Quality of home construction on the rise

new home construction austinCustomer satisfaction with newly built, single-family homes is increasing after sagging in boom years.

By Les Christie, CNNMoney.com staff writer
Last Updated: September 15, 2009: 8:15 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Builders may not be putting up as many houses as they did during the boom, but what they are building, they’re building better.

According to the J.D. Power and Associates 2009 U.S. New-Home Builder Customer Satisfaction Study, overall customer satisfaction increased for the second consecutive year, up 32 points to 811 on a 1,000 point scale.

Satisfaction with the quality of the home also grew, to 825 up from 799. The rate of customer-reported problems dropped to 9.55 problems per home down from 11.51 problems in 2008.

“Fierce competition among home builders has led to a market where only the strongest companies have survived,” said Paula Sonkin, vice president of the real estate and construction industries practice at J.D. Power and Associates. “This is great news for new-home buyers — particularly first-time buyers — since builders are offering unprecedented high levels of quality, value and service at relatively low prices.”

To continue reading, click here

How to sell a house in a buyer’s market

central austin hyde park bungalow home

Get it sold!

Home Seller’s Guide to Getting it Sold NOW
Things are picking up, but are still slow.  We rarely see a buyer’s market in Austin, but right now the tables are turned.  There are a few things you can do to put yourself ahead of the game so that the first home to sell in your area & price point is your home.

  1. Be Prepared. Mentally, emotionally, and financially.  It’s going to take more effort, stress, time, and money.  You will need to have a plan for making the house “show-ready” each day, even when you’re tired, frustrated, or otherwise less motivated.  You will likely need to spend a bit of money making your house show it’s absolute best so that today’s extra-picky buyers won’t have any easy excuses.
  2. Be Patient. So you’ve decided to move.  It may be a while before the big day homes.  Don’t get too antsy or excited because it will only add to your frustration over time.  Selling your house will likely be like a second job, particularly if you will be living there while it is on the market.
  3. It’s a Changing Market. Don’t expect the same to ring true for different areas, price points, and weeks.  Some neighborhoods may pick up momentum while others continue to lag in sales and this will vary in different price-points from day to day.  Your agent will need to stay on top of changing trends, so be sure that they are an expert in the area.  It helps if they have lived there personally, particularly through changing markets.
  4. Get Read to Price Aggressively. This is a BIG one… This is not the time to get hung up on what your house might sell for on a great day or what you heard a neighboring house sold for.  To be ahead of the game, you have to be the best house in the price-point so that your house is the best that buyers will look at (and fall in love with).  This may mean entering a different price point by pricing lower than your previous expectations.  You will need expert help with this to see where buyers are looking, since many have expanded their searches in this market.  Your price should reflect price reductions that you anticipate on your competitor’s homes.  We, at BridgeOne Properties here in Austin have had great success getting contracts even in the most over-saturated neighborhoods anticipating price reductions and the ever-expanding list of competing homes.
  5. Get Your House in Tip-Top Shape. The most motivated sellers win the contract not only for pricing, but because they put the energy into an extra-long “To Do” list around the house from paint to carpet and caulking to landscaping.  It may feel and sound cliche, but this is absolutely important to give your home the best first impression in an over-saturated market where instead of competing against 30 homes, you may be up against 100 homes!  It should be cleaner and tidier than it has ever been, any clutter or personal items should be out of sight, new landscaping will really help, and a clean entry will make a great impression.  Touch up paint, clean doors and baseboards, dust fans, clean clean clean!  If you are unable to do everything yourself, a handyman will be a great investment here.

    tree_damage1

    Fix any damage, big or small

  6. Make it an Easy Show. Some life situations don’t lend themselves well for showings, like young children, babies, and pets.  Do your best to make your house available at as many times as you possibly can.  If you are one of the many sellers that needs to remain in the house while it is on the market, get used to saying “yes” to Realtor calls, even if they are 10 minutes away and you are in the middle of something.  If having your house on lockbox 24/7 is uncomfortable, ask your agent to put the lockbox on timed access or put the lockbox out yourself when an agent calls or when you head out to work or on errands.  Make yourself a quick “showing preparation” routine.  It could be tossing pet beds in a closet, throwing toys in a trunk, and should include turning the lights on.  If this sounds like too much of a carbon footprint, make up for it by cutting something else (water bottles maybe?)
  7. Use Internet Marketing. Not all home search websites are connected to local Multiple Listing Services (MLS’s).  Austin’s MLS, although it does feed Realtor.com, does not feed Trulia, Zillow, Google Base, and many other websites (contrary to what their marketing may lead you to believe).  Make sure your Realtor’s listings are heavily marketed online because more buyers than ever do must of their hunting online, even if they also have an agent looking for them.  If you’re not sure about your agent, find out the address of some of their other listings and try to find them yourself on both text and map-based searches.  In Austin, agents can now post up to 25 photos for a listing in addition to a virtual tour with unlimited photos.  Make sure they do it!
  8. Click to Enlarge

