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Good News in Real Estate
Younger generations spending more on real estate
Second homes not just for rich and famous anymore
Beaches are back! Great for real estate!
Boomers still in 2nd home/investment mode
Housing trends steady

Younger generations spending more on real estateBack to Top

Gen X, Y buyers want bigger homes

 

Friday, April 21, 2006

 

Reprinted from
Inman News

Generation X and Generation Y buyers tend to spend more for their first home than baby boomers and this represents a larger portion of their household income, according to a Century 21 Homebuyer Survey released this week.

 

On average, the impact on the household income was 21 percent of boomers' income as compared to 25 percent of Generation X and Generation Y's household income.

The survey also reveals that baby boomers were driven to purchase their first home based on family reasons, while Generation X and Y buyers are more likely to buy or have bought a home as a 'safe investment.'

In addition, Generation X and Y buyers tend to take longer to buy their first home as compared to baby boomers. Today's Generation Y buyers are also purchasing first homes at a younger age than their Generation X and baby boomer counterparts.

The national online survey collected responses from 1,514 U.S. home buyers and was equally distributed among baby boomer (people born between 1946-64), Generation X (born between 1965-78) and Generation Y (born between 1979-94) consumers. The study was conducted by International Communications Research for franchisor Century 21 Real Estate LLC.

 

Today's Generation Y first-time home buyers are younger than their Generation X and baby boomer counterparts. The average age for first-time home buyers was 26 among Generation Y respondents, which is three years younger than Gen-X (29) and baby boomer (29) survey participants.

Of the survey respondents, the average boomer polled was 51 years old, followed by Generation X at 34 and Generation Y at 25. Among those polled, 72 percent of Generation Y respondents were single women, followed by 56 percent of Gen-Xers and 59 percent of baby boomers. About 25 percent of Gen-Xers surveyed are single and have not married, compared to 5 percent of baby boomers.

Baby boomers were more likely to have purchased a first home based on a life event, including marriage or birth of a child. Their counterparts, Generation X and Y buyers, tend to purchase a first home based on its appreciation value, according to the survey responses.

 

'Safe investment' is a key driver among Generation X (42 percent of survey respondents) and Generation Y (39 percent) versus 35 percent of baby boomers who are more likely to invest in a first home for 'family reasons.'

Baby boomers identified price as a key concern when purchasing a home (51 percent) as compared to Generation X (42 percent) and Generation Y (39 percent). Generation X (8 percent) and Y (10 percent) buyers are more concerned with proximity to work for their first home as compared to boomers (4 percent), according to the survey.

A majority of baby boomers (53 percent) ranked real estate brokers and agents as their primary source for shopping for information on their first home, followed by 45 percent of Generation X and 34 percent of Generation Y buyers. Generation Y home buyers (42 percent) search the Internet more than their Generation X counterparts (26 percent).

About 40 percent of all survey respondents noted that the best way to find a broker or agent was through

friends and relatives. About 21 percent of Generation X and Y members use the Internet to find an agent to work with for their first home purchase, while about 17 percent of baby boomers used yard signs to find a broker or agent in their first home purchase.

In all three groups of buyers, the majority preferred more frequent contact from their broker or agent when buying a first home (more than 50 percent want contact every few days), according to the survey.

Generation Y respondents ranked the Internet as their primary source of home-shopping information, though it took them longer on average to purchase their first home. Baby boomers were the quickest first-time home shoppers polled, averaging 4.3 months to buy their first home, followed by Generation X at 4.6 months and Generation Y at 5.4 months, according to the survey.

Baby boomers (26 percent) are more likely to stay in their first home for more than 10 years as compared to Generation X (13 percent) and Generation Y (9 percent).

 

Today's youngest home buyers are more likely to live with family to save money than other groups. Of those polled, more Generation Y buyers (22 percent) live with parents or in-laws prior to purchasing their first home as compared to baby boomers (3 percent) and Generation X (7 percent).

About 11 percent of baby boomers said size is important in a dream home. About 17 percent of Generation X buyers and 19 percent of Generation Y buyers stated that their ideal homes are over 5,000 square feet. The average size of a dream house for boomers is the smallest at 3,340 square feet, with Generation X at 3,840 square feet and Generation Y at 3,810 square feet. In reality, the average size of a first home is about 1,546 square feet, according to the 2005 National Association of Realtors profile of home buyers and sellers.

