Posts Tagged ‘historical data’

Bay Area Price Spike Led By Santa Clara County

Sold Sign

Great news has just been released by Real Estate information service DataQuick – Prices and sales are up in the  nine Bay Area counites !  Maybe not great news for twitchy buyers though.

Silicon Valley Business Journal reports -”The Bay Area’s housing market continued to ease back toward normalcy in October, as fewer distressed properties sold and $500,000-plus sales accounted for a greater share of transactions than a year ago.”

In Santa Clara County the median price in October was $500,000, up 4.8 percent from $477,000 in October 2008. Sales were up 27.9 percent to 1,944.  It has been like the woman assistant in magic show-disappearing.

In June I asked is this a spike in prices?

In addition to the Bay Area overall, three counties – Santa Clara, Marin and Sonoma – saw their median sale prices rise year-over-year last month. The last time that more than one county posted an annual gain in the median was November 2007. Also last month, Alameda, Santa Clara, San Francisco and the nine-county region overall posted single-digit annual gains in their median price paid for a specific home-type: resale single-family detached houses.

Barbara Corcoran ‘Today” Video “homes around the country”

Ok twitchy buyers… here’s a bone…Prices are still lower than they were in 2005.   Your friends may be unwilling to sell their homes,  since they bought at the sharp peak,  but there is an abundance of others to choose from.

How much longer do you think the housing market could withstand the price ‘depression’ in Silicon Valley?

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Santa Clara Real Estate is HOT! like me today!

hot-therm-img-for-posts

Wow,  it’s 98 degrees out!  The number of sales for the month of April for Santa Clara County are also hot and very encouraging.    It is obvious our market is stabilizing,  finally!  Or is it?  Could this just be a spike that will pop this little bubble?

If  I were a gambling man, I would bet that the heat today might keep (some) buyers away.  Nah!  Didn’t apply yesterday.

Yesterday,   Saturday,  there were so many agents and clients showing/viewing property that parking in front of many listings was hard to find.     Several new home listings, a few my clients found worth pursuing, were already looking at multiple offers.

The average days on market for the County was down by almost 30 days.     We were looking at 125+days and now we are seeing 108 days.   The average sales/listing price percentage is up to 96% and has held consistently here for a couple of months now.

I wonder if I should buy that 30,000sq ft home now.  It;s only $64mil.  Maybe after Ice Cream!


What’s in a Name?

The origins, whimsical and prosaic, of South Bay city names.

longest-city-name

We may not always think about it, but the names of our cities usually say a lot about their historical background, their physical location, or some other notable feature. The monikers of San Jose and Los Gatos, for example, speak to their Spanish origins. And with the Bay Area being the melting pot that it is, chances are, wherever you go, you’ll stumble onto some aspect of California’s rich cultural history by virtue of the city or town name and location. These are all in Santa Clara County.  If you have others..Please announce them in a comment.  I will try to post a bulletin of them for you.  With that in mind, here’s a quick look at the stories behind the names of these prominent South Bay locations:


Campbell: Named after city founder Benjamin Campbell, who grew hay and grain where downtown Campbell now resides.

Cupertino: Originally dubbed West Side, the town was renamed Cupertino in honor of the Arroyo San Jose de Cupertino, a local winery that had named itself after the nearby creek. The name change, made in the late 1800s, was due in no small part to the post office, which hoped to differentiate itself from nearby towns with similar names with similiar city history.

Los Gatos: Originally named after a land grant called Rancho Rinconada de Los Gatos (“the corner of the cats”), the city gets its handle from the indigenous bobcats and
mountain lions that roam the
Santa Cruz Mountains
.

Menlo Park: Originally a ranch owned by Irish immigrants Dennis Oliver and D.C. McGlynn, the city was named after the owners’ former home of Menlough in County Galway, Ireland.

Mountain View: Mountain View shares a common history with Sunnyvale, being one of the two territories split off from Don Castro’s sprawling ranch.

Milpitas: Named after milpa, a Mexican Spanish term for “garden where maize is grown.” Legend has it that the city was very nearly named Penitencia, but that was vetoed due to its similarity to the word “penitentiary.” To which we say, good call!

