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San Diego Real Estate

OB QR270 Hagert E 20111121115301 San Diego Housing Inventories dropped drastically

San Diego inventories of properties dropped significantly. The previous average number of active homes in all of San Diego County real estate MLS (multiple listing service) was 11,000 to 12,000 since 2007. The current number of active homes in all of San Diego County just dropped from Dec. 2011 9,161 to 7,879.

Typically as the inventories in San Diego decrease below 8,000 the market goes from a buyers market to a sellers market. The national market trend has a similar trend. Good deals in this market can also mean multiple offers.

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau!

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market with our  Internet Marketing and Sales Program. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also, go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

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dollar houses1 e1269028159523 2012 the year of the housing market rebound

Fleming says economic concerns peaked in the summer of 2011 when politicians were stuck wrangling over the nation’s debt ceiling and the economy seemed poised for stagnation.

Fast-forward a few months, and Fleming says conditions are better, making way for a possible recovery in 2012. Fleming’s more optimistic outlook is mirrored in the Freddie Mac U.S. Economic and Housing Market Outlook survey for the month of January.

The Freddie report says economic growth will strengthen by 2.1% in the first quarter of 2012, while mortgage rates will remain low at least through the beginning of the year. In addition, the Freddie Mac survey predicts home sales will grow another 2% to 5% from 2011.

Fleming with CoreLogic says several other developments could spur along housing demand. One of those being the number of households paying off debts — a factor that creates more liquidity and access to credit. Furthermore, households started adding home equity lines of credit in the third quarter of 2011, bringing in more access to cash flow and suggesting borrowers and lenders are more confident.

He believes 2012 is the right time for a housing price rebound with affordability levels putting a floor on the market, barring further price declines.

With this in mind, Fleming said analysts will be watching the market closely in search of positive signs during the spring and summer selling seasons.

His report noted that “most housing statistics basically moved sideways in the latter part of 2011. Builder sentiment is improving ever so slowly, but remains at very low levels. Housing starts are also increasing, driven mostly by multifamily starts.”

Fleming points out that single-family housing starts and permits increased at an annual pace of 15% at the end of 2011. Meanwhile existing home sales trended upward, rising 12% when comparing November 2011 to January.

County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! We offer free counseling in real estate regarding; home values and information on options of selling vs. Foreclosure.

To find out the value or your home. Click here for a free market evaluation !

If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also and close escrow in 45-60 days or less. Learn more about mortgage relief options and how to take advantage of our FREE REALTOR (R)  CONSULTATION for loan modification and or selling .

Click here to get loan informationbefore the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s) or thinking of selling your property, please contact me today for free counseling at (619) 540-5811.

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

By the way…if you know of someone who would appreciate the level of service in real estate we provide, please call me or have them go to www.CountyProperties.net/ and I’ll be happy to follow up and take great care of them.

Just as in 2011, in 2012 many will be trying to figure out where housing is headed.  While the housing market didn’t worsen in 2011, it also didn’t stabilize either.  This year, the story will be about local markets.  While many housing markets rose and fell together, they’re recovering at difference paces so talking about housing on a national level is not beneficial.

  1. Confidence and jobs: Housing is more affordable than it has been in decades, but many would-be buyers are worried about buying today if prices are going to be lower tomorrow.  Still, others don’t want to buy a house until they have more evidence that they’re not going to get laid off or see their hours cut back.
  2. Foreclosures: Banks and other mortgage investors own around 440,000 foreclosed properties, but there’s another 3.4 million loans in foreclosure or serious delinquency, according to estimates by Barclays Capital.  Because banks are faster to cut prices to unload inventory than are traditional sellers, home values can fall further as the share of distressed sales rises.
  3. Rents: If low mortgage rates aren’t enough to give urgency to would-be buyers, rent hikes could accelerate buyers’ decisions to take the plunge.
  4. Mortgage credit and rates: It’s still hard for many buyers to get approved for a mortgage because banks are demanding lots of documentation of borrowers’ incomes.
  5. Regulation: Many analysts don’t expect Congress to make major changes to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac during the election year, but several major regulatory changes could significantly reshape the future of the lending landscape in 2012.

Meanwhile, the regulator that oversees Fannie and Freddie is revamping the way that mortgage companies are paid for collecting loan payments.  This could lead to a broader shakeup in the mortgage industry that ultimately influences how much borrowers are charged for mortgages and how banks handle loans that fall into delinquency.

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth?

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market with our  Internet Marketing and Sales Program. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also, go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

rlest optiongroup1 15 Residential Housing Market Ready To Awaken?

After half a decade of withering sales and slumping prices, there are strong and diverse signs that the single-family housing market is poised for a rebound.

In some metropolitan areas, the market has bottomed, with both sales and prices on the rise and foreclosures on the decline.

This contrarian – and largely overlooked – thesis flies in the face of the persistent gloom that has nagged the industry since 2007, when the subprime crisis flared.

