Archive for June 24th, 2009

AZ Central – As Scottsdale gets older, developers take notice

by Peter Corbett – Jun. 23, 2009 12:18 PM
The Arizona Republic

Scottsdale’s image makers in recent years have positioned the city as a place with a vibrant lifestyle, wealth and attractive people striving to stay young at all costs.

It’s all about flashy wheels, designer denim and the latest must-have iSomething.

No one focuses on gray hair, liver spots and hearing aids.

Or so it seems.

In reality, Scottsdale is old and getting older. In the most recent census, Scottsdale, compared with other cities with populations of more than 100,000, was the nation’s third-oldest city. The median age of Scottsdale residents was 41.

So while Scottsdale’s nightclub scene pumps up the volume for 20- and 30-somethings, many of the city’s residents are already turning out the lights as the DJs get the party started.

Nearly 30 percent of city’s 230,293 residents are older than 55, and an additional 31 percent are 35 to 54, according to the city’s 2008 population report.

Developers are taking notice. Thousands of retirement homes are filling the Northeast Valley in a boom for the aged that rivals the luxury urban condo surge of the past few years.

3 new communities for seniors

Three luxury retirement communities – with a total of more than 600 units – will open early next year. An additional 1,400 units are on the drawing board.

Scottsdale isn’t becoming Sun City, but senior-housing executives point out that Scottsdale is growing in prominence as a hub for wealthy retirees.

“It far surpasses Palm Springs,” said Michael Grust, chief executive of the Senior Resource Group. “Palm Springs has never had the depth of the market and wealth that Scottsdale has.”

Grust and other senior-housing developers are bullish on the Scottsdale market despite sluggish sales in the current recession and growing competition in this housing sector.

The San Diego-based group is planning Maravilla Scottsdale, a 410-unit community just west of the Fairmont Scottsdale Resort.

Three communities that will open by early next year include:
• Arté, 170 units at 114th Street and Via Linda.
• Sagewood, 342 units at Tatum and Mayo boulevards.
• Classic Residence at Silverstone, 270 units at Scottsdale and Pinnacle Peak roads.

Silverstone, developed by Chicago-based Classic Residence by Hyatt, includes 203 residences in its sprawling main building for independent and assisted-living residents, plus 67 villas on a 33-acre site that was part of the Rawhide theme park.

Silverstone residents will have their choice of three dining venues, indoor or outdoor pools and an 18-hole putting course that is tucked in among the villas. Plus, there will be a sprawling desert garden with fountains and shaded benches for a sunset lifestyle that carries a golden price tag.

Steep buy-in for luxury

Silvertsone’s buy-in fee ranges from $460,000 to $1.5 million, plus $3,200 to $6,800 in monthly fees. Ninety percent of the buy-in fee is refundable to the estate, and a resident’s monthly fee does not change if they move from independent living to assisted living or to costly nursing care for the final days of their lives.

Sagewood, developed by Life Care Services of Des Moines, Iowa, has buy-in fees of $300,000 to $1 million with 80 percent of that refundable.

Arté has no buy-in fee. The Avenir Group of Cos. of Vancouver, British Columbia, will lease its units for about $3,000 to $6,500 per month.

Is the market ready for all those senior housing units?

All three operators believe it is – and each says they offer something a little different.

“We are so high on the demographics of northeast Phoenix and Scottsdale,” said Stewart Ingram, Sagewood executive director.

Will Boomers embrace concept?

But questions remain about whether enough aging retirees will move in. Some seniors are trapped until they sell their homes in a stagnant real-estate market. Others have seen their wealth diminished by the economic collapse.

And some observers question whether the post-World War II generation of Baby Boomers will embrace retirement communities when they reach their 70s and 80s.

Baby Boomer advocate Cindy Cooke said most Boomers are not interested in age-segregated communities.

They might congregate to communities of people with similar interests, said Cooke, executive director of a Scottsdale non-profit called Boomerz.

That could include a place like the retirement community that Classic Residence by Hyatt has in Palo Alto, Calif. There, residents, including retired professors and executives, can attend classes at Stanford and take advantage of the university’s cultural offerings.

