In the News

Los Angeles Times: Seniors Facing Eviction Fear Homelessness and Isolation as California's Housing Crisis Rolls on

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By Andrew Khouri

Mario Canel met his wife inside the apartment where he’s lived for the last 33 years

Canel, a house painter, was at the Silver Lake complex off of Sunset Boulevard on a job, but he and his customer quickly connected over their shared Guatemalan roots. It wasn’t long before Mario and Sabina married, and her home became his. For years, they basked in such comforts as plucking chayote from a vine outside their front window.

Los Angeles Times: California Home Builders are Pulling Back, Deflating Hopes for Housing Relief

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by Andrew Khouri

Home builders are pulling back from new construction, the opposite of what economists say is needed to ease California’s housing affordability crisis.

In the first six months of 2019, builders gained approval for 51,178 new homes in California, nearly 20% fewer than the same period a year earlier. That puts the state on track for the first meaningful annual decline since the recession.

The Press-Enterprise: Tight Apartment Market Pushes Average Inland Rent Up 5.1% to $1,532

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The average renter saw a $78 increase in monthly rents in the past 12 months By Jack Katzane

By Jack Katzanek

A scarcity of vacant apartments not seen since before the Great Recessionhas pushed the average monthly rent in the Inland Empire up 5.1% in the last year to an average $1,532, a report released last week says.

Bisnow: With Tech and Media Thriving, CRE Shrugs Off Recession Fears

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By Joseph Pimentel

In 2003, Netflix's presence in the Los Angeles office market was a tiny speck.

The nascent tech, media streaming and DVD distribution company, which is headquartered in Los Gatos, occupied a 4K SF satellite office in Beverly Hills, where workers shipped DVDs to customers and provided some tech support for its fledgling streaming content. 

AirTalk: Buying A House... Difficult For Millennials, Or Everyone? And What Does It Mean For The Future Economy?

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It’s not necessarily easy to buy a house today, especially for younger generations. Wages aren’t keeping up with the rising home prices and the median age of a homebuyer is at its oldest since the National Association Realtors started tracking in the 1980s.

Los Angeles Times: Southern California home prices rose only a little in June, and sales slid

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By Andrew Khouri

Southern California home prices rose only 1.2% in June from a year earlier, while sales fell 8.8%, reflecting a broad slowdown in the region’s pricey housing market.

The six-county region’s median price — the point at which half the homes sold for more and half for less — clocked in at $541,250 last month, according to a report Friday from CoreLogic.