Golden Gate Bridge

What’s Happening in the Bay Area?

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Broadway Shows and Other Top Entertainment Streaming Online for Free

 

Any theater lover knows the show must go on, and a global pandemic certainly hasn’t slowed our entertainment options, it’s just repackaged them for online, at-home consumption. Now’s the time to nab some VIP seating and catch a front-row view of all the top entertainment streaming online for FREE right now.

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17 of The Best Online Games
to Play as a Family

 

Families spending time at home together or living in different places can stay entertained and connected with a plethora of online and mobile games.

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Best Reading, Spelling, and
Writing Apps for Kids

 

Not only can you take a virtual tour of the museum, but you can also deepen your art knowledge through one of the MoMA’s online classes. MoMA is offering of a few different art courses on its website. All classes are taught through the online portal Coursera and allow participants to learn directly from artists and designers as well as examine the museum’s collection, according to the MoMA website.

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Zoom, It’s Not Just For Work: 30 Fun Activities Families Can Do Online

 

At first we had no idea how we were going to stay connected. Then we discovered that there were, in fact, many ways to interact even if we could not physically be together. We started Skyping, FaceTiming and Zooming with friends and family. We celebrated Zoom birthday celebrations…book clubs….and those ubiquitous happy hours. But now that we’ve settled into this new reality, we are looking for ways to up the ante.

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Eggs in Purgatory with
Chile butter and Feta

 

Turkish inspired Eggs in Purgatory with Chile Butter and Feta. Perfectly soft-cooked eggs simmered in a simple, slightly spicy, tomato sauce with garlic, herbs, and lemon. Top this one-skillet recipe with fresh herbs, plenty of feta cheese, and serve with olive oil toasted bread for dipping.

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Bombay Masala Chile Cheese Toasties

 

Melty, cheesy, crunchy, spicy—these sandwiches, a street food favorite in India, check all the boxes. There’s a tender potato filling, crisp vegetables, and oozing cheese tucked between golden bread that’s spread with an invigorating green chutney.

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TikTok’s Next Big Thing is
This Over-the-top Feta Pasta Recipe

 

A baked feta pasta recipe, which food blogger @feelgoodfoodie shared in the post that has garnered the most views, . has been taking over users’ For You pages. It’s allegedly the reason grocery stores in Finland ran out of feta cheese. In most videos, the process is simple.

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21 (Delicious) Food and Dining Trends Coming Your Way in 2021

 

Who better to tap for projected dining trends than some our nation’s top tastemakers: The chefs, restaurant owners, registered dietitians, culinary school instructors, grocery product managers, and bartenders that set the stage for foods we line up for (masks on and at a distance, please), follow on social media, and what we cook for our families at home.

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Artists At Home: School Outreach

 

This school semester, the National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) is offering a digital, interactive art program for teachers and their students in grades 3-8. Adapted from our summer program, “Artists at Home” is designed to engage students in hands-on art making and conversations about African American artists and different genres of visual art.

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Contemporary Art Gallery Online is Proud to Announce Their 1st Black History Month 2021 Exhibition

 

Contemporary Art Gallery Online encourages entries from all 2D and 3D artists regardless of their experience, education in the art field or where they may reside. This is an international competition, and everyone, who meets the eligibility, is encouraged to participate. 

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Celebrate Black History Month with Cultural Happenings in SF

 

San Francisco will celebrate Black History Month with an exciting slate of events to commemorate the contributions of African-Americans within our city, across our nation, and throughout our history, beginning Feb. 1. Plan ahead, purchase tickets, and gather your friends to take part in all of the excitement here in San Francisco and the East Bay.

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Google, Coca-Cola and Other American Companies Are Celebrating Black History Month 2020

 

February is Black History Month, and much of corporate America is commemorating the occasion. From tech to retail and industries in between, here’s how some of the nation’s biggest businesses are celebrating the achievements of black Americans.

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Riding the Next Wave of Wellness

 

No matter what the latest health and wellness trend is, technology plays a key role in creating new ways to work out and improve one’s well-being. Technology empowers startups and unleashes innovators across the industry. The future will be no different.

[/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][et_pb_row column_structure=”1_2,1_2″ _builder_version=”4.8.2″ _module_preset=”default” width=”90%” custom_margin=”15px||1px||false|false”][et_pb_column type=”1_2″ _builder_version=”4.8.2″ _module_preset=”default”][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.8.2″ _module_preset=”default” text_line_height=”1em” header_text_align=”center” header_line_height=”1.1em” header_2_line_height=”1.2em” header_4_text_align=”justify” header_4_line_height=”1.6em” width=”100%” max_width=”100%” module_alignment=”center” link_option_url=”https://www.vogue.com/article/wellness-2021?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=601dd1efa31ff90001882586&utm_source=5c17f781feb04e1be797041f&abe=0&agent_id=5c17f781feb04e1be797041f”]

What Will Wellness Look Like in 2021?

