The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado
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The Estin Report
Aspen real estate intelligence
updated regularly

www.EstinAspen.com
For the most reliable service, information, discretion, and loyalty you can imagine. Straight talk. And a work ethic you won't believe.

Tim Estin
Tim Estin mba, gri
Broker Associate
970-920-7387
testin@masonmorse.com

information is not created equal

The Clock is Ticking
to Buy in Aspen

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The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado
The Estin Report
The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado
The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado

Aspen Real Estate - For recent sales activity see The Estin Report blog. Real estate broker Tim Estin posts on the State of the Aspen Market.

Summer 2010: Time to Buy in Aspen?

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"We try to get in when the perception of risk is much greater than the reality of risk."

Investor Wilbur Ross, NPR Radio interview, March 2009

Read more...
 
The Estin Report: 2nd Quarter 2010 - Aspen Snowmass Residential
                                               
            The Estin Report: 2Q2010 rev.             The Estin Report:Vacant Land           Article on Estin Land report
            Aspen Snowmass Residential                            2004-2010 YTD                                     June 23, 2010
 
1) The Estin Report 2Q2010: Aspen Snowmass Residential  (revised July 10, 2010 (pg 1,9 &10)

2) Aspen Snowmass Vacant Land Report: 2004 - 2010 YTD (June 18, 2010)
3) 1Qtr 2010 (Jan 1 - March 31, 2010) Aspen Snowmass Residential Real Estate Summary
4) 4Qtr 2009 (Oct. 1 - Dec. 31, 2009 ) Aspen Snowmass Residential Real Estate Summary Chart compared to 4th Quarter 2008
5) Year 2009: Jan 1, 2009 - Dec. 31, 2009 compared to full year 2008
6) 2004-2009 Year Comparisons: Aspen Snowmass single family home and condo/duplex sales
Prior quarterly and annual reports are available in the Aspen Real Estate Archives Section in their respective 2006 - 2010 Market Statistics folder.

 
Summer 2010 Reading: "What's Your Property Worth?" and "Stealing Condos"...Aspen Magazine & Aspen Sojourner
                                 

                     Aspen Magazine: "Whats Your Property Worth?"               Aspen Sojourner: Market Watch - "Stealing Condos"

 
Big Chill in Colorado Mountain Resort Home Sales Starting to Thaw, Denver Post

05/23/10 article: "While first-quarter sales in all of Pitkin County were down compared with a year ago, they increased in the Upper Roaring Fork Valley communities of Aspen, Snowmass Village, Woody Creek and Old Snowmass. 'So far this year, 79 residential properties have closed, a 49 percent increase over the same period a year ago', said Aspen broker Tim Estin (of Mason Morse Real Estate and author of The Estin Report and blog on Aspen Snowmass real estate).'There are some significant bargains here based on trends and prices,'  Estin said. 'I would definitely say the smart money is recognizing that and there are transactions occurring'."

Read more...
 
Aspen Real Estate Goes Through Peaks and Valleys, Colorado Public Radio

On 12/24/09, Colorado Public Radio interviewed "Aspen real estate broker and blogger" Tim Estin about recent trends in one of the wealthiest markets in the country. To listen, click link: "Aspen Real Estate Goes Through Peaks and Valleys" … (Also, see: CO Public Radio Dec. '09 schedule). My blog post 01/04/10 The Estin Report: Aspen Real Estate 'White Paper' Year End 2009" is derived from notes in preparation for that interview.

 
Off the Charts: Aspen's Unprecedented Appreciation

 

By Joel Stonington
September 4, 2006

It's no secret that Aspen's real estate market is absurdly expensive, nor that it has experienced amazing growth in the last 30 years. Here's another log to the fire: 2006 has already seen unprecedented appreciation

There has been up to 60 percent appreciation on numerous condos or houses in the Aspen area in under a year, and three $20 million properties sold or were put under contract last month. "On certain properties there has been enormous escalation in value," said Ernie Fyrwald, owner of Morris and Fyrwald Real Estate. "There are some properties that shock us all. They get listed at an exorbitant price and then sell. Sometimes it's very astounding. It's not the case across the board, but there are quite a few. It has a lot to do with lack of inventory.

Condominiums are some of the easiest properties to track, and it's where people have seen someof the biggest value increases.

A Villas of Aspen unit, for example, recently saw a 19 percent increase in four months. It sold for $1.385 million in March, was relisted in July at $1.65 million and is now under contract.

"It's easier to see when you're looking at condominiums," said BJ Adams, owner of BJ Adams and Company Real Estate. "You can look at a complex like the Gant and see what's happened over the last few years and it's amazing. There aren't any more Gants. People are thinking that if they don't get in now then next year it probably wont be any better."

As Fyrwald puts it, people see a house or condo on the market and then it gets purchased by someone else before they can act. Waiting to buy in Aspen for much of its history has been a bad decision because the market can move upward so quickly. Tim Estin, a broker at Mason & Morse, calls it "should'a, would'a, could'a." That feeling feeds the market.

Increases of value have also been seen in examples of "flipping," whereby someone buys a house or condo, puts some money into renovation and sells it quickly at a net gain.

The house at 120 West Francis, a four-bedroom, 6-bath, 6,482-square-foot home was purchased for $5.3 million in May 2005, renovated to a six-bedroom and re-sold in January for $8.6 million. Likewise, a Silver Glo unit (3-bedroom, 3-bath) sold for $1.1 million in February and is now under contract after renovation for $1.9 million.

While the national market evens out, Aspen's market remains on an upward trend. Part of that may be that great wealth is not as interest-rate sensitive.

"There can be a point where people aren't willing to pay the number, but we haven't seen it," Fyrwald said. "With limited inventory, just by the nature of its physical size, the number of people who want to be here and who can afford to be here will outstrip supply."

Estin, of Mason & Morse, believes the hot market can be attributed the perception that Aspen is a safe market. Aspen's world class amenities, cultural and intellectual activities drive demand. Slow growth policies and restrictive zoning keep supply in check.

He also sees Aspen as one of the hottest towns in what has become known as the "third coast," areas where people not bound to a specific location are flocking towards.

However, real estate experts say the value increases in the market are certainly not across the board. And what may look like a sure bet for appreciation is not actually so simple. The market can be tricky, and much of the money that's been driving it here is right up at the top.
"A number of really big sales are staggering," said Adams. "There's a perception that the real estate community knocks off $20 million home sales every day. The truth is that there have been few of those sales in Aspen's history."

 
The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado
The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado
Mason and Morse
The Estin Report - Aspen, Colorado
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