Entries Tagged as 'austin real estate'

Inside the Solar-Hydrogen House: No More Power Bills–Ever

Scientific American

June 19, 2008

A New Jersey resident generates and stores all the power he needs with solar panels and hydrogen

By David Biello EAST AMWELL, N.J.—Mike Strizki has not paid an electric, oil or gas bill—nor has he spent a nickel to fill up his Mercury Sable—in nearly two years. Instead, the 51-year-old civil engineer makes all the fuel he needs using a system he built in the capacious garage of his home, which employs photovoltaic (PV) panels to turn sunlight into electricity that is harnessed in turn to extract hydrogen from tap water.

Although the device cost $500,000 to construct, and it is unlikely it will ever pay off financially (even with today’s skyrocketing oil and gas prices), the civil engineer says it is priceless in terms of what it does buy: freedom from ever paying another heating or electric bill, not to mention keeping a lid on pollution, because water is its only by-product.

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Austin recession-proof?

Austin Business Journal

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Austin was named third on the Forbes.com list of the top 10 “Recession-Proof Cities” in the United States.

To create the list, the magazine looked at the 50 largest U.S. metros, examining key measures, such as unemployment data, non-farm related job growth, median home prices and data from a 2007 report, “U.S. Metro Economies: The Mortgage Crisis” by the U.S. Conference of Mayors.

At number three, Austin was right behind San Antonio, which grabbed the second spot thanks to solid employment figures and affordable home prices that continue to rise.

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Guarded Optimism

Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services

Dec 7, 2007 12:36 PM

2008 Real Estate Investment Outlook: A SPECIAL RESEARCH REPORT

Concerns about financing and a sluggish U.S. economy won’t deter commercial real estate investors.

Despite a softening economy and turmoil in the capital markets, investors continue to have confidence in the U.S. commercial real estate industry. A survey of more than 1,000 private and institutional real estate investors shows only one in five respondents believe the economy will be stronger in 2008, yet the majority want to invest more funds in the sector.

“To see that a majority of investors are still planning to increase real estate holdings and that the percentage is higher than last year is a strong validation that they are separating capital markets issues from commercial real estate fundamentals,” says Harvey Green, president and CEO of Marcus& Millichap Real Estate Investment Services.

The survey, dubbed the 2008 Real Estate Investor Outlook, was conducted jointly by National Real Estate Investor, Marcus & Millichap and Countrywide Commercial. This is the fifth year in a row this exclusive survey has been administered to U.S. real estate investors.

The survey reveals that 62 percent of respondents plan to increase allocations in real estate over the next 12 months compared to 60 percent in 2006, 69 percent in 2005 and 74 percent in 2004. Only 7 percent of real estate investors plan to decrease their investments in real estate over the next 12 months (see figure 1).

“Investors are going to invest more in real estate because pricing is more attractive and they’ll be able to get slightly higher yields,” says Chris Tokarski, managing director of Countrywide Commercial’s real estate finance group. Of the investors who plan to increase their real estate holdings, the average estimated increase is 21 percent.

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Vultures Dig into Luxury Resorts

By Matt Hudgins

Apr 16, 2008 3:25 PM

Two unconnected deals announced this month show that well-funded private developers are taking advantage of the residential slump to bag ritzy residential sites to develop and hold until the market recovers.

Luxury destination club Quintess announced a $210 million equity commitment from an unnamed investor to pursue luxury residences and residential development sites around the globe. The transaction is the largest infusion of capital announced to date for a luxury destination club, according to the Broomfield, Colo.-based company, and is a cornerstone of its 10-year financing strategy to develop the largest portfolio of luxury homes in the world.

“There are certainly a lot of distressed properties out there,” says Ben Addoms, founder and executive vice president of Quintess. “Like every other investor, you don’t want to catch a falling knife, but it’s certainly easier for us to get in on the ground floor of five-star resorts.”

