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Chief Blogger: Christopher Dente, Director of Public Relations | 212.685.7777 | cdente@citi-habitats.com
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April 2009

Alliance for Downtown New York's Q1 2009 Real Estate Market Overview
Posted by Christopher Dente |  April 30, 2009


The Alliance for Downtown New York has released its Q1 2009 Real Estate Market Overview.

The national recession and capital markets crisis continued to take their toll on the Lower Manhattan real estate market in Q1 2009.  Negative trends in the commercial and residential markets were tempered  by signs of stability.  While the hotel market struggled in the face of reduced domestic and international tourism, Lower Manhattan hotels continue to perform better than city-wide averages.  And 14 new retailers opened south of Chambers Street, a testament to the enduring appeal of Lower Manhattan's live/work/play dynamic, despite the economic downturn.

Please click here to view the report.

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Filed under: Manhattan, Market Reports, Rentals, Sales
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Fed Sees Signs Recession May Be Easing
Posted by Christopher Dente |  April 29, 2009
Source: The New York Times

April 29, 2009
Fed Sees Signs Recession May Be Easing
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Reserve said Wednesday it sees signs the recession is easing and that the economic outlook has ''improved modestly'' since last month.

Against that backdrop, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues left a key interest rate at a record low of between zero and 0.25 percent, and decided against taking any new steps to shore up the economy.

Aggressive action already taken -- including a $1.2 trillion effort last month -- should gradually help bolster economic activity, the Fed said. It did, however, leave the door open to future action if needed.

Fed policymakers offered a less dour assessment of the economy than the one provided at its previous meeting in mid-March.

''The economy has continued to contract, though the pace of contraction appears to be somewhat slower,'' the Fed said. The worst of the recession -- in terms of lost economic activity -- could be past.

The economic outlook has ''improved modestly'' since the March meeting, partly reflecting some easing of strains in financial markets, the Fed said. Even so, ''economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time,'' the Fed added.

And while consumer spending has shown ''signs of stabilizing,'' it is still being constrained by rising unemployment, falling home values and hard-to-get credit, the Fed said.

The Commerce Department on Wednesday reported that the economy shrank at a 6.1 percent pace in the first quarter, worse than the 5 percent annualized decline that economists expected. The weak economic performance nearly matched the 6.3 percent contraction in the final three months of last year, which was the worst pace in a quarter-century.

But consumer spending rose unexpectedly in the January-March period and some analysts stuck to predictions that the economy would shrink less in the current quarter -- at a pace of 1 to 2.5 percent -- as the administration's $787 billion stimulus plan begins to take hold. Those analysts also continue to hope the economy would start to grow again in the final quarter of this year.

Still, weak sales and credit difficulties have forced businesses to cut spending and lay off workers, the Fed said.

To nurture economic activity, the Fed pledged anew to keep its key bank lending rate at a record low ''for an extended period.'' Economists predict the Fed will keep the rate there well into next year.

Looking ahead, the Fed didn't rule out expanding existing programs or creating new ones to bolster the economy.

At its March meeting, the Fed launched a $1.2 trillion effort to lower interest rates and get Americans to boost spending, which would help spur economic activity.

Specifically, the Fed in March said it would start buying government debt -- $300 billion over the next six months -- and would buy an additional $850 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities and debt from mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The Fed on Wednesday said it will continue to evaluate ''the timing and overall amounts'' of its government securities purchases in light of evolving economic and financial conditions.

A Fed spokesman was not immediately available Wednesday afternoon to say how much the central bank already has purchased under the new program.

The Fed hopes its various efforts will get banks to lend again, lower interest rates and increase Americans' appetites to spend, which would help lift the country out of a recession that began in December 2007.

Much hope is riding on the program called the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF. It's been hobbled by rule changes, investor worries about financial privacy and fears that participants might become ensnared in an anti-bailout backlash from the public and Congress. Just $1.7 billion in loans was requested for the second round of funding in April -- down from $4.7 billion in March.

Investors use the money to buy newly issued securities backed by auto and student loans, credit cards and other debt. The program will be expanded to include commercial real-estate loans.

Bernanke has said the recession probably would end this year if the government is successful in repairing broken banking and credit systems.

However, analysts warn that any severe outbreak of the swine flu would not only clobber tourism, food and transportation industries, but crimp spending on other things if consumers get spooked. For now, analysts are hopeful that any economic fallout will be limited and short-lived. But much hinges on the scope of the flu infections and how they affect consumer behavior.

Even if the recession ends this year, the jobless rate -- now at a quarter-century high of 8.5 percent -- is expected to keep rising and top 10 percent early next year.

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Mortgage Applications Report Released
Posted by Christopher Dente |  April 29, 2009

Mortgage Applications Decrease in Latest MBA Weekly Survey

WASHINGTON, D.C. (April 29, 2009) — The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) today released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending April 24, 2009.  The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, was 960.6, a decrease of 18.1 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from 1172.2 one week earlier.  On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 17.4 percent compared with the previous week and increased 62.7 percent compared with the same week one year earlier.

Highlights from the report:

  • The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 4.62 percent from 4.73 percent, with points increasing to 1.14 from 1.12 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio loans.
  • The average contract interest rate for 15-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 4.45 percent from 4.46 percent, with points decreasing to 0.96 from 1.18 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans.
  • The average contract interest rate for one-year ARMs increased to 6.23 percent from 6.19 percent, with points decreasing to 0.12 from 0.14 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans.