    Click to Enlarge

    Quality Photography. If you follow this site, you know this is a sticking point for me with my “Bad MLS Photos of the Week”.  This is because almost all buyers start and continue their home search online.  If your house is under-represented in photographs, they quickly move on to the next listing.  So many agents take only a few photos with a camera phone and move on.  If an agent doesn’t have the equipment or education for good architectural photography, here’s a inside scoop for you:  Professional Photography, like in the photo to the right on a previous listing of mine, costs around $80 and includes a virtual tour!

  9. Get Rid of Junk. This goes hand in hand with de-cluttering your house and chances are that you will be VERY glad you did it!  It’s also a great opportunity to find tax-deductions and Craig’s list cash in your closets, because yes, even your closets should be clean and tidy for buyers.  It gives a feeling of “my stuff will fit in here” to buyers and you’ll be amazed how refreshing a clean, tidy, un-full closet can be.  Here’s a tip: make a list of everything you donate for your 2009 taxes.  It makes things easier for your accountant, and if you do your taxes yourself, you can enter in your list in TurboTax.
  10. Offer Extras. This may be annoying, especially for us spoiled Austin sellers, but offering extras like service contracts, pre-inspections, and other warranties can be the decision maker between two homes, and puts the nervous buyers at east (and we have an extra percentage of highly nervous buyers these days!).

It’s Time to Invest in Real Estate

Screen shot 2009-09-11 at 9.04.45 AM

If you follow Austin Home Pro, this should sound familiar.  From SmartMoney.com

Passing through the Fort Myers, Fla., airport a few weeks ago, I noticed people eagerly signing up for a free bus tour of foreclosed real estate — with all properties offering water views. During the ride to my hotel, the young driver volunteered that he’d just bought his first house, paying $65,000 for a foreclosed property in nearby Cape Coral that had last sold for over $250,000. He said he’d never expected to be able to buy anything on a driver’s salary, let alone something that nice.

Last week, Standard & Poor’s reported that its S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price index of real estate values increased this past quarter over the first quarter of 2009, the first quarter-on-quarter increase in three years. Its index of 20 major cities also rose for the three months ended June 30 over the three months ended May 31, with only hard-hit Detroit and Las Vegas experiencing declines. The week before that, the National Association of Realtors reported that sales volume of existing homes was up 7.2% in July from June.

In short, the data suggest that real-estate prices hit a bottom some time during the second quarter, and have now begun to rise. There’s no way to be certain that this marks the end of the long, painful correction that followed the real-estate bubble, but clearly prices are no longer in free fall. That means if you’ve been sitting on the fence, it’s time to act.

To continue reading, click here >>

Austin Economic Outlook: Best Case v Worst Case

The current newz buzz is all about the changing state of the economy lately, and the changes we are seeing in its behavior and the outlook that these chances can provide us.  Prices and sales are up in Austin real estate, but recovery is still a long process and not all prices, areas, and parts of our economy are affected the same way.

Recently, leading central Texas real estate expert and Chief Economist for the Texas A&M Real Estate Center, Mark Dotzour, spoke detailing his outlook for the changing economy, the stabilization of our market, and recovery possibilities.

Political cartoon featured in the White Plains Republic in May 1932

Political cartoon featured in the White Plains Republic in May 1932

Best Case Scenario, according to Mark Dotzour
“…earnest recovery in the stock markets after the Labor Day vacation, which will be followed by favorable corporate earnings in the fourth quarter of this year.”
“The market’s current performance, while positive, is not yet an earnest recovery.  If that best case scenario does take place, the nation will see layoffs end by the end of this year and a ‘jobless recovery’ begin in 2010.”

Worst Case Scenario, according to Mark Dotzour
“The worst case scenario would mean the securitized lending market not reopening, a continuing propping up of bad banks and businesses and continued hesitation from investors and businesses. In that worst case scenario, unemployment could rise to more than 10 percent and the country would see commodity and price deflation.”

