Posts

Los Angeles Fire Victims Hit With $23k HOA Bill

Image
Why Did Latitude 23 Owners Get a $23K HOA Bill? Why did Latitude 23 owners receive a $23,614 HOA bill after the Eaton fire? The answer centered on a July 29, 2025 special assessment announced more than a year after the wildfire damaged the Altadena foothills community. The homeowners association said insurance proceeds were not enough to cover roughly $6.4 million in losses tied to shared neighborhood property. The HOA said the damage total included major costs for irrigation, fencing, and burned landscaping. Similar post-fire strain has appeared across Southern California as home sales plunged in wildfire-affected luxury markets like Malibu. As a result, each owner was assigned the same $23,614 charge, including residents whose homes had been destroyed. Supporters viewed the assessment as the minimum needed to move restoration forward. Critics said the uniform fee and 34-day payment window created severe financial strain during an already fragile recovery. The dispute also damaged c...

Revere $10b Project Stuns Boston, Growth Shift

Image
What the Revere $10B Project Includes Encompassing retail, housing, and commercial upside, the Revere project is structured as a mixed-use development anchored by premier shopping destinations, an Assembly Food Hall, and a flagship Apple Store. The broader investment totals $10 billion and includes 380 planned residential units. In a separate healthcare policy development, Connecticut extended its private insurance mandate for autism therapy coverage through age 26, a move highlighting broader regional focus on autism therapy coverage . The retail program centers on flagship retail appeal, including the planned Apple store and curated shopping destinations. Assembly Dining is represented by the Assembly Food Hall, positioned as a primary on-site amenity. Leasing and Residential Scope Since 4Q19, the project has achieved 140,000 square feet of leasing and reached 73 percent occupancy across 35 tenants. The average remaining lease term is 2.8 years. Elsewhere, rising regulatory pressure ...

San Francisco Eichler Fetches $1m Over Ask, Bay Shock

Image
Did a San Francisco Eichler Really Sell $1M Over Ask? Despite the intensity of San Francisco’s March 2026 overbid market, available sales data does not confirm that an Eichler home sold for $1 million or more above its asking price. Reviewed results for the week ending March 20 show five homes clearing that threshold, but none are identified as Eichlers. The top closings instead featured Victorians and views . The strongest overbids involved Victorians, a character-rich 1930s house, and a Pacific Heights condo. What the Records Actually Show Noe Valley’s 3853 22nd Street led at $1,977,000 over ask. Inner Sunset’s 1426 8th Avenue followed at $1,805,000 over, helped by solar, battery storage, and fully electric systems. Other top sales also reflected historic charm, views, or premium location, not mid-century modern design. The backdrop remains a low inventory market, with San Francisco homes continuing to sell faster than anywhere else nationally. That leaves Eichler myths and neighbor...

Huntsville Apartment Lawsuit Heads to Bench Trial

Image
What Happened in the Gateway Apartments Flooding Lawsuit? A burst pipe tore through Gateway Place Apartments in July 2024, triggering catastrophic flooding that spread through hallways and residential units, according to the lawsuit. Court filings say the water damaged personal belongings, made apartments uninhabitable, and forced multiple residents to evacuate. In a separate flooding dispute, tenants have also raised questions about whether a property owner’s failure to use a flood gate could support a negligence claim. Elevated housing strain comes as foreclosure filings rose 20% year-over-year nationally in October 2025. Allegations in the Lawsuit The class action, filed Wednesday against the complex owners and tied to Lee Company’s alleged plumbing negligence, describes six months of unresolved hardship. Residents allege poor plumbing management caused the flooding and that owners provided no meaningful aid afterward. Resident Harm and Ongoing Losses The complaint says tenant dis...

Manhattan Buyers Ditch Condos, Co-Ops Roar Back

Image
Should You Buy a Manhattan Co-Op in 2026? As 2026 unfolds, the case for buying a Manhattan co-op rests on a market that is stabilizing, but still punishing for buyers without strong liquidity. Co-op sales rose 3% in the first quarter, marking the sixth straight gain. The median co-op price held at $850,000. Overall listings fell 16.7% year-over-year, signaling a tighter supply backdrop for buyers. That stability contrasts with the broader Manhattan median of $1,225,000, which is up 5.2%. It suggests co-ops remain relatively grounded. Liquidity Pressure and Strategic Entry The market still favors cash. All-cash purchases made up 64% of 2025 sales. That leaves mortgage-reliant buyers exposed unless financing strategies are disciplined and realistic. More listings and a better supply-demand balance may improve conditions later in 2026, especially in the fall. Smaller buildings and less-central neighborhoods may offer openings. Buyers also need to weigh board approval risk, co-buying tren...

Alabama Fraud Crackdown Bill Clears Key Hurdle

Image
What Alabama’s Fraud Crackdown Includes At the center of Alabama’s fraud crackdown are strict transaction caps, new disclosure rules, placement limits, and refund protections aimed at curbing heavy consumer losses tied to crypto kiosks. The framework sets daily transactions at $1,000 and monthly activity at $10,000, replacing previously unlimited deposits with controls similar to bank ATM practices. These limits are designed to reduce severe losses, especially in scams affecting older adults. In its 2024 review, the Alabama Securities Commission found that 64% reported fraud among 1,185 contacted crypto kiosk users. Similar consumer protection concerns have intensified as wire fraud and other transaction scams continue affecting real estate and financial transactions nationwide. Consumer Safeguards The measure also emphasizes transaction transparency through detailed fee disclosures and clear exchange rate information. It also requires U.S.-based customer service lines, fraud warning...

8 Cities Where Short-Term Rentals No Longer Cash Flow

Image
Key Takeaways Short-term rental cash flow is increasingly unreliable in major markets when occupancy drops, regulations tighten, or nightly rates soften. Several cities are seeing clear performance pressure—from sub-50% occupancy to steep discounting and competition-driven price wars . Permitting requirements and caps in heavily regulated markets add risk and can materially change the economics of an STR. Why These STR Markets Are Getting Harder to Profit In You can’t bank on short-term rental cash flow in San Francisco, Orlando, Atlanta, Las Vegas, Boston, Chicago, New York, and San Diego when occupancy slips, rules tighten, or rates soften. You’ll see 50s occupancy in San Francisco and Orlando, 39% in Atlanta , and price wars in Las Vegas. You may fill nights in Boston and Chicago, but ADR discounts bite. In New York and San Diego, permits and caps raise risk. More fixes come next. San Francisco Short-Term Rentals: 54% Occupancy Warning Although San Francisco can still charge a ...