Real estate experts address O.C. market
Andrew Edwards
As home prices around Newport-Mesa and the rest of California
continue to rise, homeowners want to know if their property values
are sitting on a bubble that’s waiting to burst.
Until the market plays itself out, different people are ready with
different answers to the bubble question, which was addressed at
multiple conferences around Southern California this past week.
Whether or not home prices are on the verge of deflation is more
than an academic matter, said Bill Cote of the Cote Realty Group in
Corona del Mar. Cote, who does not believe there is a bubble, is
bothered by the potential of academics forecasting real estate
deflation to discourage the public. He said it’s tough for general
audiences to discern between the various forecasts that are out
there.
“It affects the confidence of the market -- people start talking,”
Cote said. “People can’t tell unless they’re sophisticated in
economics.”
For his part, Cote expects the market will remain healthy unless
mortgage rates make a surprise jump. As of Thursday, mortgage giant
Freddie Mac reported that average 30-year fixed mortgage rates were
at 5.57%. Five-year hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages were at 5.05%.
Both rates decreased last week.
“Confidence is going to stay at a fairly decent rate as long as we
don’t go crazy with interest rates,” Cote said.
In Costa Mesa, Cornell University’s Real Estate Council presented
a discussion Tuesday that focused on potential futures for numerous
home markets, including Orange County. John Burns, president of
Irvine-based John Burns Real Estate Consulting, told an audience at
the South Coast Repertory that the county is almost built out.
Without the likelihood of an influx of new housing, he said, he
doubts home prices will be taking a downturn.
“Much of the appreciation we’re seeing is permanent,” Burns said.
Burns does not believe prices can continue to rise forever,
though. He said it’s only a matter of time before prices get to a
point the market cannot support.
“Horrendous affordability is going to put the brakes on the market
eventually,” he said.
The California Assn. of Realtors reported in a June 9 release that
only 11% of people in the association’s Orange County region could
afford to buy a home in the area.
Recent reports from real estate trackers show homes in Orange
County continue to gain values, though appreciation has relaxed from
last year’s breakneck pace.
Earlier this month, La Jolla-based DataQuick Information Services
reported median home prices around Newport-Mesa went up in May when
compared to last May’s property values. The only neighborhood where
home prices dipped was Corona del Mar, where there was a small
decline.
The La Jolla company noted May was the first time in more than 3
1/2 years countywide appreciation year-over-year was in the single
digits. Most of Newport-Mesa did not slow to the county average.
Aside from the 3.4% dip in Corona del Mar, south Costa Mesa was the
only local zip code where year-over-year price increases did not
reach double digits in May.
Whereas Burns’ remarks at the Costa Mesa event indicated the
housing market could gradually cool off, economists at UCLA’s
Anderson Forecast also presented their views Tuesday at the
university’s Westwood campus.
In a report titled, “The California Report: Beware the Froth,”
Anderson Forecast senior economist Christopher Thornberg wrote the
low interest rates often cited by real estate professionals as a
driving force behind the home market’s growth cannot fully explain
how people can continue to buy homes that get more and more
expensive. Thornberg argued homeowners purchasing pricy homes are
using equity to move up into new houses and borrowing more through
interest-only loans that he considers risky.
Thornberg does not expect a sudden drop in home prices. Instead,
he expects activity in the real estate business to drop off. He also
contended a low supply of homes is not enough to explain rising
prices, since rental rates for apartments have not kept pace with
rising home prices.
“If we have a shortage of housing in California, you would see it
in rents first,” Thornberg said in a telephone interview.
Cote disagreed, and does not believe the apartment renters are in
the same market as people looking for costly homes.
“There’s a lot of wealthy people who want to live in Newport
Beach,” he said.
More predictions were offered Wednesday by Chapman University’s A.
Gary Anderson Center for Economic Research. The forecast was a
revision of a previous prediction that Orange County home prices
would drop more than 7% this year. The center now expects home prices
will go up by 6.7% this year.
Center director Esmael Adibi said expectations of a downturn were
reversed this year because interest rates did not rise to levels
previously expected.
However, the Chapman report, which conceded Chapman economists’
expectations of real estate price drops have been incorrect for three
years, still predicted home prices would fall slightly in 2006.
At UC Irvine’s Paul Merage School of Business, real estate
management program director G. Christopher Davis continues to believe
that a significant deflation risk is not present locally. He’s not
worried about the recent slowdown in appreciation, and said home
markets typically cool off in summer, since home buyers with children
tend to make deals in spring to align their moving schedule with the
school year.
“They want to get the escrow closed before school starts in
September,” Davis said.
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