North Jersey Data Center Industry Blurs Utility-Real Estate Boundaries – NYTimes.com

North Jersey Data Center Industry Blurs Utility-Real Estate Boundaries – NYTimes.com
Denver’s housing rebound is in full swing, but sellers are acting as though they didn’t get invitations to the party.
“The question each and every day is: Where are the sellers?” said Gary Bauer, an independent real estate research analyst.
At the end of April,metro Denver had just shy of 7,000 pre-owned homes available for sale, a third fewer than a year earlier and less than half the 15,000 to 20,000 homes that Bauer said would represent a normal market.
“I can’t figure out why people aren’t listing,” said Brenda Yates, a broker associate with Keller Williams DTC.
Yates and her husband plan to put three properties on the market, after finally seeing enough appreciation to make it worthwhile, and they don’t expect it will take long for them to sell.
The median price of homes sold in metro Denver last month rose to $280,000, up from $268,200 in March. The latestStandard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price indexreports 14 straight months of price increases in Denver, with prices up nearly 10 percent year-over-year as of February.
Scarcity is triggering bidding wars and causing homes to move quickly, often on the first day, brokers report. The median time a new listing in April remained available before going under contract was four days, reports Jim Smith, owner of Golden Real Estate.
Denver housing market recovers but sellers remain scarce – The Denver Post.
Commentary: Many global indicators are at inflection points
Long-term rates fell this week to the lows of 2013, mortgages stickier than 10-year T-notes. Although long Treasurys made it to 1.85 percent, mortgages are still 3.75 percent or so — the mortgage market frightened to death that any loan it buys today will live until its 360th payment.
Trading everywhere has ceased for Passover, Good Friday, and Easter, but next week brings a flood of brand-new information for March, capped on Friday by employment data. Thus a good time to reflect.
I do not recall a moment in which so many economic elements at the same time have been at points of inflection. In the old days (five years ago) nothing much mattered except U.S. data. In global markets the world is more important than the U.S.
1. Rates are down because of Europe. Period. Euro elites are secure looking down their noses: “Cyprus is unique, the euro-zone will be fine, just a little austerity and economic reform ahead.” Au contraire… bank funding costs in March everywhere except Germany rose by 25 percent (who wants a haircut at shoulder-level?); French and Spanish 10-year yields are opening versus German; nobody is making fiscal progress, the combination of austerity and euro-shackles making recovery impossible. Yet everyone who has cried euro-failure “Wolf!” has been premature. Or wrong: maybe there is no wolf at all. Or, if the wolf finally does arrive, the bigger the shock.
2. The stock market set a new high yesterday, greeted by no exuberance. Usually a technical “breakout” like this is followed by a big run. Not. This new high is a half-inch above the same top in 1999 and 2007. Whee. And yet … stocks could really run and bring back the wealth effect.
3. That wealth effect may already be here. This morning’s news: personal incomes jumped 1.1 percent in February and spending with them, up 0.6 percent.

Builders continued to hire more workers in April, though employment among an age cohort important to household formation slipped, according to today’s jobs report, which showed more overall growth than expected.
Residential construction jobs are up 4.1 percent year over year, towering about the overall jobs growth rate of 1.6 percent, said Trulia Chief Economist Jed Kolko, citing data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics today.
Total residential-construction jobs moved up from a seasonally adjusted 580,200 in March to 586,400 in April, according to the report. In April of last year, the sector supported 572,000 jobs, the report showed.
But that jobs growth lags compared to actual construction growth. Kolko chalks up the discrepancy to the fact that the number of jobs for every construction project is more than normal.
At the same time, today’s report also showed that employment among a cohort that is crucial to household formation, 25 to 34-year-olds, has slipped recently, dropping from 75.6 percent in December 2012 to 75.2 percent in April, Kolko said.
But Fannie Mae Chief Economist Doug Duncan said that the report was positive overall and “better-than-expected.”
– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/05/03/home-construction-continues-to-add-jobs/#sthash.c6qctOjM.dpuf
Real estate broker Nina Miller advertised the home in the paper, but the offers arrived so quickly she didn’t have the chance to even put up a “for sale” sign outside the Hampstead cottage.
Despite the recent slowdown in Montreal’s real estate market, Miller’s phone buzzed with inquiries last month as soon as she’d listed the renovated, four-bedroom house for sale mid-week. She showed it that weekend, while her clients were off for a quick getaway in the Laurentians. By the time they got back, she’d received a conditional offer on the home for just over $1.1 million — the full listing price.
“There are still some homes that sell right away,” Miller said. “There are buyers for turnkey homes. And it (the Hampstead home) was priced properly. What happens often is that people put their properties out for $200,000, or even $300,000 too high. It takes a much longer time to sell because it puts (buyers) off.”
