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Westchester NY

Tornado damage not easy to quantify | Bedford Hillls Real Estate

Early estimates suggest the tragic tornado outbreak in Oklahoma this week resulted in $2 to $5 billion in insured property losses, according to weather risk-monitoring firmEQECAT

But calculating accurate property damage estimates in the wake of a tornado remains a challenge for analysts, insurers and the mortgage industry.

CoreLogic Spatial Solutions is currently working on a new modeling system that aims to expedite and more accurately assess tornado property damage in the days following a storm.

But tornadoes remain a challenge for scientists on the property damage front.

When compared to hurricanes and earthquakes, tornadoes are less predictable — and the damage is not equitable, making it hard to simply declare losses in an entire neighborhood without sending out ground troops to separate total losses from homes that were only partially damaged.

There is no rhyme or reason to how a tornado hits; it hits one house and leaves another, creating an inconsistent trail of destruction that is difficult to study by simply analyzing property values within a given parameter, says Tom Jeffery, senior hazard scientist at CoreLogic Spatial Solutions.

EQECAT made its initial estimate after the National Weather Service confirmed 16 tornado touchdowns on May 18, another 29 on May 19 and 31 tornadoes on May 20.

“Advance tornado forecasts and warnings were not sufficient to reduce the loss of life from these events,” EQECAT said in its report.

Jeffery says his group “was originally created to provide mortgage and insurance industries with an idea of where the risk is and where the potential for the highest amount of damage is going to be.”

The company has a large database of parcel boundaries and can use that information to easily estimate the number of properties damaged within an impacted area by combining that data with property valuation research.

But the inconsistent nature of tornadoes makes it much more difficult to get the best property damage estimate early on, Jeffery told HousingWire.

In a tornado, there will always be total losses sitting next to homes that are not damaged or only 10% damaged, he said.
“This is where the feet on the ground is valuable,” Jeffery explained.

While hurricanes and floods generally have definitive boundaries where every property is mostly impacted in some way, tornadoes create an inconsistent path for researchers.

“When those events occur, we can usually put out an estimate fairly quickly,” Jeffery said. “They leave a definitive boundary. Unfortunately, tornado activity does not provide us with a nice clear boundary. There are going to be homes that are less damaged next door to those that were completely destroyed, so we are trying to work our way through an algorithm that will allow us to do that.”

Jeffery said the goal is to be as accurate as the firm can be in the wake of a tornado incident.

 

Tornado damage not easy to quantify | HousingWire.

Housing recovery falls back to 54% back to normal | Bedford Real Estate

The housing recovery is now 54% back to normal in April, down from 56% in March due to the sharp drop in new home starts. Trulia‘s Jed Kolko writes that construction starts dropp to 853,000, down 16% from March. Existing home saled inched up slightly month-over-month, while non-distressed sales increased 25% year-over-year. The delinquency rates + foreclosure rates dropped sharply to the lowest level since September 2008.

To read the full report from Trulia ($29.47 0.2%), click here.

 

Housing recovery falls back to 54% back to normal | HousingWire.

Home builders buck market trend on Wall Street | Pound Ridge Real Estate

According to MarketWatch:
Hovnanian Enterprises ($6.04 -0.06%) shares rose 2.7% after the Commerce Department said that sales of new homes rose 2.3% to 454,000 in April, the second highest post-recession level, on pent-up demand and low interest rates.
Toll Brothers ($36.75 -0.85%) closed up 1.4%, Lennar Corp. ($42.79 -0.61%) gained 2.6%, KB Home ($23.11 -0.29%) added 1.6% and Ryland Group ($48.46 0.36%) advanced 1.1%.
To see the full analysis by MarketWatch, click here.

 

 

Home builders buck market trend on Wall Street | HousingWire.

Markets remain shaken after Bernanke talk | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Financial markets experienced a few tumultuous days of trading after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testified before Congress this week, the Wall Street Journal reports.

Triple-digit gains in the Dow Jones Industrial Average turned negative at one point.

