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Posts Tagged ‘Sacramento county’

California Foreclosure Crisis Subsides

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

TOP 50 PRODUCING TEAMS IN THE NATION…. WE MADE THE LIST!!!

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

 For the first quarter we were ranked in the top 50 nationwide. We came in at #28 and are very excited. We went down a couple of spots from Jan-Feb, so we are pushing to keep that ranking. We have one of the hardest working teams out in the market place!!! Thank you to all of our Buyers, Sellers, and Asset Managers who trusted us!! We are here to serve!!!

Outfront A publication of Keller Williams Realty, Inc.

TOP 50 PRODUCING TEAMS IN THE NATION

Sacramento April home sales prices increase from year earlier

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Lucky folks with no mortgages…wow can it be true?

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Day in and out we hear about the profound number of capital-area residents struggling with mortgages and the thousands who owe more on their home loan than their houses are worth.

There’s another crowd without such worries. They have paid off their loans.

The 

Nationally, where owning a house is cheaper, 31.6 percent of owner- occupiers have paid off their mortgages, the bureau reports.

The six-county capital area, incidentally, is home now to almost 1 million single-family houses, condos, apartments and townhouses. The newest 2008 American FactFinder puts the region’s residential tally at 990,187.

U.S. Census Bureau estimates 23.5 percent of homes occupied by their owners in El Dorado,Placer, Sacramento, Sutter, Yolo and Yuba counties are free and clear of mortgages. That’s about the state average. No more counting down years, and no sleepless nights.

Home sales, prices fell last month in Sacramento County

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Sales and sale prices of existing single-family homes were down in September in Sacramento County and West Sacramento,

The Sacramento Association of Realtors reports that 1,631 single-family homes were sold last month, down 3.1 percent from 1,683 homes sold in August. The September number is a decrease of 19.3 percent from September of 2008, when 2,020 homes were sold.

The median price for existing single-family homes sold in September was $183,000, a decrease of 3.7 percent from the median of $190,000 in August, and down 6.1 percent from $194,950 in September 2008.

Condominium sales were up slightly from last September. A total of 115 condos were sold in Sacramento County and West Sacramento last month, up 5.5 percent from September 2008, when 109 condos were sold. In August, however, 118 condos were sold, 2.5 percent more than in September.

The median sale price of a condo in September was $90,000, down 3.5 percent from $93,300 in August and 19.6 percent from $112,000 last September.

Expected Wave of Sacramento Foreclosures Only a Trickle

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

 

SACRAMENTO, CA – Sacramento’s home prices are projected to drop 15.7 percent for the year, but that’s good news. Other counties are expected to fall 19 percent to 20 percent.

Much of Sacramento’s good fortune is due to the lack of foreclosures actually hitting the market. Banks are holding on to thousands of foreclosed properties in the Sacramento region. But, they are coming on the market in dribbles. So slowly, they are snatched up in a few days. That kind of demand is pushing up the price of homes that are $300,000 and under.

What was expected to be a flood of foreclosures is turning out to be a trickle. Michael Lyon of Lyon Real Estate agreed.

“Now that we’ve talked to the banks and found out what’s going on, they don’t have the personnel to do the processing to get it out,” Lyon said.

Lyon said the federal government has put heavy restrictions on banks that took bailout money when it comes to following through on foreclosures.

“There’s too much of a bureaucratic mess to really throw these things out on the streets so they’re coming in at a rather absorbable rate, which is keeping that low end, under $300,000,” said Lyon. “It’s becoming a seller’s market. I didn’t think I would be saying this for years.”

Lyon predicts that instead of seeing a wave of foreclosures sweep in over the next few months, it will likely now be a steady stream over the next few years.

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Layoffs, buyouts spur many to rethink and retrain

Monday, October 5th, 2009

7B4HARNUMBIZ

Jason Harnum of Roseville, shown above with his cat Charley, started a pet ID business after he lost his job as a mortgage broker. His company, Pet ID for Me, lets pet owners create ID tags online. The tags look like driver’s licenses, top, and owners can add their pet’s name, breed, color, contact information and photo.

Editor’s note: This one in an occasional series of stories about how Sacramento area workers are reinventing their careers during a period of high unemployment.

Maybe you’ve been laid off, accepted a buyout or taken early retirement and now are thinking about your next step.

Whether it’s a job-training program, a return to college or a venture into a small business or franchise, today’s rugged economy has led many to reconsider their career path.

At the Sacramento Employment and Training Agency, more than 50,000 people visit its 12 Sacramento Works career centers each year seeking résumé assistance and career counseling, said Robin Purdy, SETA’s deputy director of work force development.

Nearly 15,000 job seekers sought the centers’ help in the past three months alone – a 9 percent increase from the same three-month period last year, Purdy said. Many are looking for ways to retrain.

“We are seeing more and more people interested in improving their skills and looking for occupational skills training” in burgeoning fields such as health care and careers tied to green technologies, Purdy said.

Experienced workers are also retooling, re-entering the campus and the workplace. The numbers of students 59 and older enrolled at California State University has steadily grown over the past five years.

In fall 2004 semester, 1,677 students 59 and older were enrolled at CSU campuses. By fall 2008, the number had climbed to 2,117 – 182 of those at Sacramento State – with the majority in graduate studies.