Industry analysts and players cite a number of reasons – some traditional (employment), others unique to the post-credit bubble era (foreclosures) Â – for the long-awaited sea change. An analysis of industry and government data also support the forecast.

“It has become increasingly apparent to us that the pieces for a housing rebound next year are beginning to fall into place,” declared Barclays Capital analyst Stephen Kim in a recent note to investors.

Proponents admit that the nascent rebound could easily be derailed, but stress that after years of government efforts to support sales and prices as well as the volatile impact of foreclosures, the market has regained a measure of normalcy.

“With the exception of really hard-hit markets, the vast majority is ready to turn around,” adds Jerry Howard, president and CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, NAHB. “The Washington, D.C., area is not only ripe for recovery, they need to start building units.”

The iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction Index Fund (NYSE Arca: itb), for example, is up some 38 percent, while the S&P 500 is up about 21 percent.

Nevertheless, skeptics overwhelmingly outnumber the optimists, given the false-starts of previous years, the economy’s sub-par performance, a new wave of distressed properties and the capacity for the European debt crisis to spook business, consumers and investors.

“I think it’s premature,” says Richard Smith, CEO of Realogy, the nation’s largest real estate company, whose brands include Century 21, Coldwell Banker and Sotheby’s International. “We see little indications here and there. Transaction volume is improving. Prices are still under pressure. This isn’t going to be one of those spiked robust recoveries.”

Smith is echoing the conventional industry calculus: that price increases follow sales growth amid consistently strengthening demand.There’s been little conventional, however, about this housing slump, which is one reason it’s had so many false bottoms. Among its many firsts – housing starts fell through 1 million annual units, foreclosures topped 2 million in three consecutive years, and home prices declined on a national basis.

 The catalysts to recovery are mostly the same: for potential buyers, residential rents have now risen enough to consider buying; existing-home inventory is the lowest in five years, while that of new homes is at a 40-year low; affordability is at a record high; delinquencies have peaked; consumer confidence is on the rise ; and job growth is accelerating.

For investors, with a continuation of the gold rally in question, real estate is beginning to look like a viable inflation hedge alternative, while rising rents mean greater profits. That thinking may help explain why the iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction Index Fund (NYSE Arca: itb), a broad barometer for the housing market, is up some 38 percent from the stock market’s October bottom, while the S&P 500 is up about 21 percent.

Finally, there’s the intangible fatigue with bad news, and a desire to end the negative feedback loop. “We believe there is sizable housing demand that could be released into the market,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, NAR.

The NAR is forecasting existing home sales will rise 5 percent in both 2012 and 2013; prices will edge up 2 percent in each of those two years, then 4 percent in 2014. The NAHB is forecasting a 5.1-percent increase in new home sales and a 10-percent increase for new home starts in 2012.

Jobs, Jobs, Jobs 

A turnaround in the housing market will require continued improvement in the job market.The economy has created jobs 13 months in a row for a total of almost 1.9 million. Weekly jobless claims have been routinely below the key level of 400,000, and the national jobless rate is down to 8.6 percent.

There are already signs in some markets that an improving employment picture is boosting housing demand and sale prices.In cities such as Tampa, Fla., South Bend, Ind., Grand Rapids, Mich., Raleigh, N.C., Wichita, Kan., and Green Bay, Wis.., the median sales price of an existing single family home increased 1-2 percent in the third quarter, during which time the jobless rate and/or payrolls growth improved dramatically.

Even in the Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla. metropolitan area – considered the epicenter of the foreclosure crisis a few years ago – prices were just 1.4 percent lower in the third quarter than the previous year.

A new index by the NAHB and First American, the Improving Markets Index, IMI, launched in September, tracks housing markets throughout the country that are showing signs of improving economic health. Thirty cities – including San Jose, Pittsburgh, New Orleans and Winston-Salem, N.C. – are showing growth in permits, sales and employment.

In San Diego – where in the last year the jobless rate has fallen from 10.4 percent to 9.7 percent and 24,000 jobs have been added – home inventory is down to two months; in some areas of San Francisco (9.4 vs. 10.3 percent), it is one month. More broadly, 40 percent of all states showed existing home sale increases on both a quarterly and annual basis in the third quarter, according to National Association of Realtors data. That includes high foreclosure-rate states, such as California, Georgia, Michigan and Utah. All but six states showed double-digit gains year over year.

Location, Location, Location 

There’s even a strong case to be made that the foreclosure crisis is easing. “The pipeline of distressed property is plentiful but less than last year,” when foreclosure activity hit a record 2.18 million, says Yun.

For the first nine months of 2011, foreclosure activity is down sharply from the same period last year (26.59 percent), whether it is the worst-off states – (Florida, 54.98 percent; California, 31.51 percent; Utah, 27.41 percent) – or better-off ones (New York, 46.57 percent; Mississippi, 33.25 percent; South Dakota, 26.59 percent), according to RealtyTrac, which tracks the data.

