Friday, December 11, 2009

Manteca Retail Thriving















City after city in California experienced significant drops in taxable sales — often in the double digits — in July, August, and September of this year compared to the same period in 2008.

It was the same in San Joaquin County with one big exception – Manteca.
While taxable sales in neighboring cities such as Stockton plunged 18.6 percent and in Tracy 9.8 percent they shot up 7.6 percent in Manteca.

It happened despite Mervyn’s going out of business and two new car dealers closing – Manteca Dodge and Sexton Chevrolet – as well as other vehicle sales dropping off significantly.

How did it happen?

Five words: Bass Pro Shops and Costco.

Bass Pro Shops, which has already attracted more than 2 million visitors this year, is drawing in money from a 100-mile radius. Costco essentially stopped a major bleed of Manteca consumer dollars to the warehouse chain’s stores in Modesto and Tracy and has also pulled customers in from neighboring cities as well.

Bass Pro Shops and Costco were two highly criticized deals made possible by a limited sales tax sharing plan pieced together by the City Council under the leadership of Mayor Willie Weatherford.

“We were fortunate to have a council that understood the importance of changing the way we did business in Manteca and to rely on something else besides property taxes.” Weatherford said.

As for those who believe the deals with big mistakes and would only reduce municipal sales tax receipts, Weatherford said, “the numbers don’t lie.”

Bass Pro Shops and Costco aren’t the only success stories along the Highway 120 Bypass. Both Kohl’s as well as Ross Dress for Less are exceeding sales projections for their Manteca stores.

The strong retail market has allowed Kitchell – the developers of Stadium Retail Center – to secure a major fabric retailer to fill the space vacated by Circuit City. That store is expected to open by the second quarter. They have also obtained another major national clothing retailer that will also open in the coming months.

Meanwhile, work is underway on the Lifestyle Outlets at Manteca that will open sometime in mid-2010 between Bass Pro Shops and JC Penney. The outlets, coupled with Bass Pro Shops and the 16-screen Kerasotes Showplace Theatre, are expected to provide Manteca with a major jump in taxable retail sales.

Manteca also aggressively took steps to retain B.R. Funsten – one of the city’s top 10 generators of taxable sales through its showroom at its flooring products distribution center in the Manteca Industrial Park. After working with the city and getting an expedited approval and construction process, B.R. Funsten abandoned plans to move to Stockton and expanded instead in Manteca to retain 120 jobs plus the sales tax receipts.

Manteca’s 7.6 percent increase of taxable sales contrasts with California as a whole that saw a 14.8 percent drop in the third quarter compared to the same time period in 2008.

Manteca is also faring significantly better than the rest of the state and county when it comes to taxable sales in the first two quarters of the current fiscal year compared to the same time last fiscal year.

Manteca’s sales tax after six months came to $3,810,985 compared to $3,856,595 for the previous year. While that $45,610 decline in tax sales is a 2.1 percent drop it was much better than the statewide drop of 17.8 percent. It also was much better than anywhere in San Joaquin County with the next best performing city – Tracy – coming in with a 17.6 percent drop.
Ripon taxable sales for the partial fiscal year comparison dropped 39.9 percent, Escalon 29.4 percent, Lathrop 29.1 percent, Lodi 21.3 percent, and Stockton 20 percent.

In full year comparisons using the third quarter as the final quarter Manteca dropped 2.2 percent. Again, the state was such worse dropping 15.7 percent. San Joaquin County saw Ripon drop 38.7 percent, Escalon 30.9 percent, Tracy 19.2 percent, Lodi 20.2 percent, Stockton 16.6 percent, and Lathrop 16.2 percent.

Sales taxes are critical for cities as they represent one of the top two sources of revenue to operate the general fund. Property tax is the other.

If the trend holds and property valuation remains relatively close to what it was on Jan. 1, 2009 Manteca’s projected deficit for the fiscal year starting July 1 could be less than $1 million. That assumes the state doesn’t take any more money.

By Dennis Wyatt
Managing Editor
dwyatt@mantecabulletin.com
209-249-3532

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Record housing sales for Manteca?


New, existing sales may soar past 1,400 for 2009


Manteca is 27 days away from setting two housing market records – one for the most homes sold overall and the other for the most previously owned homes closing escrow.

There were 1,116 existing homes that have sold so far in 2009 as of Tuesday. Based on the sales pace of the last five weeks, at least 80 of the 201 pending sales should close by year’s end to bring completed transactions close to 1,200 homes.

That will top the record of 1,165 existing home sold in 2008.

Add the 220-plus new homes that are expected to have sold in Manteca by year’s end and Manteca will have experienced just over 1,400 overall home sales in 2009 – another housing mark.

Even though resale transactions will top 2008 levels, the overall dollar amount won’t. Although just 49 fewer homes have been sold in 2009 with three weeks to go compared to all of 2008, there is a huge gap in combined dollar value. Resale transactions were at $262,125,000 in 2008 compared to $185,690,000 to date this year. That reflects the nearly $50,000 difference in the median selling price between the two years with 2009 coming in at $175,350 per home so far and $225,000 in 2008. New home sales in 2008 are expected to hit $77,000,000.

Early indications are that the median price will start going up in 2010. That’s based on 201 pending sales with a median pending price of $192,900 or $27,550 higher than the 2009 median selling price to date.

Experts, though, caution that doesn’t mean prices are rising across the board. It does mean that buyers are now purchasing larger and newer homes that were going largely untouched as buyers scrambled to snap up lower priced properties.

When that happens, it brings up the median price.

By Dennis Wyatt
Managing Editor
dwyatt@mantecabulletin.com
209-249-3532
POSTED Dec. 4, 2009