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To: John Vosilla who wrote (544)5/3/2012 11:44:02 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2722
 
House prices rise in King County, surge in Seattle

By AUBREY COHEN, SEATTLEPI.COM STAFF Published 04:31 p.m., Thursday, May 3, 2012

House prices rose for the first time in a long time in King County last month, while they surged up by double digits in Seattle. The median sale price was $360,000 countywide and $425,000 in Seattle in April, the Northwest Multiple Listing Service reported Thursday. That's up 2.9 percent and 10.4 percent, respectively, from April 2011.

"I think it's very encouraging," said Glenn Crellin, associate director for research at the Runstad Center for Real Estate Studies at the University of Washington.

"I'm still worried about places like South King County, where activity was OK, but prices are continuing to fall," he said. "In Seattle, I think the upswing is on."

Lender-owned "REO" homes, which tend to sell for less, made up 22 percent of all house sales in April 2011 but less than 17 percent of sales last month, he wrote. "Fewer REO sales means a higher median, all other things being equal."

Across all 19 counties in the listing service, the median sales price, including houses and condos, rose for the first time since January 2008. It was $240,000, up nearly 1.3 percent from April 2011.

Commenting in a listing service news release on the disparities between areas, Windermere Real Estate President OB Jacobi said: "As is fairly typical of a recovering market, the activity first heats up in the urban centers, and then spreads to the surrounding suburbs and outlining areas. We are now seeing this trend."

We've gotten back to multiple-offer situations for many homes hitting the market, said J. Lennox Scott, chairman and CEO of John L. Scott Real Estate.

"The pent up demand of local home buyers who are now purchasing homes has ignited a surge of sales activity," he said. "For homeowners who have equity, and have been cautiously waiting to sell, this ultimately means they can sell their home today and purchase within the same market timing."

There might be enough evidence of stability to bring sellers out, Crellin said. "I'm convinced that there are a significant number of individuals who would like to sell but have just been reluctant to do so when the market was in freefall."

Sales of houses and condos were up 13 percent from a year earlier in Seattle and 19.2 percent countywide. Pending sales, which don't all close but can be the best indicator of recent activity, rose 20.9 percent in Seattle and 22.5 percent countywide.

The inventory is very low, 2.4 months worth of homes per sale at the current sales pace in Seattle and 2.9 months countywide, down from 4.7 months and 5.7 months a year ago.

Condo prices were softer than those of houses. The median condo sales price last month was $260,000 in Seattle and $194,500 countywide, down 7.1 percent and 13.4 percent, respectively, from a year earlier.

Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/realestate/article/House-prices-rise-in-King-County-surge-in-Seattle-3533110.php#ixzz1tru5ccXA



To: John Vosilla who wrote (544)5/5/2012 12:02:25 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2722
 
Retailers 'tripping over themselves' to get in Gilbert-owned buildings

By Louis Aguilar

The Detroit News
    Hundreds of retailers and other small firms have inquired about setting up shop in downtown Detroit buildings owned by Quicken Loans Inc. founder Dan Gilbert and his partners, a Quicken Loans-affiliated executive said Tuesday.

    "People are tripping over themselves" to move into the buildings, said Bruce Schwartz, Detroit relocation ambassador of Bedrock Real Estate Services, the real estate arm overseeing Gilbert's expanding downtown empire.

    Schwartz and Bedrock Managing Partner Jim Ketai spoke Tuesday afternoon at a Detroit Regional Chamber event in the MotorCity Casino Hotel.

    "We've gotten hundreds of proposals, and we are vetting them now," Schwartz said. Ketai described the retailers include "restaurants, grocery stores, furniture."

    Every downtown building Gilbert and company will buy will always have first-floor retail, Ketai said. Gilbert and his partners own nine downtown buildings.

    "We want the right retailer, the right spot," Ketai said. "The kind of retailer we can't get in the suburbs."

    The two executives also said Bedrock is considering the vacant space where the former Hudson's department store used to be located for building two residential towers.

    From The Detroit News: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120424/BIZ/204240431#ixzz1u0mZwCCY