 

The future of more accessible and inclusive tools of wellness is looking brighter for 2021. Here, seven emerging and expanding wellness movements primed to aid health and happiness in a new year.

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This 15-Minute Neck-and-Shoulder Stretch Relieves Tension in Your Body and Mind

 

On the latest episode of Good Moves, Brooklyn-based BK yoga club co-founders Alicia Ferguson and Paris Alexandra demo just how easy it is to relieve such stiffness and pain with a simple yoga flow that serves as a neck-and-shoulder stretch.

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EatingWell’s Top 10 Health
and Wellness Trends for 2021

 

2020 has been quite a year. Many of us are looking to next year with high hopes. The coronavirus pandemic has really changed the way we eat and shop for food, as well as renewed our interest in staying healthy. With that in mind, we identified trends—some new and some continuing to take off—that we think will be big in health and wellness next year. Here’s what we expect to see more of.

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Larkin Street Youth Project

 

Imagine a World where ALL youth have equal opportunities for recreation, fitness, and friendship—regardless of their abilities. KEEN’s Mission – Empower youth with disabilities by providing free, non-competitive one-to-one programs of exercise, fitness and fun, led by volunteer coaches.

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826 Valencia

 

826 Valencia is a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting under-resourced students ages six to eighteen with their creative and expository writing skills and to helping teachers inspire their students to write.

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The Bread Project

 

The Bread Project has a vision for all reentry and justice-involved individuals to be able to contribute to a stronger community through stable, gainful, and fulfilling work. We leverage the power of food prep and baking training, and job placement assistance, to support the integration of these men and women into society

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Community Grows

 

Our vision is that all youth are able to benefit from the joy and healing of nature-based outdoor education, and develop the tools, confidence and resources to navigate and challenge structural injustices.

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MLS-Export-compressed

2020 Market Review and Update

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San Mateo County

 

As I am sure you will agree, the year 2020 will go down in history as one of our Nation’s most difficult. Who could have foreseen in 2019 that we would undergo political and social turmoil, a deadly pandemic and a bitterly contested Presidential election?

By mid-March 2020, my team and I thought we were headed into a dramatically slowing market. Little did we know that we were about to face one of the most robust real estate markets we had seen in years. In 7 months, I personally sold 28 homes totaling $54M in sales.

For six weeks after Shelter In Place (SIP) began, the local housing market came to a standstill until early May. At that point, people began to realize that working and educating our children from home would soon become our new “normal”. With that, people began to re-evaluate their housing needs.

What we saw was a tremendous upheaval in our housing marketplace. The most popular keyword search term on our company website was “Outdoor Space”. People from San Francisco decided to move to the suburbs for more space. We saw a rise in condo and townhome sales as sellers wanted to upgrade into single family homes. People in 3-bedroom single family homes needed more rooms for an extra office or a “zoom room” for their kids to attend school online. Those who owned 4-5 bedroom homes who were nearing retirement decided to take advantage of the historically low interest rates and move out of the area to low or no-income tax states like Washington and Nevada.

Despite not being allowed to have open houses, our housing market became frenetic. Home values on the Peninsula began to shoot up again, multiple offers became the norm and homes were selling within a week to 10 days. With interest rates still hovering at historical lows in the high 2%/low 3% range (depending on loan size and loan product) and low inventory, we continue to see much of the same as we ease into 2021. We expect it to continue well into the second half of the year.

I will continue to keep you apprised as the year wanes on. If you have any additional questions, please do not hesitate to reach out.

Best,
Caroline

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title-image

What will be the Economic Impact of Covid-19 Crisis?

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“Life isn’t about waiting for the storm to pass. It’s about learning how to dance in the rain.”

I hope this email finds you all doing well and staying healthy! I’ve been staying very busy between all the Zoom meetings for work, trying to homeschool my 7th-grade daughter and binge-watching “Ozark” with my husband.

In terms of our local real estate market, I’ve sat on a multitude of webinars, and conference calls over the last several weeks with economists, real estate experts, and prominent wealth managers. While nobody has a crystal ball, the general consensus is that:

1. Real estate will help lead the country out of a recession this time around. Interest rates are still historically low. We live in an area with such a diverse economy. Unless interest rates start to tick upward and we start to see layoffs at some of the local tech giants, I don’t see our market declining anytime soon. It may level off but I don’t see a decline in the short term.

