Edition: September 2007



Downtown’s Shrinking New Condo Inventory

As builders stop building, the supply
of homes no longer is bottomless








Sapphire Tower

It has been almost a year since we broached the topic of the Downtown condominium market in this column. Yes, things have changed, and despite the glut of negative press, the glut of condominiums some predicted has not materialized, and business isn’t so bad.

The resale market is holding up rather nicely. The inventory of active resale listings at the end of July was 492 compared to 613 one year ago. Days on market remain at about 90. That is a lot longer than ordinary (60 days), but condominiums are selling.

At the end of July, Downtown sales had totaled 246 compared to 467 for the entirety of 2006. With any luck, 2007 will match 2006 and that wasn’t such a bad year. The upper end of the market has fared better than the lower end. Two-thirds of all Downtown resales this year have been more than $500,000. In 2006, almost 200 units sold for more than $700,000. It looks like this total may be achieved again this year, too. The average price of a resale unit was $679,000 ($560 per square foot), the same as the average for 2005.

It is true that the average price per square foot is down by 7 percent this year, but that is skewed by the large number of units sold last year at the luxurious Grande at Santa Fe. In 2006, the Grande sold 60 condominiums at an average price of $1,020,000.

In early 2006, buyers could peruse almost 100 listings at the 440 — unit Grande at Santa Fe. Now there are 37. The average unit there is 1,515 square feet with an average list pricing of $1,152,893. Actually not a bad buy considering the quality of the building and the spectacular views from its 39 stories.

“Not a bad buy,” you say? Well, one has to consider that the price per square foot is about $750. When you look at the other West Coast markets with vibrant downtowns and parallel water views, like San Francisco, Seattle and Vancouver, San Diego is a bargain, and with much better weather. In those other three towns, downtown view condos sell for well over $1,000 per square foot.

In the new condo market, the inventory of available units is negligible. Fortune magazine in a recent issue counted more than 6,000 units coming on line Downtown and declared San Diego one of the nation’s major downtown disasters. Obviously, its researchers didn’t do their homework, or talked to the wrong people. Let’s look at reality:

A look at the skyline reveals nine high-rise condominium projects that have just been completed or will be finished by the end of 2007. As a group, they total 1,922 units. Of those, only 700 remain to be sold and a third of those are in Smart Corner at 12th Avenue and C Street. Only one is west of the Gaslamp Quarter, Electra, and it is sold out.

In 2008, three more projects will be delivered: Bayside by Bosa, Breeza by Intergulf and Sapphire Tower. The view units in those projects average well over $800 per square foot. The typical Bayside unit is priced at almost $900 per square foot (and selling nicely).





Vantage Pointe

In 2009, only Vantage Pointe with its 677 units at 10th and B will be delivered.

After that, if you look at the next 2 1/2 years, the total number of units to be delivered will be 3,100, but 1,700 of those already have been sold, leaving 1,400 units to sell over the next 1 1/2 years. Of those 1,400, more than 500 are in moderate cost projects (Smart Corner and Vantage Pointe) and the remainder in higher priced projects. That hardly sounds like a glut.

On the 2007 better quality projects, a sufficient number of units have been sold to substantially pay off the construction loan, thus relieving the major burden for the developer. It also eliminates any incentive for deep discounting. By and large, the equity partners in these projects are big boys like Lehman Brothers and Capstone, and they are in no particular hurry to give away the condominiums that they have labored so hard to produce and which cannot, under any circumstances, be reproduced for the same prices.

The latter point is exceptionally important.





Vantage Pointe

Most of the product now being completed was bid out two to three years ago before concrete and steel prices accelerated. Neither concrete nor steel prices are going down in price as a result of massive infrastructure and commercial construction both in the United States and around the world, which means not just China. (Single family homes, by comparison, are primarily constructed from wood.) Therefore, to reproduce the 2007 condominiums today would cost $100 to $150 per square foot more than the condominiums are selling for today. As a result, the prices of projects like The Mark, Park Terrace, Alta, Aria, Aperture and Icon are a veritable bargain.

Those costs also are a big reason the skyline has almost no cranes in the air, except in projects that have waterfront views and can generate sales prices in excess of $700 per square foot. The best evidence of this is the Grande at Santa Fe where the units resell for $700 per square foot while Bayside, under construction next door and also by Bosa, is selling for $850-plus per square foot. (Hint: when Bayside is complete and approaching sell-out, what do you suspect will happen to the prices of the Grande units?)





Park Terrace

On balance, we will see amazingly few new residential high-rise projects delivered prior to 2010 that haven’t already broken ground or been completed.

