Archive for the ‘housing bubble’ Category
Double-Dip Real Estate Recession?
Some prognosticators are predicting a double-dip recession. Experts like Jim Cramer from CNBC disagree.
Is there a double-dip coming? Signs are not clear but it is possible, but the real question is, will a another recession deflate the real estate market again?
Gee, I hope so!! I got so many bargains two years ago and now the investor market has dried up and there’s too much demand vs. supply. Personally, I’d like another crack at it to buy 2 dozen more houses to hold onto for the next boom. Whether or not we go into a double dip recession, 10 years from now it won’t matter. Sure, people who buy for short term appreciation will get hurt by a D.D.R., but that’s their fault – I’ve always advised against short term appreciation swing investing and instead encouraged people to buy and flip or buy and hold long term (10-15 years).
10 Tips for Selling Your House Faster
1. NO CLUTTER. Throw out old newspapers and magazines. Pack away most of your small items like figurines and other trinkets. Store clothing that won’t be used in the near future to make closets seem roomier. Clean out the garage. Buyers like to visualize their possessions in the house and that is hard to do when the home is full of clutter.
2. Wash your windows and screens. This lets more light into the interior and dirty windows are a turn off.
3. Keep everything extra clean. Wash fingerprints and dirt from light switch plates. Clean the floors, stove, refrigerator, washer and dryer. A clean house makes a better first impression and tells buyers that the home has been well cared for.
4. Put brighter bulbs in light sockets to make rooms appear brighter, especially dark rooms. Replace any burnt-out bulbs. Turn all lights on before buyers come to view the home.
5. Make all minor repairs that you can find. Everything you don’t repair now will be revealed in the home inspection and can create a bad impression. Small problems such as sticky doors, torn screens, cracked caulking, cracked receptacle covers or a dripping faucet may seem trivial, but they’ll give buyers the impression that the house isn’t well maintained.
6. Shoot for good curb appeal. Cut the grass, rake any leaves, trim the bushes, and edge the walks. Put a couple of bright potted flowers near the entryway to cheer things up and get the buyers attention.
7. Patch holes in your driveway and reapply sealant, if applicable.
8. Clean dirty gutters.
9. Polish or replace your front doorknob and door numbers.
10. Get rid of smells. Clean carpeting and drapes to eliminate cooking odors, smoke, and pet smells. If carpets are old and need replacing, it is worth while to replace them. The additional price you receive for your house will most likely outweigh the expense. Open the windows. The number one turn off to a potential buyer is an unpleasant odor.
Excerpt from William Bronchick’s highly rated book, “How to Sell Your House Fast in a Slow Real Estate Market”
Is your condo warrantable for FHA financing?
Everyone knows the market value of some condominiums has been hammered. One possible reason—and perhaps a bigger factor in the future—is the recent launch of the HRAP/DELRAP system by the Federal Housing Administration.
In effect, the system declares certain condo developments “off limits” for FHA loans. There are a few financing alternatives, which I was able to touch on briefly in the final paragraph. Read the story in today’s Denver Post:
FHA rules may tip condos over financing edge
You can link directly to the HRAP/DELRAP database here, and search for a specific condo development. But be aware that the database isn’t yet fully populated. So some developments that deserve a “rejected” rating may yet be added.
Where's the best place to invest?
Where are the best investment real estate locations? If you have enough experience investing in real estate, you can make money almost anywhere, but there are always places that are better or worse for real estate investments. For maximum profits, you want places that have a better demand/supply ratio. You can use the questions below to find them.
Real Estate Demand
1. Does the area have decent job growth? Ask local authorities and use census information. Ideally, you want to see job growth equal to or exceeding population growth. You also want areas with professional jobs moving in. It is estimated that for every professional job created, there are four service jobs created, and all those employees need a place to live.
2. Is the population growing? You can check the US Census figures online, or ask the local government if they have the statistics. Stay away from areas that have little growth.
3. Is there a decent quality of life? It’s subjective, but important. Are there theaters and bookstores? Count coffee shops and cafes. Trendy areas usually have increasing demand for housing. It’s also a good indication of a high quality-of-life if people are willing to take lower-paying jobs just to live there.
4. Is there wealth in the area? It’s a good sign when there is some degree of wealth in a town. Look for nice homes. Wealth means everything doesn’t die when the economy slows.
Real Estate Supply
1. Number of homes for sale? Lower supply of homes for sale means upward pressure on prices. This indirectly drives up rents as well, which makes for better investing.
2. New construction? Census figures can tell you what’s happened over the last ten years. Check with the local authorities to see if the the number of housing units they’ve issued permits for is more or less than the expected population growth.
3. Rent and vacancy levels? Rents have to be high enough, and vacancies low enough to justify investing. When we first came to Denver, every building had vacancies We saw a man holding a sign that read, “Apartment – $250 Per Month.” A great place for renters, but not so great for landlords.
4. The available land that is buildable? Of course, less available land is better for future appreciation. When the land runs out, the prices start accelerating upwards.
When you use these questions to compare various towns and cities, you’ll see the differences more clearly. You’ll have an idea about how housing demand compares to supply in each. This will help you pinpoint the best investment real estate locations.