About 33 percent of baby boomers cite the Southeast as the dream home location vs. 27 percent of Generation X and 25 percent of Generation Y buyers.

 

Younger buyers are attracted to the Northeast as the location for their dream home, the survey revealed. About 22 percent of Generation Y and 18 percent of Generation X buyers prefer this region, compared to 9 percent of boomers.

The Southeast and Southwest are the two favorite regions for a second home for all groups of home buyers surveyed. The Northeast is favored by Generation Y buyers (14 percent) ahead of boomers (9 percent) and Generation X (11 percent).

The survey including responses from first-time buyers in their first year of home ownership along with active first-time home shoppers, and was conducted from March 17-31.

The Century 21 system includes about 7,800 independently owned and operated franchised broker offices in 42 countries and territories worldwide.

***

 

 

 

 


Second homes not just for rich and famous anymoreBack to Top
Boomers snatch up vacation, investment properties

Thursday, April 27, 2006
reprinted from Innman News


By Ilyce R. Glink
 

In the last three years, a couple that I am acquainted with has bought three investment properties in a mountain resort town about three hours from where they live.

The first townhouse they bought was for weekend getaways, but now it will probably more than cover its costs through summer and fall rentals, the couple reports. One of their properties is now on the market for nearly double what the couple paid. In fact, prices

in the 3,000-acre community have at least doubled since it opened five years ago.

That kind of activity has been replicated in vacation-home areas across the country in the past few years, according to Paul Bishop, manager of real estate research for the National Association of Realtors.

NAR recently released a new study that looks at the vacation- and investment-home markets. Last year, 40 percent of all homes bought were vacation homes or investment properties. That's up 16 percent from 2004, to a record 3.34 million homes.

"We don't have good numbers on this, but the information we do have is a lot of the activity is from buyers who buy one to two or more properties over the course of a year or two," Bishop explained. "The majority of these folks are actively in the market to buy investment properties as opposed to people buying a one-off home to rent. They are serious residential investors."

 

Bishop said the study showed there is a clear distinction between the people who buy vacation homes and those who buy investment properties.

"Buyers of vacation homes look for lifestyle opportunities, and perhaps residences for retirement. Investment property buyers want to purchase property close to their homes," he noted. "We're talking about both groups together, and that's a pretty broad brush. They have entirely different motivations."

The Midwest is the strongest area for second-home or investment-property purchases, Bishop added. Donna Hofmann, a Coldwell Banker agent located in Chesterton, Ind., says that 90 percent of her vacation- or second-home buyers come from the Chicago metropolitan area, and 80 percent live in the suburbs.

"Most of our buyers want somewhere that is close to the office that they can visit on weekends and get away from the city for awhile. Most of them are purchasing second homes in order to turn them into a retirement home some day. They plan to move there eventually," Hofmann said,

 

In Alpharetta, Ga., RE/MAX Greater Atlanta agent Tom Zaccaro is working for a new vacation-home division called Resort Connection, selling resort properties in the Florida panhandle to Atlanta-area residents.

"Panama City Beach is where the big boom is now. They're putting in an international airport. It's next to Destin, which is a big hot spot. What's going on there are beachfront condos for $1,000 per foot," he said, adding that "dumpy" hotels are being replaced by exclusive resort property. "Panama City Beach properties are going for $425 per square foot."

Investors, Zaccaro said, are gobbling up everything for sale.

But in Phoenix, which has been one of the hottest markets for more than a decade, Coldwell Banker agent Ann Morgan said there appears to be an oversupply of lower-priced homes in the outer regions of the greater Phoenix area.

At the same time, home prices at the upper end are growing quickly.

 

"Homes priced at $400,000 a couple of years ago are now priced at $600,000. Retirees and snowbirds are looking in Scottsdale because it's a nice, clean, safe environment. They want the stainless steel appliances, granite tile, an updated house and they're spending $300,000 to $400,000 without thinking about it," Morgan explained.

According to Bishop, the median price of a vacation home in 2005 was $204,100, up 7.4 percent from 2004. The typical investment property cost $183,500 last year, up 24 percent from a year earlier. Eleven percent of all homeowners own two properties, while 4 percent own three or more properties.

