Homebuilders Buying up Lots – Good Sign for Market Rebound in Denver

Denver Post: Despite softening sales in the new-home market, national homebuilding companies in the Denver area are continuing to buy lots, significantly driving up prices from where they were a year ago.

It’s part of their push to have communities to build in when their existing inventory runs out and to position themselves for an economic turnaround.

The push to buy lots comes even as sales of new homes collapsed in May, falling 18.3 percent nationally compared with the same period last year.

“At the end of last year, we had just one active community that we could still sell homes in in 2011,” said Matt Janke, director of land acquisition for Meritage Homes’ Denver office.

Over the last six months, Meritage Homes has snapped up about 600 lots in 13 communities, and the company isn’t stopping — it closed on four land deals last week.

“As long as I can underwrite the deal and the market data supports the deal, we will continue to buy,” Janke said. “We have no cap on what we can buy.”

Meritage recently bought 72 lots in the Smoky Hill corridor for $43,000 apiece from an investor who paid $24,000 each last summer, Janke said.

“It’s still a fantastic price, but it shows there’s an appreciation in the market,” he said.

Scottsdale, Ariz.-based Meritage Homes is the ninth-largest homebuilder in the U.S., based on homes closed. As of March 31, the 25-year-old company had 149 actively selling communities in 12 metropolitan areas.

David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, said national builders are flush with cash and ready to spend it, but they’ll be careful not to buy lots too far in advance of when they actually plan to build homes.

“They made a lot of money in the euphoria of the mid-decade, and they held onto it,” Crowe said. “They are smart enough to understand that homebuilding is cyclic and good times are often followed by not-so-good times.”

Like other companies, national homebuilders were able to take advantage of changes in the tax law that allowed them to refile taxes from previous profitable years.

“That added to cash advantages because they refiled and got refunds,” Crow said.

Aaron Smith, senior economist at Moody’s Analytics, said Denver’s economy is better than that of other cities across the country, so it’s not surprising homebuilders are ramping up their inventory.

“House prices have held up very well,” Smith said. “You guys have strong demographics, population growth is quite strong and doesn’t show signs of slowing, and you’re heavy in technology. Technology is one of those sectors that does well in recovery.”

First-time buying market

Click on image to enlarge

In the past six months, KB Home Colorado has acquired five new communities and has several more under contract, said Rusty Crandall, president of the company, which builds exclusively for first-time buyers.

“This is a great time for us to increase our market share, but we’re doing it within our strategy of buying finished lots and getting into the price point for first-time buyers,” he said. “We’re still actively looking, and we are trying to continue to gain market share in Denver.

“We’re pretty high on Denver and think it has a great future.”

Over the past year, land specialists Jim Capecelatro and Mike Kboudi of Fuller Real Estate have sold 4,400 lender-owned lots for $59.5 million. The buyers — both builders and investors — have paid cash for the properties, and multiple builders are bidding on them.

“The banks and other sellers today have the ability to sell for a number that makes sense to a builder,” Kboudi said. “And the builders have cash in their pockets to be able to spend money on land right now.”

Fuller had a total of 13 bids on 305 finished lots at Fallbrook Farms in Thornton. MDC Holdings, which builds under the Richmond American Homes label, won the bidding war, buying the property for $13 million. It expects to start selling at the community this fall.

“It was a very sought-after property,” Capecelatro said. “It’s just a very family-friendly community that had the right lot prices and sizes.”

Nationwide, Richmond American has taken control of 120 communities over the three quarters ending March 31, including lots in more than 15 communities in Colorado, said Zane DeHerrera, spokesman for the company.

Richmond American takes a conservative approach to buying land and typically has no more than a two- or three-year supply, he said.

“In today’s housing market, the same fundamentals apply,” DeHerrera said. “However, a homebuilder has to be even more focused. You have to buy great locations and build exceptional floor plans at the right price. And the cliche ‘cash is king’ has never been more relevant.”

Investors saw opportunity

For the past few years, while the national homebuilders were sitting on the sidelines, investors had been taking advantage of the opportunity to pick up lots at deeply discounted prices.

