Real Estate Roundup: San Francisco Luxury Condo Buyers Are the West’s Most Educated
June 1, 2015 by Pacific Union • Posted in Weekly Real Estate News Roundups
Here’s a look at recent news of interest to homebuyers, home sellers, and the home-curious.
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The Stanford University campus in Palo Alto.
BAY AREA LUXURY BUYERS ARE A HIGHLY EDUCATED BUNCH
Do
you hope to eventually become the proud owner of a high-end, high-rise
unit in San Francisco? If one recent study is any indication, your
chances get a whole lot better if you obtain an advanced degree.
Citing
a survey of more than 12,000 luxury condo owners in six Western U.S.
cities, The Wall Street Journal reports that 97 percent of buyers in San
Francisco hold a bachelor’s degree or higher — tied with Seattle for
the highest percentage of college-educated owners. The survey says that
60 percent of San Francisco luxury condo owners have graduate degrees,
the most of the six cities by a sizable margin. Across the bay in
Emeryville, 92 percent of luxury buyers have bachelor’s degrees or
higher and 33 percent have earned advanced degrees.
According to
the article, the Bay Area likely has brainier residents than other
places due to its concentration of tech and biotech companies, which
have many positions that require highly educated workers. Another reason
is the region’s top-notch colleges, with one San Francisco real estate
professional citing the city’s proximity to Stanford University as a
factor.
NEW GRADS NEED SIX-FIGURE SALARIES TO MAKE RENT IN SAN FRANCISCO
San
Francisco’s plentiful, high-paying jobs are drawing recent college
graduates from around the globe. However, these new workers may find it
sobering to learn that they will need to earn three times more than the
median income in order to afford San Francisco’s astronomical rents.
A
recent Trulia study says that the median annual income for recent
college graduates in San Francisco is $41,244, the most in the nation.
But with a median monthly rent of $3,500 for a two-bedroom unit as of
May, grads would actually need to pull in a yearly salary of $137,272 –
also the most in the country — in order to afford to live comfortably.
According to the company, 3.9 percent of rental properties in San
Francisco are affordable to new grads, who need to take on an average of
2.3 housemates to meet the monthly payments.
Oakland also ranked
among the top 10 markets where new grads require the largest yearly
incomes: $76,971 to afford the $1,963 monthly rent. A recent Oakland
grad can expect to earn $27,841 per year after earning his or her
degree. Trulia says that just 0.8 percent of Oakland units are
affordable for new grads, who would need to find 1.7 housemates.
Trulia
concludes that “The lesson here for recent grads is that although it
may be tempting to seek out metros with the highest wages, doing so may
not necessarily lead to a better quality of life because these metros
also have high rents.”
BAY AREA RESIDENTS CAN SAVE BIG BUCKS BY BUYING A HOME NOW
Bay
Area residents who are tired of paying the aforementioned high rents
and are considering buying might be surprised to learn how much money
they can save by acting now while interest rates remain low.
Citing
data from Realtor.com, a Bloomberg article estimates that San Jose
buyers who can get in the market today will save almost $62,000 more
than they would if they waited another year to purchase a home. The
publication projects that San Francisco residents will save nearly
$300,000 over the course of 30 years by purchasing a property instead of
renting one.
Realtor.com Chief Economist Jonathan Smoke told
Bloomberg that it was no surprise that high-priced markets such as the
Bay Area offered the greatest long-term financial reward, but he noted
that a median-income household in San Jose could currently afford less
than 10 percent of homes for sale.
U.S. PENDING HOME SALES HIGHEST SINCE 2006
Demand
for real estate across the country remained strong during the
traditionally busy spring buying season this year, with U.S. pending
home sales reaching their highest level in nearly a decade.
The
National Association of Realtors’ Pending Home Sales Index increased to
112.4 in April, up 3.4 percent from March and 14 percent from one year
ago. April marked the fourth consecutive month of pending home sales
gains, and the index is now at its highest point since May 2006, when it
was at 112.5.
The PHSI in the West was 103.8 in April, a month-over-month increase of 0.1 percent, up 16.4 percent from one year earlier.
(Photo: Flickr/Don McCullough)
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