Third-quarter foreclosures (610,337) were up 1 percent from the previous quarter but down 34 percent from the year-ago period.

The wild card right now is an impending wave of new foreclosed properties on the market, following the removal of state moratoria and the settlement of state and federal lawsuits with lenders and loan servicers. It’s unclear how many properties will hit the market, but conservative estimates put the number at over a million.

Still, of the top 20 markets in the new wave, nine are in California, five in Florida and two in Ohio, according RealtyTrac, so the impact will be fairly concentated. Another question is whether that wave will be a tsunami or merely a breaker. If the market is in fact recovering, why would banks want to weaken it again by deluging it with cheap properties. “You could see them trying to gauge the market like speculators,” answers Howard.

Kim of Barclays is among those who say the threat is exaggerated, perhaps misunderstood. He estimates that 40 percent of the foreclosed properties haven’t had a payment made on them in two years, which means they are in poor condition and thus unattractive to many buyers. “The deterioration has been great,” he says. “It flies in the face of all the bearish arguments.”

Kim’s thesis is that there are now two kinds of buyers in the market; those who’ll take a chance on a bargain-priced, distressed property and those who’ll only make a conventional transaction. He says it helps explain why the Core Logic data he used for his latest report shows non-distressed prices flat or slightly higher in the past year.

“Even if the banks decide to move their inventory more aggressively, and I suspect they will, it’s OK because the buyer is making a distinction,” explains Kim. “There’s a ready appetite for it,” adds Smith of Realogy, who agrees that there’s substantial pent-up demand for housing in general but also great uncertainty. “If you can relieve consumers of some of that uncertainty, then I can see a nice little recovery.” 

That’s the psychological dimension of the wild card – the negative feedback loop that has plagued housing. Optimists say most of the uncertainty and fear is gone. “The major driver of negative sentiment was that prices were going down across the market by large amounts,” says Kim of Barclays. “Buyers need to see a stabilization.”

A contributing element to that is the unwinding of government intervention – whether to artificially spur demand – as was the case with the first-time buyer tax incentive program of 2009 and 2010 – and/or to retard and prevent foreclosures.  Many regard those efforts as largely ineffective, if not counter-productive because they delayed the inevitable – a deep descent to a market bottom, which has finally been touched.

“The numbers you’re looking at you can trust,” says Kim. “There are no exogenous factors.” Though tight lending conditions and forthcoming regulations of the Dodd-Frank legislation are still an issue for some, sweeping housing finance reform is off the agenda for at least the next year.

“You’re back to the natural forces of the market,” says Howard of the builders association.

County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! We offer free counseling in real estate regarding; home values and information on options of selling vs. Foreclosure.

Click here to get loan informationbefore the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s) or thinking of selling your property, please contact me today for free counseling at (619) 540-5811.

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

By the way…if you know of someone who would appreciate the level of service in real estate we provide, please call me or have them go to www.CountyProperties.net/ and I’ll be happy to follow up and take great care of them.

San Diego County                                                            For Riverside County, Click Here

Mortgage delinquencies of 60 days or more are forecast to rise through the first quarter of 2012 and then decline to about 5% by the end of 2012, according to TransUnion.

After six consecutive quarterly declines between the fourth quarter of 2009 and the second quarter of 2011, 60-day mortgage delinquencies are expected to peak at 6.02% during the first quarter of 2012 before beginning their decline, the consumer credit reporting agency said.

“Although house prices and unemployment will likely face continued pressure next year, this forecast calls for gradual improvements in the second half of 2012 to other key variables, like improving credit quality of new originations, consumer confidence and GDP, that will positively influence homeowners’ ability and willingness to pay their mortgages,” said Tim Martin, group vice president of U.S. housing for TransUnion.

“If things go as expected, there are no additional negative shocks to the U.S. economy and the average borrower’s situation, mortgage delinquencies could fall as much as 16% in 2012 compared to 2011.”

The expected mortgage delinquency decline in 2012 would follow recent yearly trends, including an expected 7% decrease by the end of this year and a 7% reduction in 2010. This is in contrast to more than 50% year-over-year increases between 2006 and 2009.

TransUnion projects delinquency declines for 38 states with the largest percentage declines forecast for Arizona (-46.25%), Wisconsin (-45.52%) and Colorado (-40.34%). Twelve states and the District of Columbia are expected to see increases.

The agency said credit card delinquency rates for borrowers 90 days or more delinquent on one or more of their credit cards reached their lowest levels in 17 years during the second quarter of 2011 (0.60%). It expects them to remain relatively low in 2012, decreasing approximately 7% from 0.74% in the fourth quarter of 2011 to 0.69% by the end of 2012.

Credit card debt per borrower in the third quarter of 2011 stood at $4,762, approximately $1,000 less than the second quarter of 2009, the quarter in which the recession ended.”

TransUnion’s forecasts are based on various economic assumptions, such as gross state product, consumer sentiment, unemployment rates and real estate values.

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth?

