May
29th
Categories: Real Estate News, Rentals, Market Trends, Apartments
Low vacancies, rising rents and a cooling condo market has made Seattle’s apartment market more appealing to out-of-state investors, according to a report just released by Marcus & Millichap.
- Over 34,000 jobs are expected to open in 2008
- Vacancy rates are expected to be at 4.7% by the end of the year
- The average rental rate is expected to reach $1023 per month- a 6.2% increase from last year
Click here to read more!
Also, check out the National Apartment Association’s Housing Survey on how renter’s feel about our real estate market- 69% of renters plan on continue renting for as long as 5 more years!
May
11th
Categories: Real Estate News, Market Trends, Downtown

In the most recent news, UrbanCondominiums.com shared their optimism in our thriving downtown market and projected that the downtown core will continue to top nationwide trends moving forward.
Agreeing with all they have to say, experts sited that with local job growth, limitations on sprawl, commuter traffic congestion and increasing gas prices makes the condominium lifestyle even more viable than ever before. Click here to watch the May 5th interview!
Mar
3rd
Categories: Real Estate News, Market Trends
A colleague of mine passed this article to me this morning- click here! It is a piece on why the housing market has scared off first-time buyers (falling prices, foreclosures, loan approvals, on and on) and also touches on how it has momentarily affected the rental market.
The National Association of Realtors reports that hundreds of thousands of young Americans are just waiting for the clouds to part and are not buying or renting:
“There’s probably 700,000, maybe 800,000 people out there that are not getting into the market either as a renter or as a homebuyer,” said Walter Molony, spokesman for the NAR. “Where are these folks? They’re out there, they’ve got jobs. Some of them are moving back with their parents, never left the house, they’re doubling up with roommates.”
While on of the largest U.S apartment owners, Equity Residential (downtown communities: Centennial Tower & Court, Olympus, Metro on First, 2300 Elliott, Harbor Steps, Summit at Lake Union and 7th & James) have seen fewer people moving out of their apartment buildings in the last year.
The bottom-line is that buyers can no longer make a strong profit in owning a property for just a year or two and even though Seattle’s market is stronger than most, it is still important to plan for the future. If you feel that you can’t commit to staying in Seattle (or in one place) for 3 to 5 years, as an alternative there is always the option of renting your home.
Jan
6th
Categories: Real Estate News, Market Trends, Corporate News
| According to a study by Atlas Van Lines Inc, Washington State had 3,208 inbound moves in 2007 and 2,487 outbound moves- a trend that has continued since 2003.
The study found that eight of the 13 inbound states are west of the Mississippi River and 4 are west of the Rockies (Alaska, Oregon, Nevada & Washington) classifying the Northwest one of the most popular destinations in the US.
Click here for more information |
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Dec
29th
Categories: Real Estate News, Market Trends
The image says it all- homebuyers are having a more difficult time securing financing, foreclosures have reached record highs, unsold homes flood the market and prices have dropped dramatically, however the one thing we can be thankful for…is that all regions experienced drops in sales except the West.
On Friday, the Commerce Department reported that sales of new homes in the Midwest dropped 27.6%, the Northeast plummeted to 19.3%, the South fell to 6.4%, but in the West, sales rose 4% from October 07 to November 07. (Click here to read more)
We have continued to remain one of the strongest housing markets in the US, but over the last 12 months, sales nationwide have decreased by 34.4% (said to be the largest annual slide since early 1991) and many economists are predicting a housing crash is in the near future. Of course media coverage only seems to worsen perceptions of the housing market so I am interested in knowing what some of you think will happen in 2008 in Seattle and on a national level…thoughts?
Dec
26th
Categories: Real Estate News, Market Trends
In the 20-city S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices survey released this morning, the nation’s average prices fell over 6% from one year ago BUT Seattle experienced an increase of 3.3% along with Portland (1.9%) and Charlotte (4.3%).
Out of the 17 cities showing declines, Miami sits at a 12.4% decrease while Tampa (11.8%), Detroit (11.2%), San Diego (11.1%), Las Vegas (10.7%) and Phoenix (10.6%) follow close behind.
Click here to read the full report
Dec
11th
Categories: Real Estate News, Rentals, New Construction, Market Trends, Downtown, Green, Seattle Neighborhoods, Property Type, Apartments, Olivian, Aspira
A couple weeks back when I attended the IREM Forecast Breakfast, Mike Scott (from Dupre + Scott) talked a bit about the rental market and where it is heading. The topic of conversation seemed to go a little like this…
Seattle’s economy is stronger than ever, apartment vacancy rates are down and rents are still on the rise, but come 2009 we should expect to see the rental market flatten a bit due to a large amount of new construction apartments entering the marketplace.
The Seattle PI covered the topic today (and all the contributing factors) while announcing two new apartment high-rises that are well on the way.
- The Olivian will be a 27-story luxury apartment building with 224 units located at 8th & Olive…right across the street from Olive8.
- The Aspira, which was first slated as condominiums, broke ground yesterday and will soon be a 37-story apartment tower located on the corner of Stewart & Terry Ave.
Click here to read more
P.S. I am back!
Nov
14th
Categories: Real Estate News, New Construction, Market Trends, Landlord News, Lofts, Seattle Politics, Mosler Lofts, Cosmopolitan, Condominiums, The Parc, Property Type
It looks like I did miss some exciting news while I was away…
NEWS
Seattle-based REIT, The Schuster Group, launched a $100 million private real estate investment fund called Schuster Realty that will focus on the Seattle area.
Zillow.com signed a real estate advertising deal with 282 U.S. newspapers through 11 major publishers
CONDOS
The Cosmopolitan Community Committee wrote a letter to Mayor Nickels
Mosler Lofts will get certificate of occupancy on the 16th of November
The Parc now has two model homes and a 360 degree tour of the units, lobby and homeowner’s lounge on their website- check it out!
Ben Kakimoto’s update for Seattle condo sales performances in October
EVENTS
IREM’s 22nd Annual Forecast Breakfast (11/29, 7:30-9:30am, Meydenbauer Center) - I really enjoyed last year’s breakfast so I will be attending again this year. Martin Selig, Mayor Degginger, Mike Scott, John Curley and Jamie Moyer are a few of the speakers this year, click here to reserve your spot!
23rd Annual TRENDS Rental Housing Management Conference and Trade Show (12/11, all day, Convention Center) - This year we are not sponsoring a booth but I will still be volunteering and attending seminars throughout the day. AGENTS: You can earn clock hours! Click here for more information.
Oct
30th
Categories: Real Estate News, Market Trends
Although the home prices here in Seattle have recently dropped a bit, when comparing prices in August 2006 to August 2007 prices actually increased 5.7% according to the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices report released today. There were 4 other cities among the 20 metropolitan regions across the United States that saw increases: Atlanta, Dallas, Charlotte & Portland.
On a pessimistic note, home price declines across the US mark the 8th consecutive month of negative annual returns and the 21st consecutive month of decelerating returns.
Click here to read the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices report 10/30/2007
”The S&P/Case-Shiller® Home Price Indices measures the residential housing market, tracking changes in the value of the residential real estate market in 20 metropolitan region across the United States. These indices use the repeat sales pricing technique to measure housing markets. First developed by Karl Case and Robert Shiller, this methodology collects data on single-family home re-sales, capturing re-sold sale prices to form sale pairs. This index family consists of 20 regional indices and two composite indices as aggregates of the regions.
In addition, the S&P/Case-Shiller® U.S. National Home Price Index is a broader composite of single-family home price indices for the nine U.S. Census divisions and is calculated quarterly.”