Archive for April, 2009



AZ Central – Promising signs from valley housing data

For the first time in years, there’s good news coming out of metropolitan Phoenix’s housing market.

In March, home sales soared to levels not seen since 2005, foreclosures fell for the first time in a year and prices showed signs of leveling off in some areas.

The Valley’s most affordable communities, including many edge neighborhoods, are leading the housing rebound. “The affordable end of the Valley’s housing market could finally be at the bottom looking up,” said Mike Orr, a real-estate agent and analyst who publishes the Cromford Report. “Homes priced for $150,000 or lower are selling fast and even getting multiple offers. My money is on home prices in many of those neighborhoods being slightly higher by June.” and north Scottsdale aren’t seeing the same increases in home sales, though, and are likely to experience more price declines, Orr said.

High-priced areas such as Paradise Valley

Valley pending home sales hit 7,550 in March, a 70 percent jump from a year earlier, according to the Cromford Report, which has partnered with the Information Market to track housing indicators by analyzing data from the Arizona Regional Multiple Listing Service and real-estate records. The data track mostly resales but include some new-home sales.

Pending home sales, more than 90 percent of which become final, are a leading indicator for the housing market and include only deals that have a signed contract and set price.

Several Valley cities, including Phoenix, Avondale, Glendale, Peoria, Surprise and Goodyear, posted record sales in March, even beating monthly sales figures from the housing boom of 2005-06.

All of the West Valley cities seeing record sales were battered by foreclosures last year. Those foreclosures pushed down home values.

Now investors, first-time home buyers and retirees are buying those foreclosed homes from lenders. About two-thirds of all Valley home sales are foreclosure properties being resold. All those sales are putting a serious dent in the foreclosure inventory.

“There aren’t that many foreclosure homes on the market now,” said Orr, who is in the process of buying a foreclosure home in Queen Creek for $94,000. “Many of those deals will soon be gone.”

In Queen Creek, the number of foreclosure homes for sale has dropped to 79 at the end of March from 169 in February.

Foreclosure homes are selling nearly twice as fast as they did last fall, when lender-owned homes began to dominate the Valley’s housing market. On average, it is taking 117 days for a foreclosure home to sell now, compared with 227 days in November.

The number of foreclosure homes on the market could continue to fall. There were 3,377 foreclosures in metro Phoenix during March, almost 2,000 less than in February. At the same time, foreclosure cancellations nearly doubled to 3,168 last month.

Preforeclosures hit a new high of 10,689 in March. However, Tom Ruff of the Information Market doesn’t believe all those will turn into foreclosures. He cites as reasons the growing number of successful short sales in the Valley and the loan-modification programs available under the federal government’s housing plan.

Short sales can drag down prices but not as much as foreclosures.

The average sales price per square foot of a Valley foreclosure home has held steady at $66 for the past three weeks. The Valley’s overall average price per square foot fell in March to $83 from $89 in February. But Orr doesn’t see that number going below $80 because of the recent increase in demand for houses and the shrinking inventory of foreclosure homes.

The Valley’s median home price fell in March to $129,000 from $136,000 in February. Prices are a lagging indicator of deals made months ago, before President Barack Obama’s housing-rescue plan was announced and before sales began to pick up.

Orr says home prices will continue to fall in Paradise Valley, where there are about 550 houses for sale and only about six are selling a month.

At the current sales rate, that’s at least a seven-year inventory of houses on the market in Paradise Valley. In most other parts of the Valley, the inventory of homes for sale is less than a year.

If sales continue to climb in other metro Phoenix communities this month and in May, there’s a good chance home prices in the Valley’s most affordable communities could tick up in June.

“April will be the turning point for the housing market,” Orr said. “People are beginning to perceive we are at the bottom, and there’s no reason to wait to buy anymore.”

 

AZ Central – SunCor will sell housing projects

by Ryan Randazzo – Apr. 3, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

Pinnacle West Capital Corp.’s real-estate subsidiary, SunCor Development Co., will attempt to sell $400 million in housing developments and golf courses – most of them in Arizona – to reduce debt and focus on commercial building, the company announced Thursday.

Arizona Public Service Co. is Pinnacle’s main subsidiary, but the smaller SunCor business has been a drag on earnings recently.

In the fourth quarter of 2008, SunCor impairment charges of $32.5 million helped push the parent company to a quarterly loss, so the SunCor board of directors voted to sell nearly all of its assets, spokesman Alan Bunnell said.

“This will make it more focused and a lot more agile moving forward,” Bunnell said.

The company had $175 million in outstanding debt as of March 31, he said, and assets totaling $47 million.

Its holdings include Hidden Hills community in Scottsdale, Sedona Golf Resort, SunRidge Canyon in Fountain Hills and other properties.

The company will keep about $70 million of those, including parts of the Hayden Ferry Lakeside project in Tempe, and about 2,000 acres of land west of Phoenix, according to a regulatory filing.

The company has developed about 1 million square feet at Hayden Ferry Lakeside and sold nearly all of it except a parking garage and some retail, Bunnell said. But SunCor has about a mile of land fronting Tempe Town Lake left to build on, where it plans about 3.5 million square feet of development, he said.

“Effectively, we will no longer be a home builder,” Bunnell said. “We are focused on being a commercial developer.”

