Feb 16 2010

Realtors Property Resource Post

Tag: Daily LInks, Lawsuit, NAR, News, Technology, WebsitesJoe Cline @ 2:52 pm

Put this on my www.joecline.com/blog by accident. Here is the link, if you were looking for this post about the Realtors Property resource. I made this little ditty in Photoshop just for giggles. I was in a startup company a few years back and when the impending death sale of the company was in progress we had similarly themed, but much, much more professionally created posters. You know, don’t let any details slip out or you’ll sink the ship. Anyway, silence is great in war, but NOT WHEN YOU’RE TRYING TO GAIN BUY IN or when you’ve used association moneys to start your company!

Someone should let the folks at RPR know that we ARE interested, but are not going to swallow whatever you produce hook, line, and sinker.

Someone should let the folks at RPR know that we ARE interested, but are not going to swallow whatever they produce hook, line, and sinker.


Apr 08 2009

Pulte Buys Centex in All Stock Deal

Tag: Austin Texas Economy, Daily LInks, New Homes, News, builders, texasJoe Cline @ 8:24 am

AP Business Writers

In a deal that will create the nation’s biggest homebuilder, Pulte Homes Inc. is buying Centex Corp. for $1.3 billion in stock as both companies try to survive the worst real estate recession in a generation.

The transaction, which also includes $1.8 billion of debt, will combine Pulte’s strength in active-adult and retirement housing with Centex’s hefty market share of first-time homebuyers.

The acquisition also will give Pulte large tracts of land in Texas and the Carolinas, two of the most resilient real estate markets. But Wall Street analysts are concerned about the risk of taking on so much land in other areas where home prices are still plummeting.

The new company, which will keep the Pulte name and headquarters in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., will have cash reserves totaling $3.4 billion and pay off $1 billion in debt by the end of the year.

“We believe the combined companies will allow us to return to profitability quicker than a standalone. Secondly, the cash position allows us to pay down debt while at the same time provide ample liquidity for the future,” said Richard Dugas Jr., said Pulte’s president and chief executive, who retain those titles over the combined enterprise.

Centex’s chairman and chief executive, Timothy Eller, will become Pulte’s vice chairman and will also work as a consultant for two years following the acquisition’s completion.

read the rest at The Miami Herald.


Mar 17 2009

Daily Real Estate News: 03-17-09

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From Green Building Talk

Getting Into Hot Water: Solar Water Heating Pays For Itself Five Times Over
An analysis of the engineering and economics for a solar water-heating system shows it to have a payback period of just two years, according to researchers in India. They report, in the International Journal of Global Energy Issues, on the success of the 1000-liter system operating at a university hostel.

The current focus in the developed world is on advanced technological approaches to , such as for solar power and harnessing wind and wave with elaborate systems to generate electricity. However, the cost of such systems may be prohibitive for some applications in the developing world. They also often ignore the fact that a mundane process such as heating might best be carried out using direct heat from the sun rather than including a waste energy-conversion step.

Read the rest at GreenBuildingTalk.com

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From Associated Construction Publications

Construction Jobs Decrease by 104,000 in February

Construction employment fell by 104,000 in February with losses throughout the sector. This industry has shed 904,000 jobs since the recession began, with about half of the decline occurring in the past 4 months, according to testimony by Keith Hall, commissioner, Bureau of Labor Statistics, before the Joint Congressional Economic Committee today.

Although the stimulus package is expected to positively affect construction employment through “shovel-ready” projects, none of that has started yet.

The decline in construction employment mirrors declines in the rest of the labor market as the sharp and widespread contraction continued in February.

Nonfarm payroll employment fell by 651,000, following declines of 681,000 in December and 655,000 in January. Since the recession began in December 2007, job losses have totaled 4.4 million, well more than half of which occurred in the past 4 months. In February, the unemployment rate climbed from 7.6 to 8.1 percent, the highest rate in over 25 years.