The Austin Scenario
, according to Mark Dotzour
In Austin, Dotzour predicted job growth will stay roughly where it is – at negative 1.5 percent – for the next year, adding that Austin will still outperform the U.S. when it comes to job growth.

References
http://www.bizjournals.com/austin/stories/2009/08/17/daily26.html?ana=from_rss

Austin Ranks #1 AGAIN as America’s Top Bargain City

As reported by Forbe’s, the best bargain cities have been announced.  The news is good (again) for Austin as it makes the top spot on the list!  And again, Texas dominated the list taking 5 spots on this top 15 (really a top 17) list based on cost of living, housing opportunity, unemployment rate, and average salary.  Additional bragging rights?  Austin ranked #1 on Forbe’s list for lowest unemployment rate!

picture-31

  1. Austin, Tex.
  2. Phoenix, Ariz.
  3. Washington, D.C.
  4. Fort Worth, Tex.
  5. Cincinnati, Ohio (tie
    Indianapolis, Ind. (tie)
  6. Columbus, Ohio
  7. Dallas, Tex.
  8. Houston, Tex.
  9. San Antonio, Tex.
  10. Nashville, Tenn. (tie)
    Denver, Colo. (tie)
  11. Cambridge, Mass.
  12. Kansas City, Mo.
  13. Detroit, Mich.

Austin’s Low Unemployment Rate Continues to Outshine TX, US

For an up-to-date Unemployment chart with the latest data, click here.

The latest data on unemployment rates is out and available in interactive charts at http://AustinHome.Pro/data or http://AustinHome.Pro/statistics.  Austin shines yet again with a strikingly low unemployment rate, and national media has taken notice.  The great news is that unemployment rates have continued to drop across the board, a great sign that the economy is recovering as experts predicted.

  • 8.7% – National Unemployment Rate for April 2009
  • 6.4% - Texas Unemployment Rate for April 2009
  • 5.8% – Austin Unemployment Rate for April 2009

unemployment may 2009

The Statesman reported recently that

job_growth_unemployment_rate_austinThe national job market remains challenging, but Central Texas continues to create new jobs, according to figures released Friday by the Texas Workforce Commission.

The region added jobs at a 0.4 percent rate during April, and its unemployment rate fell to 5.8 percent from 6.2 percent in March. A year ago, the rate was 3.5 percent.

The percent growth rate translates into 3,480 new jobs between April 2008 and April 2009.

For the third month in a row, Austin was the only large Texas city to add jobs. Dallas lost jobs at a 2 percent annual rate last month, and its 6.7 percent unemployment rate was the highest among large Texas cities.

The news is in deed good, even if many have good reason to remain cautious for now.  It’s a good time to be proud to be a Texan, as our strong state economy has sheltered us from what appears to have been the worst of this economic storm.  And you should be even more proud that Austin continues to rank #1 against even the biggest US cities.

states_unemployment_rates_april_2009

May figures are trickling in so keep an eye out for them at AustinHome.Pro!

In the news: Austin among nation’s top tech centers

From the Austin Business Journal

austin-mural_2With a high-tech workforce of more than 54,000, Austin ranks seventh on a list of the nation’s biggest tech cities from bizjournals.

Texas’ Capital City is home to roughly 2,600 tech companies, which employ an average of 20 employees each. Austin also has a relatively educated populace–11 percent of residents have a master’s degree or higher. State government and the University of Texas also help make Austin a dynamic tech market.

Austin ranked #7

Click to read more at Biz Journals

In the news: Chain stores see first sales increase in nearly six months

From the Austin Business Journal

240563-0-0-1Chain stores across the nation saw a Mother’s Day boost and the first growth in sales in almost six months, according to a weekly chain store sales report from the International Council of Shopping Centers and Goldman Sachs.

The chain store sales index for the week ending May 9 rose by 0.3 percent from the previous week and inched up 0.5 percent compared with the same week in 2008, the report said. That’s the first positive year-over-year reading since early December 2008 and the largest boost since Nov. 29, 2008.

The report said warmer-than-normal weather and the Mother’s Day holiday helped lift customer traffic to its highest reading since early January, and contributed to the improved pace of sales on a week-over-week and year-over-year basis.

The report also said that April comparable-store sales rose by 0.7 percent compared with the same month last year. But looking ahead to May, the report said that some segments of the industry – particularly discount retailers and specifically Wal-Mart – will face flat or decreased sales for the month.

What is a ‘normal’ market?

