Friday, May 30, 2008

Weekend Opens (5/31-6/1)

We're getting back to normal, or above-normal, with lots of opens this weekend. Our weekly feature mainly looks at new offerings, but click here for the complete list of opens published in the Beach Reporter, or at any time use the link in the right-hand column under "Prop. Search Tools."

As always, click any highlighted address below for more pics & details via Redfin.


Hill Section

If you're a regular reader, you know they just don't give us many new Hill Section listings in a given week, and even fewer new opens.

953 9th is a new listing, but not posted as open. Offers 5br/4ba and 4100 sq. ft. for $2.650m. It's on the same street as Mrs. MBC's pick 2 weeks ago, 619 9th, which is open (Sun. 1-4pm) and which will run you $4.195m. Can we get really micro for a moment? 619 is west of Highview, and 953 is one door west of Dianthus. That means one's near downtown, and one's near Sepulveda. That's part of why you've got a $1.5m gap between them.

Meanwhile, this week's bogus re-list is intended to make you think 923 1st is a "new" listing; it's not, it's just got another price cut. (See "Call Off the Bump.") They're celebrating with another sunset open house, 2 hours before sunset – Open Sun. 5-6pm.


Sand Section

117 7th is a newer home close to the Strand, on a walkstreet near downtown. What could be better? Well, for $4m, you might want more than 2br and 2350 sq. ft.

The issue here is that the home is on a half lot (a bit bigger at 1500 sq. ft.), unusual in these parts. The more we look at that price, the more we say "hmmmm..." Open Sat. & Sun. 2-5pm.

4419 Highland pulled a re-list this week – it's got a new agent. That's 3 agents now, for those scoring at home. New price: $1.265m. New money quote in the listing: "effortless access to all local services." We assume they mean not only the Chevron station, but also the snack shop. Open Sun. 2-4pm.


Tree Section

Mrs. MBC is often taken by the sweet $3-4m homes. You know, the South End walkstreets, Hill Section paradises, etc. But those are for the few. We've still got plenty of spiffy, traditional family homes in MB that are perfectly good choices for regular folk.

Mrs. MBC's pick this week, 2907 Pacific, is an example. It's got 3br/2ba and 1900 sq. ft. There's nothing about the home that will blow you away, but it's sweet, updated, flows nicely and is priced as if the sellers mean to make a deal at $1.199m. Did you notice that decent homes are rapidly approaching $1m?

2907 Pacific is open Sat. & Sun., 2-4pm.
If you drop by, be sure to tell them Mrs. MBC sent you. They do want to know.

We just have to mention 3119 Valley, the lowest-priced home west of Hwy. 1, a small cottage (2br/1ba, 850 sq. ft.) on one of those little slivers of a lot (2500 sq. ft.) you see on this stretch of Valley. It's dominated by bigger homes – including one under construction – on either side. Get into MB, reduce your carbon footprint, own for just $799k. Open Sun. 2-5pm.

Another week, more new construction coming online. 664 33rd offers 5br/5ba, 3550 sq. ft., and – well, you've heard this before – this one is so much better than the rest, it needs to start near $2.7m ($2.689m).

That means it's the highest-priced Tree Section newbie except one at $4.4m. It's blue, it's different and it's described as "Coastal Plantation" in style. Hey, did MB once have plantations? Open Sat. & Sun. 1-4pm.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

A $600k Reality Check

Hold a house for a year, and you're not very likely to make money if you try to sell it.

Even in MB.

This is a lesson hard-learned, but gradually dawning on the owner/seller of 317 17th, a walkstreet home near downtown.

17th was purchased in Nov. 2006 for $2.050m. As MBC recently noted, that was "about 30 minutes ago in local real estate time."

Just over a year later, the owner offered 317 17th for $2.799m. And that struck MBC as, well, ambitious. (See "Stuff Our Stockings (Please).")

We described $2.799m as a "highway-robbery price" and noted that the seller sought a profit of $749k (+36%) after a short hold. We speculated, in a perhaps non-PC way, that the reason for sale might be that the owner "face[s] imminent court-ordered institutionalization."

Quite suddenly, those delusions have (almost) ended. Last week, the price was reduced to $2.499m, but this week, a bigger chunk came off, and the list price now stands at $2.199m.