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market with our  Internet Marketing and Sales Program. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also, go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

HomePath Mortgage allows a borrower to purchase a Fannie Mae-owned property with a low down payment, flexible mortgage terms, no lender-requested appraisal and no mortgage insurance. Expanded seller contributions to closing costs are allowed.

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  • No lender-requested appraisal.
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HomePath properties offer buyers a wide selection of options, including single-family homes, condominiums, and town houses. HomePath properties may also be eligible for HomePath Mortgage and HomePath Renovation Mortgage financing, which offers homebuyers an opportunity to purchase with as little as 3 percent down. Click here to find out additional information or to get your loan started using  (Homepath approved lender) to finance your next purchase.

See properties below! Call 619 540-5811 today for a complete list or Click Pro-Search HomePath & Reo Properties!

Street  City Zip Code List Price Contact us TODAY to Preview! Property Type Bedrms Bths Sq Feet Lot Size Year Built
2122 Alpine Glen Pl Alpine 91901 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 3 2      
1446 Woodcrest St Chula Vista 91910 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Single-Family 4 3 2382 7433 1993
2074 Barbados Cv Unit 3 Chula Vista 91915 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 3 3 1321   2002
12191 Cuyamaca College Dr E Unit 212 El Cajon 92019 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 1 1 669   1995
390 N 1st St Unit 11 El Cajon 92021 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 2 2 886   1990
1954 Glennaire Dr Escondido 92025 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Single-Family 4 2 2340 21780 1975
441 Hanford Gln Escondido 92027 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 3 2 1405 2269 1985
25124 Como Esta Ct Ramona 92065 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Single-Family 3 2 1769 20700 1972
47114713 Guymon St San Diego 92102 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Multi-Family 4 3     1953
378 68th St San Diego 92114 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Single-Family 3 2 1176   1970
5404 Balboa Arms Dr San Diego 92117 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 2 1 414   1995
6852 Quebec Ct Unit 2 San Diego 92139 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Condo 2 1 871   1980
150 S Rancho Sante Fe Rd 63 San Marcos 92069 Contact us TODAY Coming Soon Mobile Home 3 2      
3810 Pecos Dr Borrego Springs 92004 $135,000 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1356 37897 1983
2585 Lilac Trl Boulevard 91905 $37,500 Just Listed Single-Family 2 1 776   1936
2430 Sierra Morena Ave Carlsbad 92010 $454,900 Just Listed Single-Family 4 2 1799 8102 1967
3119 Via Premio Carlsbad 92010 $269,900 Just Listed Condo 3 2.5 1496   1986
128 Oaklawn Ave Chula Vista 91910 $199,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1242   1994
200 Telegraph Canyon Rd Apt J Chula Vista 91910 $184,210 Just Listed Condo 2 2 1123   1987
1720 Harvard St Chula Vista 91913 $349,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1722 7405 1966
550 Graves Ave Unit 14 El Cajon 92020 $106,900 Just Listed Condo 2 2 874   1985
1175 Naranca Ave El Cajon 92021 $184,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1104 8712 1956
725 E 4th Ave # 4 Escondido 92025 $137,340 Just Listed Condo 2 2 1089   1969
525 W El Norte Pkwy Spc 194 Escondido 92026 $223,450 Just Listed Mobile Home 3 2 1580   2004
264 Parkside Gln Escondido 92026 $189,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 1.5 1203   1972
331 Retreat Ct Fallbrook 92028 $231,900 Just Listed Single-Family 4 3 1502 6812 1976
9250 Sinsonte Ln Lakeside 92040 $299,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1302 5227 1964
2836 Washington St Lemon Grove 91945 $229,900 Just Listed Multi-Family 5 3     1970
3006 Linda Dr Oceanside 92056 $280,900 Just Listed Single-Family 4 2 1328   1964
2324 Fallingleaf Rd Oceanside 92056 $299,900 Just Listed Single-Family 4 2 1428   1985
157 Avenida Del Gado Oceanside 92057 $174,500 Just Listed Single-Family 2 1 827   1976
3606 Vista Rey Unit 13 Oceanside 92057 $105,750 Just Listed Condo 2 2 1177   1972
1240 Natoma Way Unit B Oceanside 92057 $299,900 Just Listed Condo 3 3 1539   1996
221 Riverview Way Oceanside 92057 $168,999 Just Listed Condo 3 2.5 1448 2500 1984
13616 Valle De Lobo Way Poway 92064 $283,400 Just Listed Condo 2 3 1659 236530 1978
841 Lamar St Ramona 92065 $209,900 Just Listed Single-Family 4 2 1505 30240 1940
1150 J St Unit 701 San Diego 92101 $260,510 Just Listed Condo 1 1 753 30056 2005
2760 B St Unit 114 San Diego 92102 $139,900 Just Listed Condo 1 1 560   2006
3238 Ashford St Unit P San Diego 92111 $76,300 Just Listed Condo 1 1 463 87120 1975
151 Lausanne Dr San Diego 92114 $224,900 Just Listed Single-Family 4 2 1594 11761 1959
8181 Brennan St San Diego 92114 $267,050 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1568   1955
881 Dell Anne Pl San Diego 92114 $245,141 Just Listed Single-Family 3 1 1175 16100 1954
17161 Alva Rd Unit 1724 San Diego 92127 $144,900 Just Listed Condo 1 1      
10235 Bell Gardens Dr Unit 5 Santee 92071 $99,900 Just Listed Condo 2 1.5 1095   1986
8864 Jaylee Ave Spring Valley 91977 $189,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 1 1034 13111 1960
220 Journeys End Vista 92083 $316,000 Just Listed Single-Family 4 2 1700 12196 2007
519 N Citrus Ave Vista 92084 $189,900 Just Listed Single-Family 3 2 1704 55756 1971
3178 Roadrunner Dr S Borrego Springs 92004 $149,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 2 1722 4791 1991
2045 Avenue Of The Trees Carlsbad 92008 $339,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 3 2070 1742 1974
