Toll Brothers’s model sale is part of a trend

Toll Brothers’s model sale is part of a trend

Highlights:
  • Tolls Brothers is putting a fully furnished model home in Parker on the market.
  • The asking price is about $900,000.
  • The transaction is a microcosm of the overall market.

Toll Brothers has puts its Valmont model on the marker for just under $900,000.

Toll Brothers has puts its Valmont model on the marker for just under $900,000.

In the latest sign of how hot the high-end, new home building market has become, Toll Brothers announced it has put its fully furnished model home on the market in a community in Parker, because almost everything else has been sold at the Estates at Pine Bluffs.

The model home with almost 6,000 square feet, including the finished walkout basement, is priced at just under $900,000.

“The market is very hot and we are going to be see more models going on the market as new home subdivisions sell out,” said Denver-area housing consultant, S. Robert August.

“In 40 years in the business, the market has never been like this,” August said. “The only way to talk about the market from a few years ago was doom and gloom. Builders getting to the point of selling models was inconceivable just a couple of years ago.”

There has been a sea change in the market, he said.

There is pent-up demand from the last seven or eight years,” August said. 
 “Consumers are now more comfortable with their jobs and consumer confidence is high,” August said. “The Denver unemployment rate is the lowest in four years. And, of course, mortgage rates are crazy low.”

Due to the lack of inventory for new homes and resale homes, the biggest problems facing builders is that they need land, he said.

“Many builders won’t be able to come out of the ground with new product for six to 12 months, as they sell out their communities,” August said.

More builders in the Denver-area will increasingly be selling their models, as they sellout subdivisions and begin searching for new land in the area, said Jeff Whiton, president and CEO of the Home Builders Association of Metro Denver.

He noted that Toll, for example, recently announced it is buying 387 lots in Anthem Ranch in Broomfield, expanding its active-adult “Active Living” brand in the Western U.S.

“The ultimate objective of every builders is to sell through their community and go out and find a replacement for it,” Whiton said.

There has been a huge demand for new homes, as prospective buyers have struggled to find resale homes, Whiton said.

There were only 6,798 unsold homes on the market at the end of February, a 32.7 percent drop from the 10,086 at the end of February 2012, according to an earlier report based on Metrolist data by independent broker Gary Bauer.

“There is nothing for sale on the market right now other than mid-rise and high-rise units,” August said.

‘The lack of resale inventory is part of,” what is driving demand for new homes, Whiton said.

“The other thing is that new homes have all the latest gadgets and technology and design,” Whiton said.

“The other advantage of new homes is they are far more energy-efficient than resales homes,” Whiton said. “The homes built today are probably 30 percent to 40 percent more energy-efficient than homes built five, 10 or 15 years ago, much less the older stock of resale homes.”

New home building permits in the metro area last year were up about 45 percent, he said.

“The market basically died after 2007,” Whiton said. “However, we are still down 35 percent or 40 percent from the peak, so we have a long way to go.”

Toll’s model home for sale is the two-story Valmont Craftsman design with 4,246 square feet of space on the first two levels, plus a 1,724-square-foot, fully finished basement.

To learn more, please visit: Estates at Pine Bluffs.

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder homes for sale 

 

BH4U

MBIA Inc shares rise on NY investigation of BofA mortgages

MBIA Inc shares rise on NY investigation of BofA mortgages

A sign for a Bank of America office is pictured in Burbank, California August 19, 2011. REUTERS/Fred Prouser

By Jochelle Mendonca

(Reuters) – Shares of bond insurer MBIA Inc (MBI.N) rose as much as 7 percent on Friday as investors bet that a new investigation into Bank of America Inc’s (BAC.N) mortgage practices would pressure the bank to settle a $5 billion lawsuit with the company.

Bank of America said in securities filing on Thursday that New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman was investigating the bank over the purchase, securitization and underwriting of home loans by Countrywide Financial, which the bank bought in 2008.

MBIA claims that Bank of America is responsible for the writing of dodgy mortgages by Countrywide that were packaged into bonds that MBIA had insured.

MBIA was stuck with huge losses when the loans went bad and now wants the bank to buy back the mortgages.