Bingo, bridge and a putting green just will not do it for Boomers, Cooke said.

Tom Mertensmeyer, Senior Financial Benefits president, is concerned about the surge in the senior housing supply at a time when demand is already down.

“It is a lot for the market to absorb,” Mertensmeyer said. “They’re all planning ahead for the Baby Boomers, and the Boomers are not quite there.”

Most retirees wait until they are close to 80 before considering a retirement community, said Mertensmeyer, a Sun City financial planner who has advised seniors for 20 years.

He sees Scottsdale being more akin to Palm Springs than Sun City, because Scottsdale is a blended community that is not age restricted.

“I don’t think people will stop moving there because there are too many older people,” Mertensmeyer said.

 

www.theholmgroupaz.com

AZ Central – The Valley’s priciest home sales

Jun. 24, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

The principal of a radiology company, a radiologist, an executive with a real-estate investment firm, the estate of a prominent attorney and an executive with Anheuser-Busch are among the buyers and sellers in this week’s priciest home sales.

$7,100,000.

RPMC LP, a California limited partnership, purchased a 12,399-square-foot home with a 1,350-square-foot pool built in 2005 on the eastern side of Mountain Shadows Golf Club in Paradise Valley.

The home was sold by Marlee R. Hoffman, as trustee of the Marlee R. Hoffman Separate Property Revocable Trust.

Marlee Hoffman is the owner of Arizona Radiology in Phoenix.

$3,050,000.

Eric Kovalsky and his wife, Jennifer, bough a new home east of Scottsdale Ranch Park in Scottsdale.

Eric Kovalsky is a radiologist in Scottsdale.

The home was sold by Richard Mary Judith Inderrieden as trustees of the Inderrieden Family Trust.

$2,200,000.

Kathryn A. Knoer, as trustee of the Kathryn A. Knoer Trust, purchased a 6,505-square-foot home with a pool built in 1990 northeast of the Phoenician Golf Club in Paradise Valley.

Kathryn’s husband, Dietrich Knoer, just joined DMB Associates Inc. as chief investment officer.

The home was sold by Bradley Janet P. Wilde, as trustees of the Wilde Living Trust.

$1,800,000.

Jack D. Gray bought a 6,529-square-foot home with a pool built in 1985 east of Mountain Shadows Golf Club in Paradise Valley.

Gray is founder and chairman of Vinsant Capital Co. in Paradise Valley. The home was sold by Cornelia Barr, as personal representative of the estate of the late Thomas D. Barr.

$1,800,000.

Joseph A. Castanheira, as trustee of the Joseph A. Castanheira Revocable Trust, purchased a new home near Firerock Country Club in Fountain Hills.

Castanheira is general manager and vice president of Anheuser-Busch Sales of Canton, Ohio.

The home was sold by Mieczyslaw Hawrot and his wife, Daniela M. Hawrot, who last year opened Daniela’s Gallery and Custom Framing in Scottsdale.

Researched by John McLean and the Information Market.

AZ Central – 45,000 plus Valley properties remain in foreclosure

by J. Craig Anderson – Jun. 23, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

Thomas Kelly explains the foreclosure process to those outside the banking industry by likening it to a tube.

“You get put in the tube when you’re 90 days late, and you might come out the other end of the tube six months later,” said Kelly, spokesman for JPMorgan Chase & Co.

What Kelly’s analogy doesn’t explain is how, for the past three years, thousands more Phoenix-area property owners have been entering the tube each month than coming out of it.

At present, the system is backed up with more than 45,000 “pending” foreclosures, up from about 2,300 in June 2006, according to a historical analysis by the Information Market, a Phoenix research firm.

Most experts expect pending foreclosures to increase even more before leveling off sometime within the next 12 months.

There has been much speculation among real-estate professionals about reasons for the apparent backlog of houses and condominiums headed toward foreclosure.

There’s a widespread belief that banks are purposely limiting the flow of foreclosure homes onto the market, which helps prevent home prices from sliding even further but could prolong the market’s long-term recovery.

