Wednesday, October 07, 2009
1. The good news – we’ve wrung a lot of inflation out of the housing bubble. Looking at the Case-Shiller index, Los Angeles house prices dropped about 30% in the 1990’s recession and we see a similar drop today. In the 1990’s it took 10 years for LA prices to recover to their peak. How could this be good news? It may mean prices are in sight of a bottom, and we’re in for a long period of low but stable growth. Not a V, W or U shaped recovery, but a tilted L. I don’t see how a quick recovery in housing prices could be a good thing anyway – we don’t want another crisis in confidence.
2. The good news within the bad news – although at record highs, the monthly rate of the newly unemployed has been dropping as have the rates in mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures, while the number of loan modifications is increasing.
Some of the housing delinquencies may be voluntary, as some homeowners appear to be withholding payment in order to gain lower interest rates. Also, many foreclosed owners are now free of a burdensome debt and are rebuilding their financial lives.
Foreclosed home prices, at least at the low end, appear to have stabilized, and thanks either to the banks’ inability to work as fast as a real estate agent, or a conscious effort to limit supply and keep prices up, supply is not matching demand, resulting in bidding wars.
Local home prices in some price ranges have dropped to around 2002-2003 levels which is good for buyers who hadn’t bought before the bubble. If we are at the bottom, prices will gradually increase (on average – there will be seasonal bumps). It is bad news for Sellers who bought during the bubble, but at least there will be buyers at the right price when they feel the market has stabilized.
Obtaining mortgages is more difficult – we now allow 45 days on a financed closing, but Jumbo loans are back, and the feds will subsidize certain mortgages through the first quarter of next year.
3. The bad news - there is another round of foreclosures coming from Pay-Option or Negative Amortization loans. These are beginning to reset, and will continue for about two years. These will more affect higher end homes than did the sub-prime, low credit score loans. Higher end sellers should carefully consider low offers as it could get worse. Also, a lot of high-end inventory has been held off the market, and it will return with signs of recovery, keeping prices down.
Buyers can wait, but they may be risking price increases arising from a weak dollar bringing in more foreign buyers, higher interest rates, or inflation, and of course, that perfect home.
By Wayne Longman, Broker Associate, Team Haverkate
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Renovation of Albert Frey's North Shore Yacht Club People gathered near the edge of the Salton Sea on Monday to celebrate the groundbreaking for the renovation of the historic North Shore Yacht Club Community.The 50-year-old Albert Frey- designed building, considered an architectural treasure, will undergo a $3.5 million renovation.
This is a view from inside the North Shore Yacht Club Community Center looking out at the Salton Sea. (DENISE GOOLSBY The Desert Sun)
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Great article about Albert Frey's Palm Springs house in the desert sun todayhttp://tinyurl.com/n4slqd
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Rat-Pack Style, Flea-Market Budget Great article in the New York Times about remodeling and furnishing a Palm Springs modernist property. Please click on the link below the picture:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/14/greathomesanddestinations/14Away.html?_r=1
Saturday, July 25, 2009

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

JULIUS SHULMAN, 10/10/1910-7/15/2009
Friday, Jul. 17 2009 @ 1:29PM
By Matt Coker in A Clockwork Orange, Newport Beach Film Festival
Many of those close to Julius Shulman gathered in a theater at Edwards Island Cinemas in Newport Beach in April to pay tribute to the Los Angeles photographer and subject of the documentary love letter Visual Acoustics: The Modernism of Julius Shulman. One of those closest to the 98-year-old in his later years, Rose Nielsen of the Woodbury Institute, told those who'd just watched the Newport Beach Film Festival entry (and later NBFF Outstanding Achievement in Documentary Filmmaking honoree), "He has an amazing mind. He's like a walking history book of LA." And now he's gone, as reported in the Los Angeles Times obituary of July 15th.
Born in Brooklyn on 10/10/10, Shulman got into the ground floor of architectural modernism that sprang up in California in the 1930s by photographing the creations of Richard Neutra, Rudolf Schindler, Frank Lloyd Wright, Harwell Hamilton Harris and even some architects you haven't heard of. As demonstrated in Eric Bricker's film debut, Shulman was also a cut-up, a passionate artist and a staunch protector of the Southern California landscape.
Besides Bricker and Nielsen, the screening brought actress Kelly Lynch, who hosted Shulman's 95th birthday in her Neutra home, esides Bricker and Nielsen, the screening brought actress Kelly Lynch, who hosted Shulman's 95th birthday in her Neutra home, appeared in the doc and shared with the festival audience warm stories about the photographer, who besides well-designed buildings apparently had a thing for the female form. Shulman, who'd been in poor health for years, could not make the trip to OC. That's okay; everyone knew him well by the end of the event.
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Monday, July 20, 2009
Modern and mid-century modern home owners in the Palm Springs Area that are exploring their options for updating their kitchen and storage options should take the time to explore some of the fabulous options available to them from Henrybuilt.Henrybuilt - Modern Kitchen, Storage & Furniture Based in Seattle Washington, yet serving modern-minded homeowners around the world, Henrybuilt offers homeowners a functionally integrated approach to storage, furniture, and panel systems.
The company has developed a reputation for its work on mid-century homes, approaching projects with an appreciation and understanding of each original design, allowing homeowners to update their homes without losing the qualities that made them unique in the first place. www.henrybuilt.com
Sunday, July 19, 2009
"The OASIS COMMERCIAL BUILDING comes before City Council NEXT WEDNESDAY, JULY 22 for Class One designation. Unfortunately, this vitally important nomination has also been contested for years. The International Style building is eligible for local, state and national registry and you'll recall it may have taken my detailed description of its well-intact attributes to best see the inherent beauty and significance of the architecture. The irony, of course, is that it is so intact and but for a modicum of care and apropos improvement the building could probably be on the cover of Preservation magazine as a national model of rehabilitation and economic redevelopment."Robert Imber from PSMODERNTOURS is asking for support to
write to Palm Springs City Councel Steve.Pougnet@palmsprings-ca.gov about the importance of preserving this building. (Photo by Julius Shulman)
Saturday, July 18, 2009
"The OASIS COMMERCIAL BUILDING comes before City Council NEXT WEDNESDAY, JULY 22 for Class One designation. Unfortunately, this vitally important nomination has also been contested for years. The International Style building is eligible for local, state and national registry and you'll recall it may have taken my detailed description of its well-intact attributes to best see the inherent beauty and significance of the architecture. The irony, of course, is that it is so intact and but for a modicum of care and apropos improvement the building could probably be on the cover of Preservation magazine as a national model of rehabilitation and economic redevelopment." 