3517 Caminito Sierra Unit 101 Carlsbad 92009 $209,900 Price Reduced Condo 2 2 1022   1989
2828 Andover Ave Carlsbad 92010 $209,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 2 2 994   1986
2961 Lancaster Rd Carlsbad 92010 $289,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 2 2.5 1435   1984
1211 Barton Peak Dr Chula Vista 91913 $344,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 5 2.5 2095 3517 2003
1877 Wolf Canyon Loop Chula Vista 91913 $334,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 2.5 1671 3131 2006
1654 Irwin St Chula Vista 91913 $294,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 3 1511 2700 2006
615 Alveda Ave El Cajon 92019 $324,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 4 2 1990 5662 1971
10208 Stonehurst Dr Escondido 92026 $275,000 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 2 1620 8712 1975
8850 Villa La Jolla Dr Unit 212 La Jolla 92037 $335,000 Price Reduced Condo 2 1 1080   1981
8046 Mazer St Lemon Grove 91945 $239,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 2 1008   1955
1937 S Lanoitan Ave National City 91950 $270,000 Price Reduced Multi-Family 10 6   10005 1961
404 N Horne St Unit D22 Oceanside 92054 $269,900 Price Reduced Condo 3 2 1416   2004
1269 Sagewood Dr Oceanside 92056 $224,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 2 2 977 4680 1987
2395 Rancho Del Oro Rd Unit 28 Oceanside 92056 $184,900 Price Reduced Condo 2 2 1008   1991
24557 Del Amo Rd Ramona 92065 $289,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 4 4 2061 22215 1995
5164 Landis St Apt 2 San Diego 92105 $54,900 Price Reduced Condo 1 1 567   1979
4335 Mcclintock St Unit 7 San Diego 92105 $89,900 Price Reduced Condo 1 1 551   1988
4319 Mentone St San Diego 92107 $374,900 Price Reduced Condo 2 1 858 6229 1961
7939 Jamacha Rd San Diego 92114 $184,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 2 1148 6534 1979
6883 Amherst St San Diego 92115 $189,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 2 2 1040 4994 1972
10772 Escobar Dr San Diego 92124 $391,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 4 3 1558 2918 1972
11250 Corte Playa Madera San Diego 92124 $514,000 Price Reduced Single-Family 4 3 1858 3497 1990
1140 Walpen Dr San Diego 92154 $270,000 Price Reduced Single-Family 4 2 1520 5196 1979
1627 W Augusta Dr San Marcos 92069 $275,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 4 2 1315   1974
1217 Camino Del Sol San Marcos 92069 $299,999 Price Reduced Single-Family 3 2 1315 4138 1995
10291 Bell Gardens Dr Unit 2 Santee 92071 $139,900 Price Reduced Condo 3 2 1144 128066 1986
238 Goetting Way Vista 92083 $214,900 Price Reduced Single-Family 2 3 1450 12283 1947
395 I St Chula Vista 91910 $181,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 1 874 5662 1927
772 Beech Ave Chula Vista 91910 $220,000 Back On Market Single-Family 3 1 1265 6900 1954
1327 Claim Jumper Ln Unit 4 Chula Vista 91913 $178,900 Back On Market Condo 2 2 1071 38594 2004
2114 Palo Alto Dr Unit 90 Chula Vista 91914 $185,000 Back On Market Condo 2 2 1061   2006
2250 Treewind Ln Chula Vista 91915 $314,900 Back On Market Single-Family 4 3 2075   2005
1604 Living Rock Ct Chula Vista 91915 $304,900 Back On Market Single-Family 4 2.5 1803   2006
1661 Stone Edge Cir El Cajon 92021 $139,900 Back On Market Condo 2 1.5 1097   1980
711 W 8th Ave Escondido 92025 $174,900 Back On Market Single-Family 2 1 1270 7000 1946
724 N Ash St Escondido 92027 $84,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 2   6000  
1374 Old Stage Rd Fallbrook 92028 $184,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 2 2118 10890 1975
9145 Chris Lane Guatay 91931 $137,900 Back On Market Single-Family 2 1 809 13068 1956
3856 Paula St La Mesa 91941 $214,900 Back On Market Single-Family 2 1 1063 8000 1949
1655 Skyline Dr Lemon Grove 91945 $274,900 Back On Market Single-Family 4 2.5 2292 6900 1947
3003 E 11th St National City 91950 $234,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 2 1659 5300 1961
13321334 Dubuque St Oceanside 92054 $269,900 Back On Market Multi-Family 4     8033 1959
3345 Tropicana Dr Oceanside 92054 $229,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 1 1470 6000 1963
5018 Alicante Way Oceanside 92056 $299,900 Back On Market Single-Family 2 2 1807 4094 1988
4169 Diamond Cir Oceanside 92056 $209,900 Back On Market Single-Family 2 1 776 8665 1985
3625 Vista Oceana Unit 20 Oceanside 92057 $163,500 Back On Market Single-Family 2 2 1123   1980
31762 S Grade Rd Pauma Valley 92061 $94,500 Back On Market Single-Family 2 1 1050 21780 1950
1610 Montecito Rd Ramona 92065 $124,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 2 1568 1 1986
3566 Polk Ave San Diego 92104 $299,900 Back On Market Single-Family 4 2 1197 3001 1923
5216 Chollas Pkwy San Diego 92105 $212,550 Back On Market Single-Family 3 1 1260 5500 1951
4315 Loma Riviera Ct San Diego 92110 $225,000 Back On Market Condo 1 1 876   1967
5414 Via Bello San Diego 92111 $310,650 Back On Market Single-Family 3 2 1178   1958
6215 Tooley St San Diego 92114 $181,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 1.5 1387 5000 1950
12184 Rancho Bernardo Rd San Diego 92128 $174,900 Back On Market Condo 2 2 1182 88426 1968
10406 Caminito Rimini San Diego 92129 $158,050 Back On Market Condo 2 1      
10933 Caminito Arcada San Diego 92131 $294,900 Back On Market Single-Family 2 3 1014 22520 1997
7374 Tooma St # 213 San Diego 92139 $110,000 Back On Market Condo 2 1 840   1980
940 Bolex Way San Marcos 92078 $281,250 Back On Market Condo 2 2      
8758 Williams Ct Santee 92071 $324,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 3 1549 6751 1983
941 Sacramento Ave Spring Valley 91977 $214,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 2 1260 7405 1977
15122 Fruitvale Rd Valley Center 92082 $249,900 Back On Market Multi-Family 4 4     1938
1206 Via Angelica A K A Diablo Pl Vista 92081 $294,900 Back On Market Single-Family 3 3 1706 4400 1994
2112 E Vista Way Apt 3 Vista 92084 $74,900 Back On Market Condo 1 2 1056   1980