What is a ‘normal’ market? Where are the screaming deals?

roadblockThe number 1 road block to home sales that we are seeing right now is fear that leads to the conviction that you can only buy something half price.  Here’s the trouble with this mind-set:  If you are buying in Austin, there are no half price homes!   If there were, trust me, they would be sold in a matter of hours to those of us watching like hawks for new listings.

There are half price homes available, just not in Austin.  Here’s why:  where there’s a boom, there’s a bust to follow.  Where was the boom?  Los Angeles, Palm Beach, Phoenix, Las Vegas… not Austin.  So where is the bust?  Los Angeles, Palm Beach, Phoenix, Las Vegas… not Austin.  The exception to this rule is places like Detroit where, just like in the old days, a town dependent on a factory goes bust when that factory goes bust.  Unlike Detroit, Austin is dependent not only on one industry, but several.  Our market no longer busts when Dell has major layoffs because there are other growing industries that can pick up the slack.

This is why our growth rate remains strong and why Austin consistently ranks strongest among all of the Nation’s cities in top ten lists and other rankings for financial, economic, and market strength.

So does Austin compare, really?  Let’s take a major indicator for the health of Austin’s real estate market, months of inventory – the amount of time that it will take to sell off our current inventory of homes.  With our strong, consistent job and growth rates, Austin usually has an average months of inventory figure around 3-4, representing a seller’s market.  In Austin, we are used to the security of this seller’s market.  When our inventory dips lower, homes are harder to find, you are likely to need to put an offer in on a home the day it is listed and for top dollar (like we saw in 2006).  Over 2007, 2007, and 2009, our months of inventory figure has been climbing.  This means that, compared to our local average, it is more of a buyer’s market as homes sit and some sellers are under pressure to negotiate low.  But…

march 2009 austin market health chartTo see an updated, interactive version of this chart, visit http://AustinHome.Pro/Statistics

Let me explain why things aren’t really as bad as they seem.  “Housing researchers consider a 6 to 6.5 months supply of homes for sale to represent a balanced housing market”*, or a neutral market — neither a buyer’s or seller’s market.  Last month, March of 2009, Austin just reached 6.5 months of housing inventory, up from 6.1 in Feburary 2009 and 5.7 in January 2009.  In March of 2008, we had 6.1 months of inventory and in March of 2007 we had 3.4.

So the real story is that we are still FAR below the national figures for months of inventory that can be as high as 10 (a real Buyer’s market!) and most importantly, they are steady even during this time of uncertianty — because of Austin’s (still) very strong economic and job growth rates.

As far as pricing goes, see the chart above.  The orange lines represent the median home sales price in the Austin-Round Rock mentro area and the blue line reprsents teh Average home sales price.  Both figures are still holding very steady.  In fact, take a look at how our median home salse price is stacking up next to the national and state figures over the past year:

march 2009 national state local median home salsea priceTo see an updated, interactive version of this chart, visit http://AustinHome.Pro/Statistics

The moral of the story is, as Douglas Adams put it best, “DON’T PANIC!”.  Go about your lives, buy or sell a home if you need or want to, and don’t over-think or out-smart yourself based on the pessimism and drama the news is selling you.  Be informed, I highly recommend my charts and figures over those you may find on other sites like Zillow because my data comes from a far greater and more accurate pool of information compiled by experts in our area, not in a far away state.  We are in a neutral market, not a buyer’s or seller’s market.  The only trouble is, we in Austin have grown very accustomed to living in an agressive seller’s market.

*This quote is from the April 2009 issue of Tierra Granda, Journal of the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University

In the News: How to nab a low-rate home loan

From CNN Money, click to read the entire article

(Money Magazine) — On paper it seems like the perfect time to refinance. The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage recently hit a 20-year low when it fell below 5% in mid-March. And the Fed has said that it will spend $300 billion to buy back government-backed Treasury bonds; that will probably keep loan rates low for months to come.

But wade into the mortgage market, and you may quickly feel as if you’re trying to grab a dollar in a game-show booth where the money is blowing around: Those ultralow rates are right in front of you, yet maddeningly elusive.

Lenders, grappling with deadbeat homeowners and shifting regulations, have pared back on mortgage products and upped credit requirements. Still, you have a good incentive to try: If you took out a mortgage two years ago, when rates were in the mid-sixes, you stand to drop your rate nearly two percentage points, saving almost $300 a month on a $300,000 loan. Here’s how to navigate the roadblocks.