That's a drop of $600k and 21% from that silly start price.

It's now just +$149k/+7% over the Nov. 2006 purchase price, barely enough to cover the costs of sale.

It's all downhill from there.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Renter Turns Buyer

Of all the many people weighing the rent-buy equation, one has the ear of perhaps a million people.

David Leonhardt of the New York Times calls himself "an evangelist for renting," the sort of guy who has tried, repeatedly, to persuade people that the rent-buy equation only favored renting in recent years with bubble-inflated housing prices. (See, for instance, this piece from April 2007.)

But Leonhardt is leaving Manhattan (the island, not MB) and moving to the Washington, D.C., area, where he now finds housing more affordable and buying more rational. He's under contract to buy a home. (See the story of his "conversion" in Wednesday's NYT.)

As Leonhardt explains it, his decision was tied to the "rent ratio" in the area. (Others call this the "price/rent ratio.") To calculate the "rent ratio," you need two comparable homes – one for sale, one for rent. (You need to pick your inputs carefully to get this right, of course.)

Divide the price you'd pay to buy one by the total annual rent you'd pay to live in the other. That's your "rent ratio."

Here's an illustration using the same MB home for both sides of the equation – 437 1st was recently offered for sale at $1.650m (it's in escrow). We're told it was also offered for rent at $7,495/mo. Multiply that monthly rent by 12, and $89,940 is your divisor. The offering price ($1.650m) divided by the annual rent yields a "rent ratio" of 18.3.

So what's "normal?" Leonhardt says that ratios nationwide stuck between 10-14 for most of the 1970s through the 1990s, then bubbled up to 19 recently. Individual markets vary, and the coasts have higher "normal" ratios.

A chart provided with the story (use this link to the story, then pull up the national map graphic online) gives the ratio for all of the LA metropolitan area as 24.1 today, and 31.5 at the recent peak. (Also see here for a Nov. 2007 Fortune/CNN story about the ratios nationwide, and click here for the accompanying data – select the "P/R" tab at top to the chart.)

Leonhardt says he decided to buy when he saw ratios in Washington of 16 for condos and 15 for SFRs. He still thought that was high, but the excess cost now is worth it to him. (He doesn't discuss prices much, though we're sure that the prospect of buying in D.C. was easier to tackle than buying in Manhattan for a reporter and his wife.)

Now we'll ask readers to calculate some rent ratios of your own. That 1st St. example we offered above may be a poor one, since that monthly rent seemed very high for that home. If the rent is too high, the ratio will be too low.

It's best to use market-rate examples. Please run some examples of active listings (for sale and for rent), and share your inputs and results. What do you see as the "rent ratio" in MB?

If you're not inclined to do the math, you can still use this cool online tool the NYT is providing. You input rental rates (monthly), a home price and some other standard variables, and you get a custom chart telling you when – if ever – buying works out to be a better deal financially than renting.

Happy calculating...

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Call Off the Bump

A 3-week experiment with a price increase now has been called off at 923 1st.

As we noted earlier this month (see "One Up, One Down"), on May 6, the list price for 923 1st shot up from $7.375m to $7.595m, same as the price from March 26-April 28. There were just 8 days to catch the discount then.

Today, the price is down again to $7.350m, $25k below where it stood from April 28-May 6, so it seems buyers didn't completely miss out on a bargain here.

It's hard to figure what's up, but it's not hard to imagine some terse meetings about pricing. (We're guessing.)

The listing began at $7.998m in early January, so it's now down $648k (-8%) from there.

The home is spectacular in many ways, and would be an especially great place to visit for a rollicking pool party. (See "Unpredictable.") In fact, in that alternative universe in which your blog author is a single guy with deep pockets entertaining the rich and famous, it'd be a spectacular choice for a radical pad – big views, big fun.

Alas, it's not a family home, and that sticker price (er, those various sticker prices) doesn't work but for a few. We still think there will be quite a bit more cutting to come if a deal is to be made.

Another Hill Section listing that recently made a bump, 312 S. Dianthus, is standing firm for now at $3.749m, a boost of $259k (+7%) after it began at $3.490m. We'll check in later to see how that's working out.