Self Search List of Fannie Mae foreclosures below or Contact us TODAY  

Pending home sales soared more than 10% in October and remain above year-ago levels, in a hopeful sign for the nation’s housing market, according to the National Association of Realtors.

NAR’s pending home sales index, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, surged 10.4% to 93.3 in October from 84.5 in September. The index is 9.2% above October 2010 when it stood at 85.5.

The index is based on signed real estate contracts for existing single-family homes, condos and co-ops. An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, the first of five consecutive record years for existing-home sales and coincides with a level that is historically healthy.

“Home sales have been plodding along at a subpar level while interest rates are hovering at record lows and there is a pent-up demand from buyers who normally would have entered the market in recent years,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist.

The PHSI in the Northeast rose 17.7% to 71.3 in October, 3.4% above October 2010. In the Midwest, the index jumped 24.1% to 88.7 in October and remains 13.2% above a year ago. The South saw a smaller gain, 8.6% in October, to an index of 99.5 — 9.7% higher than October 2010.Only the West saw slippage, but remains above 100. There, the index slipped 0.3% to 105.5 in October but is 8.1% above a year ago. The index is based on a national sample, typically representing about 20% of transactions for existing-home sales.

Pending home sales rise 25% in Miami area

Pending home sales in Broward County, Fla., home of the Miami metropolitan statistical area, increased 25% in October to 3,356 pending listings compared to 2,633 a year earlier. Those numbers come from the latest Miami Association of Realtors report. Single-family home and condominium sales pending during the same month increased 43%.

Las Vegas existing home sales up 15.3% on low mortgage rates, prices

A combination of low mortgage rates and prices kept real estate investors and first-time buyers hooked on the Las Vegas market in October, pushing existing home sales up 15.3% from last year, DataQuick said. The real estate analytics firm said buyer interest in homes valued below $100,000 jumped 33% over last year.

 New single-family home sales rose 1.3% in October when compared to the previous month, a government report said Monday.