Palo Alto: Named after the El Palo Alto, a tall redwood and California historical landmark known for its significance as a campsite for the Portola Expedition Party of 1769.

Redwood City: Named after, wild guess, California’s ubiquitous redwood trees.

Santa Clara: Named after the Mission Santa Clara de Asis (itself named for St. Clare of the Order of Poor Ladies).

San Jose: Originally El Pueblo de San Jose de Guadalupe, the farming community of San Jose was named in honor of St. Joseph.

Sunnyvale: Once promoted as “The Garden of the World,” Sunnyvale was known as “Murphy’s Station” and “Encinal” until its residents were informed that they were unable to name their post office such. The residents decided to name themselves “Sunnyvale” in 1901.

Sales increased 100.8% statewide in January 2009 compared to the previous year. Good News for both Sellers and Buyers.

Good News for both Sellers and Buyers.

Sellers will sell and buyers will buy at a 40% discount statewide according to the California Association of Realtors.

quote:

“Statewide sales in January edged past the 600,000 threshold for the first time since October 2005,” said C.A.R. President James Liptak. “The strength in California home sales in recent months signifies that the market is gradually working its way through the large numbers of distressed sales that have followed in the wake of the troubled mortgage problem. With favorable home prices and historically low mortgage rates, affordability in the California housing market is now at its highest since the start of the decade.” unquote

Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled 624,940 in January at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate, according to information collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations statewide. Statewide home resale activity increased 100.8% from the revised 311,160 sales pace recorded in January 2008. Sales in January 2009 increased 14% compared with the previous month.

The statewide sales figure represents what the total number of homes sold during 2009 would be if sales maintained the January pace throughout the year. It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

The median price of an existing, single-family detached home in California during January 2009 was $254,350, a 40.5% decrease from the revised $427,200 median for January 2008, C.A.R. reported. The January 2009 median price fell 9.5% compared with December’s revised $281,180 median price.

“A lot of attention has rightfully been directed toward the high number of distressed properties,” said C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young. “California’s housing market also is feeling the effects of a drought in the availability of jumbo mortgage loans.

“Since the start of the credit crisis in 2007, jumbo lending has been severely constrained to the point where markets that rely on jumbo loans experienced a 24% year-to-year decline in sales in the month of January. This stands in contrast to the 100% sales gain the overall market experienced,” she said.

Highlights of C.A.R.’s resale housing figures for January 2009:

- C.A.R.’s Unsold Inventory Index for existing, single-family detached homes in January 2009 was 6.7 months, compared with 16.6 months (revised) for the same period a year ago. The index indicates the number of months needed to deplete the supply of homes on the market at the current sales rate.
- Thirty-year fixed-mortgage interest rates averaged 5.05% during January 2009, compared with 5.76% in January 2008, according to Freddie Mac. Adjustable-mortgage interest rates averaged 4.92% in January 2009, compared with 5.23% in January 2008.
- The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home was 49.9 days in January 2009, compared with 70.8 days (revised) for the same period a year ago.

In a separate report covering more localized statistics generated by C.A.R. and DataQuick Information Systems, none of the 331 cities and communities reporting showed an increase in their respective median home prices from a year ago. DataQuick statistics are based on county records data rather than MLS information. DataQuick Information Systems is a subsidiary of Vancouver-based MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates. (The top 10 list is generated for incorporated cities with a minimum of 30 recorded sales in the month.)

Note: Large changes in local median home prices typically indicate both local home price appreciation, and often, large shifts in the composition of housing market activity. Some of the variations in median home prices for January may be exaggerated due to compositional changes in housing demand.

Statewide, the 10 cities with the highest median home prices in California during January 2009 were: Santa Barbara, $939,250; Redondo Beach, $672,500; Pleasanton, $655,000; San Clemente, $602,500; San Ramon, $582,000; Yorba Linda, $566,750; San Francisco, $561,000; Huntington Beach, $555,000; Encinitas, $550,000; and Sunnyvale, $530,000.