Apr 202012
 

Irvine: Airport Condos Overview

Median home price is $328,000. Based on a rental parity value of $450,000, this market is under valued.

Monthly payment affordability has been improving over the last 6 month(s). Momentum suggests improving affordability.

Resale prices on a $/SF basis declined from $351/SF to $341/SF.

Resale prices have been falling for 12 month(s). Price momentum suggests falling prices over the next three months.

Median rental rates declined $50 last month from $1,950 to $1,900.

Rents have been rising for 12 month(s). Price momentum suggests rising rents over the next three months.

Market rating = 10

Proprietary Irvine Housing News home purchase analysis

2305 SCHOLARSHIP Irvine, CA 92612

$330,000 …….. Asking Price
$580,500 ………. Purchase Price
4/28/2006 ………. Purchase Date

($250,500) ………. Gross Gain (Loss)
($46,440) ………… Commissions and Costs at 8%
============================================
($296,940) ………. Net Gain (Loss)
============================================
-43.2% ………. Gross Percent Change
-51.2% ………. Net Percent Change
-9.3% ………… Annual Appreciation

Cost of Home Ownership
——————————————————————————
$330,000 …….. Asking Price
$11,550 ………… 3.5% Down FHA Financing
3.90% …………. Mortgage Interest Rate
30 ……………… Number of Years
$318,450 …….. Mortgage
$101,545 ………. Income Requirement

$1,502 ………… Monthly Mortgage Payment
$286 ………… Property Tax at 1.04%
………… Mello Roos & Special Taxes
$83 ………… Homeowners Insurance at 0.3%
$332 ………… Private Mortgage Insurance
$421 ………… Homeowners Association Fees
============================================
$2,623 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

($231) ………. Tax Savings
($467) ………. Equity Hidden in Payment
$15 ………….. Lost Income to Down Payment
$61 ………….. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves
============================================
$2,002 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands
——————————————————————————
$4,800 ………… Furnishing and Move In at 1% + $1,500
$4,800 ………… Closing Costs at 1% + $1,500
$3,185 ………… Interest Points
$11,550 ………… Down Payment
============================================
$24,335 ………. Total Cash Costs
$30,600 ………. Emergency Cash Reserves
============================================
$54,935 ………. Total Savings Needed
——————————————————————————————————————————————-
This property is available for sale via the MLS.
Please contact Shevy Akason, #01836707
949.769.1599……
sales@ochousingnews.com…..

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1424 SCHOLARSHIP, Irvine, CA $320,000
1424 SCHOLARSHIP
0 miles
1 bd / 1 ba
868 Sq. Ft.
2349 WATERMARKE Pl, Irvine, CA $429,000
2349 WATERMARKE Pl
0.1 miles
1 bd / 1 ba
818 Sq. Ft.
5034 SCHOLARSHIP, Irvine, CA $594,000
5034 SCHOLARSHIP
0.21 miles
1 bd / 1.25 ba
1,175 Sq. Ft.
5045 SCHOLARSHIP, Irvine, CA $557,500
5045 SCHOLARSHIP
0.21 miles
1 bd / 1.5 ba
1,175 Sq. Ft.
2253 MARTIN #115, Irvine, CA $318,888
2253 MARTIN #115
0.51 miles
1 bd / 1 ba
934 Sq. Ft.
2253 MARTIN #408, Irvine, CA $328,000
2253 MARTIN #408
0.51 miles
1 bd / 1 ba
934 Sq. Ft.
2243 MARTIN #411, Irvine, CA $325,000
2243 MARTIN #411
0.57 miles
1 bd / 1 ba
934 Sq. Ft.
205 STANFORD Ct #5, Irvine, CA $339,500
205 STANFORD Ct #5
1.05 miles
2 bd / 1.25 ba
896 Sq. Ft.
33 AUBURN AISLE, Irvine, CA $399,000
33 AUBURN AISLE
1.3 miles
2 bd / 2 ba
1,019 Sq. Ft.
38 BAYCREST Ct #27, Newport Beach, CA $525,000
38 BAYCREST Ct #27
1.4 miles
2 bd / 2 ba
1,015 Sq. Ft.


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  2 Responses to “Airport area condos deeply undervalued”

  1. Sales are falling because lenders are withholding product. Lenders hope this will cause prices to go up. Most likely withholding product will merely cause transaction volumes to go down.

    Now for the shills and the clueless…

    Economists Respond to March’s Fall in Existing Home Sales

    The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Thursday that existing home sales decreased 2.6 percent, in March, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.48 million units, falling short of the 4.62 million economists had forecast. In response to this data, economists representing different institutions provided their insight to explain what the recent numbers might indicate.

    Patrick Newport, U.S. economist, IHS Global Insight

    “Existing home sales declined in March mainly because fewer investors bought homes. Sales to those looking for a home to live in have been flat (and weak) for the past six months, despite low borrowing rates, low home prices and rising rents. A critical

    question is whether sales are set to take off soon, given the improving economy. Our view is that sales will improve during the course of this year, but unless credit conditions loosen significantly, a takeoff will not take place.”

    NAR reported investors bought 21 percent of the homes sold in March, down from 23 percent in February.

    Paul Diggle, property economist, Capital Economics

    “March’s decline in existing home sales probably reflects the normal month by month volatility rather than renewed underlying weakness. The increase in households’ confidence in the outlook for the housing market, coupled with a gradual improvement in the pace of the economic recovery, should drive a rise in home sales later this year….It is possible that the pattern within the quarter has been driven by the weather, with falls in the most recent two months reflecting a degree of payback after January’s gain.”

    Mark Vitner, senior economist and Anika R. Khan, economist, Wells Fargo

    “Existing home sales dropped 2.6 percent, but are up 5.2 percent from a year ago. While existing sales are down for the second consecutive month, we are likely continuing to see payback from increases earlier this year. That said, we could see one more month of disappointing data, but we still contend the recent declines are not indicative of the trend. Stabilization will become more apparent once we return to normal weather.”

    • Diana Olick gets it.

      Lack of Distressed Supply Pushes Home Sales Lower

      Published: Thursday, 19 Apr 2012 | 10:46 AM ET By: Diana Olick

      Sales of existing homes continue to drop, and while tough credit and weak consumer confidence are certainly factors, lack of supply appears to be the latest culprit.Inventories of existing homes historically rise in the spring, as sellers look to take advantage of the busy season; not so this spring.Inventories fell 1.3 percent to 2.37 million units for sale. That’s down nearly 22 percent from a year ago. Inventory is dropping because the number of distressed properties for sale is dropping.

      The data speak volumes: Distressed sales fell to 29 percent of all sales in March, down from 34 percent the previous month. The investor share of sales also fell from 23 percent to 231 percent. That pushed overall home sales down, but most notably out West, where most of the distressed supply exists.

      Sales fell 7.4 percent month to month out West in March, as supplies of existing homes fell to 3.1 months from 4.7 months a year ago, according to internal tracking by the National Association of Realtors. That is the lowest supply of any region by far, and half the national average. Compare it to an 11.6 month supply in the Northeast, where there are far fewer foreclosures.

      Supply is tight because banks, after the 25 billion dollar mortgage settlement over so-called “robo-signing” have slowed much of the foreclosure process, trying to modify more loans or find foreclosure alternatives. We predicted this earlier.

      Less supply usually means rising prices, if you go by the usual supply/demand theory. The trouble is, supply isn’t dropping because of so much demand, it’s dropping because of the distressed market.

      Normal sellers still aren’t putting their homes on the market for fear of deep price cuts, or because they are so underwater they can’t afford it. More than 11 million borrowers currently owe more on their mortgages than their homes are currently worth.

      On the demand side, credit is still very tight and fees for FHA loans, which had really been fueling much of the market, rose April 1st. We saw a huge drop in mortgage applications last week, driven by a 23 percent drop in FHA applications.

      “This drop follows big increases in the demand for FHA loans over several weeks in anticipation of the FHA mortgage insurance premium increases that went into effect last week,” wrote Mortgage Bankers Association chief economist Jay Brinkmann in a release. “This was the largest weekly drop in the government purchase index since the expiration of the first-time homebuyer tax credit in May 2010.”

      Without a strong recovery in the job market, which does not appear to be the case, and a big loosening in credit, which also does not appear to be the case, regular demand for home purchases will remain soft.

      The potential demand among investors is strong and growing, but they need supply to buy, and they’re just not finding enough