Posts Tagged ‘real estate trends’

San Luis Obispo housing equity turned the corner

There are a number of forward looking indexes that try to predict the future of real estate values. They all fail. The only way to have certanty about the housing market is to look backwards, which is exactly what we have done. Every economist has been trying to call the … Read More »

Rent Vs. Buy

Americans’ Expectations Align to Encourage Home Buying More consumers may be looking to purchase homes with a shift in several key housing market indicators, according to Fannie Mae’s March 2012 consumer attitudinal National Housing Survey. More Americans now expect both home rental and home purchase prices to increase over the … Read More »

Foreclosure rates drop nearly 15% in San Luis Obsipo County

Here is another great sign of economic stability and home ownership stability in San Luis Obispo County. According to CoreLogic, The Foreclosure 12 – Month Percentage shows the percentage change in home foreclosures in San Luis Obispo County. CoreLogic records this data from banks and public record sources.     … Read More »

Who is tracking you online – home safety update

Ever visit a website looking for something, for example houses? Then every other time you searched for something else, Zillow, REALTOR.com, Trulia or some other real estate brokerage website shows up first in your search rankings! Some say “pretty cool… how’d they do that”. More and more are saying “OK, … Read More »

Paso Robles Home Showing Report

Foot traffic to properties for sale can provide great insight into the direction of future home sales. SentriLock is the lock box provider to the regions real estate professionals. Today’s lock boxes are smart. They record information each time the lockbox is accessed, and record who access the box. Aside … Read More »

Housing inventory in decline

Everyone knows the old supply and demand curve. As demand goes up and supply goes down and prices usually increase. Clearly there are numerous factors that have influence over this rather simple economic model. All things considered, when you have more buyers than sellers, prices rise. If you look at … Read More »