Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Denver soars to No. 1 in Home Value Increase -


Area leads nation with small gain in quarter that saw overall decline


By John Rebchook, Rocky Mountain News October 31, 2007


Denver squeaked out the No. 1 ranking in a national report on home prices released Tuesday.
The closely watched S&P Case- Shiller Home Price Indices showed that Denver-area homes gained 0.3 percent in value from July to August.


Although a meager appreciation rate, it was good enough to make Denver tops in the nation during that period. The 20 cities ranked showed an overall average decline of 0.7 percent.
From June to July, Denver homes rose in value by 0.8 percent, bested only by the 1 percent increase experienced by Detroit during that period.


"It looks like Denver may be one of the first markets in the turnaround mode. Maybe," said Maureen Maitland, an analyst and vice president at Standard & Poor's.
Maitland said she would like to see more data before she's comfortable in saying that Denver's down cycle is over.


"However," she added, "Denver has had five positive months of price movement in a row."
Maitland noted that Denver -real estate stumbled earlier than most cities in the country and in recent years didn't go through the double-digit price appreciation experienced by other formerly hot markets on the coasts and places such as Phoenix and Las Vegas.
Nevertheless, the new-home market in the Denver area is still suffering through its worst period in more than a decade, according to a report by the Genesis Group.


Genesis said that there were 5,842 sales of new homes in the first half of the year, a 33 percent drop from the 8,758 sold in the first half of 2006. And 2006 was the worst year for new home sales in a decade.


There are pockets of robust price appreciation in Denver.
Deviree Vallejo, of Kentwood City Properties, who on Tuesday was showing a prospective buyer a $1.15 million home in Cherry Creek North, said she has seen a huge appreciation of home prices in the Denver neighborhoods where she focuses.


She said she is concerned, in fact, that values have risen too fast in some areas and aren't sustainable.


"We've seen appreciation in Highland at 13.5 percent and Cherry Creek North at 22 percent," Vallejo said. "What we want is appreciation at 7 percent to 10 percent."
Tom Clark, executive vice president of the Metro Denver Economic Development Council, said he thought the S&P/Case-Shiller report would show Denver-area home values falling less than the rest of the country, not rising in value.


Denver's housing downturn started around 2001, and the area dodged "the 2006 housing bubble bursting in other parts of the country," Clark said.


In the past, he would have considered it bad news from an economic development perspective that home values were on the rise.
"But now it's probably not a factor because homes in Phoenix, our No. 1 competitor, are more expensive than our housing," Clark said.


Carolyn Sandberg, a broker associate with Metro Brokers, said the report shows that Denver housing is at the "very, very tip of turning around."
Rising adjustable-rate mortgages will mean more foreclosures through 2008, which will dampen appreciation at the low end of the market, she said, but are not affecting more-expensive homes.
"There will be another year for buyers to buy," Sandberg said. "But a lot of people are going to wait until all of the doom and gloom is over, and they are going to end up paying more.
"You need to buy when the market is down to get the best deal."
rebchookj@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-5207

Monday, October 15, 2007

More Good News About Denver Real Estate in the Rocky Mountain News

Home prices hint at turn

S&P report suggests Denver area may be starting to recover
By John Rebchook, Rocky Mountain News September 27, 2007


S&P report suggests Denver area may be starting to recover
By John Rebchook, Rocky Mountain News September 27, 2007
Fresh evidence suggests the Denver-area housing market may be in the early stages of recovery, even as the national housing market faces an even bigger slump.

From May to June, Denver homes showed a 1.3 percent appreciation in value, the highest of 20 metropolitan areas surveyed, according to the Standard & Poor's/Case Shiller Home Price Indices. Charlotte, N.C., was No. 2 at 1.2 percent.
And while Denver home prices dropped by 0.7 percent in July from July 2006, only five metropolitan areas fared better during that period, the survey showed. Overall, a composite of 20 major metropolitan areas experienced a 3.9 percent drop during that one-year period.

"We need to see if the trend continues," said S&P Vice President Maureen Maitland, referring to Denver. "What you have to do now is to watch for signs of a turnaround before calling anything,"

She said Denver has been beating the nation as a whole for four consecutive months. From June to July, for example, Denver's market appreciated by 0.8 percent, with only Detroit doing better at 1.3 percent, and all 20 areas dropping by an average of 0.6 percent.

The report is produced by S&P and Yale University economist Robert Shiller.
The nation as a whole is "in a bit of a housing crisis, and it is likely to get worse before it gets better," Maitland added.

Adjusting for inflation, housing prices nationwide have soared by 86 percent in the past decade. Some cities, such as New York, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., saw larger jumps than other places in the country, including Denver.
The Denver-area housing market peaked in February 2001, with a 15 percent year-over-year appreciation, slightly higher than the nation as a whole, Maitland said.

"Many other markets across the country continued on an upward swing, and the Denver growth rate slowed down," she said. "Now, Denver seems to be going in an upward direction."

Economist Michael Kone, principal of Boulder-based Housingmetrics, said there is still "intense pain" for the lower end of the housing market in the Denver area, with a "huge bump" in foreclosures to come, as subprime mortgages adjust upward.

Colorado is on pace to see more than 37,000 foreclosures filed this year, a 30 percent increase over the record set last year. Colorado and the Denver area are among the top 10 worst areas in the county for foreclosure rates.
Expensive houses, Kone said, are doing much better in the metro area. Also, as always, there are pockets of strength.

The S&P/Case Shiller report also illustrates that housing is a bargain in the Denver area compared with many other places, said Mike Foster, director of land acquisitions for Century Communities, a private, suburban builder.
Not long ago, Denver was the most expensive housing market "anywhere in the U.S. without a beach," Foster said.