The company had about 480 employees in 2008, most at golf courses. Bunnell said about 20 employees will remain if the firm sells all the planned properties.

“We would expect most employees associated with the properties would be transferred to the new owners along with the operations,” he said.

Standard and Poor’s Rating Services said the sale would not affect Pinnacle’s credit rating, a major concern for company executives who say a junk rating would increase costs to utility customers.

“The decreased value in SunCor and lower expected levels of future income . . . are reflected in the current rating,” analyst Tony Bettinelli said.

Pinnacle will record impairment charges on its first-quarter earnings of about $120 million after taxes, the filing said.

The SunCor parcels could be sold together or individually, depending which brings more money, Bunnell said.

“If you take a look at what the market holds right now, no doubt it is a very difficult market,” he said.

Regardless of the sale’s success, utility customers will not be affected, he said.

“Neither APS nor the parent company guaranteed any of SunCor’s debt,” he said. “It is truly a stand-alone company.”

AZ Central – Paradise Valley’s median home price fell 1%

Apr. 1, 2009 12:00 AM

Paradise Valley’s housing market didn’t do as well as the area’s 2008 median price might indicate.

The Valley Home Values’ analysis of home prices tracked by ZIP codes showed the median home price only fell about 1 percent in 85253, which spans all the upscale neighborhoods of Paradise Valley. That small price decline looks pretty good compared with those in many parts of metropolitan Phoenix, where prices plummeted more than 20 percent last year.

But several Paradise Valley real-estate agents say the median home price doesn’t tell the real story for the high-priced home area.

The 85253 ZIP code definitely has the most expensive homes, with a median price of $1.74 million. Considering that one house in the area sold for $14 million last year, Paradise Valley also has the largest range in home prices. A wide range in prices does make it more difficult to track an area’s home values with one measure.

Here are some other Paradise Valley home-price statistics from real-estate agent Walt Danley’s group at Coldwell Banker.


• Average list price per square foot for roughly the first quarter of this year is $371. That compares with $544 during the same period in 2008.


• Average sale price per square foot for this year is $323. Last year, it was $490.

Danley, who has been selling homes in Paradise Valley for more than 30 years, estimates the area’s prices are down about 30 percent from the peak in 2005-06.

He said foreclosure properties owned by lenders have hurt Paradise Valley’s housing market, as they have harmed the rest of the Valley. But now, as in many other parts of the Valley, activity and buyer interest is picking up in Paradise Valley.

“We are at the bottom or very close,” he said. “In the past two weeks, we have received multiple offers on homes priced about $5 million.”

www.theholmgroupaz.com

 

AZ Central – Market rebound near

by Peter Corbett – Apr. 1, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

Former Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros says he is more optimistic than most observers in predicting that the collapsed housing market will show signs of a recovery by year’s end.

Cisneros, in town Tuesday to address an apartment-development conference, said the cumulative effect of the $800 billion federal stimulus package and private-sector investment will lead to a turnaround in housing next year.

“But we still have more setbacks to work through,” said Cisneros, U.S. Housing and Urban Development secretary under President Bill Clinton. “That includes commercial real estate, which looks grim right now.”

Cisneros, who has moved to the private sector, is chairman of Los Angeles-based CityView, which invests institutional capital in affordable, urban housing.

He was in the Valley to tour a north Phoenix condo-conversion complex at Tatum Ranch and to deliver a keynote speech at the Apartment Finance Today Conference at the Arizona Biltmore Resort.

CityView invested in the 168-unit Terra Vista complex in 2007 when the P.B. Bell Cos. started to convert the apartments to condos just as the market cooled for condo conversions. It has sold 86 condos and is leasing the other units. CityView, with investments in 7,000 homes in 12 states, looks for investments that offer affordable housing for working families, Cisneros said.

Terra Vista, built in 2000, is priced starting at $139,900 and includes a lease-purchase program that helps turns renters into buyers.

That includes Julie Russell, 34, a swimming instructor and golf-course worker, who is in a lease-purchase condo at Terra Vista that the former housing secretary visited.

“I feel like my money is staying with me at the end of the day,” Russell said of her lease payments.

Terra Vista will use $5,000 of Russell’s first-year payments for a down payment on the condo. She is also eligible for an $8,000 federal tax credit as a first-time buyer.

Cisneros, HUD secretary from 1993-97, said Terra Vista is offering the kind of program that is helping working families and people like Russell build equity in their homes. He defended the Clinton administration’s efforts to loosen credit requirements to make ownership accessible for more Americans.

That led to the home ownership rate growing from about 64 percent in 1993 to 69 percent by the end of Clinton’s second term, Cisneros said.

“Those efforts we hijacked by unscrupulous companies that had no goal of creating ownership or equity for buyers,” he said. “They were all about ambition and greed, and perverted the system.”

Cisneros, former San Antonio mayor, said there is a growing need for apartment development to keep pace with immigrants and others who are not ready for home ownership.

There is a backlog in demand for about 5 million apartment units but there is little funding available to build them, he said.

Chapin Bell, P.B. Bell Cos. president, said financing for apartment development dried up in the middle of 2008. That will slow development in the Valley from about 6,500 units this year to 1,400 next year, Bell said.

www.theholmgroupaz.com

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