What's contributing to these second-, third-, and fourth-home purchases? Bishop says it's the Baby Boom generation (born 1946-1964) flexing its financial muscle.

"The median age of vacation home buyers is about 52, so this is the first wave of Baby Boomers, and about one in five is planning on using the second home they've purchased as a primary residence

someday." Bishop explained. "They're thinking about lifestyle issues and their future retirement."

Past research has shown that people aged 55 to 65 are the most active second-home buyers, followed closely by those aged 45 to 55. Since the Baby Boomers are just turning 60, the first wave of Boomers is just hitting their peak second-home-buying years.

Bishop said that with Boomer buying power, second homes could remain a large percentage of all home purchases for the next 20 to 30 years.

 

***

 

 


Beaches are back! Great for real estate!Back to Top

Beaches expect a busy summer

 

Friday, May 26, 2006

By RYAN DEZEMBER

Staff Reporter

 

GULF SHORES -- Until Hurricane Ivan struck in September, the summer of 2004 was the busiest ever on Baldwin's beaches.

Occupancy rates for condominiums along the beach peaked at 90 percent that July; 92 percent of hotel rooms were rented that same month; and more than $329 million in retail sales were registered June through August in Foley, Gulf Shores and Orange Beach, according to Alabama Gulf Coast Convention and Visitors Bureau data.

Now, heading into Memorial Day weekend and the start of the tourist season, rental companies are reporting reservation rates that exceed those they had prior to the start of that watershed summer two years ago.

It's looking like it's going to be great," said Convention and Visitors Bureau President Herb Malone. "With what we've been through the last two years, we're ready for a great weekend and a great summer."

Hurricane Ivan put a quick end to the beach season in 2004 and caused enough damage to carry over into the summer of 2005. That season was further dampened, and reconstruction efforts slowed, by a succession of four evacuation-forcing named storms.

More than 13,000 condominium units and hotel rooms are ready for rent on the beach this season and, weather permitting, those in the tourism business are predicting that most will be filled throughout the summer.

Marie Curren, director of marketing and reservations for Brett/Robinson, said each of her firm's 1,841 condos is spoken for this weekend and, as of late Wednesday, the real estate conglomerate's two Gulf-front hotels had about 20 unreserved rooms between them.

Most of the 200 or so condos that Bender Realty rents have been claimed through June, which is a good indicator of how the rest of the summer will go, owner Bill Bender said.

"I would say that by the end of June, we'll see 80 percent occupancies," Bender said. "In July, we should exceed 90 percent."

The high occupancy rate extends beyond the beach into Foley, where at least two new hotels are planned or under construction and the eight there now are booked for most of the summer, said James Wood, manager of the Holiday Inn Express on Alabama 59.

Wood said that his hotel's 83 rooms across the street from the Tanger Outlet Center are "almost sold out -- and we will be prior to the weekend."

The sheer volume of accommodations should improve business for the retailers and restaurants along the beach this coming summer, said Bill Howard, owner of the Top Shelf Restaurant & Sports Lounge, which overlooks the public beach in Gulf Shores.

"If we can stay storm-free, I think everyone will benefit, and we should have a better year than last year," Howard said.

At Old World Bakery & Pizza, also across from the public beach, Melissa Downing said expectations for the summer are high.

She said that besides an increase in the available accommodations, the beaches, roads and boardwalks have been repaired, and most of the storm-damaged properties have been cleaned up, including an amusement park which, when demolished, gave her eatery a view of the Gulf.

Aiding the beach's attempted resurgence will be the completion of a host of new high-rise condominiums -- an April report said nearly 1,500 new condo units will open this year -- and a large mixed-use project in Orange Beach called The Wharf.

Eventually including about 1,000 condos and a million square feet of retail space, The Wharf will open its 10,200-seat amphitheater -- along with its 15-screen movie theater and 112-foot-tall Ferris wheel -- this weekend with a Saturday night show by country stars Hank Williams Jr. and Rhett Akins.

The white sand and emerald-hued waters, however, will always be the biggest draw to Baldwin's beaches, Malone said, and following completion of a 14-mile, $26 million beach renourishment project, the sandy vistas are as wide and plump as they've been in years.

"We've walked the beach and made sure we got every last chunk of asphalt and debris out," Gulf Shores Public Works Director Chuck Hamilton said earlier this week. "We have all the trash cans in place, and we're trying to just make the place look real good for our holiday visitors."

