Last week saw one of the largest mortgage interest rate drops in a single. Acting on early indications that inflation cooled slightly in October & on the CPI report from the Bureau of Labor - interest rates dipped to their lowest level in the last 30 days.
Impact of the Coronavirus on the U.S. Housing Market
The Coronavirus (COVID-19) has caused massive global uncertainty, including a U.S. stock market correction no one could have seen coming. While much of the news has been about the effect on various markets, let’s also acknowledge the true impact it continues to have on lives and families around the world.
With all this uncertainty, how do you make powerful and confident decisions in regard to your real estate plans?
“At the very least, the coronavirus could cause some people to put home sales on hold."
While this is an understandable approach, it is important to balance that with how it may end up costing you in the long run. If you’re considering buying or selling a home, it is key to educate yourself so that you can take thoughtful and intentional next steps for your future.
For example, when there’s fear in the world, we see lower mortgage interest rates as investors flee stocks for the safety of U.S. bonds. This connection should be considered when making real estate decisions.
“The Fed’s action was expected but perhaps not to this degree and timing. And the policy change was consistent with recent declines for interest rates in the bond market. These declines should push mortgage interest rates closer to a low 3% average for the 30-year fixed rate mortgage.”
This is exactly what we’re experiencing right now as mortgage interest rates hover at the lowest levels in the history of the housing market.
Bottom Line
The full impact of the Coronavirus is still not yet known. It is in times like these that working with an informed and educated real estate professional can make all the difference in the world.
The housing market has started off much stronger this year than it did last year. Lower mortgage interest rates have been a driving factor in that change. The average 30-year rate in 2019, according to Freddie Mac, was 3.94%. Today that rate is closer to 3.5%.
The Census Bureau also just reported the highest homeownership rate since 2014 for people under 35. This is evidence that owning their own home is becoming more important to Millennials as they reach the age where marriage and children are part of their lives.
According to the latest Realtors Confidence Index Survey from the National Association of Realtors (NAR), buyer demand across the country is strong. That’s not the case, however, with seller demand, which remains weak throughout most of the nation. Here’s a breakdown by state:Demand for housing is high, but supply is extremely low. NAR also just reported that the actual number of homes currently for sale stands at 1.42 million, which is one of the lowest totals in almost three decades. Additionally, the ratio of homes for sale to the number purchased currently stands at 3.1 months of inventory. In a normal market, that number would be nearly double that at 6.0 months of inventory.
What does this mean for buyers and sellers?
Buyers need to remain patient in the search process. At the same time, buyers must be ready to act immediately once they find the right home.
Sellers may not want to wait until spring to put their houses on the market. With demand so high and supply so low, now is the perfect time to sell your house for the greatest dollar value and the least hassle.
Bottom Line
The real estate market is entering the year like a lion. There’s no indication it will lose that roar, assuming inventory continues to come to market.
Homes priced in the top 25% of a price range for a particular area of the country are considered “premium homes.” At the start of last year, many of the more expensive homes listed for sale hadn’t seen as much interest, since much of the demand for housing over the past few years has come from first-time buyers looking for starter homes. It looks like buyer activity, however, is starting to show a shift in this segment.
According to the January Luxury Report from the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing (ILHM):
“In a snapshot of 2019, despite pessimism at the start of the year, the last quarter showcased a strengthening, with an upswing in the luxury market for sales in both the single family and condo markets.”
Momentum is growing, and those looking to enter the luxury market are poised for success in 2020 as well. With more inventory available at the upper-end, historically low interest rates, and increasing average wages, the stage is set for buyers with an interest in this tier to embrace the perfect move-up opportunity.
The report highlights the increase in buyer activity in this segment, resulting in growing sales toward the end of 2019:
“According to reports from many luxury real estate professionals, the significant increase in number of properties bought at the end of 2019 versus 2018 is reflective of an early 2019 holding pattern.
Many of early 2019’s prospective luxury buyers held off while waiting to see how prices would react to new tax regulations and other policy changes. Buyer confidence returned in late spring and compared to 2018, above average sales were reported in the final quarter of 2019.”
