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The Santa Cruz real estate market, along with the rest of the Silicon Valley, continues to face a number of challenges and hopeful indicators during the first half of 2010. Commercial real estate is very close to rock bottom, while housing affordability is mixed and home sales are starting to rise. According to a May 10, 2010 article in the Mercury News, “Pending home sales were up again in March, pointing to an upswing in home sales for the spring home-buying season, according to the National Association of Realtors. The Pending Home Sales Index is a forward-looking indicator of the housing sector based on pending sales of existing homes.” The piece, composed by Rose Meily, went on to say that “Contracts signed in March rose 3.5 percent to 102.9 from 97.7 in February, and is 21.1 percent above March 2009 when it was 85; this follows an 8.3 percent increase in February.”
Although it may not directly affect Santa Cruz homes for sale, the commercial real estate market in the region is in serious distress. According to a May 3, 2010 article in the Santa Cruz Sentinel, “The county’s once hot commercial real estate market has cooled considerably, with nearly a million square feet of office space empty at the start of the year and asking rates dropping compared to a year ago. The market hasn’t hit the 1 million mark since 2004, according to Cassidy Turley BT Commercial, which reviews the data for Santa Cruz County quarterly.” The piece, written by Jondi Gumz, continued to say that “Industrial vacancies rose to 7.3 percent from 3.3 percent in the same time frame, with the asking rate dropping 11 percent to 85 cents per square foot triple net…In the city of Santa Cruz, office vacancies edged up from 14.7 percent to 15.2 percent. Asking rates were $1.88 per square foot, off by just 4 cents.”
The affordability of Santa Cruz real estate is mixed, according to a May 13, 2010 article in the San Jose Business Journal. This piece found that “An index of the affordability of homes for first-time buyers rose between the last three months of 2009 and the first three months of 2010. But it was down from last year’s first quarter.”
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