Austin / Central Texas Real Estate News & Updates

Keep up to date with the latest Central Texas real estate trends and news.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Austin Ranks #2 in Best Performing Cities for Job Growth & Employment



How did Austin rank in job growth compared to the other top 50 U.S. Metros? We were Number Two in the nation!

When you compare to jobs lost in the U.S. in 2009 (4,941,700) or TEXAS (201,700), Austin’s performance is amazingly strong. With so many indications of growth returning to different segments of the economy, Austin is well positioned to benefit early on in the recovery.

The Austin Chamber of Commerce’s customary ranking of the best performing large metros, we retain second place behind Virginia Beach.
#2 Austin’s aggregate job losses of 2,300 (-0.3%) as compared to #1 Virginia Beach job losses of 1,600 (-0.2%).
Fort Worth was 8,000 (-0.9%)
San Antonio was 9,000 (-1.1%)
Dallas was 42,100 (-2.0%)
Houston was 92,500 (-3.5%)

Top 10 Best Performing Cities
1) Virginia Beach
2) Austin
3) Washington DC
4) Newark
5) Fort Worth
6) San Antonio
7) Edison
8) Columbus
9) Baltimore
10) Boston

Source: Austin Chamber of Commerce

Labels: , , , ,

Texas Job Growth Tops Nation for the Decade

While the rest of the nation fell behind, Texas continued to make strides in private sector job growth during the past 10 years.

Figures released by the U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics showed Texas leading the nation with 724,300 more net private sector jobs in December 2009 compared with one decade ago.

Of the top 10 largest states ranked by civilian labor force, only Texas and Florida had positive job growth over the 10 year period.

Texas Workforce Commission Chairman Tom Pauken credits economic policies for better-than-the-rest job growth.

“While the rest of the nation has only seen net growth in government jobs, Texas’ business, tax, and economic policies have created an environment where businesses can succeed and create the jobs that will allow Texas to lead our nation out of this national recession,” Pauken said.

For December, Texas showed the lowest overall seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate of large states at 8.3 percent, compared to 10 percent nationally. Austin rates were steady at 6.9 percent in December.

“Our nation cannot continue to spend its way out of the recession by incurring ever increasing amounts of government debt,” Pauken said. “For more than a year now I have been warning that Washington policymakers have failed to develop an economic policy designed to encourage capital investment and private sector job creation here in the United States. We need to act quickly in order to avoid a jobless recovery.”

Source: Austin Business Journal

Labels: , ,

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Austin Home Sales up 5%, Down in 2009


Austin home buyers returned in force last month, increasing sales 5 percent from the same time in 2008, according to a Austin Board of Realtors report Wednesday.

The median price of the 1,373 homes sold in December rose to about $194,000, an increase of 6 percent year over year.


“We saw dramatic increases in sales volume in October and November 2009, which were presumably related to the original deadline for the first-time home buyer tax credit,” board Chairman John Horton said.

“However, increases in sales volume beyond November and figures that have improved steadily throughout the year indicate that, while some demand was driven by the tax credit deadline, a sustainable recovery is also underway in the real estate market.”

Despite the encouraging numbers, home sales were still down 6 percent from 2008. Homes sold last year drifted near a $188,480 median, which was down 1 percent year over year. Officials said the overall 6 percent decline in home sales is still a significant improvement when compared to the double-digit decreases experienced in the first quarter 2009.

Source: Austin Business Journal

Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Austin New Resale Listings Continue to Fall

Austin New Resale Listings Continue to Fall
Austin residential properties for sale (listings) dropped 17.6 percent in December compared with the same month in 2008, according to a ZipRealty Inc. report today.

The document that compares listings in 27 U.S. metros found on average the homes for sale sloped 26.3 percent year over year and 4.3 percent between November and December. The final month of last year was the largest month-to-month drop in home listings of 2009.

“Seasonality and the heavy activity by first-time home buyers in October and November, who were rushing to take advantage of the tax credit, impacted housing inventory in December,” ZipRealty President and CEO Patrick Lashinsky said.

Austin reported 6.7 percent fewer homes on the market in December than the previous month, which was more than the change in Houston and Dallas. San Antonio numbers were not available.

Dallas listed 9.1 percent fewer homes on the market year over year and 3.8 percent fewer between November and December. Houston posted 5 percent less from November to December and 11.7 percent less in December than 12 months before.

Source: Austin Business Journal : Wednesday, January 13, 2010, 12:15pm CST

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, January 4, 2010

Austin Ranked Best City to Invest in Commercial Real Estate

Austin Ranked Best City to Invest in Commercial Real Estate

Austin has the best prospects for commercial real estate investment this year, a Grubb & Ellis Co. forecast reported today.