Bernanke must be thinking: “Was it something I said?”

In the midst of heightened concern over the hazards of overreaching government agencies, this may be a propitious moment to review the Fed’s outsize role in determining the price and availability of capital.

 

Markets remain shaken after Bernanke talk | HousingWire.

Oakland’s real estate market heats up, becomes attractive to many | Waccabuc Real Estate

Those tracking trends say Oakland is getting hot. It may have started with Oakland’s emerging restaurant scene or perhaps it was the buzz created by those First Friday gatherings. Now Oakland is on a list of most attractive cities for tech startups.

In the shadow of Oakland’s Occupy riots and violent crime, the city has been quietly gaining accolades as the place to be.

“The attraction is the diversity of culture,” said Albert Rowe, a new Oakland resident.

The National Venture Capital Association ranks it the 11th most attractive city for tech startups like Power Hive. The solar startup is electrifying remote villages in Africa with micro-grids.

“I don’t think we would be able to be in Silicon Valley in an office space that we are in today and afford the kind of space that we have here today. So we’d probably be working out of our garages,” said Jane Oyugi, the Power Hive vice president.

Also this month, online real estate company Movoto named Oakland “The Most Exciting City in America.” Home sales are thriving and young professionals are flocking there.

“Oakland has changed a lot since the last time I was out here. Even Uptown is changed. There’s new bars and restaurants down here. It’s real nice,” said Zachary Gostlin, a new Oakland resident.

The Bond, a modern/classic condominium in Jack London Square reflects the fast selling pace of homes in Oakland. They started selling five days ago and they’ve already sold four condos.

The New York Times calls Oakland the fifth most desirable travel destination, and Forbes Magazine ranked the Uptown District ninth among the top hipster neighborhoods.

“There’s a tremendous shift going on right now in the Bay Area. Oakland is the hot market and we see a large number of people moving from the Oakland Hills and San Francisco into Downtown Oakland to take advantage of all the cultural diversity and excitement that’s going on here,” said Paul Zeger, president of the Polaris Pacific Real Estate Company.

 

 

 

Oakland’s real estate market heats up, becomes attractive to many | abc7news.com.

Is Canada’s housing market on the verge of a crash? | North Salem Real Estate

Canada’s housing market has been a wildly popular topic lately with experts sounding off on everything from house-market affordability to house-buying intentions to the effects of too-long, very-low interest rates. All this is keeping the debate about the soft landing, or crash to come, firmly on the minds of Canadians.

The common link is the Bank of Canada’s benchmark rate, which has been frozen at 1.0 per cent since September 2010. The market doesn’t expect the central bank to move higher — if it moves higher — until sometime in the latter part of 2014, or even later, so in some ways there’s a bit more time to sit back, wait and watch.

If you believe The Economist, Canada’s housing market is “especially vulnerable” to a major correction, according to a recent analysis on global property markets. It says house prices here are overvalued by 73 per cent compared to rental prices, and 32 per cent overvalued when compared to household incomes.

“Home sales in March were 15% down on a year earlier. Buyers are in short supply. A recent poll showed that only 15% of Canadians are likely to buy a home in the next two years, down from 27% last year—the steepest decline in the 20-year history of the survey. After a big boom, the housing bust will be a wrenching affair,” the magazine stated earlier this month. This is golden for those who are in the doom and gloom camp, and don’t believe house prices will bounce any time soon.

Now, combine that with a recent warning by the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals. This week the group said many Canadians are managing their debt responsibly, and warned Ottawa’s clampdown on mortgage lending rules has set the stage for up to a 30 per cent plunge in home sales by 2015, translating into massive job losses related to the industry and other negative things that could crimp economic activity. Think of all those first-time home buyers who may be on the sidelines.

