By Norb Leahy
California is ahead of the rest of the country on Agenda 21
implementation. The Bay area is finally
rebelling against unelected regional governance, land seizures, attacks on
property rights and regional tyranny.
It’s good to watch California to see the ill effects of Agenda 21 land
use planning. California began environmental brainwashing over 40 years ago, so
the majority of their citizens were unprepared for the slick sales jobs
presented in “visioning” sessions that kicked off government control of their
land. They thought the federal grant bribes were a good deal, like free
money. Now they aren’t so sure going
regional was a good idea. In Georgia, we
rejected regionalism in 2012, but that doesn’t mean the Georgia regionalists
have given up.
California has had tough sledding for over a decade, with
businesses relocating to other states and jobs following, with high tax rates,
water problems, forest fire problems, regional governance, high debt, cities
going bankrupt, the illegal alien invasion, government abuse and earthquakes.
The fact that California is still there is a testament to the resilience of what’s
left of the local economy. But if Agenda 21 wants to take over our cars, move
us out of the suburbs and stack us in small apartments in transit villages, we
should see this occur first in California before it hits Georgia.
The following article from Uncommon Wisdom Daily outlines
the housing sales downturn in California, mostly in the Bay area:
California Leads the Way – by Brad Hoppmann
Beware, Homeowners: Housing Trends Don't Look So Good - Affordability
challenges - Trouble in the Southland - Homeownership going out of style?
If home is where the heart is, then wealthy Chinese hearts
are at home in California. However, some foreign homebuyers may now be having
second thoughts.
[House for sale] I reported in July how the Chinese and
other foreign buyers were snapping up large West Coast houses while many
American born citizens try to downsize (see Chinese-American House Swapping).
More recent data indicates the trend may be slowing. Average
selling prices in some California markets dropped significantly in the last few
months, while the raw number of homes sold plunged in the Los Angeles area last
month.
Home equity is still a huge part of most family balance
sheets. Another popped bubble could mean very bad news for millions. Let’s see
what the West Coast trendsetters are saying.
DQNews.com is a real estate news and information site. Here
is a headline they ran last Thursday.
[headline] Southland is the six-county Los Angeles region
and seems as if August was a soft month for home sales there. Here is the
beginning of the DQNews.com story.
“Irvine, Calif. — Southern California home sales slipped to
a four-year low for August as would-be
buyers faced inventory and affordability challenges and investor purchases held at the lowest level
in several years. The median sale price climbed to a post-recession high, a
real estate information service
reported.
“A total of 18,796 new and resale houses and condos sold in
Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego,
Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. That was down 7.7 percent from 20,369
sales in July, and down 18.5 percent
from 23,057 sales in August 2013, according to CoreLogic DataQuick data.
“On average, sales have risen 3.7 percent between July and
August since 1988, when CoreLogic DataQuick statistics began. Southland sales
have fallen on a year-over-year basis for 11 consecutive months. Sales during
the month of August have ranged from a low of 16,379 in 1992 to a high of
39,562 in 2003. Last month’s sales were
28.2 percent below the August average of 26,169 sales.
“The median price paid for all new and resale houses and
condos sold in the six-county region last month was $420,000, up 1.7 percent
from $413,000 in July and up 9.1 percent
from $385,000 in August 2013. Last month’s
median was the highest for any month since December 2007, when it was
$425,000. “The median’s 9.1 percent year-over-year
gain in August was the highest in three months. But it also marked the third
consecutive month with a single-digit annual increase following 22 months of
double-digit year-over-year gains as high as 28.3 percent.”[Read more at
DQNews.com] Notice the pattern here. The
number of homes sold is dropping, but the median sale price is rising.
We discussed mean vs. median in regards to income inequality
last week, so I don’t need to remind you what it means. Half the homes sold in
Southland last month went for $420,000 or more.
This indicates that there is still plenty of demand for
high-end Southland homes. Yet, the number of such homes sold dropped
considerably in the last year from 23,057 in August 2013 to 18,796 in August
2014.
Sales volume is slowing in the Bay Area as well with median
prices actually falling in August. Here’s DQNews.com again.
“The number of Bay Area homes that sold last month declined
again as potential buyers continued to
struggle with constrained supply, tricky
mortgage availability and affordability issues. ‘The median price paid
for a Bay Area home dropped somewhat, as it usually does from July to August,’
a real estate information service
reported.
“A total of 7,578 new and resale houses and condos sold in
the nine-county Bay Area last month. That was down 10.6 percent from 8,474 in
July and down 12.0 percent from 8,616 in August last year, according to
CoreLogic DataQuick data.
“August sales have varied from 6,688 in August 1992 to
13,940 in August 2004. The average since
1988, when CoreLogic DataQuick’s statistics began is 9,526.
“The median price paid for a home in the nine-county Bay
Area was $607,000 in August. That was
down 1.6 percent from $617,000 in July, and up 12.4 percent from $540,000 in
August a year ago. A seasonal late-summer decline in median price is normal in
the Bay Area. The Bay Area’s median sale price peaked at $665,000 in June and
July 2007, then dropped to a low of $290,000 in March 2009.” [Read more at
DQNews,com]
The story tries to sound optimistic, but if I owned Bay Area
real estate, I think it would make me nervous.
The average August since 1988 saw 9,526 homes sold, but this year it was only
7,578. That’s almost 21% below normal.
We can’t blame all this on slowing Chinese demand, but that
may well be part of it. The country’ National Statistics Bureau reported over
the weekend that home sales in China
slowed 10.5% in the first eight months of 2014.
We may be facing a longer-term change in the housing market.
The millennial generation, those now aged 25-35, show little interest in (or
ability to afford) buying their own
homes. That age group was once the prime market for first-time home
purchases.
Homeownership as a percentage of the population peaked in
2004-2005, and has been dropping
steadily ever since. The trend was already well underway before the last
recession hit.
Source: Brad Hoppmann, Publisher, Uncommon Wisdom Daily
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