In an unrelated transaction announced this month Macfarlan Capital Partners, a privately owned Dallas investment group has purchased five resort communities in three states for approximately $181 million from Centex Destination Properties, a division of publicly traded Centex Homes (NYSE: CTX). When fully developed, the acquired portfolio will be worth about $1 billion, estimates Dean Macfarlan, founder and CEO of Macfarlan Capital Partners.

“We are getting tremendous value, irreplaceable locations and the opportunity to build a great brand,” Mcfarlan says. The assets are being re-branded under the name TerraMesa Resorts and the new owner has hired 135 former employees of Centex Hospitality Group and Centex Destination Properties to operate the company. Dallas-based Centex has sold nearly 30% of its resort and second-home communities, or five of 17 resorts, to Macfarlan.

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Numbers Pop Housing Bubble Talk

News Release No. 53, August 2005
By Ellissa Brewster

COLLEGE STATION, Texas – Is there a housing price bubble in Texas that is about to burst? Researchers at the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University are standing by the position they took a few years ago – no bubble here. A new study by a Center researcher has the numbers to back them up.

While the housing appreciation bubble may burst in some markets in the country, Texans need not worry.

Homeowners have seen their property grow in value, but not to the extreme, and Center researchers continue to say homeowners and real estate professionals need not worry about the bottom falling out. A worst case scenario would be a flattening out of home prices.

From 1999 to 2004, the average price of existing homes sold in Texas rose 24 percent to $164,400, and the median price rose 28 percent to $129,600.

Dr. M.A. Anari, a research economist with the Center, devised two measures to help determine if Texas home prices were dangerously high. These ratios are similar to the price-to-earnings ratios of stocks, which investors use to determine if a stock is overpriced.

Anari studied home price-to-rent ratios in Texas markets and in other areas of the country. These were compared to the growth rate of home prices. He found that there is a maximum home price-to-rent ratio that depends on the local economy. When this number is exceeded, home prices generally fall.

Current home price-to-rent ratios for all Texas metro areas are below the maximum ratios. So the risk of a price bubble in the state’s residential market is very low.

For example, if the price-to-rent ratio in Austin exceeded 24, it would be a signal of future price declines. But Austin’s price-to-rent ratio was 20 in 2003 and fell to 18.1 in 2004, so a steep decline Austin home prices is not likely.

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The Housing Crisis Is Over

The dire headlines coming fast and furious in the financial and popular press suggest that the housing crisis is intensifying. Yet it is very likely that April 2008 will mark the bottom of the U.S. housing market. Yes, the housing market is bottoming right now.

How can this be? For starters, a bottom does not mean that prices are about to return to the heady days of 2005. That probably won’t happen for another 15 years. It just means that the trend is no longer getting worse, which is the critical factor.

Most people forget that the current housing bust is nearly three years old. Home sales peaked in July 2005. New home sales are down a staggering 63% from peak levels of 1.4 million. Housing starts have fallen more than 50% and, adjusted for population growth, are back to the trough levels of 1982.

Furthermore, residential construction is close to 15-year lows at 3.8% of GDP; by the fourth quarter of this year, it will probably hit the lowest level ever. So what’s going to stop the housing decline? Very simply, the same thing that caused the bust: affordability.

The boom made housing unaffordable for many American families, especially first-time home buyers. During the 1990s and early 2000s, it took 19% of average monthly income to service a conforming mortgage on the average home purchased. By 2005 and 2006, it was absorbing 25% of monthly income. For first time buyers, it went from 29% of income to 37%. That just proved to be too much.

Prices got so high that people who intended to actually live in the houses they purchased (as opposed to speculators) stopped buying. This caused the bubble to burst.

Since then, house prices have fallen 10%-15%, while incomes have kept growing (albeit more slowly recently) and mortgage rates have come down 70 basis points from their highs. As a result, it now takes 19% of monthly income for the average home buyer, and 31% of monthly income for the first-time home buyer, to purchase a house. In other words, homes on average are back to being as affordable as during the best of times in the 1990s. Numerous households that had been priced out of the market can now afford to get in.

The next question is: Even if home sales pick up, how can home prices stop falling with so many houses vacant and unsold? The flip but true answer: because they always do.

