Skip to main content
brightcove-2806118369001.jpg
Back to Show
SoCal Connected

Time to Buy?

Home sales are up … prices are down … mortgage rates rock-bottom. By most historical measures, this looks like the ideal time to take the plunge and buy a house in Southern California.

In “Time to Buy?” we go behind the latest housing facts and figures to try and find out what’s really going on in the housing market. It turns out that the situation is even more volatile and complex than the shifting columns of sales prices and percentage changes would indicate. What SoCal Connected dubbed “Foreclosure Alley” now looks like “Auction Alley,” as hundreds of foreclosed houses get auctioned off to bidders who are snapping them up often at unheard-of prices in the low five-figures.

Some of these new buyers - like drug company sales rep Marion Watson - are Californians that are finally able to afford a home after years of watching prices go into the stratosphere. But the biggest group of buyers in this post-bubble era is a new breed of real estate investors. We travel with a bus tour of these wannabe investors as they inspect foreclosed properties in South L.A. They’re looking for houses they can purchase at a low price, re-hab, and turn into rentals. And who will they be renting to? Foreclosed homeowners whose financial woes have shut them out of the market.

But while sales are way up in the low end of the market, the numbers of homesellers in the high-priced zip codes has dropped precipitously. They’re not willing to sell their homes at the highly discounted prices that are being offered. With sales in these areas slow, real estate agents who’ve worked these markets have had to find new sources of income. In 2006, California Connected filmed Mike Mandekic as he checked up on multi-million dollar homes he was selling in Beverly Hills. In 2009, we filmed him in San Fernando, where he was selling a foreclosed home on a working-class block. It takes five to ten sales of houses like this to match the profit he used to make from one Beverly Hills sale. But some experts believe that homeowners in the high end areas may soon face a day of reckoning. If job losses continue, they too may be forced to sell at lower prices than they’d hoped to, driving down home values in areas that have so far hung on.

Support Provided By
Season
Pharmacy counter in Los Angeles
25:42
A look at the profiteering behind two of America's fastest growing diseases affecting millions of Californians.
la county districts
25:30
"SoCal Connected" profiles how some local governments have used political borders to dilute minorities' power, and what is being done about it.
Out Of Bounds Still
27:17
One of the nation's top high school athletes was on a path to the NFL, but instead became the poster child for what's wrong with L.A.'s mental Health system.
News Blues - LA News
27:34
The LA Times may have found its savior in Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, but how will the other local newsrooms in LA be rescued?
The People Vs. Kiera Newsome
27:10
One woman strives to prove her innocence from behind bars.
30 Years with Val Zavala
26:59
This half-hour retrospective reviews Zavala's role in covering some of the region's most critical events and key influencers.
Hands of an Undocumented Immigrant
26:59
A look at the spike in the number of employers retaliating against undocumented workers when they complain of stolen wages. What is the legal loophole that transforms neighborhoods and gets developments built without consent from the community?
A Worker At Cisco Pinedo's Furniture Business
27:59
With the rise of the super-temp, comes the increase income inequality. What happens when half the workforce are gig workers? SoCal Connected follows an Uber driver who lost his job and is struggling to support his family as an independent contractor. Ho
'Who Approved That?,' 'Super Soil,' and 'Oil Activist'
27:50
SoCal Connected takes a deep dive into L.A.'s housing, the idyllic Apricot Farms and the Los Angeles teenager who took on the oil industry, city hall and the Catholic Church to curb urban oil drilling in her neighborhood - and won.
'Maybe Babies' and 'Patagonia's Workplace Paradise'
25:45
Nearly a million frozen embryos are stored in labs across the nation.
Man Looks at Housing Development in his Backyard in Westchester
28:29
As new developments pop up all over L.A., many are asking, 'Who approved that?'
Bail Screen Grab
26:59
The price of freedom for some in the L.A. County Jail system is simply to high a cost. As much as a quarter of the 17,000 in LA's jails are there simply because they cannot make bail. Condors were close to extinction when officials took an aggressive appr
Active loading indicator