With evidence of strong buyer confidence, this is great news, as more homeowners are building equity and growing their net worth throughout the country:
“Many homeowners are now diversifying their wealth, owning several properties rather than a single mega mansion. In addition, there have been an increase number of home purchases taking place in smaller cities, reflecting the rising number of people relocating from major metropolises. Their property equity wealth or ability to pay high rental costs have afforded them the opportunity to purchase luxury properties in…secondary cities throughout North America.”
With a strong economy and a backdrop set for moving up this year, it’s a great time to explore the luxury market. Keep in mind, luxury can mean different things to different people, too. To one person, luxury is a secluded home with plenty of property and privacy. To another, it is a penthouse at the center of a bustling city. Knowing what characteristics mean luxury to you will help your agent understand what you’re after as you define the scope and location for the home of your dreams.
Bottom Line
If you’re thinking about upgrading your current house to a luxury home, or adding an additional property to your portfolio, let’s get together to determine if you’re ready to make your move.
Innovation Hub Called 'Silicon Valley of Golf' Ready to Tee Off in Texas
PGA of America Focuses on Golf Innovation
Fields is a master-planned, mixed-use development adjacent to the PGA of America proposed headquarters in Frisco, Texas. (The Karahan Cos.)
By Candace Carlisle
CoStar News
February 14, 2020 | 2:08 P.M.
When PGA of America's Chief Operating Officer Darrell Crall and other top executives of the golf industry group began touring the country in search of fertile ground for creating innovation for the sport, they didn't expect to find it on a former cattle ranch.
But, as Crall and his team navigated the Texas Blackland Prairie ground dodging cow pies, they found a raw piece of land with enough room to build a new corporate headquarters with two championship golf courses, as well as a convention center hotel and resort. That helped them make the decision to relocate their longtime headquarters from Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, a city known for its golf courses and gated communities, for the wide, open spaces of Frisco, Texas, about 27 miles north of downtown Dallas.
PGA of America, a 104-year-old group with nearly 29,000 members, has resided in Palm Beach Gardens for 60 years. Frisco lured the headquarters from the Florida city, and beat out other cities such as Atlanta, Phoenix and Charlotte, North Carolina, by offering more than $160 million of economic incentives from various entities.
About 600 acres are being transformed into the "Silicon Valley of Golf," or a hub of innovation for the golf industry, said Seth Waugh, CEO of the PGA of America. The moniker is a tip of the golf cap to Silicon Valley in the San Francisco Bay Area, which has some of the most expensive real estate in the country and is home to tech giants such as Google, Facebook and Apple, and tech-innovation minds centered on Palo Alto's Stanford University.
The PGA of America's campus in Frisco is aimed at becoming, like Silicon Valley, a magnet for luring golf companies and services or executive golf enthusiasts wanting to be near the action. A 100,000-square-foot building for PGA of America's corporate headquarters is expected to be completed in 2022.
The two planned championship golf courses will be open to the public, the first one expected to start in 2023, and the PGA already has more than two dozen championship tournaments scheduled to be held in Frisco in the next decade.
"We want to be a hub for innovation," Crall said in an interview. "We want to build a place where ideas come to live, not to die. We are an organization rich with traditions and the only way to achieve our mission is to evolve with an entrepreneurial mindset, not just inside and under the umbrella of golf, but we want to invest in companies that have a golf app."
He declined to disclose the names of the companies the PGA of America is looking to add to its campus leader board, citing non-disclosure agreements.
With the innovation hub, the PGA of America hopes to bring more diversity to golf, a sport heavily weighted to white males, while building an affinity for the game with a younger population with the help of partnerships with Frisco Independent School District and the University of North Texas System.
More Golfers Sought
Golf participation in the United States increased incrementally in 2018 for the first time after declining year-over-year for 14 years, according to the latest golf industry report conducted by the National Golf Foundation, an advocacy group for the sport. The foundation estimated 24.2 million people played golf on a course in 2018, which increased slightly from 23.8 million people in the previous year, according to the foundation's study. Participation is well below the all-time high set in 2003 of more than 30 million golfers, but advocates say it remains relevant to millions of people.