In the past five major housing market corrections (and there were some big ones, such as in the early 1980s when home sales also fell by 50%-60% and prices fell 12%-15% in real terms), every time home sales bottomed, the pace of house-price declines halved within one or two months.

The explanation is that by the time home sales stop declining, inventories of unsold homes have usually already started falling in absolute terms and begin to peak out in "months of supply" terms. That’s the case right now: New home inventories peaked at 598,000 homes in July 2006, and stand at 482,000 homes as of the end of March. This inventory is equivalent to 11 months of supply, a 25-year high – but it is similar to 1974, 1982 and 1991 levels, which saw a subsequent slowing in home-price declines within the next six months.

Inventories are declining because construction activity has been falling for such a long time that home completions are now just about undershooting new home sales. In a few months, completions of new homes for sale could be undershooting new home sales by 50,000-100,000 annually.

Inventories will drop even faster to 400,000 – or seven months of supply – by the end of 2008. This shift in inventories will have a significant impact on prices, although house prices won’t stop falling entirely until inventories reach five months of supply sometime in 2009. A five-month supply has historically signaled tightness in the housing market.

Many pundits claim that house prices need to fall another 30% to bring them back in line with where they’ve been historically. This is usually based on an analysis of house prices adjusted for inflation: Real house prices are 30% above their 40-year, inflation-adjusted average, so they must fall 30%. This simplistic analysis is appealing on the surface, but is flawed for a variety of reasons.

Most importantly, it neglects the fact that a great majority of Americans buy their houses with mortgages. And if one buys a house with a mortgage, the most important factor in deciding what to pay for the house is how much of one’s income is required to be able to make the mortgage payments on the house. Today the rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is 5.7%. Back in 1981, the rate hit 18.5%. Comparing today’s house prices to the 1970s or 1980s, when mortgage rates were stratospheric, is misguided and misleading.

This is all good news for the broader economy. The housing bust has been subtracting a full percentage point from GDP for almost two years now, which is very large for a sector that represents less than 5% of economic activity.

When the rate of house-price declines halves, there will be a wholesale shift in markets’ perceptions. All of a sudden, the expected value of the collateral (i.e. houses) for much of the lending that went on for the past decade will change. Right now, when valuing the collateral, market participants including banks are extrapolating the current pace of house price declines for another two to three years; this has a significant impact on the amount of delinquencies, foreclosures and credit losses that lenders are expected to face.

More home sales and smaller price declines means fewer homeowners will be underwater on their mortgages. They will thus have less incentive to walk away and opt for foreclosure.

A milder house-price decline scenario could lead to increases in the market value of a lot of the securitized mortgages that have been responsible for $300 billion of write-downs in the past year. Even if write-backs do not occur, stabilizing collateral values will have a huge impact on the markets’ perception of risk related to housing, the financial system, and the economy.

We are of course experiencing a serious housing bust, with serious economic consequences that are still unfolding. The odds are that the reverberations will lead to subtrend growth for a couple of years. Nonetheless, housing led us into this credit crisis and this recession. It is likely to lead us out. And that process is underway, right now.

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New home starts fall to lowest levels since 2003

Number of closings outpace starts; builders pull back to prevent glut of homes on market


AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Austin-area builders continue to cut back on the construction of homes, with first-quarter starts falling to their lowest levels since 2003.

Starts for new homes declined 33 percent to 2,271, compared with first quarter of 2007, according to the latest report from Residential Strategies Inc., which tracks real estate trends.

The number of new-home closings dropped 24 percent to 3,125. But the number of closings exceeded the number of homes being started, helping to prevent a glut of unsold new homes on the market.

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Posting: When to Shout ‘Eco-Friendly’

A splashy magazine is the latest attempt to sell apartments by emphasizing energy efficiency.

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In the Region | Long Island: Refining the Rationale for Condos

Condominium sales are down, but construction on Long Island is forging ahead.

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Streetscapes | Varick Street: A Chapel the City Fought to Save

St. John’s Chapel survived threats of demolition for two decades until it finally fell in 1918.

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