rub a little on a soft cotton cloth and polish to a shine.

8. Remove soap residue in your dishwasher by running a wash cycle with a cup of white vinegar added.

9. Clean stains on your sofa fabric with a small amount of club soda on a dry cloth. Some stains can be more difficult to remove. If the club soda does not work, make a paste of 3 Tablespoons Baking Soda and 1Tablespoon of club soda and rub a small amount on the stain with a soft cloth. Gently rub the cleaner off with another clean soft cloth dipped in a small amount of warm water. Once dry, vacuum off any remaining residue.

10. Remove oil and grease stains from concrete driveways or garage floors by sprinkling the stains with baking soda or another absorbent substance such as cornmeal or sawdust. If the stain is dry, be sure to wet it first to create a paste and then scrub with a stiff brush. If this is unsuccessful, try using automatic dishwasher detergent, leave it on for a few minutes and then pour boiling water on it and, again, scrub with a stiff brush.

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Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Fannie Mae Releasing Foreclosures

Hello,

Fannie Mae has begun to release nearly 1 Million foreclosures. Fannie Mae tends to be the market leader and indicator. Stay Tuned as other banks may follow suit.

Justin Brennan

Broker Realtor San Diego

Asset Manager

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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The Power of a Tax Credit Near Expiration

The Power of a Tax Credit Near Expiration

$8,000 is a powerful incentive for home buyers who are buying their first home, especially when half of the homes in the country are trading at below $172,000. Visit www.TheLaJollaLife.com for more info

However, we are also a nation of procrastinators, so the tax credit is really only effective as it nears expiration. We saw this with the new home tax credit in California last Spring and we saw it with the national tax credit last Fall. Note the spike in existing home sales in October and November in the chart below. The existing home data is actually closing data, so most of these contracts were entered into in August September.

I see a large "W" shaped sales volume curve forming, with a huge decline when the December and January data is released, and a potentially even larger spike in May and June, with the new tax credit available to all buyers instead of just entry-level buyers.

Source_ John Burns Real Estate Consulting

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Monday, January 18, 2010

2009-2010 La Jolla Housing Trends and Values

Chargers Disappoint again

Painful, yet again. Our hometown of San Diego still remains the ONLY city left in the entire country with two major sports teams and no championship. That’s right… ONLY city. As much as I love the Chargers…I hate them too. After the last time we lost to the Jets in the playoffs in 2004-05, I have found a way to deal with the unfulfilled promises…take the point spread so you can root for them to win, but ease the disappointment with a couple dollar bills. Call me what you will, but all charger fans should try this until the Chargers sack up…it helps the pain.

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Friday, January 15, 2010

Test 2

Just testing my new Posterous account. Making sure it all works

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