Meanwhile, Frisco has boomed from 37,714 residents in 2010 to 155,363 residents in 2018, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. With the proposed developments in the city, including those of the PGA of America, the city doesn't show any signs of slowing.
The addition of the PGA of America and the creation of the golf innovation hub builds on the brand of the city being "Sports City U.S.A.," said Mayor Jeff Cheney, with the world headquarters and practice facility of the Dallas Cowboys; the corporate home and practice facility for the NHL team, Dallas Stars; the corporate headquarters and 20,500-seat stadium for FC Dallas, the Major League Soccer team; and the corporate headquarters and 10,316-seat ballpark for the Minor League Baseball team, Frisco RoughRiders.
"We don't just have teams and brands, but we have evolved in the business of sports by bringing startups and businesses to Frisco," Cheney said in an interview. "Like The Star in Frisco, which is home to the Dallas Cowboys, we want to create a halo effect with other brands wanting to attach their names to the Cowboys, which have led to some of the highest lease rates in all of Dallas-Fort Worth" for office space.
"With the PGA, it doesn't just play out on a national stage, but it has international recognition," he added. "Every tract of land next to the PGA is in active design and negotiations with various entities to have a direct attachment to the PGA and the golf courses. This part of Frisco is going to develop 15 years faster. It will develop seemingly overnight."
Omni Stillwater Woods, the developer of the PGA of America project, bought the 600 acres for $455 million last year from Hunt Realty Investments. The company is a joint venture led by the Omni Hotels & Resorts with Dallas-based Stillwater Capital and Dallas-based Woods Capital. Plans include a 500-room Omni resort with private villas and a 127,000-square-foot conference center.
When Chris Kleinert, CEO and president of Hunt Realty, initially saw the sprawling tract of prairie land called the Bert Fields estate, totaling more than 2,700 acres in Frisco four years ago, he and his team passed on buying the land.
The Dallas-based investment firm was primarily in the energy business and his team was selective about its real estate investments, he said. But they changed their mind when the PGA of America and the University of North Texas System began to hone in on the northern part of Frisco.
"Over the course of time, as well as talking about this with our partners, and we ended up closing on the property in August 2018," Kleinert said, adding Hunt and its development team plans to build out "a seamless campus site" to attract Fortune 100 companies and add a variety of housing from high-end homes overlooking the PGA championship golf courses to student housing on the eastern side of the master-planned development near the UNT-Frisco campus.
"There's so much potential for this site," he added. "The opportunities were too great to pass up."
Legacy West
Prior to buying the development tract, Kleinert bounced the idea off his friend Fehmi Karahan, who also happens to be the master developer behind Legacy West, a $3.2 billion mixed-use development in Plano, located just south of Frisco. Legacy West is widely considered by real estate executives as a success as an urban-suburban development and is home of Toyota's new North American campus, as well as major employment centers for JPMorgan Chase, Liberty Mutual Insurance and home to the corporate office of Boeing's new global services division.
Legacy West includes a food hall, as well as restaurants and shops typically found in urbanized cities. The result has created a new central business district in the region outside of downtown Dallas, which has been likened to Tysons Corner, Virginia, a former rural area that transformed into a central business district outside of Washington, D.C.
Karahan, who is president of the Karahan Cos., is working with Hunt Realty to build out the land in Frisco.
"The Legacy area is full without any large acreage available and I wanted to be part of a great master-planned development, which is what Fields will be," Karahan said in an interview. "Our goal is to create the master plan of the development with all the product mixes to attract great companies. This isn't just limited to the PGA-related brands, but we feel we can attract the next big relocation with an impact like Toyota and we are planning the land to accommodate it."
By the end of the month, the Fields development is set to reach a major milestone with land planning and zoning approval from city officials, which can make way for infrastructure work to begin on the raw land to help create nine distinct villages and break up the massive tract into chunks of workable real estate.