2. Real Estate as the “safer asset”. After the dot-com bomb, people will probably move their money from the stock market into real estate as it will be perceived as a “safer” asset class.

3. Our local market seems to have picked up in the last week and a half. We are seeing fewer homes being withdrawn from the market, more homes being put on the market and pending sales are up 42% since the week of March 29th. (See slide below).

4. Being stuck at home has inspired people to look for bigger homes. Our CEO shared on Monday that:

• Web traffic was up 30% from previous weeks.
• 20% of consumers are looking for Single Family Homes
• The most popular search term is, “outdoor spaces”.

Fun Fact: China, where property transactions were at or around zero for the three weeks following movement restrictions, had within two months recovered to 50% of the 4-year average.

My Favorite Binge-worthy Shows: Money Heist and Ozark. Both are on Netflix.  
If you have any questions or if I can help in any way, please don’t hesitate to reach out. 

Stay well and stay safe!

Best,

Caroline

What will be the Economic Impact of the COVID-19 Crisis?

On April 28th, McKinsey & Company’s Global Managing Partner, Kevin Sneader appeared on CNBC to discuss how his firm is advising multiple governors on when and how to reopen their states. In his words, the decision hinges on one question: how do you reconcile the saving of lives with the safeguarding of livelihood? 

There’s no easy answer. And with 70% of the US workforce unable to do their jobs from home, states need to consider how to make sure there is enough PPE, testing, and contact-tracing in place to be confident that once they reopen, they won’t have to shut down again.

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How This Could Unfold

A recent survey of over 2,000 global executives showed that many expect the recovery to look like one of the scenarios shaded in blue below (A1–A4) which lead to a V- or U-shaped recovery. In each of these, the COVID-19 spread is eventually controlled, and catastrophic structural economic damage is avoided. 

Almost one third of these leaders anticipate a muted world recovery where US GDP could drop 35-40% in Q2 of 2020 and won’t return to pre-crisis levels until Q1 of 2023 (A1). A slightly more optimistic outlook was the second most anticipated scenario, reflecting virus containment by mid-Q2 of 2020 with an economic rebound following Q2 2020 (A3). [Source: McKinsey] [/et_pb_text][et_pb_image src=”https://carolinedinsmoreandco.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/image-2.jpg” _builder_version=”4.0.9″][/et_pb_image][et_pb_text _builder_version=”4.0.9″]

Which Sectors are being Hit the Hardest?

 

  1. Commercial Aerospace
    May take years to recover from production and supply chain shortages 
  2. Consumer Air & Travel Domestic recovery is likely to recover faster than international travel
  3. Oil & Gas
    Oil price decline driven by short-term demand impact and OPEC+ decision to increase supply
  4. Insurance Carrier
    Reduced interest rates and investment performance impacting returns
  5. Automotive
    Trade tensions and declining sales amplified by an acute decline in global demand
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san-francisco-bay-area-real-estate-market

Is our market going to crash?

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Dear Friends,

I hope this email finds you all safe and healthy during this unprecedented time with Shelter In Place. If there’s anything I can do to help you, please reach out.

In terms of my question in the subject line, the short answer is, no.  At least, I don’t think so. It could slow down for a while but it won’t stay down forever.

So what is happening in our local real estate market right now?  While it’s only been a week and a half since Shelter In Place has been instituted, this is what I’ve been seeing so far:
 

1. Homes Are Still Selling:  People are still putting their homes on the market even though the MLS has banned open houses and broker tours.  There was a home that was put on the market in Redwood Shores for $2M this week and it sold in 3 days!

2. Off Market Listings:  There are several homes listed as Coming Soon on both the Compass.com site as well as the Top Agent Network.  I expect that when Shelter In Place is lifted, we will see a lot more inventory come on the market.

3. Offers Over Asking:  A few of my colleagues reported that a few of their buyers got into contract this week.  They reported that sellers are still expecting offer prices over the list price and that buyers are willing to pay over asking for the right home even though they aren’t in a multiple offer situation.

4. Legal Penalties for Showing Homes: A colleague told me an agent showed a vacant home in San Carlos this past weekend to a few of their clients.  The neighbor saw 4 people congregating by the front door and called the police.  The agent was fined $600 and received some sort of court order.

In terms of moving forward, while I don’t have a crystal ball, I personally believe that the market will slow down dramatically while Shelter In Place is in effect but it won’t come to a stand-still.

With people not making travel plans right now and with interest rates still historically low, I think the brisk Spring market will get pushed into the Summer which is historically a slower time of the year.