In October, new home sales hit a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 307,000, up from 303,000 in September, according to a study from the  U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Compared to October 2010, home sales are up 8.9% when considering 282,000 homes were sold during that month last year.

While sales edge up, the median sales price in October hit $212,300, and the average price was $242,300. The median sales price of new homes in September was $204,400, while the average price hit $243,900.

After studying the report, analysts with Econoday said, “Today’s report joins a growing list of housing indicators that are pointing to limited recovery for the sector, recovery supported by very low mortgage rates. Yet housing is still held down by foreclosures and by tight credit conditions that are limiting the number of home buyers.”

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth?

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Pending home sales in California rose in October and were up from the previous year for the sixth consecutive month.  Additionally, distressed home sales rose in October from both the previous month and year, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) reported today. 

Pending home sales:
California pending home sales climbed 3.1 percent in October and were up from a year ago, according to C.A.R.’s Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI)*.  The index was 122.0 in October, based on contracts signed in that month, up from September’s index of a revised 118.2.  The index also was up 10.7 percent from October 2010.  October marked the sixth consecutive month that pending sales rose from the previous year.  Pending home sales are forward-looking indicators of future home sales activity, providing information on the future direction of the market.

“October’s increase in pending sales is encouraging, especially the six straight months of year-over-year increases,” said C.A.R. President LeFrancis Arnold.  “Despite all the challenges the housing market has faced this year, California home sales continue to perform modestly well and should be on pace to match or better last year’s level.”

Distressed housing market data:

  • At 53.9 percent, equity sales made up more than half of home sales in October, down from 55.5 percent in September and 55.2 percent in October 2010.
  • While equity sales have edged down from their peak of 57.1 percent in July 2011, they are up from the beginning of the year when less than half (46.5 percent) of sales were non-distressed.
  • The total share of all distressed property types sold statewide rose to 46.1 percent in October, up from September’s 44.5 percent and 44.8 percent in October 2010.
  • Of the distressed properties sold statewide in October, 20.7 percent were short sales, slightly up from the previous month’s share of 20.1 percent and up from last October’s share of 19.7 percent.
  • At 24.9 percent, the share of REO sales was up from September’s 24.0 percent, and slightly up from the 24.8 percent reported in October 2010.
 

Share of Distressed Sales to Total Sales
(Single-family) 

 

Type of Sale

Oct. 2010

Sept. 2011

Oct. 2011

REOs

24.80%

24.00%

24.90%

Short Sales

19.70%

20.10%

20.70%

Other Distressed Sales (Not Specified) 

0.30%

0.30%

0.50%

Total Distressed Sales

44.80%

44.50%

46.10%

 

Single-family Distressed Home Sales by Select Counties
(Percent of total sales)

 

County

Oct.
2010

Sept. 2011

Oct.
2011

Amador

45%

54%

46%

Butte

27%

42%

43%

Humboldt

26%

19%

28%

Kern

65%

61%

67%

Lake

65%

61%

78%

Los Angeles

46%

46%

48%

Madera

63%

65%

89%

Marin

24%

35%

26%

Mendocino

51%

41%

49%

Merced

69%

61%

58%

Monterey

56%

59%

61%

Napa

50%

51%

46%

Orange

36%

36%

36%

Riverside

64%

60%

63%

Sacramento

64%

64%

64%

San Benito

74%

73%

72%

San Bernardino

67%

65%

65%

San Diego

25%

25%

28%

San Luis Obispo

43%

40%

46%

San Mateo

25%

26%

23%

Santa Clara

33%

35%

34%

Santa Cruz

30%

40%

40%

Solano

72%

73%

72%

Sonoma

46%

49%

51%

Tehama

63%

62%

49%

CALIFORNIA

45%

44%

46%

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth? Click here for a free market evaluation !

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market with our  Internet Marketing and Sales Program. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also, go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

Although the housing market struggled to maintain an even footing in 2011, gradual improvement is expected in 2012 and beyond, according to projections at a residential forum here at the 2011 Realtors® Conference & Expo.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors®, said home sales should be stronger. “Tight mortgage credit conditions have been holding back home buyers all year, and consumer confidence has been shaky recently,” he said. “Nonetheless, there is a sizeable pent-up demand based on population growth, employment levels and a doubling-up phenomenon that can’t continue indefinitely. This demand could quickly stimulate the market when conditions improve.”

Yun projects growth in Gross Domestic Product to be 1.8 percent this year, then rising moderately at a rate of 2.2 percent in 2012. With job growth of 1.7 to 2.2 million next year, the unemployment rate is expected to decline to 8.7 percent by the second half of 2012.

Mortgage interest rates should gradually rise from recent record lows and reach 4.5 percent by the middle of 2012.

“Housing affordability conditions, based on the relationship between median home prices, mortgage interest rates, and median family income, have been at a record high this year,” Yun said. “Very favorable affordability conditions will dominate next year as well, which will probably be the second best year on record dating back to 1970. Our hope is that credit restrictions will ease and allow more home buyers to take advantage of current opportunities.”

