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Southland housing market’s 10 fastest-recovering ZIP Codes

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Few markets crashed harder than Compton when California’s real estate bubble burst.

The city’s northwest side saw the median home price plummet to $94,000 in 2009, down from $385,000 at the peak. Foreclosures dotted the streets. Families fled, leaving trash and old furniture behind.

“There were a lot of empty houses. It was a big mess,” said real estate broker Ruben Magdaleno of Re/Max VIP.

These days, the working-class community has a new identity: comeback kid.

Northwest Compton has posted the most dramatic price jump of any area in Southern California. The median home price in the 90222 ZIP Code rose 96.8% from the second quarter of 2009 to $185,000 at the end of last year.

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Southern California’s housing recovery: An interactive map

Although that’s still a long way from the top, it’s the biggest percentage gain in the Southland, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis of data provided by real estate information firm DataQuick.

Joining Compton among the top 10 fastest-recovering ZIP Codes is a diverse group of communities:

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•San Diego’s hip South Park and adjacent neighborhoods (92102), up 96.4% from their bottom to $299,000 in the fourth quarter of last year.

•Los Angeles’ tony Hancock Park and diverse Koreatown (90004), up 85.8% to $1,050,000.

•The beach community of Cardiff by the Sea (92007) in San Diego County, up 81% to $860,000.

•Two blue-collar sections of San Bernardino (92411 and 92405), up 79.4% to $96,000 and up 76.9% to $115,000.

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•The upscale Newport Coast area in Orange County (92657), up 76.7% to $2,885,000.

•The Conejo Valley’s affluent Westlake Village (91361), up 73.5% to $1,127,500.

•The San Gorgonio Pass city of Banning in Riverside County (92220), up 68.4% to $141,000.

•Escondido’s central neighborhood in northern San Diego County (92025), up 67.4% to $370,000.

Overall, the Southern California median price for single-family resale homes has risen 34.5% since bottoming out at the beginning of 2009. The median price is the point at which half of homes sold for more and half for less; it is influenced by the type of homes sold.

The median peaked at $550,000 during the second quarter of 2007 before crashing to $249,000 during the first quarter of 2009, according to DataQuick. At the end of last year, home buyers shelled out a median of $335,000 for a resale home.

“For the typical person who bought at the peak, they are still a long way away,” said Richard Green, director of USC’s Lusk Center for Real Estate.

So why the big gains in markets as dissimilar as Compton and Newport Coast? In general, those areas got hit harder during the meltdown and so now are particularly attractive to bargain hunters.

Places such as Cardiff by the Sea, Newport Coast and Westlake Village are highly coveted areas with good schools that are always in demand, especially after a rare drop in prices.

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Meanwhile, investors are scooping up run-down properties in Compton and San Bernardino to renovate for sale or rent. A flood of foreclosures and short sales in those areas pushed prices to levels so low that recent price gains look huge in percentage terms.

“It became so toxic that [prices] dropped to almost nothing,” Green said. “Investors saw great opportunity and started coming into the market at really remarkable bottoms.”

Investor Brian Coomans has done about 35 deals in Compton since the crash, fixing up the properties to rent or sell. In particular, he’s fond of a western portion of the 90222 ZIP Code, with its collection of generally well-maintained single-family homes that saw values plummet.

“It was just a home run,” he said.

Although rising values are good news for hard-hit communities, some would-be home buyers are having a tough time breaking into the market.

On a recent Saturday, Juan and Lupe Maciel toured a four-bedroom home on West Piru Street in Compton. They already have been outbid on four houses in the city. The nearly $280,000 list price for the Piru Street house was too much, given the repairs needed, they said. If they keep striking out, they may simply continue to rent.

“It’s pretty frustrating,” Lupe Maciel said.

More than 100 miles to the south, sellers in a collection of neighborhoods east of downtown San Diego are getting much higher prices for their properties.

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San Diego real estate agent Ed Landsberg said investors have snapped up foreclosures and other distressed properties in the hardest-hit neighborhoods in the 92102 ZIP Code.

“The low-end stuff — all the investors have gobbled up,” he said.

Meanwhile, the neighborhood of South Park, which fared better during the downturn, has become a magnet for its collection of Craftsman bungalows, restaurants and proximity to downtown, he said. Houses for sale there are extremely hard to come by.

“South Park is a real buzz word in San Diego,” said Landsberg, who specializes in the neighborhood.

Whereas investors have played a major role in many neighborhoods, other areas seem to have bounced back simply because they are highly desirable places to live, said Stuart Gabriel, director of UCLA’s Ziman Center for Real Estate.

The price declines were so widespread that even “high amenity and well-located markets” took major hits to housing values, Gabriel said. That included some areas of Beverly Hills and coastal Orange County, which are now seeing prices roar back in the recovery.

“It is not surprising that those coveted neighborhoods would see such early and sizable rebounds,” Gabriel said.

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In the exclusive Newport Coast community, nestled in the hills above the Pacific Ocean, agents don’t have enough homes to sell.

“We are on fire right now,” said Ann Ngo of HOM Sotheby’s International Realty, who covers Newport Coast.

Some wealthier areas never experienced huge declines. The three ZIP Codes closest to their peak prices are all in upscale neighborhoods of the San Gabriel Valley, where good schools abound and investors from China have pumped money into real estate.

The median sale price in Arcadia’s 91007 ZIP Code hit $1,199,000 during the fourth quarter of last year — 18% higher than in the fourth quarter of 2007, when the median sale price topped out before declining. The area is the only Southern California ZIP Code to surpass the peak reached during the real estate bubble.

“There was no significant downturn,” Ash Rizk, a sales associate with Coldwell Banker’s Arcadia office, said of the city. “We haven’t seen foreclosures; we haven’t seen short sales — maybe one sporadically.”

Still, most areas of Southern California aren’t likely to return to bubble-era prices any time soon.

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“I would say at least another 10 years,” agent Anthony Turner of Prudential California Realty said of Compton, which is one of his coverage areas.

The vast majority of ZIP Codes have recouped less than 30% of their median-price declines from the peaks in those areas. More than half of 464 regional ZIP Codes analyzed by The Times have regained less than 20%.

If prices continue to rise, more home buyers will escape their negative-equity positions. That will allow them to sell their homes without taking a loss, loosening up supply.

But many homeowners who bought at the top of the market are still stuck.

Vincent Waller, a steam plant assistant for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, moved into a Compton home with his family in 2008. He said the four-bedroom home is now worth half its $430,000 purchase price.

“Terrible timing,” Waller said on a recent afternoon, taking a break from playing ball with his 6-year-old son, Cazzie, outside his home on 134th Street.

There’s not much to do but stick it out, he said. He’s happy in the neighborhood, although he wishes it had better schools for his children.

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If prices keep climbing, the family may recalculate.

“Might try to sell off,” he said.

andrew.khouri@latimes.com

Times staff writers Alejandro Lazo and Doug Smith contributed to this report.

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