In terms of how a recession could affect our local real estate market, I will say that I’ve been through 3 significant recessions as an adult and homeowner.  I worked in tech during the dot-com boom/bust as well as during the aftermath of 9/11.  I  became a realtor shortly before the 2008 – 2012 “Worst Recession since the Great Depression”.  During those times I not only survived, but I always thrived afterward.

Our local real estate market has always come back higher than the last peak before the recession as you will see in the charts below.  It just takes time and as I’ve always said, real estate is a long-term play.

We are going through a very scary and unprecedented time right now.  It will be difficult.  However, as my mom, who survived the Blitzkreig in London during WWII plus many other global crises after that, always reassured me during tough times, “This too shall pass”.

It’s just not easy going through it.

Again, if there’s anything I can do to help, please feel free to reach out.

Please stay safe and well!  ~Caroline

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Market Cycles in Bay Area Real Estate

This article was written before the coronavirus – in fact, the first version was written over 10 years ago by our chief market analyst to help place the 2008 crash into context. We realize there are much more important things than real estate right now, but since some of our clients are trying to make decisions about buying and selling, we will continue to try to provide useful information on market trends and conditions. At this point, we cannot know how the current crisis will play out. 

This first chart is a very simplified, smoothed out look at Bay Area market cycles for higher-price-tier homes using data from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Home Price Index. It is a very approximate overview of hundreds of different neighborhood markets – whose trends up and down were broadly similar, but whose details, such as specific appreciation percentages, varied. 

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The following chart uses the median house sales price trends of 5 Bay Area counties to illustrate a simple fact: The entire Bay Area generally follows the same broad trend lines in market cycles. Of course, there are differences by location, property type and price segment, but overall cycles are very similar. (We picked 5 counties as samples, because adding them all over-clutters the chart.)

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This chart uses yet another market-value tracking algorithm looking at the 2 biggest, multi-county “metro areas” in the Bay Area. Since they reflect multiple counties of highly varying values, the prices themselves don’t really reflect the prices of any specific market. The reason for the bigger drop post-2008 in the SF metro area is that portions of its 5-county area were more deeply impacted by the subprime lending crisis than the counties comprising the San Jose metro area.

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Financial-market cycles have been around for hundreds of years, from the 1600’s Dutch tulip mania through our recent speculative frenzy in crypto-currencies. Each market cycle has different characteristics in underlying causes and effects and how it ultimately plays out in its specifics. Still, there are fundamental similarities in all of them, providing more context as to how the market works over time.

Human beings have always been worried about (or terrified of) the future, and we have constantly attempted to predict what it holds. However, whether using priests, oracles, astrologers, economists, analysts or media pundits, we show no aptitude as a species for having the ability to do so with any accuracy. In 2012, a Nobel-Prize-winning economist, famous for housing market analysis, said that the U.S. real estate market might not recover “in our lifetimes.” In hindsight, we now know that the recovery had already begun in some markets such as San Francisco. In 2015, during a period of financial market fluctuations and a slowdown in our local high-tech boom, a well-respected Bay Area economist predicted that there would soon be “blood in the streets of San Francisco.” Within cycle phases, there are often shorter-term periods of economic, ecological and political volatility which then pass. In 2016-2018, housing and stock markets soared higher and the high-tech boom strengthened again.

Our smartest experts can’t get it right, much less the thousands of glib, confident forecasts by utterly unqualified individuals reported on in the media every month. We can’t even remember the mistakes of the recent past – one reason why we don’t seem to be able to escape the curse of recurring cycles – much less foretell what’s going to happen tomorrow. Which leads to the next point.

It is extremely difficult to predict when different parts of a cycle will begin or end. There is no rule regarding how long the different parts of a market cycle will last. Boom times, even periods of “irrational exuberance,” can go on much longer than expected, or get second winds, with huge jumps in values. On the other hand, negative shocks can appear with startling suddenness out of nowhere, often triggered by unexpected economic, political or even ecological events that hammer confidence, adversely affect a wide variety of market dominos, and then balloon into periods of decline and stagnation. These negative adjustments can be in the nature of a bubble popping, the slow deflation of a punctured tire, or some combination of the two.

Going back many decades, all the major Bay Area recessions have been tied to national or international economic crises. Considering the fundamental strengths of the local economy, absent a major natural disaster, it is unlikely that a major downturn would occur due simply to local issues. However, local issues can exacerbate a cycle: The 1989 earthquake intensified the effects of the national recession in the early 1990’s; our greater exposure to dotcom businesses produced a spike up and down with the NASDAQ bubble & 2000-2001 crash; and our current high-tech boom poured fuel on our up-cycle during the current recovery.