More About You

We learn a lot from readers here, even though the MBC comments section is anonymous. Correspondents reflect several different viewpoints based upon factors that include homeownership status.

Twice recently, we have run polls that gathered interesting evidence on who reads MBC. Our most popular poll yet asked simply which RE-related actions readers had taken, if any, in the past 2 years. (See "Recently Bought? Or Sold? Why?")

In comments on that story, people described their decisions to buy and sell in recent years, and gave some sense of market psychology. In the poll, we learned that slightly more than a quarter of the MBC readership has bought or sold in the past 2 years. Most readers have not been active in the market in that timeframe.

About a third of readers (32%) say they've "stayed put" in homes they own during this period. Added to the 18% who bought in these past 2 years, our poll tells us that fully half the MBC readership consists of MB homeowners.

Meanwhile, 27% of poll respondents said they "stayed put" in rental homes over the past 2 years. It is conceivable that, also, some of the 8% who said they had sold in MB as their last RE-related action are currently renting in MB. If so, the total number of MB renters reading MBC could be as high as 35%, still considerably below the number of homeowners.

Finally, 15% of readers chose "other" to describe their actions in the past 2 years. We know that we have plenty of readers from outside MB to whom this category would apply, but it's also possible that our poll didn't offer adequate choices to readers who do live in MB.


The Scoop on HELOCs

Now, as to MB homeowners, we ran a poll a little while back asking about Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs). (See "How's Your HELOC?")

A loyal reader had asked for help getting a HELOC "unfrozen." The bank claimed that a "decline in value" had wiped out the available credit, but any halfway reasonable calculation of LTV would show that not to be true, the reader felt. We saw this as a case of a bank in trouble shutting down credit, not really a reflection of the reader's home's value.

We asked how common this problem was among readers with HELOCs. And we found that it was somewhat uncommon, but not unheard of.

Nearly one-third (31%) of readers with HELOCs said they had their credit lines frozen or reduced recently.

In comments, a few readers complained of Washington Mutual having chopped their limits substantially, while a couple others mentioned Chase doing the same thing. Our reader whose experience sparked the story worked with a third lender, a popular, but troubled, online brokerage.

A second graph of the poll results includes the 34% of readers who said they owned their homes but did not have a HELOC. This is a different way of looking at the problem among all MB homeowners.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Holiday Open Thread

Memorial Day is the traditional kickoff to Summer.

We're not getting the hot weather this year – more of a shorts-and-long-sleeves kind of day – but it's still shaping up to be one of the nicer days in a week.

How are you celebrating? Where? With whom?

And on point with the purpose of the holiday, what or who are you remembering most today?

In Baghdad, it's 101 and getting hotter throughout the week.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

MB Market Update for 5/15/08, Trees

The new MB Market Update spreadsheets are available: download the 5/15/08 update by clicking here (note: this one is revised, fixing layout problems), or at any time by using the link at the upper-right corner of the main MBC page. Information in this update closed May 15.

This is the third of 3 articles describing market activity May 1-15.


Tree Section

There were 51 active SFRs in the Tree Section as of May 15, with 27 priced below $2m, and 24 priced above $2m.

We had 7 new listings, 3 of them new construction:

  • 2901 Oak (pictured) is located on a not-terrible part of Oak. Home is essentially Spanish, 5br/5ba and 3250 sq. ft. Starts a hair below $2m at $1.995m.
  • 2504 Poinsettia is very surprising – they say "not cookie-cutter," and they're not kidding. A completely different layout, an interesting mix of styles that is not purely contemporary nor Mediterranean (click for the pics via Redfin). All bedrooms downstairs, most boxy. Hmmm. Starts at $2.499m.
  • 721 36th is a Cape Cod that was new last year, and we're letting it sneak onto this list now. Purchased for $2.327m in March 2007; the markup after a year: +$172k/+7% to $2.499m. Well, they only need one buyer who thinks the market has appreciated 7% over on 36th in the past year.
The resales new to the list:
  • 1705 Pacific (4br/4ba, 2650 sq. ft.) was remodeled awkwardly in stages by previous owners, and radically redone inside by the current owners. Very classy, but you need to get past the strange layout (master downstairs), so-so curb and location on Pacific near the school. The start at $1.875m struck MBC as fanciful (sellers paid $1.060m in late 2003), but comparably few MBC readers found the price "delusional" in our poll – or, at least, not the worst offender in the bunch.
  • 3104 Palm shows its 80s vintage outside, but it's large (4br/3ba, 3425 sq. ft.) and ultra-updated inside. Starts at $1.799m (with a low $525/PSF).
  • 2905 Valley is a comfy cottage with 3br/2ba and 1500 sq. ft. that the listing insists is "sophisticated." It's clean. Starts at $1.239m.
  • 1816 Agnes, a humble remodel (3br/2ba, 1820 sq. ft.) in a quiet, "A" location, came up at $1.775m and sold quickly, just after our May 15 window closed.
In the first half of may, there were 5 sales (new escrows):
  • 3404 Maple (pictured), akin to new construction though born 8 years ago (5br/5ba, 3300 sq. ft.) sold quickly at $1.799m;
  • 1821 Walnut, new construction, fell out of escrow and then fell right back into it with a new buyer, last at $2.399m (recall its start last year at $2.75m);
  • 2310 John is a unique contemporary – rare for the Trees, last at $2.099m;
  • 2204 Palm is a huge home that once boasted the title "Colossal Corner Cape Cod" (see our review: "Oh Yes, It Is Big"). Started at $3.45m and never budged; and
  • 625 26th is a nice, late-80s Mediterranean that sold after chopping almost $200k from its start at $2.185m; that last $1.999m price was about $200k higher (+11%) than its Aug. 2004 purchase price ($1.795m).
Noteworthy price cuts:
  • 560 36th, a surprisingly warm modern, made a sudden cut of $300k before May 15 to $2.699m, and a few days later (outside the report window) has cut another $200k to $2.499m;
  • 1829 Poinsettia, now on market more than a year, lost another agent and returned $100k lighter at $1.475m – now -$310k/-17% from its preposterous start last May; and
  • 500 14th cut $100k, now -$150k/-8% from start and at $1.699m.
There were 4 closed sales, the first 2 being short sales that skipped straight from "active" to "sold" –
  • 3412 Pacific got its asking price: $1.199m – remember this one sold just over a year ago for $1.491m (Jan. 2007), nearly $300k more, although that was also probably $100k-$150k higher than its true market value at the time;
  • 1313 Oak went for $1.780m, -$710k/-29% from the most recent start price of $2.490m;
  • 3517 Elm got $1.155m, -$244k/-17% from its October 2007 start – sellers paid only a bit more ($1.045m) in Oct 2004; and
  • 738 26th (pictured), the picket-fence beauty on a corner lot at Agnes, closed at $1.770m, just a $29k hair below asking.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Weekend Opens (5/24-5/25)

May and June may be great selling months, in general, but Memorial Day weekend is a time for car races, barbeques and beach time, not new listings or open houses.

Literally 1 new SFR listing west of Sepulveda has come on since last week, and that's a $6m+ Sand Section home (2719 Manhattan Ave.) that isn't open this weekend. So we'll pick out listings worth special attention for one reason or another.

The way the weather is shaping up this weekend, don a parka if you dare to trod from open to open.

Click here for the complete list of opens published in the Beach Reporter, or at any time use the link in the right-hand column under "Prop. Search Tools."

As always, click any highlighted address below for more pics & details via Redfin.


Hill Section

Everyone talks about the big money and even bigger estates in the Hills, but regular folks live there, too. They snatch up houses like 511 N. Dianthus (open Sat. 1-4pm) and 1100 John (open Sun. 1-4pm) and then make it a point to be overheard in crowded restaurants talking about their "home up in the Hill Section."


Sand Section

We've said it before, we'll say it again – 332 20th (pictured), up at the top of the 20th St. walkstreet above Highland, is splendid, plush, unique and offers great ocean views, plus back-door access to Live Oak Park. You would think it'd be taken by Summer, but that's just around the corner. Currently at $4.495m. Open Sat. & Sun., 1-4pm.

Another wower is at 228 29th Place, which we've urged readers to drop in on previously.

The fall from great heights would seem to be nearly complete – this one began at $3.049m last year and now stands (after a legit re-list) at $2.499m. Contemporary, custom, big views and 4 levels, if memory serves – seems like 6. Open Sun. 1-4pm.