Likewise, some say lenders are dragging their heels on repossessing and selling extravagant homes, and to a lesser extent commercial properties, including raw land, because the demand for big-ticket real estate is too low and because selling off large assets at sharply reduced prices could cause some smaller banks to fail.

Lenders have been relatively quiet about their strategies for working through pending foreclosures, which has only fueled various theories.

But Kelly said such theories give the banks too much credit.

“We’ve got such an enormous portfolio of homes to deal with, we don’t have time to say, ‘Let’s do this with this one, and let’s do that with that one,’” he said.

Monthly foreclosure totals have risen and fallen a number of times since the housing market peaked in 2006, although the general trend has been upward.

However, the number of pending foreclosures, properties on notice for a trustee sale but not yet sold, has increased steadily without exception since April 2006. In the past year, it has climbed by anywhere from 500 to 5,000 properties each month.

As of Friday, there were 45,709 total pending foreclosures in Maricopa County, according to the Information Market. Those are in addition to the roughly 73,000 foreclosures completed during the past three years.

Also as of Friday, the county was on track to reach 5,000 foreclosures by the end of this month, which would be the second-highest monthly total on record, having reached a high of 5,240 in February.

Even if 5,000 properties complete the foreclosure process this month, an even greater number will enter it.

As of Friday, lenders had served pre-foreclosure notices on 5,700 additional properties, a net increase of at least 700 in pending transactions for the month.

Actual foreclosures in the past three years total about 73,000, according to the data.

Some Valley foreclosures may be taking longer than the usual 91 days from notice to sale because the borrowers are attempting to work out a loan-modification or “short sale” agreement with the lender.

In Maricopa County, short sales have increased in the past year but still account for less than 5 percent of property sales.

Modifications help

Colleen Gunderson, Tempe-based Century 21 All Stars owner and designated broker, believes banks have intentionally slowed the release of foreclosure properties onto the market at the behest of the federal government, which provided many banks with bailout funds.

“There is a process in place to sort of warehouse these properties until a time when it’s more beneficial to place them on the market,” she said.

It’s the right approach, Gunderson added, because dumping 45,000 foreclosed-on properties onto the market all at once would deliver the knockout punch to a real-estate economy already leaning against the ropes.

New, standardized loan-modification guidelines issued by the Obama administration in March appear to be doing a better job of keeping some borrowers out of foreclosure than modifications made in 2008, according to two federal bank regulators, but it’s still too early to know for sure.

More than half of loan modifications negotiated before the Treasury Department launched its $75 million Making Home Affordable program in early March were back in default within six months, according to a study conducted by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

Those same officials said in May that the rate of re-default fell by about 12 percent among those borrowers whose monthly payments were reduced.

However, the number of loans headed toward foreclosure has risen significantly despite better modifications.

In March, the Investigative Reporting Workshop at American University in Washington, D.C., conducted a study of the nation’s roughly 8,000 banks with online-news service msnbc.com and reported finding a 150 percent increase in loans at risk of foreclosure compared with a year earlier.

Kelly said job losses are one likely reason for the continued high volume of foreclosures, in addition to people walking away from mortgages even though the payments are affordable because they owe far more than the home is worth.

Commercial is next

Although most Valley foreclosures thus far have involved residential property, commercial-property owners and lenders are preparing for apartment, office and retail foreclosures to rise sky-high in the coming months.

Selling those properties back to the market could take years in some cases, analysts said, because there is little interest in new office and retail space, even at the low-rent end.

Craig Henig of commerical real estate brokerage CB Richard Ellis in Phoenix said banks aren’t in any rush to foreclose on commercial real estate because it forces the lender to adjust the property’s book value to today’s considerably lower market price.

Significant write-downs on a few multimillion-dollar commercial loans could put a small or financially stressed bank out of business, he said.

“I don’t know how they could sustain the amount of markdowns,” Henig said.

However, Kelly said the holding costs associated with thousands of foreclosed-on properties outweigh any benefit the bank might realize from waiting to sell them.

He also noted that the value of commercial real estate and high-end homes is still on the decline, which means waiting is likely to cost lenders even more.

“The goal is to get that asset back earning money for you,” he said.


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