Existing-home sales are forecast to edge up about 1 percent this year, and then rise another 4 to 5 percent in 2012. Based on NAR’s current projection model, existing-home sales would total 4.96 million in 2011.

NAR presently is benchmarking* existing-home sales, and downward revisions are expected for totals in recent years, although there will be little change to previously reported comparisons based on percentage change. There will be will be no change to median prices or month’s supply of inventory. Publication of the improved measurement methodology is expected in the near future.

New-home sales are expected to be a record low 302,000 this year, rising to 372,000 in 2012. Housing starts are forecast to rise to 630,000 next year from 583,000 in 2011. “Although a double-digit growth in new-home sales and housing starts sounds encouraging, the projections remain historically soft relative to long-term underlying demand,” Yun explained.

With falling inventory, the median home price should rise in 2012. “Home prices have yet to show a definitive stabilization pattern in most areas. Still, given an over-correction in prices, there likely will be moderate appreciation in 2012,” Yun said.

“Once home prices turn positive on a sustained basis, consumer confidence will rise and help the broader economy to improve,” Yun added. “If we could maintain sound and reasonable mortgage underwriting standards, the market would be able to avoid a future big boom and bust cycle, but mortgage standards remain overly stringent.”

Also speaking was Richard Peach, Senior Vice President at the Federal Reserve Board of New York, who said the economy is under-performing. “Nearly two-and-a-half years since the end of ‘the great recession,’ the economy continues to operate well below its potential,” he said. “Among the significant structural impediments are the legacy of the housing boom and bust, and fiscal contrition at the state and local level.”

Peach said the current business cycle remains 7 percent below its peak and is longer than other recession cycles since 1953. He added the employment to population ratio is historically low, and there’s been a shift in the distribution of income with corporate profits up strongly while employment compensation is down.

Peach believes there is a sizeable level of shadow inventory that will result in rising foreclosures. “My idea is to allocate certificates to 2.5 million service members who served in Afghanistan and Iraq that could be used as a downpayment on a foreclosed home in the Fannie or Freddie portfolio,” he said. This would help to absorb the inventory and stabilize the housing market.

The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth? Click here for a free market evaluation !

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market with our  Internet Marketing and Sales Program. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also, go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

We’re getting close to the end of the year, which begs the question of whether it’s worthwhile trying to sell your home now. Is it a waste of time? Will it sit on the market and become shopworn? Should I take my house off the market for the holidays? Will the home-sale market be better for sellers in 2012?

The first question you need to ask yourself is: Are you emotionally prepared to sell? Selling is a challenge for most sellers, although some markets are better than others. Unless you bought more than eight to 10 years ago and preserved your equity, you may not be able to sell for enough to pay off the mortgages secured against the property and the other costs of selling.

For sellers who have no additional assets, a short sale or foreclosure may be the only option. If so, first look into government programs that might help you out financially. Also, talk to your attorney and tax adviser.

Sellers who have the resources to make up the difference between the sale price and the amount they owe need to ask themselves if they are willing to pay the additional cash in order to sell and move on.

There are two reasons why you might prefer bringing cash to closing. One is that your credit will not be negatively impacted, as would be the case with a short sale or foreclosure. The second is that many buyers shy away from short sales because of the lengthy and uncertain process involved.

The next thing to consider is the condition of your home. Is it ready for the market? The most salable homes are those that are in move-in condition.

Before racing to the hardware store, ask your REALTOR® about how much competition there would be for your home if you put it on the market before the holidays. Some areas are shy on inventory of good homes on the market. If so, now could be a good time to sell.

HOUSE HUNTING TIP: The supply/demand ratio plays a significant role in the health of a local real estate market. No matter what is said about the housing market nationally, it’s the local picture that tells the tale in terms of the possibility of selling your home at any given time.

Most sellers don’t put their homes on the market during the last or first couple of months of the year. The inventory of homes for sale tends to dwindle during the winter months. Interest rates are low. So, if there are buyers in your local market, you may be at an advantage selling when most sellers are waiting.

Some sellers feel that if they’ve waited this long to sell, they should put the process on hold until spring and get the house ready in the meantime. Certainly, it’s not a good idea to put your house on the market until it looks great. But if you and your house are ready to sell, move ahead.

The market in general tends to slow down over the holidays. But rather than pull your house off the market and miss a likely prospect, change the showing procedure to require advance notice. And enjoy your holidays. A sale before year end could be a great holiday gift.

There is a lot of pent-up demand, on both the buyer and seller sides. Sellers have been waiting for a better time to sell. Buyers have been waiting for more quality inventory and a sense that prices have bottomed or are close to it.

THE CLOSING: Recent projections call for another five or so years of bouncing along close to the bottom of this market cycle. Many experts believe that the big price declines are behind us.

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth? Click here for a free market evaluation !

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market with our  Internet Marketing and Sales Program. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also, go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

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