Tag Archives: real estate news

Texas Gets $31 Million in Wildfire Recovery Funding NEW

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Associated Press) – Texas is getting $31 million in federal funding to help with wildfire recovery. At least 80 percent of it will go to Bastrop County, which was devasted by fires that began late last summer.

Community development block grants will help pay for housing, business and infrastructure needs beyond other public and private help.

The money is part of $400 million in nationwide natural disaster assistance from the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

According to the Texas Forest Service, last year’s wildfire season was the worst in the state’s history, covering nearly four million acres and destroying 4,000 structures, and resulting in ten deaths.

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Houston Industrial: Construction Uptick Indicates Market Strength NEW

HOUSTON (CB Richard Ellis) – An increase in building activity marked the strengthening of Houston’s industrial market in fourth quarter 2011, according to CB Richard Ellis’ latest market analysis.

The report showed that 4.1 million sf of active building was taking place at the end of 2011, up 14 percent from the end of the third quarter and more than 450 percent over the end of 2010.

Industrial vacancy rates have declined over the past two years. The overall vacancy rate dropped to 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter from 5.9 percent in the previous quarter and 6.5 percent in fourth quarter 2010.

At the end of fourth quarter 2011, Houston’s industrial market posted 25 million sf of vacant space alongside 2.1 million sf of positive net absorption, pushing year-to-date absorption to 3.8 million sf.

In its report, CB Richard Ellis says “employment now exceeds its prerecession peak in several sectors — oil and gas extraction, food and beverage stores, utilities, and trucking to name a few. The recovery has been rough, and job growth will repeat that trend with only construction and real estate showing signs of significant improvement next year.”

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Oil Industry Boosts Texas Job Growth

COLLEGE STATION (Real Estate Center) – Texas’ mining and logging industry ranked first in job creation in the past year, followed by the professional and business services industry, and the leisure and hospitality industry, according to the latest Monthly Review of the Texas Economy.

Overall, the state’s economy gained 205,100 nonagricultural jobs from December 2010 to December 2011, an annual growth rate of 2 percent compared with 1.3 percent for the United States. The state’s nongovernment sector added 261,200 jobs, an annual growth rate of 3 percent compared with 1.8 percent for the nation’s private sector.

Texas’ seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell from 8.3 percent to 7.8 percent while the nation’s rate decreased from 9.4 percent to 8.5 percent.

All Texas industries except the information industry, construction industry, and the state’s government sector had more jobs in December 2011 than in December 2010.

All Texas metro areas except Abilene, Wichita Falls, College Station-Bryan, Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood, Brownsville-Harlingen and Beaumont-Port Arthur had more jobs in December 2011 than in December 2010. Laredo ranked first in job creation followed by Corpus Christi, Victoria, Lubbock, Midland and Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown.

The state’s actual unemployment rate in December 2011 was 7.2 percent. Midland had the lowest unemployment rate followed by Amarillo, Odessa, Lubbock, College Station and San Angelo.

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Houston Master of Master-Planned Communities

HOUSTON (Houston Business Journal) – Houston is home to two of the country’s five top-selling master-planned communities, according to John Burns Real Estate Consulting LLC.

The Woodlands ranked second based on 945 home sales last year, up from 786 sales in 2010. Cinco Ranch came in third with 862 home sales, up from 823 sales in 2010.

Also cracking the top five was Alamo Ranch in San Antonio, with 500 home sales last year.

The top spot went to The Villages in Orlando, Fla., which had 2,307 sales.

Twelve of the top 50 master-planned communities in the survey are in Houston. A list is posted on the Houston Business Journal‘s website.

A total of 133 master-planned communities were surveyed by Irvine, Calif.-based John Burns Real Estate Consulting for the second annual ranking.

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Real Estate Market Trends for Houston, Texas

November 2011 real estate search results are in and Houston, TX was the #27 most searched market in the country in November 2011, based on data released today by Realtor.com, the #1 homes for sale real estate web site.  The Median list prices for homes in Houston, TX hit $174,500 in November 2011, a 2.79% increase from one year ago this month, and -0.20% decrease from October 2011.  The national median list price in November 2011 was $189,900, a 4.05% increase compared to November 2010.  Active for sale inventory of homes in Houston, TX in November 2011 leveled out at 24,561, a -21.68% decrease compared to November 2010. National inventory counts for November 2011 were 2,014,352, a -21.30% decrease as compared to a year ago.  The median age of inventory in Houston, TX in November was 91 days, a 2.25% increase compared to October 2011.  Nationally, the median age of inventory was 114 days, a 3.64% increase compared to October.

 

 

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10% Increase Predicted for Houston Home Starts, Sales

HOUSTON (Houston Business Journal) – Metrostudy President Mike Inselmann predicts 2012 will bring about a 10 percent increase in both single-family home starts and existing home sales in Houston.

Speaking Wednesday at the 2012 Houston Housing Forecast, Inselmann predicted the number of home starts will rise from 18,000 in 2011 to as much as 20,500 this year.

He also also predicted sales of existing single-family homes will increase by at least 10 percent, rising from 2011′s 54,000 to as much as 59,400 this year.

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Texas Named Sixth Most Enterprising State

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Urban Land Institute) – The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has released its ”Enterprising States 2011″ report, and it enhances Texas’ reputation for being a business-friendly state.