But in findings that appear to contradict The Economist and other pessimistic views, an RBC Economics analysis stated that while Canada’s housing market still faces higher-than-usual stress, recent affordability measures don’t suggest a “significant nation-wide price correction is imminent.” In fact, the low mortgage rates helped make owning a house relatively affordable — though arguably a more accurate definition would be less unaffordable —  in the first quarter of 2013, of course, with variations across regions.

At the same time, BMO housing confidence report showed consumers’ buying intentions were bolstered by low interest rates. This poll found some 45 per cent of Canadian homeowners say they are looking to buy a property in the next five years, also with results varying from region to region, in another bit of data to play up the good news story to reassure Canadians the sky isn’t falling. What’s more, it says first-time homebuyers could take advantage of low rates and shorter amortization periods for financial stability.

Given all the data, one can’t help but think everything is being held together — but just barely — thanks to low interest rates.

On that note, consider one final, powerful warning to add to the mix. The head of the country’s banking watchdog told a Bloomberg economic summit this week that a transition to higher rates could be really, really bad. That is, it is a greater incentive for banks to take on more risks when lending, business to depend on cheap credit and for borrowers take on more debt.

“No one can predict when, or how fast, rates will start to climb (or indeed, whether they will fall further),” Julie Dickson said in prepared text of a speech she delivered at the summit. “Yet dependence on low interest rates can become significant, meaning that transition to higher rates could be very painful.”

 

Is Canada’s housing market on the verge of a crash? | Insight – Yahoo! Finance Canada.

Troubling Signs In The Housing Market | Cross River Real Estate

The housing market showed signs of recovery in late 2011, beginning with a sharp upturn in housing stocks in October of that year. This was followed by a small upturn in housing starts and home sales starting in early 2012. While Wall Street economists and the media are avidly reporting that a full-fledged housing market recovery is under way, my view has been that what looks like a “recovery/bull market,” is more akin to a “dead cat” bounce and that the bear market in housing has a lot further to go to the downside.

With that in mind, I wanted to discuss some indicators I like to follow that, if they become full-blown fundamental trends, could be signifying the start of the next leg down in housing.

The first sign is housing starts. While the current crop of new and existing home sales reports hitting the tape are still showing some growth, assuming the seasonal adjustments are accurate, housing starts appear to be signaling possible future weakness. Housing starts should reflect a new homebuilder’s expectations of future sales. April’s starts were 853,000, which was 12% below the number expected by Wall Street economists and 16.5% below March’s revised number. When the housing starts for April were released, it was also reported that the March number was revised lower from 1.036 million to 1.021 million. Not as strong as originally reported.

 

Troubling Signs In The Housing Market – Seeking Alpha.

Jessica Simpson lists one home, keeps the other | Bedford Hills Real Estate

The “Fashion Star” judge just listed her longtime residence for $7.995 million, according to Zillow, who writes:

Custom-built in the early ’90s by award-winning L.A. designer Kerry Joyce, the 5,500-square-foot home is located in a private celebrity enclave with a gated entrance and vine-covered exterior. Simpson has owned the 5-bedroom property since 2005, when she bought it for $5.275 million following her separation from then-husband Nick Lachey.

To see photos of the California home, click here.

 

Jessica Simpson lists one home, keeps the other | HousingWire.

Sacramento housing market nears normal | Bedford Real Estate

With 42 new permits issued in January through March of this year, Sacramento increased by 121% over the same period a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac. Foreclosure starts slid by 74% when compared to the pace from a year earlier, writes the Sacramento Business Journal.

 

Sacramento housing market nears normal | HousingWire.

Foreclosure threat subsides for more Miami households | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Foreclosure rates in the greater Miami area remain astonishingly high, but they’re headed in the right direction.

In March, 13.25 percent of the outstanding mortgages in the Miami, Miami Beach and Kendall area were in some stage of the foreclosure process, according to CoreLogic. That was down from 17.51 percent a year earlier. But it was dramatically higher than the national foreclosure rate of 2.84 percent, according to the Irvine, Calif.-based real-estate data firm.

 

Foreclosure threat subsides for more Miami households | HousingWire.