In pure Econ 101 terms, this is a great time to buy a condo Downtown or near Downtown — not for flipping mind you — but for at least a three —to four —year hold. More than 30,000 folks own or rent today Downtown. In many quarters, Downtown San Diego is being heralded as the next great downtown in the United States. I believe it.

Alan N. Nevin is director of economic research with MarketPointe Realty Advisors (market-pointe.com), a consultancy providing real estate and demographic statistics, feasibility studies and litigation support to the California land use industry and legal professions. Nevin can be reached by e-mail at anevin@sandiegometro.com.


Story Comments

This is a well prepared article which I assume was written in Sept of 07. When is an update due. With all the problems in the Mortgage Market, has there been a change in pricing/financing and to what extent. Thanks James Goode

Posted by james goode at 7:13pm on 2008 February 22

San Diego isn't going anywhere but up. Literally, we are almost out of buildable land so all construction will have to go vertical. The communities of the future will be the loft and condo buildings, cities within cities. There is so much infrastructure being developed that will only raise the value of Downtown San Diego Condos in the future.

Posted by Mike at 12:48pm on 2008 February 28

I knew this article was written by a realtor before I read the bio at the end. Actually, this is not an article. It is an advertisement and a misleading one at that. There IS in fact a gut on downtown San Diego condos right now and prices for the forseable future are going nowhere but down. This really should have been presented as an ad, not as an article. Interestingly, similar "articles" have been written on other markets in a free fall, such as Las Vegas. Buyers take note.

Posted by Michael P. at 8:33pm on 2008 May 04

Actually, this article was not written by a realtor. Clearly Michael P did not even reach the end of the article where he could have actually seen the bio. Alan Nevin is one of the most respected real estate analysts in San Diego. Many people rely on him and his company Market Pointe Realty Advisors for the "actual numbers"...not opinion based "doom and gloom". This company does not get paid to sell headlines, just do research. All they do is present the facts. This article was now written over a year ago. It predicted that due to costs of materials, no new residential tower projects would make it out of the ground aside from the four projects being completed (Bayside, Vantage Pointe, Breeza, and Sapphire Tower). This has held true, as we now know the date for delivery of a new Downtown San Diego Residential complex may be more realistically 2011 or 2012. Residential Development and building in California is at its lowest level since the 1950's. Alans' new prediction is that we could see a housing supply crisis in the next few years as the market "swings" back to the middle, and Supply/Demand corrects. Alan is a monthly contributor to the San Diego Metropolitan on real estate economics, values, and statistics. Readers be advised...his opinion and predictions should (and DO) carry much more weight than a random comment based on pure opinion only!

Posted by Mike at 10:29pm on 2008 July 27

Wow. Michael P's suggestion that Alan Nevin is a realtor writing a paid advertisement for downtown is the equivalent to inferring that Alan Greenspan was just an analyst who had his own personal agenda for moving world markets! Obviously, the casual reader Michael P. is unfamiliar with who Alan Nevin is. While I have never met Mr. Nevin in person, I have read many of his articles and reviewed some of his Market Pointe analysis pieces. His summary of the real estate market is never unsubstaniated without supporting data. Mr. Nevin is held in very high regard throughout the county and writes far more about the San Diego marketplace than just 92101 real estate. Should Michael P. care to reply, I'd be interested to know how he arrived at his opinionated conclusions about the author before researching him more extensively. Many thanks to Mr. Nevin for sharing his perspective in a marketplace where bad news seems more readily accepted than good news. We should all count overselves fortunate to live in an economic market that does not resemble many other parts of the country! -Pete

Posted by Pete at 12:07am on 2008 July 28

Alan Nevin has been at the forefront of what is happening economically in San Diego for years. His lack of emotion and personal agenda when presenting facts is what makes him reliable. Automatically calling someone out as an "advertising realtor" because the article isn't about doom or gloom is just lazy, sad and extremely uncreative. The lack of Michael P.'s ability to have his own thought's only sheds a spotlight on his lemming tendencies. Way to go.

Posted by The Mayor at 11:01am on 2008 July 28

Has Mr Nevin written any recent updates on this subject? I would be most interested to read them. There is one apparent error I noted in his article. Bayside by Bosa is not scheduled for delivery until 2009 correct? thank you

Posted by Bonnie at 8:39pm on 2008 August 09

"Alan Nevin is one of the most respected real estate analysts in San Diego?" Suggest you look into his disastrous condo conversion projects at Suncrest in University Heights and Axos in Golden Hill before singing praises for his insights....

Posted by An Investor at 5:25am on 2008 August 27

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