The Lone Star State ranked sixth on the list of top ten states for low business taxes and regulations. The report said “the Lone Star State is a low-tax state that offers a low cost of living and has an enterprise-friendly climate that’s paying off with high job growth rates. Recent state initiatives include a business tax reform that raises the revenue exemption.”

Ahead of Texas were Tennessee, South Dakota, Wyoming, Alaska and Indiana.

According to the Urban Land Institute, “states were ranked in a variety of performance metrics, including their tax and regulatory environments. Those environments were compared in five ways: overall state and local tax burdens, corporate taxes, small-business costs, state government budget gaps, and cost-of-living indices.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce noted that states making the top ten were mostly inland locales, saying desirable coastal states don’t always need incentives to attract business investment and expansion.

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Houston: Still Ahead of Housing Downturn

HOUSTON (Houston Business Journal) – A new report from Clear Capital provides further evidence that Texas housing markets are faring better than the nation’s.

According to the real estate data provider, the average home price in Houston dropped .8 percent in 2011. Nationally, prices dropped 2.1 percent.

In fourth quarter 2011, the city’s home prices increased by 1.8 percent compared with the national decrease of .4 percent.

Clear Capital expects Houston home prices to increase by 3 percent this year, compared with the nation’s .2 percent.

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Texas’ Private Sector Job Growth Outpaces Nation’s

COLLEGE STATION (Real Estate Center) – Texas gained 227,800 nonfarm jobs from November 2010 to November 2011 according to the Center’s latest Monthly Review of the Texas Economy. That represents an annual growth rate of 2.2 percent compared with 1.2 percent for the United States.

The state’s nongovernment sector grew at an even faster rate, adding 292,700 jobs (3.4 percent) compared with 1.7 percent for the nation’s private sector.

Texas’ seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell to 8.1 percent in November 2011 from 8.3 percent the year before. The nation’s rate decreased from 9.8 to 8.6 percent.

All Texas industries except the information industry and the state’s government sector had more jobs than the same time a year ago. The state’s mining and logging industry ranked first in job creation, followed by the professional and business services industry and the leisure and hospitality industry.

Abilene, Wichita Falls, Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood and College Station-Bryan were the only metro areas that had fewer jobs in November 2011 than in November 2010. Victoria ranked first in job creation followed by Corpus Christi, McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Lubbock and Laredo.

The state’s actual unemployment rate in November 2011 was 7.5 percent. Midland had the lowest unemployment rate followed by Amarillo, Odessa, Lubbock and San Angelo.

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Texas Poised to Outpace Nation (Again)

COLLEGE STATION (Real Estate Center) – Texas’ economic outlook for 2012 is positive. Job growth is occurring in several sectors, and a low cost of living is enticing businesses to move to the Lone Star State.

It will be tougher going for the nation, however, because of several factors. The housing market needs to clear a high number of foreclosures. Consumers need to pay off their debt. The banking system needs to write off bad debt. Small businesses need to start hiring again.

Writing for the January issue of Tierra Grande magazine, Real Estate Center Chief Economist Dr. Mark Dotzour says, “Fortunately, Texas is poised to outperform the U.S. averages. Home sales volume in Texas should show modest improvement over 2011, and prices should be stable throughout 2012.” Dotzour’s economic outlook is titled “Texas Sails On: Nation Battles Headwinds.”

Other articles detailing findings from the nation’s largest publicly funded real estate research organization are in the issue scheduled for mailing in late January.

  • “Beyond      a Reasonable Drought” by noted agricultural expert Dr. Joe Outlaw and      Center Research Economist Dr. Charles Gilliland. Farmers, ranchers and      service businesses that support them are suffering negative effects of the      drought. To make matters worse, federal agricultural programs are on the      chopping block to reduce the deficit.
  • “The      Great Recession: Why Intensity and Duration Varied” by Center Research      Economist Dr. Ali Anari. Why did some Texas metros fare better in the      Great Recession? Results from the Center’s business cycle research program      pinpoint several reasons. These included shares of employment in the      government sector, education and health services industry, mining and construction      industry, and the metro’s level of educational attainment.
  • “Dialing      Down Debt: Road to Recovery Begins at Home” by Center Research Analyst      Gerald Klassen. It will hurt, but American households will have to      liquidate their assets and reduce debt if they want the economy to      recover. This means selling luxury items including vacation homes, boats      and RVs, as well as selling investments, declaring bankruptcy or suffering      through foreclosure.
  • “For      the Record: When to Toss Old Tax Records” by Center Research Fellow Dr.      Jerrold Stern. At a minimum, tax records should be kept three years.      However, a period of seven or more years is recommended. Tax and nontax      factors play a role in the decision.
  • “Vested      Rights: Project Protection for Developers” by Houston attorney Reid C.      Wilson. Vested rights freeze land use regulations affecting property      classification, building size, lot size-dimension-coverage and certain      other matters once the owner or developer files a permit application for      that project.
  • “The      Trouble with Troubled Assets” by Center Research Economist Dr. Harold      Hunt. The volume of distressed property sales was expected to be much      higher by this time. So far, everyone is still waiting. However, according      to commercial real estate insiders, distressed sales are on the way up.
  • “Terminated:      Transfer Fees Outlawed” by Center legal expert Judon Fambrough. Transfer      fees, money paid for transferring interest in real property, were      implemented in 2007 legislation. Four years later, that law was repealed,      prohibiting any future transfer fees and terminating existing fees that do      not comply with the new legal requirements.
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