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Informative Articles

Becoming A Battle Hardened Real Estate Veteran Without All The Scars: Seven Steps That Real Investors Make
As part of a new web site that we just launched, www.GetPreconstructionDeals.com , I get repeated requests asking if a particular deal is good or not. While we can't answer this for individual projects, we can certainly look at what HAS to get...

California Real Estate: "Bubble" or the World's Greatest Bargain?
A day doesn't pass when a self-anointed talking head doesn't make solemn noises of "California Real Estate bubble". I'm a hands on Realtor in Pleasanton, California, San Ramon, and Danville. We are the epicenter of paradise, 20 minutes east...

Chicago Real Estate: Is It Overheating?
Chicago real estate is one of the greatest success stories of the recent boom in property prices. With low, low mortgage rates for Chicago home (http://www.bestchicagomortgage.com/mortgage-calc.html) mortgage loans, demand for real estate is going...

Flipping Real Estate: Calculating Costs
If you've been in the real estate investing business, or more specifically been flipping real estate, for more than a few days, you've inevitably gotten an email that reads something like this: "Investor's Dream. This property will go...

Florida Real Estate Market Still Hot for Land & Lot Investors
Is the Real Estate bubble going to burst? We have heard this statement hundreds of times. While there are definitely going to be strong corrections in some overly priced markets there are other markets that will tolerate it differently. ...

 
Carpinteria Real Estate in 2005, What the Heck Happened?????

Looking at Homes and Estates and Planned Unit Developments for 2005 in Carpinteria versus 2004 it was a combination of the best of times and the not so good times. The real questions are, was 2004 a particularly good year and 2005 a not so great year, or what? Well let's look at some of the numbers and see.

In 2004 71 single family dwellings changed hands. Compare that to 2005 when only 55 properties moved. This translates to a decrease of about -24% in the number of properties sold.

So what about the List price of these properties? In 2004 the Median List price which is the one right in the middle of those 71 properties went on the market for $949,000. In 2005 the Median List price was $1,275,000 for a 34% increase in one year. An even more amazing number was the increase in Average List price. For 2004 the Average price was $1,852,268 but in 2005 it went to $2,479,555 also a 34% increase. Now that's a pretty high average!!!

Okay, the list prices were way up in 2005 but as someone once said, "how'd ya' come out?" The only thing that truly matters is what the houses eventually sold for. Well the Median Sold price for 2004 was $922,500 and in 2005 it went to $1,278,500 for a 38% increase even above the number of the Median List price. In the words of Mel Allen "How About That?" The average price also increased greatly with 2004 coming in at $1,764,522 and 2005 showing up at $2,374,601 for another 34% increase.

So for the first part of our questions about the best of times and the not so good times the answer is that there were fewer properties that sold in 2005 but the selling price of those properties that did sell increased substantially.

Digging deeper into the numbers we find a few more, uh' differences. In 2004 82 properties came on the market but in 2005 95 came on. Ummmm, so more came on the market in 2005, but fewer sold. So what happened to all of those properties that didn't sell? Well, in '05 14 got withdrawn as opposed to 7 for '04. 13 Cancelled in '05 vs. 6 for '04, and 14 expired in '05 as opposed to 19 in '04.

Basically at this time in the Carpinteria Real Estate market we've got an increased expectation on the part of sellers that their house is going to sell for a lot of money. And when it doesn't they take their ball and go home.

Alright that's Homes and Estates and PUDs. What happened in the Condo market? Just like single family homes the number of sales in the Condo market was down in 2005. In '04 there were 94 properties that sold and in '05 there were 67. That translates to a -29% decrease in homes that sold, an even greater number than single family dwellings. This was interesting because in the rest of the Santa Barbara area Condo sales from '04 to '05 were pretty much flat. So what about the list prices? In 2004 the Median List price was $549,000, but in 2005 it went to $659,000 for a 20% increase. And the Average List price went from $625,660 to $673,018 for a 7.5% increase.

Okay, so the List Price went up. What about the sales price? In 2004 the Median Sales price was $549,000 and in 2005 it was $658,500 for a 20% increase. Not a bad return on your investment. And the Average Sales price went from $616,751 in 2004 to $665,848 in 2004 for an 8% increase.

Again, let's look a little deeper at the numbers. 118 Condos came on the market in Carpinteria in '05 vs. only 99 for '04. 19 got withdraw in '05 as opposed to 8 in '04. 17 cancelled in '05 vs. 9 in '04 and 15 expired in '05 vs. 8 in '04. So just like single family homes the number of sales was down '05 vs.'04 but the sales price was up about 20%. I guess the real question is what does that mean for the future? Well, all the economic blocks are still in a line. We've got a pretty low inventory of homes to sell, but there are a substantial number of people looking to get into the market. Combine that will still very low interest rates and things look pretty good. If you've got a piece of paradise I'd hold on to it, if you're looking to buy in the

Carpinteria area I'd recommend sooner rather than later. Well that's about it for Carpinteria Real Estate.......

About the author:

Gary Woods is a Real Estate Broker in Santa Barbara California and is the Computer Trainer for the Santa Barbara Association of Realtors. You can hear him on Radio 1290 AM Mondays from 9-10AM in Santa Barbara

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