Posts from August 26th, 2024

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August
26

Selling avocados requires understanding market conditions, pressures from imported avocado volume, current inventory levels and consumer demands. The market statistics provided here are collected from AMRIC, USDA databases, and cooperative data sharing between avocado suppliers.

Need more information? Send us an email and tell us what you would like to see, or request specific statistics.

CALIFORNIA AVOCADO SOCIETY WEEKLY NEWSLINE* AVOCADO PRICES

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August
26

New Data Finds Dramatic Changes in California's Mortgage Market Since 2020: Fewer Loans, but Larger Amounts

Berkeley, CA, July 27, 2023 — New data released today by the nonpartisan California Policy Lab (CPL) shows a sharp downward trend in the number of new mortgages originated in California since late 2020. In the fourth quarter of 2020, 929,500 Californians took on new mortgages, and CPL projects that number fell 90% by the first quarter of 2023, with only 95,000 Californians taking on new mortgages. The new data is from the CPL's California Credit Dashboard which uses credit bureau data to provide near-real-time measures of the financial health of Californians.

During that same time period (Q4 2020 to Q1 2023), the size of the average mortgage loan in California grew by more than $125,000 – from $468,000 to about $594,000. Due to lags in reporting of mortgages to credit bureaus, the most recent four quarters of originations are projected.

"Far fewer Californians are taking out new mortgages, a trend that started even before the Federal Reserve began increasing interest rates," explains co-author Evan White, the Executive Director of the California Policy Lab at UC Berkeley. "The loans that are being made are on average much larger, indicating that the remaining market skews wealthier."

This reshuffling of the mortgage market is evident throughout California, but there are large regional differences in average loan amounts. In the Bay Area, the average new mortgage in the first quarter of 2023 was $731,400, compared to $439,300 in the Greater Sacramento region, and $285,800 in the Northern California region.

CPL also published updated research on Californians' financial health to the California Consumer Credit Dashboard, including a new chart focused on monthly payments and new map features that allow users to filter the population and compare custom time ranges.

This new version of the Dashboard includes 10 longitudinal charts for 6 types of debt (auto, credit card, home equity, mortgage, student, and other) and collections. The figures can be sorted by 7 age groups, 9 economic regions, and 5 credit ratings. The Dashboard data generally spans from Q1 2004 through Q1 2023.

Additional Findings from Q1 2023

  • The state's overall delinquency rate in Q1 2023 (counting all loan types included in the Dashboard) is 5.0%. That's a small decrease from the 5.3% delinquency rate in Q4 2022, but much higher than the pandemic low of 2.7% in mid-2021.
  • Average monthly payments on all major loan types continued to rise in nominal dollars. The average mortgage payment is now $2,360, up $150 over the same time last year. The average auto payment is $538, up $40 year-over-year.
  • The average new auto loan amount fell to $32,900, down from $35,700 last quarter. That's the first decline since early 2021.

More about the California Credit Dashboard
The Dashboard uses credit-bureau data from the University of California Consumer Credit Panel. All figures in the Dashboard are based on a 2% random sample of individuals. Where applicable, the results are multiplied by 50 to obtain the full-population estimate. A technical appendix provides detailed information about the data and underlying research. Several dozen faculty and graduate students from the University of California currently use this dataset for research.

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The California Policy Lab translates research insights into government impact. Through hands-on partnerships with government agencies, CPL performs rigorous research across issue silos and builds the data infrastructure necessary to improve programs and policies that millions of Californians rely on every day.

Article belongs to Calpoly.org

August
26

Hard. Really hard. Both compared to how difficult it is in other states, and how challenging it was for previous generations of Californians.

In the late 1960s, the average California home cost about three times the average household's income. Today, it costs more than seven times what the average household makes.

While it's always been more expensive to be a homeowner in California, the gap with the rest of the country has grown into a chasm. The median California home is priced nearly 2.5 times higher than the median national home, according to 2019 Census data.

The pandemic hasn't cooled the housing market, either. Demand has long exceeded supply of homes for sale in California, and that's especially true now. But while many families are suffering the economic impacts of COVID-19, wealthier households with money to spend and capitalizing on low interest rates have driven up prices even more. As of August 2021, California's median home price hit $827,940 — the fifth all-time record in six months.

Who owns their house?

Despite relatively low mortgage rates, however, exploding housing prices have caused California's overall homeownership rate to dip significantly. Just more than half of the state's households own their homes — the third lowest rate in the country and the lowest rate within the state since World War II. 

And those homeowners skew significantly white. White Californians are twice as likely as Black Californians to own their home, according to 2019 Census data. The racial gap in homeownership has widened over the years, which also means Black Californians are less likely to build wealth over time, said Carolina Reid, associate professor of city and regional planning at UC Berkeley.

The issue has gained more attention in the Legislature.

But racial disparities are true in all dimensions of housing.

"Blacks and Hispanics are more likely to be cost burdened, more likely to live in overcrowded conditions, more at risk of eviction, and displacement," she said.

Rents dipped with the pandemic, but are still soaring

Rents are among the highest in the country in California, home to seven of the ten most expensive cities for tenants. The pandemic has changed things up — driving down rents in some of the most expensive cities and hiking rents in some more affordable ones. But affordability overall has only worsened with COVID-19.

San Francisco remains the most expensive city to rent in the United States, with the average rent for a two-bedroom apartment at $3,500 a month, according to Zillow. That's even after a 23% drop from last year. Fresno, at one point considered on the more affordable end of California housing, has seen a 39% hike in average rent since 2017, including a 12% increase during the pandemic.

The drop in homeownership plays a role here. As it has become more difficult to buy a home, wealthier people have remained stuck in the rental market — and driven up rent prices.

Wages can't keep up with rental costs

Median earnings for Californians are higher than the national average, and are significantly higher in certain regions like the Bay Area. But on average, income over the past two decades has not kept pace with escalating rents.

Before the pandemic, about half of California renters were rent burdened, which means that more than 30% of their income went toward rent, according to the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. Nearly a third of Californians were severely rent-burdened, which means that more than half of their income went toward rent. 

The numbers are worse for families of color. A California Housing Partnership analysis found that in 2019, Black renter households were about twice as likely as white renter households to be severely cost burdened.

The pandemic only worsened these numbers. As unemployment skyrocketed and families lost wages, roughly one of every six tenants fell behind on rent payments, according to a study by the Little Hoover Commission.

It's a statewide problem

The extremes of California's housing crisis are concentrated in the Bay Area and greater Los Angeles, but the challenge is statewide. While San Diego, San Francisco and L.A. top the list of toughest rental markets in the country, cities including Sacramento and Fresno recently have experienced the largest year-over-year rent increases.

In most Central Valley cities, the majority of very low-income families are spending more than 30% of their paycheck on rent.

Homelessness is on the rise

The number of people experiencing homelessness is notoriously hard to track, but estimates are getting more accurate — and show that the problem is big, and worsening.

Newly released state numbers show that throughout 2020, nearly a quarter of a million people accessed homeless services through local agencies. About 160,000 were single adults, and nearly 85,000 in families with kids. Los Angeles County has the highest number of people experiencing homelessness, with about 90,000 people who accessed services in 2020.

That data — submitted by 42 of the 44 local agencies that manage homeless dollars and services across the state — was not previously compiled or made public. That number is dynamic, because someone may have been homeless at the start of the year, but housed by the end — or vice versa. 

The data also fails to count some individuals who never interacted with homeless providers and survivors of domestic violence who are omitted for safety purposes, according to Ali Sutton, the state deputy secretary for homelessness.

According to the state, nearly 40% of those people, or 91,626 individuals, moved into permanent housing last year — which could mean anything from moving back in with a family member to getting their own place. This overlaps with an unprecedented amount of funding going to fix the issue — $13 billion over the last three years.

In the 2021 session, lawmakers and Newsom agreed to a $12 billion plan to create more than 44,000 new housing units and treatment beds for people experiencing homelessness. For the 2022 session, the governor is proposing $2 billion more.

Previous estimates of people experiencing homelessness were much lower. Every two years, the federal government mandates a tally of the number of people on the streets on a single night in January. Advocates and experts have long clamored that the count is not accurate

The point-in-time count was last taken in January 2020 — before COVID-19 ravaged the economy — and showed 161,548 people experienced homelessness in California. The January 2021 count was postponed due to COVID-19. The 2022 count was conducted in late February.

It's really hard to pass legislation to build more housing in California

Sen. Scott Wiener takes a photo of the vote tally as the eviction bill passes in the senate. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters
Sen. Scott Wiener takes a photo of the vote tally as the eviction bill passes in the senate. Photo by Anne Wernikoff, CalMatters

But that doesn't stop lawmakers from trying, and trying again.

2020 was supposed to be a big year for housing legislation. Lawmakers proposed a slew of housing bills, including a measure that would have forced cities to allow more mid-rise apartment buildings, convert big-box retail property into housing, and limit the restraints of environmental law on housing projects.

None of those bills passed. Democratic squabbling and the global pandemic, among other factors, were to blame. 

Key legislators are back at it this year. The bills are mostly designed at easing zoning and environmental restrictions to allow for more dense housing, funneling more money into affordable housing production and trying to force local governments to comply with state goals. 

Here are a just a few of the bills we're watching this year:

AB 215, by Assemblymember David Chiu, would essentially give teeth to the Regional Housing Needs Allocation, a law designed to increase housing production but that has done little to mandate it. Cities would need to check in with the state halfway through their eight-year housing approval process. If they're behind on their goals, the state would force them to approve more pro-housing policies. Gov. Newsom signed the bill into law on Sept. 28.

SB 9, by Senate leader Toni Atkins of San Diego, bears some resemblance to last year's SB 50. The bill would allow homeowners to put a duplex on single-family lots or split them without requiring a hearing or approval from the local government. Affordable housing and rental properties would be exempt from the changes. The Legislature passed this bill and Newsom signed it on Sept. 16.

SB 10, by Sen. Scott Wiener, would allow cities to rezone transit centers and job hubs to allow as many as 10 units per parcel. Proximity to public transit would theoretically lead to fewer cars on the road, bringing the state closer to its goals to reduce climate change. Newsom also signed this bill on Sept. 16.

SB 478, also by Wiener, takes aim at local ordinances that limit the construction of housing based on lot size, which effectively erases any chance of building small apartment buildings on land that is already zoned for multi-family housing. Newsom signed this bill on Sept. 28.

California's most controversial homebuilding bill

Senate Bill 50, proposed last year by Sen. Scott Wiener, would have forced cities to allow more mid-rise apartment buildings around public transit and next to some single-family homes. Proponents believe this is the best and quickest way to come close to meeting the state's housing needs.

A host of political interests supported the bill — developers, landlords, environmental groups, big city mayors and even Facebook wanted to see it pass. But the bill failed to get enough votes in the Legislature to survive in 2020 before time ran out. Among the opponents were Los Angeles Democrats, spurred by low-income tenant advocacy groups.

That wasn't the first time the legislation failed.

Similar versions of the bill had been blocked twice before, with strong opposition from suburban homeowners, local governments and community groups who contended the proposal would destroy neighborhood character and gentrify lower-income communities.

"As disappointing as it was not to pass (Senate Bill 50), it left me quite optimistic about what we will be able to do in the future," Wiener told CalMatters. "The fact that a bill four or five years before (SB 50) would not have probably even gotten a hearing in a single committee, but then we were able to get it through two committees and almost off the Senate floor (means) there is actually very, very broad and deep support for a pro-housing agenda."

Many of the same ideas proposed in SB 50 were debated again this year. Combined, SB 9 and SB 10 offer a more modest version of the failed SB 50. 

While they are going to take a few years to lead to increased housing production, they are a significant start, said David Garcia, policy director for the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley. "It signals that lawmakers are willing to take on the traditional sacred cows of housing and single-family zoning. From a political standpoint, that's a pretty significant shift in the housing landscape," he said.

The housing crisis has major repercussions for the economy

Big business is also feeling the pinch of California's housing crisis.

The McKinsey Global Institute found that housing shortages cost the economy between $143 billion and $233 billion annually, not taking into account second-order costs to health, education and the environment. Much of that is due to households spending too much of their incomes on the rent or mortgage and not enough on consumer goods.

Even the attractive salaries and lavish perks of Silicon Valley struggle to overcome the local housing market, as young tech talent flees to the relatively inexpensive climes of Austin or Portland. Nearly 60 percent of Los Angeles companies in a recent University of Southern California survey said the region's high cost of living was affecting employee retention.

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