All bubbles are ultimately based on irrational exuberance, runaway greed, criminal behavior, or all three mashed up together. Whether exemplified by junk bonds, stock market hysteria, gorging on debt, a corporate Ponzi-scheme mentality, an abandonment of reasonable risk assessment, and/or incomprehensible and dishonest financial engineering, the bubble is relentlessly pumped bigger and tighter.

However, the 2008 crash was abnormal in its scale, and much greater than other downturns going back to the Great Depression. The 2005-2007 bubble was fueled by home buying and refinancing with exorbitant, unaffordable levels of debt, promoted by predatory lending practices such as deceptive teaser rates, no-down-payment loans and an abysmal decline in underwriting standards. The market adjustments of the early 1990’s and early-2000’s saw declines in Bay Area home values in the range of 10% to 11%, as compared to the terrible 2008 – 2011 declines of 20% to 60%. (Bay Area prices are now above their 2007 peaks.)

Whatever the phase of the cycle, many people think it will last forever. Going up: “The world is different now, profits don’t matter, the rules don’t apply anymore, and there’s no reason why the upward trend can’t continue indefinitely.” Well, it turns out that the rules do still apply, and up-cycles always end sometime. And when the market turns: “Homeownership has always been a terrible investment and the market will not recover for decades.” But the economy mends, the population grows, people start families, inflation accumulates over the years, and the repressed demand of those who want to own their own homes builds up. In the early eighties, mid-nineties and in 2012, after about 4 years of a recessionary housing market, this repressed demand jumped back in – or “exploded” might be a better description – and home prices started to rise again. The nature of cycles is to keep turning.

As long as one doesn’t have to sell during a down cycle, Bay Area homeownership has almost always been a good or even spectacular investment (though admittedly if one does have to sell at the bottom of the market, the results can be quite painful). This is due to the ability to finance one’s purchase (and refinance when rates drop), certain tax benefits, the gradual pay-off of the mortgage (the “forced savings” effect), inflation, and long-term demographic and appreciation trends.

The best way to overcome cycles is to buy a home for the longer term, one whose monthly cost is readily affordable for you now, ideally using a long-term, fixed-rate loan (refinancing to lower rates when that option opens), while keeping an adequate financial reserve for emergencies – and then resisting the urge to use one’s home as an ATM during times of significant appreciation. If one keeps to those rules, then it is usually true, quoting a NYT editorial, “Renting can make sense as a lifestyle choice… As a means to building wealth, however, there is no practical substitute for homeownership.”

————

Market Changes & Home-Price Segments

The next chart, also based on S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Home Price index data, illustrates an important point about the last market bubble and crash: Different price segments experienced bubbles and crashes of vastly different magnitudes, mostly due to each segment’s exposure to predatory subrprime lending practices and the foreclosure crisis that followed. It was the lowest price segment that was most drastically affected by subprime lending: The blue line reveals its vastly bigger bubble and commensurately enormous crash. All Case-Shiller numbers refer to a January 2000 value for any home of “100.” Thus a reading of 250 signifies appreciation of 150% since Jan. 2000.

The 2008 crash was an anomaly caused by the fact that tens of millions of Americans bought and refinanced homes with loans they could not afford on day one. Happily, underwriting standards have recovered from the abysmal standards of the subprime bubble. That and low-interest rates, so far, have kept mortgage debt well out of the danger zone.

It’s also interesting to note on this chart that when the dotcom bubble popped, only the higher-price home segment was significantly affected (and that relatively briefly), because more affluent households have more assets invested in financial markets, and follow those changes most closely.

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The Confluence of Economic Indicators

The 3 charts below show how real estate market cycles generally move in sync with other economic indicators such as – using 3 examples – financial markets, employment and consumer confidence. The S&P 500 chart goes through the end of 2019 and does not reflect the crazed volatility created by the coronavirus situation.

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New Case-Shiller Index Report – for SF Metro Area

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The CoreLogic S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index does not evaluate median sales price changes, but employs its own proprietary algorithm to measure home price appreciation over time. Since its indices cover large areas – for example, the San Francisco Metro Area is comprised of 5 counties – which themselves contain communities of widely varying home values, the C-S chart numbers do not refer to specific prices, but instead reflect prices as compared to those prevailing in January 2000, which are all designated as having a consistent value of 100. A reading of 250 signifies that home prices have appreciated 150% above the price prevailing in January 2000.

Case-Shiller divides all the house sales into thirds, or tiers: The third of sales with the lowest prices is the low-price tier; the third of sales with the highest sales prices is the high-price tier; and the third in between is the mid-price. The price ranges of these tiers change as the market changes. The 3 price tiers experienced dramatically different bubbles, crashes and recoveries over the past 18+ years, to a large degree determined by how badly the tier was affected by the subprime financing crisis. The low price tier was worst affected – huge bubble, huge crash, most dramatic recovery – and the high-price least affected (but still significantly affected).