But because the Denver-area housing market has been flat for so many years, it will recover faster than other areas that, until recently, saw a huge run-up in prices, he said.

"Denver is a low-risk market," Foster said. "It will be easier for companies to relocate to our market than to relocate to other markets."

Independent broker Gary Bauer, who puts out his own monthly report based on Metrolist data, said that the S&P/Case-Shiller report is encouraging.
"Basically, it is saying what I have been saying for quite a while - Denver is counter-cyclical to the rest of the nation," Bauer said. "Is it all roses in the Denver marketplace? No. But it is not as bad as all of the doom-and-gloom talk, either."

The top-performing metropolitan area, according to the national study, was Seattle at 6.9 percent, followed by Charlotte, N.C., at 6 percent. Other cities faring better than Denver included Portland at 3.8 percent; Atlanta at 1.2 percent; and Dallas at 0.8 percent.

rebchookj@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-5207.

Denver Report Card...Check This Out!

Metro Denver Business Climate

Colorado received an 'A' for Business Vitality based on business competitiveness and entrepreneurial energy - 2006 Development Report Card for the States

Colorado also received an 'A' for Development Capacity based on the positioning of the state for future economic growth - 2006 Development Report Card for the States

Fort Collins is the number one "Best Place to Live." Westminster also ranked 24, and Longmont ranked 61 on the same list - Money Magazine, 2006

Metro Denver is the second most competitive place in the nation to do business - San Diego Regional Economic Development Corp. Study, 2005

Colorado ranked fifth of the 50 states for long-term employment growth - Corporation for Enterprise Development, 2006

Colorado also ranked fifth of the 50 states for short-term development growth - Corporation for Enterprise Development, 2006

Colorado ranked second for Economic Freedom - Economic Freedom of North America, 2005 Annual Report

Metro Denver ranked in the top ten for business growth in the past five years - infoUSA, 2005

Seventeen Colorado companies made Fortune's 1000 list - 2006

Colorado ranked third in the nation for economic competitiveness based on ability to generate income and promote growth - Suffolk University's Beacon Hill Institute, 2005

Colorado has the largest space economy in terms of private employment - Development Research Partners, 2006

Colorado entrepreneurial activity ranked second in the U.S. - Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, 2006

Metro Denver Transportation

Denver International Airport was voted the third best airport in the Americas and the third best airport in the world among airports with more than 25 million passengers annually - AETRA passenger survey, 2006

Denver International Airport was the fourth busiest airport in the nation in March 2006 - U.S. Bureau of Transportation

Denver International Airport was the sixth busiest airport in the nation last year, and eleventh busiest in the world - Bureau of Transportation Statistics, 2006

The nation's largest multi-modal transportation project--T-REX--completed in November 2006 under budget and nearly two years ahead of schedule - Colorado Department of Transportation

FasTracks is the largest one-time build out of any mass transit system in U.S. history - Regional Transportation District, 2006

Denver has the nation's fourth shortest commute time for executives at 35.3 minutes - TheLadders.com, 2005

Denver is the fourth easiest city in terms of getting out of town for the weekend - MapQuest Summer Survey, 2006


Metro Denver Workforce

For the seventh straight year, Colorado ranked first in concentration of tech workers - AeA (former American Electronics Association), 2006

Colorado ranked third of the 50 states in the percentage of scientists and engineers as a percent of labor force - Beacon Hill, 2006

Colorado has the second most highly educated workforce in the nation - U.S. Census Bureau, 2005

Colorado has the fourth highest concentration of scientists and engineers - National Science Board, 2006

University of Denver's Daniels College of Business ranked eighth on the Wall Street Journal's 2005 ranking of regional business schools.

The Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado at Boulder in one of the top ten "hot spots" for entrepreneurial education - Fortune Small Business, 2006

Boulder ranked as the number one spot for brainpower in the nation - American City Business Journals, 2005

Venture Capital in Metro Denver

Colorado ranked fifth in the first quarter 2006 for venture capital investment - PricewaterhouseCoopers, Thomson Venture and the National Venture Capital Association, 2006

Eighteen Colorado companies were awarded $107.2 million in the first quarter 2006 - Ernst & Young, 2006

Quality of Life in Metro Denver

Denver ranked third on the list of 'Best Cities for Relocating Families' - Worldwide ERC, Primary Relocation, Sperling's Best Places, 2006

Denver has the nation's largest park system, with more than 200 parks in the city limits, and 20,000 acres of parks in nearby mountains.

For the third consecutive year, Denver ranked as the best city in the nation for singles, thanks to the area's booming job market, relatively low cost of living, and large university population - Forbes Magazine, 2006
Denver ranked as the fifth fittest city in the nation - Men's Fitness Magazine, 2005

Denver ranked sixth out of the 50 largest metro areas in the nation for being one of the "Cleanest Cities in America" - Reader's Digest, 2005

Boulder is the best place to retire for "outdoor addicts"- Fortune, 2006

Denver ranked as the ninth most sustainable city based on making its resources sustainable for future generations to enjoy without passing on a major cost burden - SustainLane.com, 2006

Colorado ranked fifth of the 50 states in the percent of households with computers - Corporation for Enterprise Development, 2006

Metro Denver Healthcare

Colorado currently has the lowest obesity rate in the nation and, as a result, annual health insurance rates in the Denver area are about $400 cheaper than the national average - Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, 2006

National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver was named the top respiratory hospital in the country for the ninth year in a row - U.S. News & World Report, 2006

The University of Colorado Hospital was cited for excellence in nine of 16 medical specialties - U.S. News & World Report, 2006

Children's Hospital in Denver ranked seventh among hospitals that specialize in children's diseases - U.S. News & World Report, 2006