Following the addition of infrastructure and building out a roadway system, the development partnership plans to concentrate on building single-family homes overlooking the championship golf courses. But it won't be a homogeneous design.
"The blending of the residential neighborhoods is our goal," Karahan said. "We don't just want to do these gated large communities, but create an environment with all the components from a big lot with a multimillion-dollar home to a three-story townhouse with a beautiful terrace overlooking the golf course."
The development team plans to begin on the western side of the Fields master-planned development on a neighborhood known as The Preserve, followed by moving to the eastern side toward the UNT-Frisco campus. The acreage along the Dallas North Tollway, in the center of Fields, is expected to attract corporate tenants with mid- and high-rise towers.
Even though plans to add a corporate tenant could be in the years ahead, Karahan said there's the ability to add a mid- to high-rise corporate tenant, much like Liberty Mutual Insurance's campus in Plano's Legacy West, in part of Fields in the next few years. A roughly 10-acre tract along the Dallas North Tollway at the corner of Rock Hill Road could be carved out of the Fields' puzzle for the right corporate tenant, he said.
"By having more than 2,000 acres to develop, it gives us a lot of flexibility and the ability to showcase what the whole environment is going to look like," Karahan said. "This is very important to large corporations, they want to know what the neighboring environment looks like and what they can offer their employees. It helps protect their investment."
A Golf Education
The University of North Texas System has recently received approval from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to begin development on its 100-acre campus at the southwest corner of Preston Road and Panther Creek Parkway in Frisco.
This October, construction is expected to begin on the initial phase of the $115 million, 130,000-square-foot education building, called Building 1, at the UNT-Frisco campus, which will sit on land donated as part of a partnership with the city of Frisco. The university system also has the ability to extend its campus on another 50 adjacent acres. At full build-out, the new UNT campus could bring up to 25,000 university students to the city.
The new building is expected to help significantly expand UNT-Frisco, which currently has an enrollment of roughly 1,500 students at Hall Park in about 36,000 square feet of leased space at 2811 Internet Blvd. in Frisco. If the university "does it right," it could have up to 25,000 students enrolled at the Frisco campus, said Wesley Randall, dean of the new Frisco campus.
"The opportunity to grow and to be focused on going back to the main campus to efficiently and agilely bring things that are of value to Frisco and to nimbly move in the ecosystem," Randall said. "We are going bring down the parts that will help enable the Frisco economic engine."
UNT's flagship campus is located in Denton, which is about 25 miles west of Frisco, and has an enrollment nearing 40,000 students. In opening a Frisco campus, Randall said the vision is to bring nanotechnology, sports innovation and other fields of study that would track well with Frisco and the PGA of America's shared vision.
The city of Frisco, development corporations, and the Frisco Independent School District contributed $35 million to helping develop the public golf facilities at the PGA of America-anchored development. The public-private partnership ensures more than 300 Frisco ISD high school golfers will have access to practice at the facility on a weekly basis.
The move echoes one seen years ago from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones' playbook when the billionaire decided to put the team's corporate headquarters and practice facility in Frisco. The venue anchors a 91-acre mixed-use development called The Star in Frisco, located along the Dallas North Tollway, a few exits from the PGA of America's soon-to-be headquarters and championship golf courses.
The Star includes The Ford Center, a 12,000-seat indoor stadium developed in a public-private partnership with the city of Frisco and Frisco ISD the Cowboys use as an indoor practice facility and allows students to play on the same field as professional players. The deal also gives the city and school district the ability to host other events, trade shows and concerts at the venue.
The allure of these partnerships being tied to the Cowboys or PGA brand, as well as the incoming students from UNT, could bring an important quality to Frisco every employer needs: A pipeline of labor.
"Corporate location decisions are driven primarily around labor," said King White, president of Dallas-based Site Selection Group. "If you are looking to staff a large operation, you want to put yourself in a strategic place to pull employees from multiple angles. The north side of Frisco is pushing out to the edges, but this move has certainly been done in the past with Silicon Valley companies in the 1980s."
