Tag Archives: San Diego County California

San Diego real estate market

Seal of San Diego County, California
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The distress of the San Diego real estate market seems to be easing, as most indicators are rallying despite some signs of continued fragility. According to a May 25, 2010 article from San Diego 6 News, “San Diego has logged 11 consecutive months of increasing home prices, while much of the nation’s housing market continues to decline. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices for San Diego rose 1.5 percent from February to March and was up 10.8 percent year-over-year.” The piece went on to say that “Nationally, the S&P index of 20 major cities fell 3.2 percent in the first quarter of 2010, but was 2 percent higher from the same period last year. The index was down .5 percent from February to March. Prices in 13 of the 20 metropolitan areas tracked by the index declined from February to March.”

This same basic news – that the average price of a San Diego home for sale rallied once again in March – was mentioned in a May 25, 2010 article in the San Diego Union-Tribune. This piece found that “With 11 consecutive months of growth, San Diego County is leading the nation’s largest metro areas in home-price appreciation, the widely watched Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed Tuesday. In March, the index of San Diego prices was up 10.8 percent from the previous year, the biggest increase since the heady days of mid-2005.” The piece by Roger Showley continued to say that “By contrast, prices in the 20 metro areas that comprise the index declined by 0.5 percent from February to March, the sixth straight decline. They were up 2.4 percent year over year.”

Foreclosure rates, one of the usual indicators of distress in the San Diego real estate market, eased considerably in the most recent tracking period. According to a May 24, 2010 article also in the Union-Tribune, “Mortgage defaults dipped in San Diego County last month to their lowest level since January, as distressed-property owners found alternatives to foreclosures, MDA DataQuick reported Monday. Other signs of distress seemed [to] be easing, as delinquencies stopped growing, banks acted on their foreclosure backlogs, more homes were listed for sale and there were more building permits.”

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Palos Verdes real estate market

Palos Verdes' Malaga Cove Plaza and its Neptun...
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The Palos Verdes real estate market, a subsidiary of the larger Los Angeles County and Southern California real estate markets, seems to be steadily rallying after the devastating economic recession. According to an April 23, 2010 article in the Valley News, “The number of Riverside County homes slipping toward foreclosure dropped by 49.9 percent in the first quarter of the year, compared to the same period in 2009, a real estate information service reported Tuesday. Lenders sent default notices to 8.474 homeowners in Riverside County in the first quarter, down from the previous year’s first quarter total of 16,906, according to La Jolla-based MDA DataQuick. Meanwhile, the number of San Diego County homes slipping toward foreclosure dropped by 39 percent in the first quarter of the year, compared to the same period in 2009. The number of Los Angeles County homes heading toward foreclosure dropped by 43.5 percent over the same time frame. In Orange County, default notices were sent to 5,270 homeowners, down 37.5 percent from the 2009 first-quarter total.”

The same article in the Valley News continued to quote John Walsh the president of MDA DataQuick, who “said it was difficult to determine if the dramatic reduction in default notices was the result of shifting market conditions or changing banking policies. ‘Several factors are at play here and it’s hard to know how they play into each other right now,’ Walsh said. ‘A year and a half ago, the sub-prime mortgage loan mess was the black hole. Now, playing catch-up is the financial distress households are experiencing because of the recession. Add to the mix shifting policy decisions, both by lending institutions and in public policy,’ he said.”

More good news for the Palos Verdes real estate market was noted by an April 13, 2010 article from the Associated Press, which found that “The median home price in Southern California rose 14 percent last month from March 2009, as more high-end homes trickled into the region’s sales mix, a tracking firm said Tuesday. San Diego-based MDA DataQuick reported that last month’s median of $285,000 was up from $250,000 in March 2009 and up almost 4 percent from February’s $275,000.”

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