For some seniors, the situation is more dire. They’ve absorbed a late-career layoff or buyout or have watched their 401(k) retirement funds disappear. They’ve forestalled retirement or have been forced to return to the job market.

“We’re seeing a lot of skilled people coming back to the work force,” said Bob Rice, a project director for AARP Foundation’s WorkSearch program in Sacramento, which helps mature workers re-enter the workplace. Officials estimate registration in the program is up 40 percent from the same time last year.

“Frustration is showing up with a lot of the people we work with,” Rice said. “They’re running out of money, they’re losing their house. There’s a lot of desperate people out there.”

At Los Rios Community College District, enrollment this fall at the four-campus district has swelled by 5,000 students from fall 2008, and classrooms are stretched to the limit.

Though officials say the reasons for the spike vary widely, among the incoming students are job seekers and employees squeezing into classes to boost their skills or jump-start their chances on the open market.

“We do have job seekers returning to our colleges. They’re coming to us because their out of work or they’re afraid of losing their jobs,” said Susie Williams, a district associate vice chancellor.

Some 70 El Dorado County residents signed on in June to a program for job seekers organized by Green Valley Community Church in Placerville. After the eight-week program ended recently, five came out of the program with jobs, said volunteer instructor Michael Dugan.

“We wish the numbers were higher,” he said, but in today’s economy, “we’re delighted that anyone’s getting jobs.”

Another 100 job seekers are signed up for the current eight-week module.

In a Sacramento-area market where the jobless rate sits at 12 percent, more people are looking for ways to stay afloat or chart their own destiny.

Now is the time, AARP’s Rice said.

“When you’re laid off and that is a gap in your work life, it gives you a chance to figure out what you want to do.”

Credit unions report rising mortgage action

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

California credit unions originated more than 12,500 primary mortgages � including purchases and refinances � in the second quarter of 2009, the highest since the second quarter of 2004 and almost 2,000 more than in the first quarter, according to the California Credit Union League.

CCUL, which is headquartered in Ontario and has an office in Sacramento, said California credit unions originated more than $7.3 billion in loans in the second quarter, up from $7.1 billion in this year’s first quarter.

The league also noted that Sacramento County credit unions saw money market shares gain more than $207 million, or 7.8 percent, in the second quarter, while regular savings and checking accounts had gains of less than 1 percent.

Lennar falls deeper into red

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Signs that the housing market is gaining traction have yet to pull Lennar Corp., one of the nation’s largest homebuilders, out of the red.

The Miami-based homebuilder (NYSE: LEN and NYSE: LEN-B) said it lost $171.6 million, or 97 cents a share, on revenue of $720.7 million for the third quarter ended Aug. 31. A year ago, it reported a net loss of $89 million, or 56 cents a share, on revenue of $1.11 billion.

The third quarter results included write-downs totaling 76 cents a share.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected a 46-cent loss on revenue of $774 million.

Lennar was the area’s fifth-largest homebuilder in 2008, selling 277 homes in the six-county Sacramento region with a 5.7 percent market share, according to analyst Hanley Wood Market Intelligence.

Lennar president and chief executive officer Stuart Miller said the overall housing market is on the “road to recovery.”

“While high unemployment and foreclosures will continue to present challenges, consumer sentiment has significantly improved as homebuyers have recognized that the residential housing market is stabilizing,” he said.

Miller said the company’s strategy is to target first-time buyers and bargain-hunters, which are helping new home orders rise each month. New orders were still down 8 percent in the third quarter, but that decline was the smallest percentage year-over-year decline since November 2006.

“In order to capitalize on the improvement in our sales pace, we increased our home starts during the quarter, which will lead to higher deliveries in the fourth quarter,” Miller said. “We are also encouraged by the continued improvement in our cancellation rate.”

The cancellation rate dropped to 19 percent from 27 percent, gross margin on home sales shrunk to 15.6 percent ($98.9 million) from 18 percent ($179.4 million).

Third-quarter home sales revenue in the third quarter decreased 36 percent, to $635.3 million from nearly $1 billion in 2008. The drop was mostly due to a 28 percent decrease in home deliveries and a 12 percent decrease in the average sales price of homes delivered.

Year-over-year, the average sales price was down by $30,000 – to $239,000.

wow..$10M in stimulus funds for empty downtown senior high-rise

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Federal stimulus funding is bringing $10 million to restore an empty residential high-rise at 7th and I streets in downtown Sacramento.

“We were high-fiving each other. It’s not every day you get $10 million in a competitive grant project,” said Nick Chhotu, director of public housing at the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency. The money is headed toward a thorough facelift for the 12-story Riverview Apartments owned by SHRA. It’s a senior complex built in the late 1970s at 626 I St. The building has been empty two years.

Plans are to start construction late next year after getting up to $6 million more in federal funds. The building, with 108 rooms for people 62 and older, needs new windows, a new electrical system and new plumbing, a job that will run well into 2011, said Chhotu.

The Public Housing Capital funds are provided through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The agency said Sacramento’s $10 million is among the largest grants nationally, and one of two on the West Coast. The other: Seattle.

Here is the building everyone is talking about: