Austin / Central Texas Real Estate News & Updates

Keep up to date with the latest Central Texas real estate trends and news.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Central Texas Real Estate In Perspective

While headlines such as last week's about the latest monthly numbers for Austin home sales and prices can inspire debate about whether we are defying the national trends or following them, 2008 will see a volume of sales exceeding 24,000 homes. 2008 will represent the 4th highest total of homes sold in a year over the last 25+ years. This is lower than the last three years, however, home sales nationally are at their lowest level since 1999.

Year-to-date, 2008 is down 18% over the same period in 2007, however, the Real Estate Center's latest projection for 2008 only puts sales off 3,460 or 14% from last years total.There was an average of 4 months inventory remaining on the market in Austin during 2007 which increased to 6 months by September 2008. Nationally inventories currently represent a 10-month supply, while 4-5 months is considered typical.

Average home prices in Austin have held steady based on estimated 2008 data and median price has increased 3%. Nationally, the median has dropped 9% and in some areas of the United States, home values are down substantially more.More information on Central Texas economic indicators can be found at www.austinchamber.com.

by Beverly Kerr, Chamber Vice President of Research

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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Best Cities to Live, Work and Play (Austin is #6)

Our approach this year to picking the ten best cities in which to live and work was simple: Look for places with strong economies and abundant jobs, then demand reasonable living costs and plenty of fun things to do. When we ran the numbers, some of the names that popped up made us do a double take at first. So we hit the road to meet movers, shakers and regular folks, experience the ambience and take in the sights.
We discovered that our numbers guru, Kevin Stolarick, hadn't steered us wrong. Stolarick, research director at the Martin Prosperity Institute, a think tank that studies economic prosperity, says: "Our formula highlights cities not just with strong past performance, but also with all the ingredients for future success."

One key to a bright future is a healthy shot of people in the creative class. People in creative fields -- scientists, engineers, architects, educators, writers, artists and entertainers -- are catalysts of vitality and livability in a city.

The cities that made our list also represent larger surrounding areas. And because we understand that city living isn't for everyone, we've highlighted some great suburbs, too.
Pack a bag and join us on a tour of the Best Cities for 2008 and prepare for some surprises.
No. 1: Houston,Texas
No. 2: Raleigh, N.C.
No. 3: Omaha, Neb.
No. 4: Boise, Idaho
No. 5: Colorado Springs, Colo.
No. 6: Austin, Texas
No. 7: Fayetteville, Ark.
No. 8: Sacramento, Calif.
No. 9: Des Moines, Iowa
No. 10: Provo, Utah

From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, July 2008

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Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Austin job creation slower, but still outpacing rivals


Employment in the Austin-Round Rock region increased 1.9 percent between October 2007 and October 2008, outpacing many of Austin’s economic development competitors, according to data released Tuesday by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.


The local region added about 14,700 jobs in the 12-month period, bringing its total employment figure to roughly 781,000, according to the report.

By comparison:
• San Jose, Calif. added 700 jobs for a 0.8 percent increase
• Raleigh, N.C. added 8,800 jobs for a 1.7 percent increase
• Nashville, Tenn. lost 2,200 jobs for a 0.3 percent decrease
• Seattle lost 1,900 jobs for a 0.1 percent decrease
• Phoenix lost nearly 50,000 jobs for a 2.3 percent decrease
• San Antonio added 17,900 jobs for a 2.9 percent increase
• Memphis, Tenn. lost 10,800 jobs for a 1.7 percent decrease
• Albany, NY remained stagnant.

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