Tree Section

560 36th is a new home that's really trying to move. After just 2 months on market, the price is down $500k/17%. The listing screams "please submit all reasonable offers!"

36th is surprisingly warm for a concrete-glass-and-steel modern home. It's new construction with 4br/4ba, 4000 sq. ft. and a different flavor – not what you expect in the neighborhood and not the sort of stark, soulless contemporary that you might find elsewhere. (The listing has pics but they don't do it much justice.) Overall, the project is pretty daring for a speckie and for this location – steps from the armory and Sand Dune Park. That's why it's down already to $2.499m. Open Sun. 2-5pm.

2812 Elm recently crossed a shocking threshold – 600 days on market. It began Sept. 13, 2006, and if it has taken 7 total days off market since then, we've got monkeys for nephews.

When the listing urged buyers, in January, to "Hurry, this home will not last!" MBC said, "Really, Don't Hurry," because we thought they must be kidding.

But now, partly with Mrs. MBC's urging, we're changing our tune completely. It's a weekend must-see.

The sad part about this case is that it's a very charming house, great curb, nice kitchen, and yet challenged by a layout that is just too hard to swallow, with 2 of the 4 bedrooms in awkward places downstairs.

Homes that haven't sold have a way of not selling, so this one's been stuck in a feedback loop for months. The first problem was that shoot-the-moon start price 600+ days ago: $1.769m. Current price of $1.599m means the sellers lose something if they make a deal – they paid just $15k less in June 2005.

It's time folks, it's time. First, drop by, even if it's just for moral support. Give the layout and location and other charms a serious thought. Somebody, please make an offer. Have some holiday spirit. Open Sun. 1-4pm.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

MB Market Update for 5/15/08, Sand

The new MB Market Update spreadsheets are available: download the 5/15/08 update by clicking here (note: this one is revised, fixing layout problems), or at any time by using the link at the upper-right corner of the main MBC page. Information in this update closed May 15.

This is the second of 3 articles describing market activity May 1-15; again, shooting for shorter this round...


Sand Section

There were 36 active SFRs on May 15.

The biggest news was the raft of sales (new escrows), 7 in all, so we’ll start there:

  • 437 1st, a 2007 purchase ($1.450m) that was tidied up and last offered at $1.65m;
  • 401 3rd (pictured), a large remodel that may have been "underpriced" in a way that only a $2.7m home in the South End could be – lasted less than 2 weeks;
  • 408 6th, the midblock walkstreet home that we're hearing is sold to a builder – last at $2.099m;
  • 2211 Highland, twice surprising us as a listing on Highland that went quickly (listed at $1.399m);
  • 324 25th, a new listing of an older, smallish (1400 sq. ft.) home on a midtown walkstreet east of Highland, which didn't last a week at $2.2m; and
  • 125 31st, a contemporary in a sleepy walkstreet block of the North End at Manhattan Ave., last at $3.399m.
Meanwhile, just 3 other new listings, including:
  • 217 35th Pl, perhaps a lot sale, given that the status of the converted duplex is not that of a dream home – at the corner of two alleys. Clear second-place finisher in MBC's "most delusional" poll last week. Started at $1.5m, about 50% above the March 2006 purchase price; and
  • 204 38th St., a small "as-is" cottage on a half-lot (1350 sq. ft.) priced at $899k, which sold the day after our report window closed.
Several listings made cuts, including:
  • 473 31st, a new home (pictured), took another $150k off, now -$251k/-8% at $2.999m;
  • 341 10th, which took another $196k off, now -$301k/-10% at $2.999m;
  • 448 27th, a fairly large (2650 sq. ft.) 2br home, took off another $100k to -$190k/-9% below start, now at $1.899m; and
  • 417 28th took its first $201k off, now -6% at $3.298m (with a bogus re-list to boot).

There were 3 closed sales:

  • 3200 Alma at $1.909m, $10k above asking – recall that this one sold quickly in late March (see story here);
  • 207 Homer, another quick sale, at $1.715m, just -$64k/-4% from asking; and
  • The "brownstone" (pictured) at 428 27th went for $2.712m, -$186k/-6% from the start at $2.899m.