That the home took a week to sell was not a one-off fluke, buyers, evaluators, mortgage and real estate brokers say, even at a time when the inventory of Montreal homes for sale is at its highest point since the late 1990s. Indeed, brokers point to several cases of Montreal Island properties selling for full asking-price within days — or even within hours at some new condo towers.
They suggest the current market slowdown is due not just to the highly-publicized tightening of rules on insured mortgages and a vast condo supply inflated by years of near-record construction — but also to some extent, by greedy sellers. Indeed, a Gazette analysis of around 70,000 Montreal homes sold by brokers since 2008 shows the gap between average asking and selling prices widens as the real estate market gets weaker, suggesting some sellers are still making unrealistic demands following years of rapidly climbing property values.
Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/
BEIJING: Average home prices in China’s 100 biggest cities rose in April from the previous month, the eleventh straight month-on-month rise, a private survey showed on Thursday, raising the risk of further tightening steps despite recent government measures to crack down on speculation.
Average home prices in April climbed 1 percent from March to 10,098 yuan ($1,600) per square metre, said China Real Estate Index System (CREIS), a consultancy tied to China’s largest online property firm, Soufun Holdings.
The share of distressed properties on the market continued to decline. About 21 percent of REALTORS® reporting on their last sale in March sold distressed properties, compared to approximately 40 percent in March 2011. This is based on data from the March REALTORS® Confidence Index Survey.
Distressed sales are mostly sold for cash. Distressed sales accounted for 35 percent of cash sales compared to 21 percent of mortgage sales.
HAVANA (AP) — In some ways, Yosuan Crespo‘s real estate office resembles any you might find in New York, London or Tokyo. There are slick posters of hot properties hanging from the ceiling, a steady stream of hopeful buyers and sellers and a constant clack of computer keys.
But Crespo‘s headquarters in central Havana’s trendy Vedado neighborhood is actually somebody else’s breezy front porch. The computer’s only connection to the Internet is a creaky dial-up link, and Crespo is careful to say he’s not operating as a broker, since the job is still technically illegal.
A baffling, sometimes bizarre real estate market has emerged in the year and a half since President Raul Castro legalized private home sales on this Communist-run island for the first time in five decades.
While trade in homes is now legal, the people who bring buyers together with sellers are not. The government has yet to make good on promises to legitimize brokers, most of whom still operate in the shadows.
It’s a story that has been typical of Castro’s economic reforms, which often have left little space for the sort of middlemen and other services that help markets work.
Masonic Temples are staples in many U.S. cities, but one of them is having a tough go of it in this economy.
The 14-story Masonic temple in Detroit is in foreclosure, with its current owners owing well over $150,000 in back taxes.
The ABC affiliate in Detroit says the building – once the hang out of dozens of Masons – is slated for a September tax foreclosure auction.
In the first quarter, sales of expensive Hamptons homes fell off the fiscal cliff.
Fear of higher taxes in 2013 drove a flurry of high-end house sales in the Hamptons at the end of last year. That front-loading of sales slowed down the top of the market in the first three months this year, experts said Wednesday, citing data from a report scheduled to be released Thursday by broker Douglas Elliman Real Estate and prepared by appraisal firm Miller Samuel Inc.
On the rest of Long Island — excluding the Hamptons and North Fork — housing inventory declined sharply in the quarter, according to the report. Houses listed for sale fell to 15,303 in the first quarter, down from 20,358 a year earlier, as homeowners wait to rebuild equity and see where prices head. Average prices rose in the first quarter to $435,082 from $415,243 a year earlier.
Hamptons houses sold for an average price of $1.2 million in the first quarter of 2013, down from $2.1 million in the previous quarter and $1.7 million a year earlier, the report said. The fall doesn’t signal a decline in prices so much as a shift in timing, said Jonathan Miller, president and chief executive of Miller Samuel.
Buyers, Miller said, tried to close “by Dec. 31 because the general assumption was a tax environment would be higher in 2013.”
Miller said 49 houses in the Hamptons sold for more than $5 million in the fourth quarter but only eight in the first quarter.
The so-called “fiscal cliff” threatened a mix of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts in 2013. Congress agreed to limit the tax hikes while increasing rates on the highest earners — those likeliest to be worried about capital gains on the sale of multimillion-dollar homes.
While the average price in the Hamptons swung, the median price was more stable, falling to $740,000, a 5.1 percent drop compared with a year earlier.
“The top end of the market has taken a breather,” said Douglas Elliman broker Paul Brennan. “Other than that everything is pretty normal.”