WSJ: Now is the time to buy real estate
An opinion piece in the WSJ today opines that now is the time to buy real estate, in that the bottom of the market has been reached:
“The latest S&P/Case-Shiller survey results, released last week, suggest housing prices bottomed out around April 2009, when its 20-city composite index was down 32.6% from its peak reached in June/July 2006. Since then it has gained 3% through January 2010, with some markets much stronger, especially San Francisco and Minneapolis. (Charlotte, N.C., Las Vegas, Seattle and Tampa, Fla., continued to hit new lows, but at a much slower rate of decline.” Read more –>>> http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304172404575167971729724454.html?mod=residential_real_estate
California Extends Housing Tax Credit
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a new bill this week that would extend the $10,000 homebuyer tax credit to Californians.
The state legislature on March 22 passed assembly bill (AB) 183, which gives the Franchise Tax Board authority to extend $200m in tax credits to homebuyers in the Golden State. Buyers of new, unoccupied homes are allocated $100m in credits, and first-time homebuyers of existing homes get another $100m.
The credit is extended from May 1, 2010 to Dec. 31, 2010. The credit is available to buyers on a first-come, first-serve basis, and it’s applied in equal amounts over a three-year period.
According to the governor’s office, the initial $100m tax credit approved in February 2009 lasted just four months.
According to the real estate data provider, MDA DataQuick, sales in Southern California increased 0.8% in February 2010 from the year before. The median sales price in the area also increased 10% during the same time to $275,000.
Bank of America to Reduce Principal Balance on Some Howeowners
Bank of America, the nation’s largest mortgage lender, on Wednesday announced a program to offer homeowners who owe significantly more than their homes are worth the opportunity to have their loan balances reduced.
The program, which starts in May, would potentially help about 45,000 homeowners nationwide. In launching the effort, Bank of America is jumping into the debate about how to address the millions of homeowners whose mortgages exceed the value of their homes and who have complicated industry and government efforts to prevent foreclosures.
Lenders have traditionally resisted reducing borrowers’ loan balances, arguing that doing so would encourage homeowners to miss mortgage payments to qualify. But as foreclosure-prevention efforts have struggled, the industry has started to relent. Bank of America is hoping that by reducing principal balances it will give borrowers an incentive to keep up with their payments and potentially create an industry model.
The company “has found that many homeowners who owe considerably more on their mortgages than their homes are worth are reluctant to accept a solution that addresses only the amount of the payment without an accompanying reduction in the balance due on the loan,” said Barbara Desoer, president of Bank of America Home Loans.
The Bank of America plan is limited in scope. Borrowers must have missed at least two mortgage payments and be severely underwater to qualify, owing 20 percent more than their homes are worth. It is also limited to borrowers with certain types of risky loans, including subprime mortgages or other loans with a two-year adjustable rate.
Bank of America expects to forgive about $3 billion in principal on loans as part of the program. The effort expands a settlement agreement that the bank made with several state attorneys general in 2008 to modify thousands of mortgages and settles a Massachusetts investigation of lending practices by Countrywide Financial, which Bank of America acquired in 2008.
Treasury officials have said they were considering proposals to address negative equity, but have not given a timeline for announcing a plan. Under the federal foreclosure-relief program known as Making Home Affordable, borrowers can receive up to $5,000 to lower their loan balances if they keep up their payments. But that amount would make only a small dent in the problem facing millions of homeowners, housing advocates have said.
Economists consider underwater borrowers among the most vulnerable to foreclosure, even if they can afford their mortgages, and some industry officials worry that more of them will simply walk away from their mortgages, or “strategically default,” rather than spend a decade or more trying to regain positive equity. First American CoreLogic has estimated that more than 11.3 million homeowners are underwater on their mortgages.
During the third quarter of 2009, 13 percent of loan modifications included a reduction in the borrower’s principal, up from 10 percent during the second quarter, according to a report by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Wells Fargo, for example, says it has increasingly used principal reductions for homeowners with “pay option arm” loans. The bank says it forgave $2.6 billion in borrowers’ principal balances for these types of mortgages last year.
Obama May Lean on Banks to Not Foreclose
The Obama administration may expand efforts to ease the housing crisis by banning all foreclosures on home loans unless they have been screened and rejected by the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program.
The proposal, reviewed by lenders last week on a White House conference call, “prohibits referral to foreclosure until borrower is evaluated and found ineligible for HAMP or reasonable contact efforts have failed,” according to a Treasury Department document outlining the plan.
Read more –>>> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=ahuuwBS8KYq8
Foreclosure BOAT tours!
Realtors can get pretty creative. First bus tours, now BOAT tours of foreclosed properties.
Check it out –>>> http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=7111055&page=1
Report: BofA worst Lender for Loan Mods, GMAC the Best
Among big lenders, Bank of America Corp. had the worst performance in the Treasury Department report card released Thursday. The nation’s largest lender completed just 98 modifications for the 160,000 borrowers who had signed up by the end of November. GMAC Mortgage had the most modifications of any lender, 7,100.




