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The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 12/29/09

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Today’s News Synopsis:

The S&P/Case-Schiller index shows that home prices increased in 20 major U.S. cities in October. A Bloomberg study shows that broker commissions decreased by 6.2 percent from last year. Steve Thomas of Altera Real Estate reports that Orange County home sales take half as much time in comparison to last year. O.C. distressed property sales decreased by 53 percent from last year.

In The News:

Bloomberg - “Home Prices in 20 U.S. Cities Rose for Fifth Month” (12-29-09)

“Home prices in 20 U.S. cities rose in October for a fifth consecutive month, putting the housing market and economy farther along the path to recovery. The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index increased 0.4 percent from the prior month on a seasonally adjusted basis, after a 0.2 percent rise in September, the group said today in New York. The gauge was down 7.3 percent from October 2008, the smallest year- over-year decline since October 2007. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News anticipated a 7.2 percent drop.”

Bloomberg - “Housing Recovery Fails to Bolster Broker Commissions” (12-29-09)

“A surge in home purchases by first- time U.S. buyers is doing little to help real estate agents and brokers who close the deals. Commissions in 2009 fell to the lowest level in seven years, driven down by sales of low-priced homes to first-time buyers using the federal tax credit. Commissions through November dropped 6.2 percent from a year earlier to $40.6 billion, according to Bloomberg calculations based on the average commission rates from Real Trends Inc. and on home price and sales data from the National Association of Realtors.”

Inman - “Approach 2010 with curiosity, not dread” (12-29-09)

“Given the immense global economic expansion under way and the shortage of the commodity, its price ought to go up. Then again, given cost of production at $600 an ounce and doubled price, nobody knows at what point balance will appear. If you want an inflation indicator, watch inflation. Currency values are relative to each other, not absolute, and are effect, not cause. In the old days you could assume that a weak currency brought inflation, or that you got some benefit from having a strong currency. Today, China has no inflation problem and tries like hell to keep its currency cheap. Watch economies themselves.”

Inman - “3 steps to a better marketing strategy” (12-29-09)

“Cummings points out that more wealth is created during recessions than at any other time. Recessions do end. While you can’t control when your market will shift, you can control your reaction to the market.”

Realty Times“Washington Report: Estate Taxes” (12-29-09)

“If the Senate fails to pass a bill preserving current estate tax rates, as the House did before heading home for the holidays, the estate tax will totally disappear January first. While that might sound like outstandingly good news for people who want to pass along real estate to children or grandchildren tax-free, there’s a major complication here. If the estate tax disappears in 2010 because the Senate couldn’t get its act together in 2009, the disappearance will only be temporary, for one year. Then, under a legislative deal worked out nearly a decade ago, the estate tax will suddenly spring back to life in 2011 with higher tax rates and lower exclusions.”

Orange County Register“Home-selling time sliced by half in 2009″ (12-29-09)

“The latest O.C. home inventory report from Steve Thomas at Altera Real Estate in Aliso Viejo — the last one for 2009 — tells you that the typical home officially on the market today takes half the time to sell than it did a year ago!”

Orange County Register - “Distressed homes for sale cut 53% in a year” (12-29-09)

“the number of O.C. distressed properties (homes listed by agents in the MLS system as foreclosures or short sales) was 2,537 last week — down 53% in a year.”