Across the bay on Dauphin Island, which was hit much harder than Baldwin's beaches by Hurricane Katrina in late August, the tourism forecast is looking up, but not quite as rosy as in Gulf Shores and Orange Beach.

Dauphin Island Mayor Jeff Collier said that despite lingering storm damage there, the town's public beach is open, nine of the 18 holes on the Isle Dauphine golf course are playable, and attractions, such as historic Fort Gaines and the Dauphin Island Sea Lab and Estuarium, are ready for visitors.

"We'll be a little short on rentals," the mayor said. "That'll be our biggest problem right now."

Though new condos have recently entered the rental pool, many private homes haven't been repaired to the point that they can house tourists, Collier said.

"Certainly we encourage people to come over," he said. "For the most part, we're open."

 


Boomers still in 2nd home/investment modeBack to Top

Research: Boomers feed second-home boom
By Kenneth R. Harney/ The Nations Housing
Sunday, May 28, 2006 - Updated:
02:03 AM EST

If youre thinking about buying a second home, youre part of a major transformation under way in the real estate market.

 

    New research by economist Keunwon Chung of the National Association of Realtors shows the number of second homes Americans buy each year doubled between 2000 and 2004.

 

     Chung recently studied federal data on hundreds of thousands of second-home mortgages taken out during the period.

 

    He believes baby boomers cashing out equity from primary homes are buying second places as vacation, retirement or investment properties.

  

Chung also cites some largely unexpected effects of a 1997 tax-law change on home-ownership profits.

 

     Before the 1997 amendment, Americans who sold primary homes often faced big capital-gains taxes.

 

    Avoiding this levy usually involved rolling over proceeds from one houses sale into purchase of a new place costing as much or more as the old one.

 

     But thanks to the 1997 law change, married couples can now usually pocket $500,000 of home-sale profits tax-free. (Singles can exempt $250,000).

 

     Chung said the 1997 amendment meant homeowners did not have to buy expensive (replacement) homes anymore.

 

    Instead, many people now downsize out of big suburban houses and into condos - often using some of the leftover sale proceeds to purchase second homes.

 

    Chungs study suggests this trend is hot right now - and likely to stay that way for years to come.

 

    He found that in 2000, Americans bought 405,000 second homes - 8.6 percent of all properties purchases using a mortgage.

 

    But by 2004, total U.S. second-home sales had more than doubled to 881,000, accounting for 14.2 percent of all home loans issued.

 

    Whos buying second homes?

 

    Primarily baby boomers - especially those with above-average incomes, according to Chung.

 

    He found that while the average primary-home buyer had $61,000 of annual household income in 2004, the average second-home purchaser earned $102,000.

 

     Part of such folks interest in second homes apparently revolves around diversifying their assets.

 

     After all, Chung said, U.S. home prices rose 55 percent on average between 2000 and 2004 - a period when the Standard & Poors 500 stock index fell 15 percent.

 

     As an investment choice, the housing market presented an attractive alternative to stocks for investors, Chung said.

 

     Where are Americans investing their second-home dollars?

 

    Chung found that 11 states and the District of Columbia have seen exceptionally high second-home purchases in recent years.  [continue]

 

Not surprisingly, Hawaii leads the list, with second homes making up 27 percent of every purchase mortgage taken out in 2000-2004.

 

    Florida places No. 2, with second homes making up nearly one sale in five there.

 

    Other popular states: Arizona (where second-home purchases made up 18 percent of all mortgages taken out), Nevada (17 percent), Idaho (13 percent), New Mexico (12 percent) and a tie between Utah and the District of Columbia (10 percent in each locale).

    California and Washington state tie for eighth place, with second-home sales there making up 9 percent of purchase loans.

 

    Rounding out the top 12: a tie between Maryland and Virginia (8 percent in both states).

    How long can the second-home boom continue?

 

     As long as boomers remain in their peak earning years and . . . can afford second homes for vacation purposes or as investment vehicles, Chung said. For the next decade, baby boomers will continue to drive housing markets - particularly the second-home segment.