MB Market Update for 5/15/08, Hills

The new MB Market Update spreadsheets are available: download the 5/15/08 update by clicking here, or at any time by using the link at the upper-right corner of the main MBC page. Information in this update closed May 15.

We now split up the discussions of our 3 areas west of Sepulveda into separate articles. By necessity, we'll be short on text and pics this round. As always, you can click on a highlighted address for pics & details on active listings via Redfin.

Total SFR inventory west of Sepulveda was at 108 on May 15, just +1 from the end of April. It is, nonetheless, another new inventory record in MBC's year-plus of public market tracking.

In the whole of our subject region west of Sepulveda, we recorded 14 new listings in this 2-week period and 14 sales (new escrows). Nice balance. Some listings returned – some had gone on hold or had sold but fell out of escrow. One listing canceled.

Onward, then, to the details...


Hill Section

There were 21 active SFRs as of May 15.

There were 3 new listings, dreamers all, some might say:

  • 114 N. Poinsettia is a pricey, beautiful, newer home starting at $7.750m. Credit the writeup for labeling it "Andalucian" rather than, say, "Spanish." Someone has been test-driving the home for about a year – oh, that's the agent, too;
  • 619 9th is a Cape Cod-style remodel with charms like a beautiful yard & pool, good space, but surprising layout and general need for updates, starting at $4.195m; and
  • 1015 Boundary, reluctantly wearing the crown of "most delusional" among new listings, that being the clear choice of MBC readers after it began at $2.480m for 3br/3ba and 2400 sq. ft. on an alley.

One sale (new escrow): 869 3rd, last at $3.750m. This one began at $3.995m last Summer (see "Two Views from the Hills").

Sellers paid $2.437m in May 2004, so this looks like a sweet payday of $1m+ when the sale settles out.

A few price changes worth noting...

First, a more traditional move on the new home at 218 N. Dianthus – began at $6.75m, chopped $455k to $6.295m after several weeks with no takers.

Less traditional actions – 2 listings increased their prices:
  • 923 1st, on market 4 months, retracted a previous price chop from late April to $7.375m, rising back to $7.595m (see "One Up, One Down"); and
  • 312 S. Dianthus, on market only a few weeks, jumped to $3.749m from $3.490m, no doubt reacting to the recent sale at 869 3rd.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Great Streets: 7th Street (Sand)

Seventh Street in the South End is one of those fabled Manhattan Beach walkstreets. As much or more than others, this one is a kid's paradise.

7th is a flat stretch that goes all the way from Crest to Valley – no break at Ingleside. On a recent stroll we counted no fewer than 3 playhouses, 4 basketball hoops (of varying sizes) and a tetherball post in the walkstreet. It's a playground.

7th boasts a number of beach cottages that are well-kept and have preserved their original charm. Many of the entrances are warm and welcoming, embracing the walkstreet. (We cringe when we see walkstreet homes that are tucked behind fences or don't have a patio or deck fronting the public areas – why bother being on a walkstreet?)

On 7th, you'll also see a handful of new homes that are designed to take the utmost advantage of the location.

One home in particular is notable for how most of a whole wall on the ground floor opens out onto the front yard, which continues out onto the walkstreet without interruption.

The flat south end walkstreets are super kid-friendly, but as we've heard from current and former residents, they're not for everyone.

Some say that once their kids have grown older they'd rather live in a more mellow location. We don't take this as anti-kid so much as pro-peace-and-quiet.

The adults get their share of fun, too, though – the extraordinary, raucous Halloween activities on these South End blocks are a major draw, with plenty of parties for grown-ups alongside the trick-or-treating.

For its charm, family appeal, and easy access to the beach and downtown, 7th Street is one of MB's Great Streets.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Recently Bought? Or Sold? Why?

There's little doubt that our local RE market has changed recently.

MBC's perception is that the go-go times ended somewhere in 2006, roughly, though prices have only recently begun to degrade noticeably. (More on that later this week, with more DataQuick charts.)

If you're an MBC reader, you've got an above-average level of interest in the state of the local market, and its future. But we know the homeownership status of MBC readers varies widely.

For instance, in comments and private email, we hear from people who are longtime local homeowners, others who are actively looking, folks who have decided to wait, and plenty who have bought or sold homes recently.