Most house sales in expensive counties such as San Francisco, Marin and San Mateo, as well as affluent communities in other Bay Area counties are in the “high price tier”, and many would qualify for an “ultra-high-price tier,” if such existed. All counties, to varying degrees, have sales in all 3 price tiers.

The Index is published 2 months after the month delineated – the September 2019 index was released 11/26/19 – reflects a 3-month rolling calculation, and one month’s sales generally reflect accepted-offer activity in the previous month. The Index is looking into a rear-view mirror at the market 3 to 5 months ago: The Sept. 2019 reading, released in late November , mostly reflects market conditions in June – August 2019.

The 5 counties in our Case-Shiller Metro Statistical Area are San Francisco, Marin, San Mateo, Alameda and Contra Costa: Alameda and Contra Costa are by far the largest markets; SF itself comprises only about 7% of house sales in the metro area. We believe the Index generally applies to other Bay Area counties, such as Sonoma and Santa Clara, though those 2 have had somewhat softer markets over the past year. There are hundreds of unique real estate markets in such a broad region, with different dynamics, moving at varying speeds, sometimes in different directions. How the C-S Index applies to any particular property is impossible to know without a specific comparative market analysis.

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Data courtesy of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, CoreLogic S&P/Case-Shiller:

More information: https://us.spindices.com/index-family/real-estate/sp-corelogic-case-shiller

 

 

Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California, DRE 01527235. Equal Housing Opportunity. This report has been prepared solely for information purposes. The information herein is based on or derived from information generally available to the public and/or from sources believed to be reliable. No representation or warranty can be given with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the information. Compass disclaims any and all liability relating to this report, including without limitation any express or implied representations or warranties for statements contained in, and omissions from, the report. Nothing contained herein is intended to be or should be read as any regulatory, legal, tax, accounting or other advice and Compass does not provide such advice. All opinions are subject to change without notice. Compass makes no representation regarding the accuracy of any statements regarding any references to the laws, statutes or regulations of any state are those of the author(s). Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

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FR-After

The Dangers of Overpricing in the San Mateo County Real Estate Market

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While overpricing almost always has negative ramifications for sellers (lower sales prices than if priced correctly to begin with), it can provide opportunities for buyers who carefully track price reductions and react accordingly. Such buyers will typically face less competition from other buyers – often no competition, which eliminates any need for overbidding – and allows for more aggressive negotiation of the purchase price. Across Bay Area markets, price reduced properties consistently sell for lower average dollar per square foot values than homes that sell quickly.

The Truth about Home Pricing

Ironically, instead of getting more money… [Over-pricing] usually stigmatizes a property and reduces the eventual sale price to less than it would have been with more realistic pricing.”

-House Selling for Dummies

Fair market value is that price a qualified, reasonably knowledgeable buyer is willing to pay, which a seller, not under duress, is willing to accept after the home has been properly exposed to the market.

Neither agents nor sellers determine market value: Only the market – willing and able buyers — determines market value. Agent and seller work together to create a plan – which includes pricing, preparation and marketing — to maximize the conditions that reliably achieve the highest possible sales price.

The vast majority of buyers will not make offers on homes they consider significantly overpriced. Either they don’t want to waste their time, or are uncomfortable with possibly “offending” the seller. In any case, they simply move on to other listings.

Well-priced homes create a sense of urgency in the buyer/broker communities to act quickly with strong, clean offers, and often lead to competitive bidding between buyers – which is the most likely way to increase sales price.

Overpricing wastes the optimum moment of buyer and broker attention: when it first comes on the market. This moment cannot be recaptured.

Overpriced homes kill any sense of buyer urgency and take much longer to sell, which then significantly reduces value in buyers’ minds: “There must be something wrong with it if it hasn’t sold by now.” It almost always eliminates the possibility of competitive bidding.

Overpricing helps sell competitive properties, since they stand out as good values in comparison.

If a listing has inadvertently been overpriced, the sooner it is recognized as such and the price reduced, the smaller the negative impact. Price reductions must be big enough to regain the attention of buyers and their agents – typically, at least 5%.

In order to win the listing, some agents suggest a list price considerably higher than what they believe market conditions and comparable sales justify—because they believe this is what the seller wants to hear. This is called “buying the listing” and is a violation of the fiduciary duty of honesty that an agent owes their client.