Please click here to view the entire release.

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Filed under: Manhattan, News, Sales
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Favorite Neighborhoods
Credit to: Cyla Klein
Posted by Christopher Dente |  April 28, 2009


The Upper East Side

Cyla Klein, Senior Associate Broker

The UES offers every type of living  you could want –from tiny studio in pre war walkups to luxury apartments and town houses that you can see in the movies, authentic eateries, gourmet shops, chic retail, services and abundant of green space – nothing can beat Central Park on one end or Carl Schurz at the other.

For families with children, the UES has the most awarding winning public and private schools in the City.

The UES is offering  apartments to  rents or buying at prices that have not been scene for a decade, yet because  of its high concentration of Co-ops, property value has been maintained and foreclosures  are rare.

Some of my favorite places are  Luka for breakfast , lunch or even brunch. Buon Gusto casual dining ,and 183 for fine dining- don’t miss there outdoor garden and very attentive staff.

Day or night 24/7 the UES has what you want!

Contact Cyla:

400 East 84th St., New York, NY 10028
C: 917-502-4486 | O: 212-794-1133

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Finding Bottom: Where the Market Will Turn Around
Posted by Christopher Dente |  April 28, 2009
Source: RIS Media

Finding Bottom: Where the Market Will Turn Around
By George W. Mantor

One of the factors affecting the selling price of real estate is local employment.

At first, all the talk of the housing crisis was about over-leveraged consumers. But, we have now moved to a more critical phase. If you do not have a job and you have little to no savings, you can’t make a mortgage payment, period.

Nor do I believe that housing brought down the economy. It’s the other way around. Housing is benign. People buy houses, start families, and trade up when they are employed. And, because jobs are disappearing so fast, even those untouched by job losses are fearful they could be next.

What brought down the economy was fraud. Massive waves of, as yet not fully disclosed, fraud did this to us. ENRON, WorldCom, AIG, Tyco, Halliburton, Arthur Anderson, Madoff, the legal fraud perpetrated by greedy CEOs; fraud by their accounting firms, loan fraud by sophisticated organized crime from both in and outside the country, fraud by elected and appointed officials, and a bunch of garden variety fraud by small timers brought down the economy. It was a whole sale looting. They got a lot of our money and they burned through our prosperity like drunken whores, and now we are forced to bail them out. But, this too shall pass.

When the job trend reverses, when we begin to create a few hundred thousand jobs over a few months, an enormous pent up demand will return to a limited selection of good housing stock. At the moment, one in seven of the nation’s houses is vacant. Many are in various stages of disrepair, functionally obsolete, or located in the wrong place.

Unemployment filings will likely continue to fluctuate for a while and are sometimes more indicative of changing industry dynamics than the actual employment health of a local community. If your region is anticipating stimulus funds or has modern growth industries that will be developing jobs of the future, your employment picture should start to improve.

Local communities’ recovery time will vary, reflecting employment conditions. Some will never recover at all. Apparently, there is no bottom in Detroit where reports have surfaced of homes selling for as little as a dollar. But, Detroit has been in decline for decades. In the 70’s, so many Detroiters moved to Windsor, Ontario that there was a common bumper sticker which read, “Will the last person leaving Detroit please turn out the lights.”

Detroit has been losing jobs for a very long time, and the recent woes of the American automobile industry do not bode well for the future. But, in other places, where contemporary industry is growing, like Seattle-Tacoma or the Silicon Valley, the bottom is closer.

2. Return to historical baseline of sales

To understand the market dynamic, it is important to understand “normal” for your community. Every month, a finite number of residential real estate transactions occur. In a down market, the number might be as few as half the number of sales during a boom market. But over time, it tends to average out.

Determine a monthly baseline of sales for your community. Obtain a history of sales activity for the past ten years. This will give you a measure that includes sufficient market ups and downs.

In a recovering market, there will be a return to the historical baseline of monthly sales activity.

3. Reduction of available inventory

Just as there are historical baselines for sales activities, there are also similar baselines of available property offered through builders, the MLS, and occasionally, private sellers. Simply tracking the number of listings through the MLS will give you a clear picture of the direction of inventory.

Knowing the baseline of sales activity, you can determine how many months of available inventory are currently in the local market. If inventory is shrinking, the bottom is near.

4. Relationship to cost of new construction

In many communities, sales prices are actually below replacement cost. And, that in itself suggests the bottom is near. If builders cannot recoup their costs and make a profit commensurate with the risk, they will cease building until sales prices begin to rise. Recognizing that prices are actually starting to rise and that resale inventory is shrinking, pent-up demand will pour back into the market and here we go again. Remember, all the people not buying these days will combine with normal baseline demand and overwhelm the market.

5. Hidden price stabilization

Recent reports of sales prices often seem to assert that these sales prices are representative of the value of housing in general. First, that’s just what sold that month. Since distressed properties make up much of the market, it stands to reason that those prices would reflect smaller square footage and a discount equivalent to the cost of rehabilitation.

Some homes are more desirable than others. What about those homes with extra features or those located in good school districts? Are their prices holding? If so, your community may be on its way to recovery.

For potential buyers, finding bottom is less important than knowing that it is near. While it is impossible, given our unprecedented circumstances, for anyone to say for certain when prices will begin to rise in each community, the buyer who knows the signs of recovery will already be settled into the opportunity of a lifetime. In growing communities, housing must and will return to the cost of replacement or new construction.

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