Over the past few years, Real Capital Solutions, formerly Colorado & Santa Fe Land Co., has bought about 5,000 lots nationwide, said Marcel Arsenault, chairman and chief executive of the company. But the re-entry of the national builders has forced the company to adapt its strategy to buy in smaller markets where the big companies aren’t going.

“The price of lots has been bid up as the national homebuilders have come out of the bunker and realized the whole industry isn’t going to implode,” Arsenault said. “They have more cash than we do. They’ve paid prices we, frankly, can’t afford to pay. We’re finding it more difficult to buy finished lots.”

While national builders are snapping up lots, small local builders are still struggling to get financing to buy lots and build homes.

“The banking issue hasn’t gotten any easier,” said David Tschetter, chief executive of Colorado Custom Homes. “The big guys are sitting on a fair amount of capital, so it makes it a little easier for them to maneuver in those constraints. But for the smaller and medium-sized guys, it’s as difficult as it has been, and it will continue to be difficult.”

New Town Builders is among the smaller companies selling off lots to focus on infill locations such as Stapleton and Bradburn, said Gene Myers, president and chief executive of the Denver company.

Last week, Myers sold 94 lots in Lafayette’s Coal Creek Village subdivision to BMB Colorado LLC of Scottsdale, Ariz. Earlier this year, BMB sold 47 lots at Coal Creek to Meritage Homes, which started construction Tuesday on its model home, said Luigi Talarico, manager of BMB Colorado.

“They plan to be built out in the next 18 months,” Talarico said.

BMB, which recently started a homebuilding company, BMB Builders Inc., will start building in the community by Aug. 1.

Meanwhile, New Town doesn’t have a single bank loan and is instead funding construction with private money, Myers said.

“The recovery is showing great preference to national companies and big guys,” Myers said. “But really, the only business that’s too big to fail is small business because we employ 80 percent of the employees in this country.”

Denver Post – Foreclosure Filings Down in May

May foreclosure filings dropped to their lowest level in 18 months in Colorado, a sign that homeowners may be getting more leeway in repaying or restructuring their loans.

New filings in metropolitan Colorado counties fell to 2,633 in May, a 17.7 percent decline over the same month last year, according to the state Division of Housing.

Denver, Douglas, Larimer and Weld counties saw the steepest drop over last year, while Mesa county recorded an increase in new foreclosures. The monthly report only covered the 12 most urban Colorado counties.

“The news was unexpectedly good,” said Ryan McMaken, a Division of Housing spokesman. “The fact that this was such a low number over the past 18 months — that’s cause for cautious optimism.”

Denver Most Improved Housing Market in U.S.

“With help from the government’s first-time home buyers tax credit, which expired in April, home prices improved slightly. Some metro areas appear to have entered the early phases of the long recovery process”

Read more —>>>http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/denver-is-the-most-improved-us-housing-market.html

Looks Like Erin Toll Calls it Quits?

Erin Toll has applied for her real estate license to go work as a broker:

http://www.denverpost.com/realestate/ci_15215287

Would it be Karma if she were harassed by her replacement commissioner about her dealings as a broker?

Many would think so, although I don’t wish her ill will.  I have met Ms. Toll and she seems like a nice enough person, but disagreed whole heartedly with her iron-fist approach to regulating brokers.  In a tough real estate market, brokers need all the help they can get, and the consensus is Ms. Toll didn’t give it.

Aurora to Scrape Homes that are Blighted

The city of Aurora has announced a plan to raze homes that are foreclosed, ugly and vacant.  Most of the scrapes are in 80010 and 80011 and will start in Spring 2011.

http://www.denverpost.com/realestate/ci_15139954

Colorado Foreclosures up from last year

DENVER—The state Division of Housing says first-quarter foreclosure filings in Colorado rose 6 percent from the same period last year, but numbers last year were affected by efforts nationwide to help troubled borrowers avoid foreclosure.

The division said Thursday there were 11,136 new foreclosure filings in the first three months of the year, up 6 percent from a year ago but down 4 percent from two years ago.

