This post first appeared in the May edition of: Cirios Trends: In Search of Real Estate Opportunities.

Silicon Valley Defies California Gloom
(Silicon Valley Business Journal)
Even though consumer confidence in California has fallen to a historic low, Silicon Valley residents remain some of the country’s more optimistic folks. California’s Index of Consumer Sentiment registered an all-time low of 68.8, five points lower than last April’s 73.8 tally. Silicon Valley, on the other hand, came in at 75.9. Just 14% of the state’s residents believe they are better off now than they were a year ago. On the flip side, only 13% believe they’ll be worse off next year at this time. So, even though Californians think the current situation generally stinks, by in large we don’t think it can get much worse!
(Read more here: http://tinyurl.com/ciriostrendsmay1)
Calls for a Bottom in Commercial Real Estate Ring … Softly
(Cornish and Carey Commercial Real Estate)
A growing consensus is emerging that despite fears of a collapse in commercial real estate, the market may be quietly healing itself. In its latest quarterly survey of San Francisco commercial real estate activity, brokerage Cornish and Carey reported that Class A asking rents inched up by 0.4% from the previous quarter. A smidgen indeed, but this marks the first Q/Q increase since the market peaked in Q2 2008. Even though unleased inventory still appears massive when you look at the data, most of it is concentrated in vast, empty swaths of space. Smaller chunks and premium view space are in limited supply and deals are on occasion seeing multiple bidders. Recovery? Not yet, but investors are licking their chops.
(Read more here: http://tinyurl.com/ciriostrendsmay2)
Are Mortgage Backed Securities Back?
(San Francisco Business Times)
For the first time in almost two years, investors placed bets that mortgages not backed by the government were a good investment. Redwood Trust, a Mill-Valley based real estate investment firm, issued and sold the first private label jumbo mortgage backed security since 2008. The deal, small by bubble-craze standards, consisted of 255 mortgages issued by Citigroup for a total deal size of $222.4 million. The secondary market for mortgage backed securities not insured by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac has been literally non-existent, as investors have proven unwilling to buy debt without Uncle Sam’s implicit (or explicit) stamp of approval. The deal, adding more fuel to optimists fire, was over-subscribed.
(Read more here: http://tinyurl.com/ciriostrendsmay3)
Foreclosures Continue Steady March Upwards
(San Jose Mercury News)
For all the signals that the housing market may actually be improving, that nasty fly in the ointment, foreclosures, just won’t go away. Despite hundreds of billions of dollars thrown at the problem, foreclosures in Santa Clara County rose 72% from a year ago. This trend is being echoed around California and indeed the country, where foreclosures, the market clearing mechanism everybody loves to hate, continue to plague local economies. One bright spot, however, is that investors are stepping into the market. 4,000 homes were sold directly to investors at auctions – up almost 4-fold from 2009.
(Read more here: http://tinyurl.com/ciriostrendsmay4 )