Developing the urban-suburban part of the Fields puzzle will be an important piece, as well as a potential corporate magnet, in the years ahead, said White.
Meanwhile, Frisco Mayor Cheney said he expects good things to come out of this public-private partnership with the PGA of America.
"We are growing to grow the game of golf," he added. "This project is going to be a place people will want to be in even if they've never picked up a golf club. We're going to have a whole new generation of golf lovers."
Why an Economic Slowdown Will NOT Crush Real Estate this Time
Last week, the National Association for Business Economics released their February 2019 Economic Policy Survey. The survey revealed that a majority of the panel believe an economic slowdown is in the near future:
“While only 10% of panelists expect a recession in 2019, 42% say a recession will happen in 2020, and 25% expect one in 2021.”
Their findings coincide with three previous surveys calling for a slowdown sometime in the next two years:
That raises the question: Will the real estate market be impacted like it was during the last recession?
A recession does not equal a housing crisis. According to the dictionary definition, a recession is:
“A period of temporary economic decline during which trade and industrial activity are reduced, generally identified by a fall in GDP in two successive quarters.”
During the last recession, prices fell dramatically because the housing collapse caused the recession. However, if we look at the previous four recessions, we can see that home values weren’t negatively impacted:
January 1980 to July 1980: Home values rose 4.5%
July 1981 to November 1982: Home values rose 1.9%
July 1990 to March 1991: Home values fell less than 1%
March 2001 to November 2001: Home values rose 4.8%
Most experts agree with Ralph McLaughlin, CoreLogic’s Deputy Chief Economist, who recently explained:
“There’s no reason to panic right now, even if we may be headed for a recession. We’re seeing a cooling of the housing market, but nothing that indicates a crash.”
The housing market is just “normalizing”. Inventory is starting to increase and home prices are finally stabilizing. This is a good thing for both buyers and sellers as we move forward.
Bottom Line
If there is an economic slowdown in our near future, there is no need for fear to set in. As renowned financial analyst, Morgan Housel, recently tweeted:
“An interesting thing is the widespread assumption that the next recession will be as bad as 2008. Natural to think that way, but, statistically, highly unlikely. Could be over before you realized it began.”
The Housing Market Will “Spring Forward” This Year!
Just like our clocks this weekend, in the majority of the country, the housing market will soon “spring forward!” Similar to tension in a spring, the lack of inventory available for sale has been holding back the market.
Many potential sellers believe that waiting until Spring is in their best interest. Traditionally, they would have been right.
Buyer demand has seasonality to it. Usually, this falls off in the winter months, especially in areas of the country impacted by arctic conditions.
That hasn’t happened this year.
Demand for housing has remained strong as mortgage rates have remained near historic lows. Even with an increase in rates forecasted for 2019, buyers are still able to lock in an affordable monthly payment. Buyers are increasingly jumping off the fence and into the market to secure a lower rate.
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) recently reported that in 2018 the top 10 dates sellers listed their homes all fell in April, May, or June.
Those who act quickly and list now, before a flood of increased competition, will benefit from additional exposure to buyers.
Bottom Line
If you are planning on selling your home in 2019, meet with a local real estate professional to evaluate the opportunities in your market.
Keller Williams Named Among Fast Companies Most Innovative Companies
Keller Williams has been named to Fast Company's prestigious annual list of the World's Most Innovative Companies (MIC) for 2019. The company ranked No. 1 in the real estate and urban development category on the new ranking.
"We are excited and honored to be named one of Fast Company's Most Innovative Companies in 2019," said Gary Keller, co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Keller Williams. "We are developing our technology in close partnership with our associates – from ideation to design and iterating together through release."
"It is this collaboration that drives our greatest opportunities for innovation. As technology continues to reshape our industry, I have never been more excited for thehttp://www.christiecannon.com future of our company," said Keller. "This is just the beginning."
The real estate industry is changing faster than ever before and Keller Williams is at the forefront of this change. The company is reaching new heights through innovation, disruption and an uncompromising commitment to the agent and the consumers they represent.