The number of completed foreclosures was up too. There were 6,686 first-quarter foreclosure sales at auction, up almost 54 percent from last year and up 13 percent from 2008.

The housing division says record high new foreclosure filings in the second and third quarters of last year drove the large number of foreclosure sales.

Foreclosure Report —>>> http://bit.ly/aDYeGQ

Denver Prices Up 3.6%

Denver was among the nine cities that showed a rise in home prices, with a 3.6 percent increase — the fourth-largest gain among metropolitan areas tracked.

Entire story —>>> http://www.denverpost.com/realestate/ci_14971804

7 Simple Steps to real estate investing

Whether you are BRAND NEW to real estate investing or an expert in the game, it’s critical that you understand these 7 Simple Steps to real estate investing.

First things first…

Real Estate is NOT a get rich quick scheme. However, if you learn the foundations and put them into practice, you will make more than enough money to realize any and all of your dreams and goals.

What this means is simply that you must be experienced in the basics – the tried and true techniques, strategies and systems that have worked in the past, are STILL working and will work in the future. You’ve got to have all the tools in your bag so that you can go with the flow and not be affected when real estate markets begin to shift (which they are already in the process of doing, in case you’ve missed that memo! ;-)

Step #1 – Set your plan: Figure out what your long term real estate goals are (aka retirement and wealth building) and figure out what your short term needs are with regard to making money in real estate. Then, set up the proper entities and put the plan in place.

Step #2 – Determine what your target market will be: You cannot be all things to all real estate markets. If foreclosures appeal to you, start investing in the foreclosure market. If you want to be a landlord, look to out of state owners to focus your real estate marketing efforts.

Step #3 – Be consistent and persistent: Real Estate is not a get rich quick scheme. Real Estate is get wealthy over time and put some quick cash in your pocket today. You’ve got to follow your plan and stick with it to see real results in real estate. You’ve also got to continue to increase your education and your experience.

Step 4 – Don’t fall into the “Analysis Paralysis”: Learn to analyze properties quickly. Don’t get caught up overthinking. It’s quite simple actually: What’s the property worth? What does the property need for repairs? And how much can you get the property for? It all comes down to numbers!

Step 5 – Become a master of finance!: Real estate is the business of marketing and finance. You must learn about mortgages and interest rates and loan programs that are out there. You must know how to use finance to negotiate your deals and to sell your properties.

Step #6 – Become a skilled problem solver: The reason you will get real estate deals that others don’t, is because you are able to solve people’s problems. Anything goes on the real estate playing field. You’ve got to be ready!

Step #7 – You must continue your education: It is important that you are always investing in your education and learning new tactics, strategies and tips that will help you make more in real estate.

Denver Post Article Recognizes Wholesalers!

Congrats to those mentioned in the article:

–>>> http://www.denverpost.com/realestate/ci_14857010

Prices up again in March for Colorado – will it end with the tax credit?

With the deadline looming to take advantage of an $8,000 federal tax credit, first-time buyers helped boost Denver-area home sales in March by nearly 50 percent over the previous month, according to data released Thursday.

There were 3,602 homes sold last month, up 47.9 percent from the 2,436 homes sold in February, according to data from Metrolist, the area’s multiple listing service.

The March sales represent a 12.4 percent increase from the 3,206 homes sold during March last year.

About 70 percent of the single-family homes sold last month were priced below $300,000, and below $200,000 for condos, indicating that first-time buyers were the driving force for most sales.

“First-time homebuyers are out in force, which will be great for us and great for the market,” said independent real estate analyst Gary Bauer. “The Denver market will show its resiliency and have a very nice year.”

Median prices for single-family homes were $229,000, up 12.3 percent from last year’s $203,950 price. Condo prices were up 2.4 percent from a year ago to $131,579.

“Everything is going to be positive in terms of price appreciation,” Bauer said. “I don’t believe that anything is out there to indicate there is any kind of a cliff we’re coming up on.”

Other industry experts were less optimistic, noting that both the first-time homebuyer tax credit along with a $6,500 tax credit for move-up buyers who have owned their homes for more than five years are set to go away.

Read more –>>>> http://www.denverpost.com/realestate/ci_14849071