The Santa Ana, Calif-based real estate services and investment firm said it expects commercial real estate will continue to falter this year, but at a slower rate, according to the 2010 forecast. Most property types will reach bottom pricing near the end of 2010 with a slow recovery beginning in 2011, officials said.

In a ranking of the top 10 markets for long-term office, industrial, retail and multi-housing investment potential, Austin was listed No. 1. Houston was the only other Texas city to make the list, taking the sixth spot.

“Because commercial real estate lags the labor market, it still has a ways to go before reaching its own low point,” said Bob Bach, Grubb & Ellis senior vice president and chief economist. “The good news is that the freefall we saw in 2009 is over and the future is more certain, giving owners and users of real estate the confidence to begin making decisions again.”

The investment market will see a slight rebound in 2010, according to the forecast, with at least some assets entering the market in 2010. Officials said the shift should prompt increased sales volume of 20 to 30 percent. The report said record-high office vacancy rates will likely continue, reaching as high as 19 percent by the year’s close.

Source: Austin Business Journal : Monday, January 4, 2010

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Area Home Sales Jump, Fueled by Tax Credit

Existing home sales in Central Texas rose 6.4 percent in September, the first year-over-year increase in more than two years, and the median sales price also was up, rising 2 percent to $185,250, the Austin Board of Realtors reported Tuesday.

Sales were buoyed by factors including a federal tax credit of up to $8,000 for eligible first-time homebuyers and mortgage interest rates that are hovering around 5 percent.

The 1,780 sales last month were up from 1,748 in August and up from 1,673 in September 2008. The number of sales due to close in October was up 24 percent from a year ago, an indication that the tax credit is continuing to spur sales, real estate agents and experts say.

With pending sales up and prices stabilizing, it seems "to indicate a market that is beginning to recover," said Charles Heimsath, an Austin real estate consultant, although he predicts "a slow ascent into recovery over the next 12 to 18 months."

Heimsath and other experts have cautioned that the housing market, locally and nationally, could lose steam if the tax credit is not renewed, although there are proposals in Congress to extend or broaden it.

"Still, it does appear the worst of the housing downturn is behind us, although it may be some time before we see a marked turn upward," said D'Ann Petersen, an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, adding that she expects "a slow, prolonged recovery."

Nearly half the sales in September were for homes costing between $100,000 and $199,999 — a typical price range for a first-time home.

Nick Teplitz moved to Austin from Los Angeles in late May, drawn by the city's reputation as a "hip, fun city" and lower housing costs than in California.

He said the tax credit was a factor in his purchase of a unit at 2020 Congress, an apartment building that was converted to condominiums on South Congress Avenue.

Teplitz, a writer, closed on his condo June 30, paying under $100,000 for a one-bedroom unit.

Instead of "flushing $2,000 a month down the toilet" on rent in Los Angeles, Teplitz, 32, found he could own his home in Austin for one-third that much.

He said he thinks the tax credit should be extended, because it's "definitely going to keep the market afloat right now ... and keep people buying."

Jay Gohil, chairman of the real estate board, said the tax credit is likely to feed sales into November as buyers scramble to make the deadline.

The credit was passed earlier this year as part of the federal stimulus package. It provides a 10 percent credit, up to $8,000, for first-time buyers and those who have not owned a home in the previous three years. It is available to single buyers who make less than $75,000 a year and couples who make $150,000 or less.

Through September, the 14,286 home sales were down 14 percent from the same nine months of 2008, and the median price was unchanged, at $190,000.

But home sales have been slowly improving this year along with the economy, spurred by the tax credit and low mortgage rates.

Nell Hanson, a real estate agent with JB Goodwin Co., said the company "has had a huge influx of buyers who want to use the tax credit." Although an extension of the credit would be beneficial, "the low interest rates and the potential rise in the median price in Austin for 2010 will keep sales going up," Hanson said.

Greg Cooper, CEO of Goldwasser Real Estate in Austin, said "it would be suicide for the (housing) market" if the tax credit isn't renewed.

"I can't see them (Congress) taking it away right now," Cooper said, at least not until job growth comes back and unemployment eases.

Cooper said sales at his firm were up 51 percent in September over a year earlier, and "if we close what we have pending," October's sales will be triple that of last October's.

"Obviously, the stimulus is clearly helping," Cooper said.

Steve Cochrane, managing director at Moody's Economy.com, an economic forecasting and consulting firm, said he thinks that there is "a better than even chance" the credit will be renewed. He noted that there are positive ripple effects, as owners sell their entry-level homes to first-time buyers and are able to move to another home.

