Every Day Is A Good Day In The South Bay In LA

Every Day Is A Good Day In The South Bay In LA
Hermosa Beach

Monday, April 28, 2008

March 2008 Median Home Prices

The price statistics are derived from all types of home sales -- new and existing, condos and single-family. See note below table.

County/City/Area

Mar-08

Mar-07

Y-T-Y % Change

Southwest Los Angeles Selected Areas




Beach Cities

$1,112,500.00

$1,037,500.00

7.2%

South Bay

$599,500.00

$655,000.00

-8.5%

Palos Verdes Peninsula Area

$1,225,000.00

$1,237,500.00

-1.0%


Median home prices contained in this chart were generated from DataQuick Information Systems. The price statistics are derived from all types of home sales -- new and existing, condos and single-family. Movements in sales prices should not be interpreted as changes in the cost of a standard home. Median prices can be influenced by changes in cost, as well as changes in the characteristics and size of homes sold. Due to the low sales volume in some cities or areas, median price changes may exhibit unusual fluctuation. N.A. = Not available.


Friday, April 25, 2008

South Bay home price slide continues

By Muhammed El-Hasan, Staff Writer

The South Bay housing market continued its skid in March, with every local city and community cited in a new report seeing a drop in median home price.

The South Bay, excluding the Palos Verdes Peninsula, experienced an 8.5 percent year-over-year drop in median home price to $599,500 in March, the Los Angeles-based California Association of Realtors reported Friday.

The Hill saw a drop of 1percent to $1,225,000 in March.

The median price refers to the middle figure where half of homes sold for more and half for less.

Housing prices have been dropping statewide and across the nation as fewer buyers are able to qualify for home loans amid a tightening of standards and a souring economy.

"It hasn't been this tough in the South Bay for a while," said Adolph James, a Realtor with Shorewood Realtors in Manhattan Beach.

James said he recently took a "knockout listing" in Rancho Palos Verdes off the market after about four months because the seller gave up.

"The owner was getting tired of showing it," James said.

The South Bay beat Los Angeles County, which posted an 18.5 percent drop in the median home price in March.

Most South Bay cities cited in the report posted double-digit losses.

Hawthorne's median home price plunged 27.4 percent to $429,500 in March. Carson's median dropped 16.6 percent to $417,000.

San Pedro, Inglewood and Torrance also fell by double digits. Torrance


saw a drop of 10.6percent to $532,500.

Because of the relatively small number of homes sold during a single month in any individual South Bay city, the median price can skew up or down depending on the types of homes selling in that period.

Last month, Redondo Beach was the only South Bay city in the report to post a tiny drop in the median price, down a mere 0.8 percent to $774,000.

In addition, Redondo Beach was ninth in the report's top-10 list of the highest-priced California communities for March, ahead of San Francisco.

"I can believe it," James said. "I think one of the things south Redondo has had through the years is it's almost been overlooked. South Redondo, near the Riviera Village, has just become really a charming area. And people like it because there's a lot of restaurants and it's come into its own. And it's become pretty pricey."

Redondo Beach was helped in its top-10 standing by Manhattan Beach and individual cities on The Hill, none of which was cited in the report. A city must have at least 30 home sales in a month to be cited.

The housing market has been so slow that many South Bay cities, including Gardena and Lawndale, cannot make the 30-sale-minimum cutoff. However, these cities' home sales are included in the regional median figures such as those for the county, South Bay or Palos Verdes Peninsula.

muhammed.el-hasan@dailybreeze.com


Friday, April 18, 2008

Prices Are Falling But Not As Much In The South Bay

Area home sales fall - prices dip

By Muhammed El-Hasan, Staff Writer

March sales of homes in much of the South Bay was less than half of what it was a year ago, a sign of the continued weakness in the real estate market, according to a new report.

Last month, 149 single-family homes sold - a drop of 52 percent - and 84 condominium and town homes changed hands, representing a fall of 64 percent, according to the report released Friday by the South Bay Association of Realtors.

The Realtors' report excluded the Palos Verdes Peninsula, Inglewood and Lennox, three areas the group says follow different market dynamics than the rest of the South Bay.

The median price of a South Bay single-family home sold in March was $640,000, down 8.4 percent compared with the same month last year, the report says.

(The median represents the middle figure where half of homes sold for more and half for less.)

The median price of a condominium or town house sold last month was $534,280, a drop of 6.3 percent.

By comparison, the median home price in Los Angeles County was down 18.5 percent in March, according to DataQuick, a San Diego-based firm that compiles real estate statistics. Southern California's median home price fell 24 percent in March.

"Twenty-four percent is nowhere near a reality in our market," said Carol Olney, the association's president.

"We're in single digits."

Regarding the steep drop in the number of homes sold, Olney said, the volume is the disturbing thing.


It is unclear how the South Bay median price would have fared if the Peninsula, Inglewood and Lennox were included in the calculations, or if condos and town houses were grouped with single-family homes.

"We have a sense that Inglewood tends to trend more to South Los Angeles ... and Palos Verdes is a uniquely different dynamic as well," said David Kissinger, the group's director of government affairs.

Olney added that The Hill has its own Realtor association, "so I really shouldn't speak for them."

In addition to the median price, the South Bay Realtors report also included average sales prices.

The average price of single-family homes sold in March was $924,215, which was down just 0.7 percent compared to a year earlier.

The average price for condos and town houses was $614,109, down only 3.6 percent.

For both categories, the average sales price was much higher than the median, while the drop in average price was much milder than for the median.

The median is considered a more accurate measure of home prices, especially when representing a market with widely varying home values, said Robert Kleinhenz, deputy chief economist at the Los Angeles-based California Association of Realtors.

