Friday, February 03, 2006

Condo Projects 'Succumb To Realities': SD

The Voice of San Diego is reports the 'dominos' are tumbling in the condo market. "The fact that Bay Structures LLC., a consortium of developers from Los Angeles, has decided to sell the planned-but-as-yet-un-built project, is the latest in a string of indicators that show the downtown condo market may have hit its high-water mark. Of the 59 residential projects currently underway in downtown, experts are predicting that many will never crawl off the plans and stand in the already saturated condo market. The Elle is the first development to succumb to the realities of that market, they said, and more are sure to follow." "'It's a little scary, no question,' said Joe Werner, COO of Intergulf Development, which has completed a number of condo projects in downtown San Diego. 'The speculators who have driven the market to some extent are bailing out.'" "It was unclear why Bay Structures decided to sell. Calls to the company were not returned. Tim Winslow, a broker who is selling the property, said the entire project, including land, designs and permits, is up for sale. The sale is completely in line with the company's business plan, Winslow said." "But Werner and others told a different story. Werner said he heard the company had run into difficulty with its financing for the project, and downtown realtors and analysts said that is more likely to be the case. Alan Gin, professor of economics at the University of San Diego, said financiers are increasingly wary of lending to condo developers. 'Lenders are starting to see that it's a little bit more risky venture and as a result they may be a little bit more hesitant,' Gin said." "Anthony Napoli, a Realtor in Little Italy, guessed that 35 to 40 percent of the 11,000 condo units in the pipeline for downtown San Diego will never be built in the current real estate climate. He said the superheated condo market of the last few years has attracted many people into the condo business who didn't really know what they were doing. 'In the heyday, a monkey could be a developer in downtown,' Napoli said. 'Now you will only get financing if you can show a real feasibility study.'" "Russ Valone was characteristically upbeat despite the news of the Elle sale. He said the sale could be due to any number of reasons, and that it is not necessarily indicative of a weakening condo market. However, Valone did say that the downtown condo market has become increasingly competitive, and that he can foresee a proportion of the planned condo units never making it off the ground. As developers find it more difficult to acquire the financing for projects, the existing inventory on the market will be bought up, he said, and soon enough, San Diego will face a 'shortage' of condos again." "'It would be better for property owners, people trying to sell their homes or increase their investment portfolio, if there wasn't a constant dumping of new units on the marketplace,' said Jim Abbott a realtor who lives and works downtown." "But Chris Thornberg, a senior analyst with the University of California, Los Angeles Anderson Forecast, said the important thing for owners, realtors and investors to consider is not the fact that the development has been put up for sale, but how quickly it sells. 'How fast will it get snapped up?' he said. 'That's what I would be watching.'"

6 comments:

  1. 'In the heyday, a monkey could be a developer in downtown,' Napoli said. 'Now you will only get financing if you can show a real feasibility study.'

    Read: 'In the heyday, a monkey could be a dotcom millionaire on the Internet,' Napoli said. 'Now you will only get financing if you can show a real feasibility study.'"

    Real Estate, the new Pets.com?

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  2. I didn't invent it but it bears repeating:

    DOTCONDO BUBBLE

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  3. (People, should we wish that every single proposed condo actually gets built. If supply slows, then it will meet demand sooner which means less price declines. The vast overbuilding of new homes/condos would be far better for us in terms of pricing over the long run. I certainly don't cheer new projects being haulted)

    the problem is if non-builder supply comes on the same time people realize home prices aren't increasing like crazy it stops demand. in a mania it's the price increase that sends the signal.

    when the beer runs out the party is over.

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  4. Steph,
    Sorry about the blogger oddities today.

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  5. @StephInNH,

    The bad news: Mr. Bongwater Specuvestor will soon be showing up on the pages of SoCalMortgageGuy's F@cked Borrower site

    The good news: You friend may not be liable for his debts if she married him AFTER he purchased these properties.

    Altogether now: D-I-V-O-R-I-C-E

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  6. Drat, I'm a lousy typist:

    -Altogether now: D-I-V-O-R-I-C-E
    +Altogether now: D-I-V-O-R-C-E

    ReplyDelete