Asked whether the credit is artificially propping up the market, Cochrane said: "One can argue that any kind of government stimulus is artificial. But if it acts as the spark to get the market going, that can be fine. The government doesn't have to stay in the business of providing the spark forever."

By Shonda Novak
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
snovak@statesman.com; 445-3856
Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Austin cited as one of the next "youth-magnet" cities

According to the Journal, "Austin has become a gathering place for tech- and arts-conscious young adults." The paper also lauded Austin for its cultural attractions like the Austin City Limits Music Festival and South by Southwest. But some of those polled by the Journal expressed concern over how strongly Austin will bounce back from the recession.

What do Washington D.C., Seattle, New York, Portland and Austin all have in common? They are the five cities that top a new Wall Street Journal poll on where young people are likely to flock once economic recovery takes hold.

The Journal polled a panel of experts, from demographers to economists, on where young college graduates are likely to congregate in coming years. Austin ranked fifth on the list with the lowest unemployment rate of the five cities and a relatively high median household income. The Capital of Texas didn't fare quite so well as the others on the education front, with 41.8 percent of 25-35 year olds holding a bachelors degree or higher compared with 61.3 percent in Washington and 64.2 percent in Seattle.

The top 10 post-recession boom towns for the young and ambitious:

1. (tie) Washington D.C.
1. Seattle
3. New York
4. Portland
5. Austin
6. San Jose, Calif.
7. Denver
8. Raleigh-Durham, N.C.
9. Dallas
10. Chicago

Austin Business Journal

Labels: , , , , ,

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Austin Among Best Performing U.S. Metros (Economic Recovery)

Austin and San Antonio will be the first two U.S. cities to recover from the recession, according to a new national forecast from IHS Global Insight.

The forecast from the Lexington, Mass. economic research firm suggests the two Texas cities will bounce back to their pre-recession job levels sometime next year.
Eight other metropolitan areas are predicted to recover by 2011, a group that includes Texas’ two largest markets, Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston, along with Washington, D.C.

IHS Global Insight said most metros will start adding employment next year, but the increases are likely to be tepid. “Solid gains will not return for the majority of the country until 2011,” the report said.

Austin is also named one of the 20 best performing metropolitan areas in the second quarter of 2009, according to a study by the Brookings Institution. The second quarter MetroMonitor report tracked nine metrics in 100 U.S. metro areas, and found Austin was a leader in many of those, from percent change in gross metropolitan product to percent change in housing prices.

Employment in Austin fell 0.5 percent from its pre-recession peak, that was the second-narrowest gap in the nation. The Texas Capital was also one of only three metro areas that surpassed their pre-recession peak output by the second quarter of 2009. Along with the other two cities, McAllen and Washington D.C., Austin was one of those least affected by the downturn.

The report’s authors said the figures reveal some stark differences in economic performance among metro areas. “Signs at the national level that job and income losses are slowing continue to mask the highly variable performance of individual metropolitan economies,” said Alan Berube, co-author of the report. “While several metro areas may have reached a turning point, there are many others that still have not touched bottom, as well as a few that have almost fully recovered.”
Texas had the strongest showing, with six cities among the 20 strongest metro areas: Austin, Dallas, El Paso, Houston, McAllen and San Antonio. Florida dominated the list of the 20 weakest metro areas with eight, including Bradenton, Cape Coral, Lakeland, Miami, Orlando, Palm Bay and Tampa.
For the full report, click here.

Source: Austin Business Journal

Labels: , , ,

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Austin Poised for Fastest Recovery

From now until the end of 2010, the Austin economy is projected to grow by $5 billion. That, coupled with relatively subdued unemployment, has the Texas Capital poised for the quickest economic rebound in the nation, according to Forbes.com.


Overall, many economists expect the national economy to return to growth later in 2009, perhaps as soon as this summer. But, as the Forbes writers point out, that won't be the case everywhere. While some cities are positioned for a quick rebound, others face a slow crawl to recovery that could take years.


Texas cities such as Austin, San Antonio, Dallas and McAllen are in a good position, Forbes' analysis found. That's due in part to the fact that Texas did not see the massive real estate bubble that formed in states like California, Nevada and Florida.


To determine the 10 cities that look best poised for recovery, Forbes examined estimates from data provider Moody's Economy.com of the projected gross domestic product of metropolitan areas across the U.S., as well as unemployment figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and home prices, incomes and affordability data from the National Association of Home Builders.
The analysis shows the importance of a city's economic make-up. In essence, the more diverse the industry base is in a particular city, the better off that city is when it comes to quick recovery.
The top five cities for recovery, in order, are Austin; Fayetteville, Ark.; Boulder, Colo.; Huntsville, Ala.; and San Antonio.

Source: Austin Biz Journal

Labels: , ,