So where do you fit? If you have bought or sold a home within the last 2 years, we're particularly interested in your reasoning. Did you perceive a change in the market, and did that play any role in your decisions? Be as specific as you can.

Please vote in the poll, too. There are 4 options: Tell us whether you have, in the past 2 years (May 2006-present), bought a home in MB, sold a home in MB, or stayed put in MB (specify renting or owning). If you both bought and sold in this period, go by the last transaction (i.e., a move-up seller/buyer would be a buyer).

Privately, we've heard from recent buyers of a Sand Section townhome, who told MBC they're "super happy" with their purchase of a "nice home in a great location" after more than 2 years of searching in their price range. We've heard the inside story on some recent short sales. We've heard from people searching for lots and buying new homes at a substantial discount.

In comments at MBC, particularly, you'll hear from people who have sold homes recently – sometimes a personal residence, in other cases a second home in MB held for some time as an investment. Many attribute their decisions to the change in the market. Some are profit-takers, others, perhaps, market-timers hoping to buy back in at lower prices some day.

Whatever your situation, please offer parts of your story here. And please consider creating a nickname via "Name/URL" – no URL necessary – just so we can track and refer to your comments here on this post.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Weekend Opens (5/17-5/18)

Lakers are off for the weekend, so do your duty and drop in on a few opens. Who knows when your next break might be?

Click here for the complete list of opens published in the Beach Reporter, or at any time use the link in the right-hand column under "Prop. Search Tools."

As always, click any highlighted address below for more pics & details via Redfin.


Hill Section


Mrs. MBC doesn't pick many Hill Section listings, but an interesting option presents itself this week – 619 9th.

The home is comfortably large at 4br/4ba and about 3800 sq. ft. (BTV – public records say closer to 3400) on a nice, large lot – almost 10,000 sq. ft. It's attractively landscaped (includes a "meditation garden") with a pool. A sweet great room, but you must like brick. And if you find some of the décor a bit frumpy, remember that stuff is easy to change.

619 9th is close to downtown, not a view home. The buzz is that it's high at $4.195m, but the first question is: Could it be a great home? Mrs. MBC thinks it could be. Open Sat. & Sun. 1-4pm.


Sand Section

Folks have been too busy buying and selling in the Sand (7 sales in the first half of May) to open up anything new this week. Retread time.

There's that attractive downtown walkstreet home, 341 10th – a bit of a head-scratcher because a chunk of the living space is tied up in a rental unit. It gets another mention this week because it's now down 10% from its ambitious $3.3m start in March. Can anyone explain why the walkstreet homes aren't moving? Now $2.999m. Open Sun. 1-4pm.

Another walkstreet home not moving yet: 317 5th, still at $3.2m, which seemed pretty aggressive (we mean low, not absurd) when it began. Open Sun. 1-4pm.

There's a contemporary (90s) home in El Norte that's actually located on El Porto St. – they haven't changed that yet? – but hasn't had any takers after a few months. 125 El Porto offers 3br/4ba and 2000 sq. ft. It has squeeked down just a bit to $1.599m. Open Sun. 1-4pm.


Tree Section

721 36th
is a newer Cape Cod with 5br/5ba and 3450 sq. ft. It was purchased last year, in March 2007, for $2.327m. The markup after a year: +$172k/+7% to $2.499m.

Did we mention that this is 36th St.? And 2008? Good luck with that. Open Sun. 1-4pm.

Worth another mention this week is 621 Marine, a newer home (2002) that – get this – was also purchased in March 2007 (for $2.436m). The "rustic Spanish" home offers 5br/4ba, 3100 sq. ft., but it is now priced below last year's purchase price. Now $2.419m. Open Sun. 1-4pm.


Looking for something on the more affordable end of the spectrum? Suck up the busy street and you can have 2905 Valley for $1.239m. It's got 3br/2ba and 1500 sq. ft. The listing calls it "sophisticated." Remember, there are no regulations on the use of that word to promote real estate. It's a comfy, clean cottage. Open Sat. 2:30-5pm, Sun. 3-5pm.

2901 Oak is a new home with perhaps the most defensive – no, we'll say "proactive" – listing language we can recall. It begins with: