Weather | Beachcam
Login | Contact Us | Staff | Site Map | Archives | Alerts | Electronic Edition | Subscribe to the paper

HomeBusinessBusiness

Builder at RiverPark pushing to sell 200 homes in Southland


Download Podcast  Download this story as a podcast!
Flags announce the model homes at the Avenue Celadon development at RiverPark.

Flags announce the model homes at the Avenue Celadon development at RiverPark.

Order Photos

In an effort to entice buyers, Standard Pacific Homes is staging an aggressive campaign called "Mission: Possible" to sell 200 homes across Southern California over a 10-day period, ending Sunday.

The Irvine-based homebuilder has homes for sale at 49 new housing developments, ranging from $300,000 to $7 million for homes of 1,100 square feet to 4,000 square feet, said Stephen Boggs, division president in Westlake Village. He oversees the company's housing developments in Ventura County.

The company has some 40 homes for sale at developments in Oxnard and Simi Valley. Prices range from the mid-$300,000 at Waypointe at RiverPark to the high $800,000s at the Bluffs at Big Sky in Simi Valley.

A clear obstacle to moving those homes has been the depressed housing market. Sales have plunged over the past year in Ventura County and Southern California. The company is hoping to stir up some enthusiasm with its advertising blitz.

"Both in the resale market and brand-new homes, there are just some fabulous deals right now," said Joe Virnig, president of the Ventura County Coastal Association of Realtors.

Standard Pacific has advertised that its sale offers customers more than $20 million in savings. There has been some discounting in price, but it's been fairly minimal, Boggs said. He estimates that Standard Pacific has slashed prices by 5 percent within the past month, mainly for the blowout sale.

The bigger incentive is the low interest rates that the company offers, which can reduce mortgage payments by about 20 percent, he said. Standard Pacific offers lending through its wholly owned subsidiary Standard Pacific Mortgage Inc. The company has a handful of loan programs, with rates for a 30-year fixed mortgage starting at 5.375 percent.

Bonuses include a free 42-inch plasma TV with every house purchase and a daily $500 drawing. The company is also offering free upgrades for Oxnard locations, including stainless steel appliances, granite countertops and air conditioning.

It was the low interest rate that appealed most to Alonso Escamilla. A property manager, Escamilla owns two houses in Santa Barbara, but he's looking for something more economical. Since the interest rate on his jumbo loan adjusted upward, his payment has become sizable. By selling one of his homes, he wants to be able to put 10 to 20 percent down on a $450,000 house.

"I don't want to leave Santa Barbara," he said. "But it's either struggle, or move and live comfortably."

Blowout sales are growing more common as homebuilders attempt to entice potential buyers who have grown skittish in a slumping housing market. Homebuilders need to be more aggressive to make the sale, Virnig said.

In its "Deal of the Century" promotion, Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. trimmed home prices by as much as $100,000 during a three-day national sale.

But these type of campaigns by big builders can rankle smaller firms. Ian Bentley, sales and marketing manager of JM Development, a Santa Barbara-based real estate development company, calls Standard Pacific's campaign a "hype" and says the company isn't offering anything that it wouldn't already offer.

"All of these builders play a game with pricing," he said.

Bentley spoke of another builder that added $20,000 to the price so it could offer buyers a $20,000 credit.

This summer, JM Development permanently reduced prices by $80,000 at Henderson Cottages, a new 28-home community in east Ventura. There are 17 properties still available.

"Realistically, would we do what Standard Pacific is doing? Come talk to us. We can give you a deal of the century,' or mission possible.' We can do the same thing."

Part of Standard Pacific's campaign is to get sales staff energized, and to educate buyers on what they can afford, Boggs said, noting that a lot of people think that they can no longer afford a home or that they can't get financing.

On Thursday, Boggs said Standard Pacific was ahead of schedule and will exceed its goal of 200 sales by Sunday. He said the Ventura County division will exceed goals by 25 to 30 percent, but declined to release sales figures.

New homes sales are down, Boggs said, and Standard Pacific is trying to attract more buyers to move inventory.

Even before the campaign began Sept. 14, Boggs said there was an increase in traffic of 30 percent at each one of the model homes in the six developments he oversees in Ventura County, and sales increased 50 percent.

The goal of hitting the 200 mark is realistic, Boggs said. The company probably does about half as many sales in a 10-day period, although it's hard to tell because sales averages vary based on season, he said.

When Virnig heard Standard Pacific's ad on the radio, he thought that it sounded like a car commercial.

"Some marketing guy took a page from what people do in car sales," he said, adding that the company is obviously trying to drum up business by adding a sales deadline, similar to what automobile dealerships do.

"They are just trying to generate some excitement and buzz, just like every real estate professional is trying to do," Virnig said.

On the Net:

www.StanPacMissionPossible.com

Discussions

Posted by palmerda on September 21, 2007 at 4:39 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Don't bother with the link. There's no info at all on the sale at the web site. In order to receive info, you have to register by giving your name, address, phone number, and e-mail address so that the starving sales agents can pester you until you either buy or go postal.

Ian Bentley (cited in the article) put it best - it's a game the builders are playing with pricing. You're not getting anything extra during the ten-day period you wouldn't have received any other day.

However, it won't matter, since lending is much stricter now than it was a year ago when these guys started selling the units in RiverPark. They may reach their goal on contract signing. Of course, closing the deal will be much tougher.

Posted by THX1138 on September 21, 2007 at 6:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I can't wait to see the increase in grid-lock traffic after they sell all those houses...!

Posted by chuckles on September 21, 2007 at 7:15 p.m. (Suggest removal)

MELLO-ROOS is all I have to say.

Posted by star on September 22, 2007 at 3:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Wow, a 42-inch teevee! Which, by the way, you're paying for as part of that mortgage -- so you're borrowing money at 5.4% to pay for that "free" teevee. And of course, it'll be part of your property tax basis too, from now until you sell the house or die, long after that teevee has been recycled or sent to the landfill. You'll pay for that "free" teevee many times over.

Posted by heregoes on September 23, 2007 at 11:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I would never buy a "new" home again. Dirt in the back yard, no window coverings, etc. Then I had to pay tens of thousands to put it in myself.

Buy a re-sale that has all the improvements already done.



Discuss this article
(Requires free registration.)

Article discussions on this site are to support community debates of issues related to our stories and editorials.

Discussions should not stray from the subject of the story or editorial.

We do not allow the following:

  • Posts that degrade others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation or disability.
  • Disparaging remarks, abusive language or obscene comments.
  • Threats, whether obvious or veiled.

We reserve the right to delete threads and/or ban users for these or other reasons we deem necessary.

Opinions are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.

Username:

Password:
(Forgotten your password?)

Your Turn:

Loading videos... If you don't see them shortly, you may need to download the Flash Player.