Friday, January 14, 2011

Denver Real Estate Market Heating Up, Residential Investors Clean House

Denver Real Estate Market Heating Up, Residential Investors Clean House

Author: Tim Paynter
Published: January 13, 2011 at 7:46 pm

Real estate investors have spent years trying to figure out where the bottom of the market is. According to Gregory Beran of Performance Property Management in Denver, Colorado, we are a few steps up from bottom in the Mile High City of Denver, Colorado.

According to Beran, the two ingredients that make residential properties attractive to buyers are low prices and high rents. Beran, a long time property manager and investor in the Denver metroplex, says those conditions exist right now. He says competition is heating up for his rental units and vacancy rates have plummeted.

“We don’t have any single family homes available” the lanky investor told me during an exclusive interview. “They don’t stay for rent longer than a week or so.”

When asked about two bedroom apartments Beran was only able to offer one prospect for a fast move.

“It is the trickle down effect,” Beran said during our discussion in his nicely appointed office on South Broadway Boulevard in Denver. Unlike “trickle down economics” in which wealth trickles down from the super rich to the middle class as promised by the Bush administration, the trickle down effect Beran is talking about is from those transitioning from home owners to small house and apartment renters after losing their homes in foreclosure.

“The banks aren’t letting people stay in their homes any more,” Beran explained. “So people are moving from large houses into anything we have.” The same is true for apartments, as people face a substantial lower standard of living after losing their homes and condos and being forced to accept significantly less.

Even though a person has a foreclosure or bankruptcy on their record Beran may still work with the tenant.

“I like to work with people to see if we can help them. If I am convinced they will pay the rent then we overlook a lot,” he told me.

Beran qualifies the tenant by checking their criminal and civil background. He is looking for serious criminal charges as well as prior evictions. Assuming the person has stable employment, the Denver leasing agent tries to put them into something they can presently afford.

All of this is good news for landlords trying to hang onto their properties and for new investors. Sales prices still remain competitive in Denver. There are scores of fixer uppers on the market. An investor who is able to buy right can lease the property for positive cash flow. One bedroom units rent for $550 to $595 in lower income complexes, which are favored by investors. Two bedroom units go for $650 to $750.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Denver emerging from slump

Denver emerging from slump

The overall Denver real estate market was ranked No. 9 in the prestigious Emerging Trends in Real Estate report released today.

More than 250 real estate, finance, academic and business leaders gathered at meeting at 7:30 a.m. today to hear the results of the report – billed as the longest running national real estate in the country – to hear the results of the report, whose 2011 theme is: “Entering the Era of Less.”

Although the report, which has been released for 32 consecutive years, is geared toward commercial real estate, housing issues also were front-and-center. And the economic dynamics that impact commercial properties such as offices, industrial, retail and apartments, also are the same that led to the collapse of the housing market, and it’s eventual recovery.

Homebuilding still weak.

Indeed, Denver’s lowest ranking was No. 17 out of 51 cities in the “For-Sale Homebuilding” category. Denver received a score of 4.13 in that metric, where 1 is abysmal and 9 is excellent. Washington, D.C. was ranked first in that category with a score of 5.86, while Detroit was last, with a score of 1.63. Washington, D.C, overall was first with a score of 7.0. Denver’s overall score with 5.6, tied with San Diego.

The report is sponsored by the Urban Land Institute and PWC (formerly PriceWaterhouseCoopers.) The findings of the report are based on interviews of more than 875 interviews and surveys sent to investors, fund managers, developers property companies lenders, brokers, advisers and consultants.

Denver received a “green” light in this report, after receiving a “yellow,” or caution ranking last year. Red is the lowest ranking.

Denver best between coasts

“Anything between the coasts seemed to suffer, with the exception of Denver,” said Charles DiRocco, director and head of real estate research at PCW, who spoke at the new Embassy Sites hotel on 14th Street in downtown Denver.

The report had this to say about Denver: “The city make progress positioning for 21st-century growth by strengthening its downtown core through a new light-rail and railroad hub to serve surrounding suburban nodes. As a result, the central business district becomes “the place to be,” and mixed-use, transit-oriented development helps anchor suburban districts. This metro area also has one of the nation’s most modern airports, an attractive Rocky Mountain backdrop, relatively low business taxes, and a broad-based economy anchored by oil and gas, alternative energy, and defense companies.

“We can weather the storm better than most, and quality-of-life attributes will continue to attract people,” the report quoted one anonymous person as saying.

The report goes on to say that the office market has stabilized, and large blocks of space are relatively scarce, although it said that it is still a tenant’s market.

Apartments strong

Read More: http://www.indenvertimes.com/denver-emerging-from-slump/

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Foreclosures in Colo. mountains scaling record heights

BUSINESS

Foreclosures in Colo. mountains scaling record heights

UPDATED: 01/12/2011 06:04:12 AM MST


Seven bedridden years after tumbling from a rooftop, Terry Counterman can walk again but could soon lose his Carbondale home in a foreclosure sale.

"I've been sending them paperwork and forms for two years. Someone from the bank calls five, six times a day, telling me to send them more forms. I'm sending them all the money I have, and they say it's not enough," said the 63-year-old former roofing inspector, whose lender plans to sell his home of 30 years next month. "I didn't buy this place as an investment. I bought it as my home."

On Garfield County's tally of foreclosures, Counterman's bank reports he owes about $67,000 on his loan. He's one of an unprecedented number of homeowners in Colorado's high country who are battling foreclosure.

The crush of foreclosure filings in mountain communities continued through 2010, eclipsing not just the records from the previous year but the fallout from the formidable crash of the mid-1980s.

Read more:Foreclosures in Colo. mountains scaling record heights - The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_17071031#ixzz1ApPbE44b


Tuesday, January 11, 2011

2010 mixed for Denver metro-area homes

BUSINESS

2010 mixed for Denver metro-area homes

Number sold declines by 10.7 percent, but median price hits $235,000
By Margaret Jackson
The Denver Post
UPDATED: 01/11/2011 02:45:57 AM MST

(AP, Bill Sikes)

Buyers were willing to pay more for houses last year than they were in 2009, but the number of homes sold declined compared with the previous year.

Total homes sold in the eight metro-area counties dropped 10.7 percent, from 42,027 in 2009 to 37,522, according to an analysis of Metrolist data by independent real estate consultant Gary Bauer.

Meanwhile, the median price of a single-family home increased to $235,000, up 7.3 percent from $219,000 in 2009.

"There were more homes sold in the $1 million-plus range," Bauer said. "In 2010, there were fewer transactions in the lower price categories, mainly because of the scarcity of inventory."

Sales of homes priced at more than $1 million increased 11.2 percent, from 471 in 2009 to 524 last year.

Meanwhile, sales of homes priced between $200,000 and $300,000 declined 10.6 percent, from 11,149 in 2009 to 9,967 last year.



Read more:2010 mixed for Denver metro-area homes - The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/commented/ci_17060952?source=commented-#ixzz1An2xGOAs

Counties included in the report are Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, Elbert and Jefferson.