  • Price it right to begin
  • Prepare the home to show in its best possible
  • Implement the most comprehensive marketing plan
  • Hire an agent who knows how to negotiate effectively on your behalf, and manage the disclosure and due diligence

The difference can add up to tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.

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Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California, DRE 01527235. Equal Housing Opportunity. This report has been prepared solely for information purposes. The information herein is based on or derived from information generally available to the public and/or from sources believed to be reliable. No representation or warranty can be given with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the information. Compass disclaims any and all liability relating to this report, including without limitation any express or implied representations or warranties for statements contained in, and omissions from, the report. Nothing contained herein is intended to be or should be read as any regulatory, legal, tax, accounting or other advice and Compass does not provide such advice. All opinions are subject to change without notice. Compass makes no representation regarding the accuracy of any statements regarding any references to the laws, statutes or regulations of any state are those of the author(s). Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

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Looking For A Flip-Worthy House? Must-Haves For Every Room

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When looking for a return on your investment, keep these things in mind as you scour the market.

While location is key in almost any real estate transaction, that’s not all you should consider when purchasing a property you intend to “flip.” You need to examine the home room by room, looking for potential ways to make it marketable. “Flipping real estate is all about minimizing risk,” says Robin Mathis, a settlement attorney in Fairfax, VA, who flips homes with her husband, Mike Irvin. “It’s not something to go into lightly.” With that in mind, here are some details to mull over before you buy.

Basement and attic: All systems go

Just about every house-flip TV show will tell you that updated bathrooms and kitchens sell houses, but the less glamorous areas are just as important. “Things like electrical, plumbing, HVAC, foundation, roof, windows … these are the things that are more costly to fix or replace,” says Michael Hyne, who has flipped homes for sale in New Haven, CT. If most of these items aren’t in good condition, move on. “Nobody wants to buy a house with a crumbling foundation, even if [it] does have a brand-new kitchen,” he says.

Dining room: Versatility (and utility) is important

It’s a space that will probably be used frequently. You’ll want to have the option to customize it to your clientele. “It helps to know what kinds of families live in the area so that you can tailor your future renovations to your potential buyers,” says Hyne. “You wouldn’t want to do a modern-style renovation and then realize your clients are elderly people looking for a more traditional setup.”

Kitchen: Dream big (but make sure your plan is feasible)

For flips, the kitchen is definitely the heart of the home. Mathis often takes a contractor or home inspector with her to tour properties to make sure her ideas are actually doable. “Non-load-bearing walls are easier and less expensive to remove,” says Hyne, so think about where it’s feasible to knock them out to make a space look and feel more open. Also, consider what can be saved or reused. After all, it’s much more cost-effective to refinish or repaint kitchen cabinets than to replace them.

Bathrooms: Can you add or enlarge them?

“Most people want at least one and a half bathrooms, so think about where you can add one, even if it’s only a half-bath on the main floor,” says Hyne. Keep in mind that freshening up existing bathrooms doesn’t have to be costly. Simply changing the fixtures or other small elements may be all you need. “You can get a brand-new toilet for around $150, and it makes a huge difference,” says Mathis.

Living spaces: What updates and embellishments can be added?

Finishing touches and small updates in foyers, dens, or living rooms can create clean lines (think moldings, light fixtures, and other details), and you may be able to do them inexpensively. “Take a look at what they’re doing in million-dollar homes and then figure out how you can duplicate that in your price range,” says Irvin. He also advises thinking about ways you can make a home unique, which is especially important if it’s in a development where most of the homes have a similar layout.

Living room: Look for hardwood floors

“Refinishing existing flooring is about a third of the cost of installing new,” says Hyne. So, don’t be afraid to peek under that carpet to see what magic (or deflating dose of reality) lies beneath. Use this same logic when looking at the home’s existing finishes. Can dated wallpaper be removed? Will a new coat of paint be a huge improvement? Neutral choices are better, as they allow the home to appeal to a larger pool of buyers.

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2016 Year-End Report: What Homeowners Need to Know for 2017

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Dear Neighbor,

 

As Redwood Shores homeowners, there are local, national, and global forces affecting our real estate market.

In 2016, the market showed that strong and steady wins the race. Values climbed at a healthy rate, and mortgage rates hit historic lows.

Median sale price is up 5.8% compared to 2015, a much more stable increase than what we saw even three years ago. Average days on market are also up, which is to be expected. Some buyers have been priced out of the market, while others are starting to experience “buyer fatigue” after submitting multiple offers.

Despite cooling off from the astronomical growth we saw for a number of years, the market is still quite strong.

What can we expect in 2017? See my analysis below.

If you are thinking about selling your home in the next 12 months, call me today for your strategic marketing consultation ==> 650-773-2226

We will cover your goals, and my unique approach to getting you the highest possible price in the fewest days on market.