Read the rest at Associated Construction Publications

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Mar 16 2009

New Blog Posts

I am pretty much addicted to magazines and newsletters about a few things. Green building, architecture, home stuff, computers, and real estate. I thought I’d finally put some of my subscriptions to wider use and share a few links every day on this blog and on my West Austin real estate blog. Be sure to check out both sites for links of interest and let me know if you suggest any other magazines for me. I currently subscribe to about 25 or so and always love to get new ideas.

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Interested in Green Building and Sustainable Living? I got this a few days ago. I’m going so if you want to go and meet up, I’d love to meet ya.

Designing for Food Resources
Food is among life’s most basic needs.  Our current food production model is centralized and sells to a global market.  Like any other massed-produced commodity, our food product is cheap, abundant, and easy. There are many problems with the current model, leaving our food resources far from secure or sustainable.  Food production, transportation, consumption, and disposal each have a huge impact on our carbon footprint.

On a local level, grassroots groups are working hard to reduce Austin’s carbon foodprint. This presentation explores ways in which our planning process, building infrastructure, and operations policies can incorporate goals for responsible food resources. Changes in our single-family homes, multifamily homes, and commercial buildings can lead to more sustainable, reliable, and environmentally-responsible food resources.

This seminar will feature three speakers:

  • Pamela “Sweetpea” Hoover is the assistant grounds master at Natural Gardener and a certified teacher of the square foot gardening method.  Sweetpea will address attainable and appropriate food production in Austin on a single-family scale.
  • Marla Camp is the owner/publisher of Edible Austin magazine and also sits on the board of the new Austin Food Policy Council. Marla will speak on local food production, consumption and education on a community scale.
  • Justin Doak is the founder of BlueBin LLC, a sustainability guidance firm for the retail industry and a partner in Austin Refuel, a Texas-based company that has developed a closed loop waste-to-resource network. Formerly the Program Manager of LEED for Retail, Justin will address marketing and money-making strategies in food waste-management for Commercial retailers and developers.

A Question/Answer period will follow the presentations.

You can get the full details of the meeting at Austin’s Green Building site.

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PROJECTS READY, CREDIT NOT

AUSTIN (get the full story at Austin American-Statesman) – Large Austin projects set to begin construction are stalled because of the recession and frozen credit markets.

JMI Realty is ready to start work on the Hotel Van Zandt, a 327-room boutique hotel at the eastern edge of downtown on Red River and Davis, but cannot receive the financing to do so.

“We have lots of jobs ready to be created with this project, but until the banking environment improves, we will be on hold,” said JMI Senior Vice President Greg Clay.

In north Austin, Atlanta-based Novare Group and its local partner Andrews Urban are holding off on a 28-story tower that would house condominiums and the 145-room Twelve Hotel at Endeavor Real Estate Group’s Domain. The developers say the delay of the $100 million-plus project stems from the postponement of three major retail projects at the mixed-use Domain. These include new stores for Nordstrom, Saks Fifth Avenue and Whole Foods Market Inc.

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From the Niel Spelce Austin Letter ( I highly recommend subscribing for anyone trying to stay abreast of what’s going on in Austin)

The information was released midweek that seven states posted an unemployment percentage above 10%.Texas was not in the group of seven.In fact, it was among the best overall.

The totals, as well as some major shifts, provide an interesting comparison. Let’s start with a few of the best states.Wyoming was the only state, at 4.8% unemployment, that came in under the 5% mark.Texas was one of the best, at 6.8%, ahead of New York at 7.6%.

But some of the hardest-hit states appear to be reeling because of the suddenness of the impact. For instance, North Carolina (a state many consider competitive to Texas because of its technology industry centered in the Research Triangle) suffered the worst upswing in unemployment.At the beginning of 2008, its unemployment was a very reasonable 5.3% then, wham!, it hit 10.3% at the start of this year.A swing of five full percentage points!The number of workers looking for a job almost doubled.This is how you define “impact.”

So what about the other big states?How do they compare to Texas January 2009 total of 6.8%.In addition to those mentioned above, Florida recorded 8.8% unemployment, Illinois notched 8.5% unemployment, Massachusetts tallied 8.1%, Ohio nudged near the 10% mark with 9.7%, and Pennsylvania came in at 7.7%.It’s pretty clear that Texas still stands out among the states that matter for future leadership and growth.

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