BTIG analyst Mark Palmer said that if MBIA won its suit, the accepted facts would make it easier for the New York attorney general to make his case that Countrywide had engaged in fraud and that the bank was now responsible.

That made it more likely that Bank of America would want to reach a settlement, he said. Otherwise, it could end up losing both cases.

“If we were serving as general counsel of BAC, we would be advising CEO Brian Moynihan in no uncertain terms that … he immediately move to settle all litigation with the bond insurer,” Palmer said in a client note.

Bank of America did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A settlement is vital for MBIA. The company said on Wednesday there was a significant risk that its structured finance insurance unit, MBIA Insurance Corp, would be put into liquidation or rehabilitation by its New York regulator if it was unable to settle its claims with the bank.

(Reporting by Tiziana Barghini; Editing by Theodore d’Afflisio and Ted Kerr)

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder CO homes for sale

Existing home sales edge higher, inventory at 13-year low

Existing home sales edge higher, inventory at 13-year low

A vacant and blighted house sits next to a well-kept occupied house in a once thriving eastside neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan January 23, 2013. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook

U.S. home resales edged higher in January and left the supply of homes at its lowest level in 13 years, a sign that steam is gathering in the U.S. housing market.

The National Association of Realtors said on Thursday that existing home sales rose 0.4 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.92 million units.

That was the second highest rate of sales since November 2009, when a federal tax credit for home buyers was due to expire.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a 4.9 million-unit rate.

The U.S. housing market tanked on the eve of the 2007-09 recession and has yet to fully recover, but steady job creation helped the housing sector last year, when it added to economic growth for the first time since 2005.

The nation’s inventory of existing homes for sale, which is not seasonally adjusted, fell 4.9 percent from December to 1.74 million, the lowest level since December 1999.

Many Americans are holding back from putting their homes on the market because they owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth. A sharp drop in inventories over the last year has given developers more incentive to build homes. Home building is expected to boost the economymore in 2013 than it did last year.

Inventories were down 25.3 percent from January 2012.

At the current pace of sales, inventories would be exhausted in 4.2 months, the lowest rate since April 2005.

The low inventories are also helping pushing prices higher.

Nationwide, the median price for a home resale was $173,600 in January, up 12.3 percent from a year earlier.

(Reporting by Jason Lange)

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder CO homes for sale

Household debt falls sharply among younger Americans: study

Household debt falls sharply among younger Americans: study

A newly built housing project is seen near downtown Detroit, Michigan, January 4, 2012. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook

(Reuters) – The recession had a strong impact on young Americans who saw the credit crisis up close: they are taking on less credit card debt, delaying plans to buy homes and owning fewer cars, according to a study released on Thursday.

From 2007 to 2010, the median debt of U.S. households headed by people aged 35 and younger fell by 29 percent – from $21,912 to $15,473 – while debt of older Americans fell by just 8 percent, to $30,070, according to a Pew Research Center study titled “Young Adults After the Recession.”

Residential property accounts for at least three-quarters of average American debt, so much of the drop may be connected to a decrease in home ownership. The number of Americans under 35 who own their primary residence dropped to 34 percent in 2011 from 40 percent in 2007, Pew said. Meanwhile, the percentage of homeowners over age 35 fell by 2 percentage points to 72 percent.

“As younger people invest in education and wait longer to enter the workforce or start families, that may mean they will wait longer to buy homes,” said Richard Fry, a senior economist at Washington-based Pew and the author of the study.

Young adults are cutting back on credit card usage as well. Young households with credit card debt fell by 10 percentage points to 39 percent between 2007 and 2010.

Car ownership is an area in which younger Americans also cut back. The number of households led by adults under 35 with auto debt fell by 12 percent between 2007 and 2010. The typical outstanding car loan fell to $10,000 from $13,000.

As unemployment drove many young people to return to school, student debt increased during the recession. By 2010, 40 percent of households headed by young adults had student debt, up from 34 percent in 2007 and 26 percent in 2001.

Squeezed by increasing student debt, younger Americans are cutting debt in other areas. Their median level of debt fell to $15,473 in 2010 from $17,938 in 2010, according to the study.

(Editing by Lauren Young and Dan Grebler)

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder CO homes for sale