To your success in 2017!

 


 

Looking Ahead:

The 2017 Short List

 

Especially as homeowners on the SF Peninsula, there are local, national, and global forces affecting our real estate market.

 

Here are the top five things we will be watching this year:

 

 

» Peninsula home values continue to rise.

 

Home values have increased dramatically since the 2007-2008 financial crisis, and we have already surpassed the previous high point.

While some predicted the “bubble” could pop, our market has essentially stabilized. We are still seeing gains in home value, without the astronomical, explosive growth we saw even just a few years ago.

There are pockets within the Peninsula that were once comparatively bargains that are quickly becoming up-and-coming areas as demand increases. This is an expected outcome when space is limited.

As a homeowner looking to sell, your top priority is working with an agent who can speak to more than just your home’s ideal list price. Look for an agent who understands market trends as a whole.

Want my tips on selling for the highest possible price?

Get my complete report on the

11 proven strategies for sellers on the SF Mid-Peninsula ==>

[leadpages_leadbox leadbox_id=145618346639c5] [/leadpages_leadbox]

» Mortgage rates are on a steep climb.

 

As was hotly anticipated, the Federal Reserve meeting in mid-December 2016 confirmed my predictions—mortgage rates are on the rise.

The good news is that we were starting from nearly the historical lowest-ever mortgage rates. That makes this pill an easier one to swallow.

What do higher interest rates mean for a typical Redwood Shores real estate transaction?

==> For buyers, the bottom line is that increased mortgage rates translate to higher monthly payments.

If you are considering buying a Redwood Shores home in 2017, the time to act is now. Find an educated agent who can speak to micro- and macro-level economic trends, get pre-qualified with a lender, and start your home search in the first quarter.

==> For sellers, increasing mortgage rates mean a few things.

Demand in Redwood Shores, for the foreseeable future, will always remain on the higher side. That said, buyer fatigue is real and will start to play out in pockets, leading to a decrease in demand.

Decreased demand means reduced traffic through open houses, fewer offers, and ultimately, a lower sale price.

If you’re considering selling your home in 2017, the time to sell is now. Find an educated, connected agent and start the preparation process to get your home on the market and maximize your sale price.

 

» Peninsula real estate solutions.

 

California boasts a top worldwide economy ranked among entire nations, in large part thanks to the boon of development in Silicon Valley.

From already-established hi-tech firms to startups getting a toe hold, the Peninsula attracts talent from around the globe. Add our amazing climate, wonderful cultural experiences and beautiful scenery, and it’s no wonder so many people want to call the area home.

With increasing populations, space comes at a premium, contributing to rising real estate costs.

In an effort to manage the situation, companies like Facebook are working on housing solutions.

We will be paying close attention to legislation and development that works to address the Peninsula’s “space” problem in the coming years.

 

» Why you need to care about China’s GDP and LTD ratio.

 

In our local market, international buyers from China comprise a significant percentage of transactions.

The reason for this influx of international all-cash buyers over the past 5 years?

China’s banks do not have the same regulations banks in the U.S. do.

As China’s GDP has experienced fluctuations—ironically caused in part due to including real estate in their GDP calculations—banks have had a harder time regulating their loan-to-deposit ratio.

Banks in China have, in some cases, been giving out more loans than they have in deposits. This means that if borrowers default on the loans, the banks can easily fail—meaning the affluent citizens who comprise the majority of the deposits in the bank would lose their assets.

Savvy Chinese investors have been flocking to the U.S. to diversify their financial portfolio.

Another factor to consider is that the U.S. owes China over a trillion dollars, an additional layer in this intricate situation.

These are topics to which we will be paying close attention in 2017, especially given the changes in administration.

 

» Incoming administration changes—and SF Peninsula real estate.

 

Politics aside, the incoming administration does carry a high potential for changes that will affect real estate across the nation.

One key topic? We have heard swirlings of rumors that the Dodd-Frank Act is on the chopping block.

Should a repeal or revision come to pass, that has the potential to allow banks to give mortgages to underqualified borrowers as they did back in the early aughts—which was no small contribution to the recession.

As reported by the Case-Shiller Index, home values have only just recovered from the 2007-2008 financial crisis, the worst since The Great Depression. In our area, values have more than recovered, and have maintained a more stable growth pattern over the past couple years.

Combined with changes in Congress, the new Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of Housing carry the potential to have great sway in the U.S. housing market as a whole.

This is something we will be keeping a close eye on.

» 2017 will be a “deciding year” of sorts. There is potential for some big changes in the economy and in real estate, especially on a national and global level.

 

 
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