 


Housing trends steadyBack to Top

Housing boom will not end in a crash, says Harvard

 

Markets seldom disappoint both bulls and bears for long. But over the coming years the US housing market looks likely to do just that, according to a study by Harvard University. After the slump of the early 1990s and the surge of the past five years, the housing market might prove an anti-climax to all concerned. The long period of stagnation forecast by the survey would disappoint homeowners who expect big price rises but also those who missed the boat and have been hoping for a crash.

 

"Although housing prices are stretched, it is hard to see the catalyst for a crisis in the market," says Nicolas Retsinas, director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard. "The overvaluation looks pretty well balanced by longer term supports for house prices, so we may just see a few years with little action. Houses will revert to being something to live in rather than money makers."

 

The study begins with some sobering observations about the record run in the US housing market. Over the past five years house prices have outstripped income growth more than sixfold  the median home now costs more than four times median household income in 49 out of 145 metropolitan areas in the US, a record. In 14 metropolitan areas, the median house is now worth more than six times median income. Last year saw the average house price shoot up 9.4 per cent  the biggest rise in the average house price since records started more than 40 years ago.

 

Financial strains on US home-owners have been mounting. The number of Americans devoting more than half of their incomes to housing climbed by 1.9m to 15.6m in the three years to 2004. To bridge the gap between sluggish earnings growth and speedy house price growth, ever more Americans have been tempted by riskier flexible-rate mortgage products. More than a third of loans last year were at adjustable rates and may rebound on their holders if interest rates continue to climb. Even more reckless buyers, about 10 per cent last year, opted for payment-option mortgages  which do not require full payment of the interest costs.

 

So why will non-homeowners be deprived of the crash they have been waiting for? The strongest underlying support for the market comes from accelerating household formation. Demand is being driven not only by population growth but by household fragmentation, as couples divorce or children leave home. Immigration has been a still stronger force  over the past decade 12.6m new households were formed in the US. Over the next 10 years the pace of household formation will accelerate to 14.6m, according to the Joint Center for Housing Studies. "Even if America decided to close the borders now, we would still see the lagged effects of previous waves of immigration," said Mr Retsinas. "Many of those that came to America earlier are only now in a position to buy property. As it is, we don't believe there will be any slowdown in immigration."

 

The Harvard study also argues that there are fewer points of vulnerability than during previous housing market downturns. The macroeconomic outlook for the US is uncertain but no mainstream economists are predicting the kind of surge in unemployment or leap in interest rates that would prick the housing bubble. In spite of the shift towards flexible rate mortgages, 75 per cent of mortgage holders have 30-year fixed rate loans and are therefore largely invulnerable to rising rates. A third of households own their homes outright. Nor are many likely to suffer from negative equity should rising interest rates or unemployment drive up defaults  about 94 per cent of home-owners have equity of more than 10 per cent.

 

Over-development has also been less of a problem than in the past, the study says. Price declines associated with episodes of big job losses alone average 4.5 per cent, while those occurring around periods of over-building alone average 8.3 per cent, it says.

Not everyone concurs, however. Many economists say national figures are deceptive, since they obscure pockets of extreme over-valuation in property prices and greater vulnerability to rising rates. Others point to evidence of overbuilding in recent years. Residential investment has risen to 6 per cent of gross domestic product  its highest level in 50 years and much higher than the average of 4.75 per cent.

 

The Harvard study concedes that even a slowing housing market could take a heavy toll on growth, as Americans become less able to use their houses as ATM machines and less employment is created by homebuilding. Provided the slowdown is gradual, as Harvard expects, this could help rebalance the US economy, reducing demand for imports and so stemming the growth of the trade deficit.

 

Copyright 2006 Financial Times

June 13, 2006

 

 


Back to Top

FROM: HOUSING PREDICTOR,                                           Independent real estate market forecasts, FEB 12, 2008

The Mobile economy is the healthiest it has been since 1990. Housing prices are still on the rise and should remain that way through 2008 with forecast appreciation of 4.4% for the year.

Mobile has seen many new residents from Louisiana move to the area. The micro boom has topped that of World War II’s, which was the last real big boom for the region.

However, the subprime problem will begin to slowly creep into the Mobile market to further slow home sales.

Condo preconstruction is beginning to pick up again in Gulf Shores, which had slowed as a result of the hurricane. But tourists have returned to the beaches in mass and life has begun to get good for the tourists business in Gulf Shores along the gulf coast.