"We rely on the median because we know there's a mix of homes out there. And there are some high-end homes out there that can skew the average up," Kleinhenz said.

That was the point of including the average, Olney explained, to show that even with a down market, sales of high-end homes are strong enough to skew the average upward.

"The average shows you that the high end is still selling," Olney said.

"Those who have money are spending it. Those who are working stiffs are hit. The middle class gets hit every time."

muhammed.el-hasan@dailybreeze.com

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Beach Cities Homes Holding Their Value

REAL ESTATE
Coastal bargains are to be had amid the housing downturn, but the properties are holding their value better than homes inland.
By Ronald D. White, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 8, 2008
The housing market's wipeout means there are deals to be found, even at the beach. ¶ Grant Niman landed his dream home in Hermosa Beach after a careful six-month search. The 46-year-old certified public accountant is in escrow on a three-story, four-bedroom home within four blocks of the sand. The sale price came in just under $1.4 million. Comparable houses near Niman's pick were selling for as much as $200,000 higher in December. ¶ "It was an incredibly good deal. There were five serious inquiries on the home and at least two other offers. I bought it the second day it was on the market," said Niman, who can't wait to sit in his living room and "watch the sun go down over the ocean." ¶ Although home prices at the beach have so far avoided the high platform dive occurring in many areas of Southern California, they have taken a dip.

In February, the average of median sale prices in 18 beachside ZIP Codes, including parts of Santa Monica, Manhattan Beach and Long Beach, was $1.08 million, down nearly 8.9% from August and 10.2% from February 2007, according to monthly sales data from DataQuick Information Systems. The 18 ZIP Codes were selected by The Times for relative affordability, excluding such spend-happy areas as Malibu, Palos Verdes and Newport Beach.

The price slip is far shallower than in the worst slump-affected parts of San Bernardino and Riverside counties, were homes sold in February for half of what they brought before the housing decline, DataQuick statistics show.

Some of the biggest seaside bargains, real estate agents said, were in Huntington Beach's three coastal ZIP Codes. Median prices peaked at $785,000 to $1.2 million in 2007, but the range had declined to $635,000 to $827,000 in February.

In eight beach ZIP Codes, homes were selling for less in February than a year earlier. An additional seven ZIP Codes showed price increases over the year.

Newspaper ads for beach-area houses are beginning to echo those for properties farther inland, with headlines such as "$$ PRICE REDUCTION!!" and "BEACH HOME STEAL!"

"A year ago, bidding wars were the norm," said Denise X. Lavell, who runs Beach Girl Realty. "You'd have a buyer out there the day the property was listed. Now, people are taking a month or two months to decide."

Javier and Marianne Cano recently spent nearly $1.9 million for a two-story, five-bedroom Spanish-style house less than a quarter of a mile from the ocean in Redondo Beach. Six months earlier, the Canos would have had to pay about $2 million to $2.1 million, based on comparable home sales at the time.

"We got a little bit off the asking price, but we thought it was priced pretty reasonably in the first place," said Javier Cano, a 50-year-old hotel industry executive who transferred to Southern California from the Hawaiian island of Maui.

Still, most looking for beach bargains are in for a bit of sticker shock.

Buyers "want to believe the sky is falling," said Tracey Nesicolaci, a Shorewood Realtors agent. "This is a buyer's market, but in their minds they think they ought to be able to buy a 3,500-square-foot to 4,200-square-foot beach house for a lot less than the listed price. They're surprised that a small starter home in Manhattan Beach still costs $850,000."

There are several reasons home prices in the beach cities haven't fallen as much as in some other spots. Fewer sub-prime loans were made in the coastal areas, where the buyers tended to have less trouble qualifying for good fixed-rate loans, said Stuart Gabriel, a finance professor and director of the Ziman Center for Real Estate at UCLA.

"The sub-prime problems are focused on lower-income and lower-credit borrowers who were stretching to afford homes. Those areas are very visibly and geographically concentrated in the interior parts of the state," Gabriel said.

Housing supply and demand also play an important role in keeping price declines in check. Beach housing supply grows slowly, Gabriel said, and demand always remains high. But inland areas saw significant overbuilding, he said, which leads to falling demand and prices.

Moreover, beach city owners aren't feeling nearly as much need to unload their homes quickly or at sharply reduced prices. The number of sales in the 18 beach ZIP Codes fell to 149 in February from 205 a year earlier.

"The individuals who had the income and wealth to own in the beach areas have not seen any significant decline in their situations," said Michael Carney, director of the Real Estate Research Council of Southern California at Cal Poly Pomona. "If the economy really starts to tank, you might find more of an impact in those areas."

Tony and Sara Romero went looking for a deal in Redondo Beach, which they assumed was the cheapest of the beach cities.

"We figured it was a perfect opportunity," said Tony Romero, a surfer and a coordinating producer for the late-night television show "Jimmy Kimmel Live." "We were hoping that the prices had gone down, but you just don't see it happening very much."

The Romeros ended up spending $600,000 for a Torrance house in foreclosure that had been listed at $640,000. The house is two miles from the water but twice as large as anything they could find closer to the ocean. Similar homes in the area sold for $700,000 to $725,000 six months before, said Nesicolaci, their real estate agent.

The Romeros say they are thrilled with their home purchase, even though it is farther inland than they had hoped. The one-story, ranch-style home has two bedrooms, a big kitchen, a formal dining room and a family room. It's still close enough to the water for Tony to grab one of his three surfboards and catch a wave before heading off to work.

And from time to time, he said, "we even get a beach breeze."

ron.white@latimes.com