Whole Foods, Trader Joe's improve home values

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WTTCHMN

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Good news for Greenwood and HC.  For OH, maybe Zillow should do a study on the lack of a grocery store.


Being within a mile of Whole Foods or Trader Joe's will make your house more valuable

By Bob Bryan

And according to analysis by Zillow, an online real estate marketplace, one of the increasingly important factors is the presence of a high-end grocery store.

"Zillow found that homes grow more rapidly in value if they are closer to a Trader Joe's or Whole Foods," the company said in a release.

"Between 1997 and 2014, homes near the two grocery chains were consistently worth more than the median U.S. home. By the end of 2014, homes within a mile of either store were worth more than twice as much as the median home in the rest of the country."

The analysis is included in the new edition of Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff and Zillow Group Chief Economist Stan Humphries' book Zillow Talk. In the release, Humphries offered an explanation for the phenomenon.

"Like a self-fulfilling prophecy, the stores may actually drive home prices," Humphries said. "Even if they open in neighborhoods where home prices have lagged those in the wider city, they start to outperform the city overall once the stores arrive."

For example, the analysis found that 2 years after a new Trader Joe's opened home values within one mile went up by 10 percentage points more than homes in the rest of the city.

"It says something about the way people want to live ? in the type of neighborhood favored by the generations buying homes now," Rascoff said.

"Today's homebuyers seek things in neighborhoods that weren't even in real estate agents' vocabularies a generation ago: walkability, community, new urbanism ? and maybe we should add words like sustainable seafood and organic pears."
 
Spot on analysis and identification of cause and effect.  If only we could be a fly on the wall during the random dartboard sessions where these chains decide where to open their next stores...
 
Lies! All Lies!

The Trader Joes on Culver and Walnut has been there forever yet those homes in Walnut and El Camino Real hoods are not very pricey.
 
daedalus said:
Spot on analysis and identification of cause and effect.  If only we could be a fly on the wall during the random dartboard sessions where these chains decide where to open their next stores...

irony alert!
 
The Laguna Hills TJ's hasn't helped surrounding property values. OH/LA were expensive well before the new Whole Foods opens later this year. Just not seeing the connection yet.

As for putting a WF/TJ in Compton, the "Relocatin' Rams" stadium will do more for property values than any supermarket could. If I had the cash to invest, I'd' be buying up raw land, parking lots and teardowns around the new stadium.

My .02c
 
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