Daily Archives: July 27, 2011

Mount Kisco NY Real Estate | How to save the housing market: Realtors have a few ideas

Caption this cartoon

Scott Stantis contest: Caption this cartoon

Here’s your chance to be a cartoonist without having to deal with all of that annoying drawing. Chicago Tribune Editorial Cartoonist Scott Stantis draws the cartoon and you provide the caption. Just send your submission to: ctc-captions@tribune.com. The winner will be announced in Friday’s Chicago Tribune. To see the runners-up check them out at chicagotribune.com/Stantis.

The winning entry will receive a signed print with your caption on it signed by Scott Stantis.

So what are you waiting for? Get writing!

South Salem NY Real Estate | Fed Sees Few Gains in Housing Market

The U.S. housing market remains anemic, with little change seen in the early weeks of summer, the Federal Reserve reported today in its most recent snapshot of the nation’s economy.

Residential real estate sales throughout the nation were largely unchanged from late spring, according to the Fed’s latest Beige Book report on the nation’s economy, released today. Most of the nation’s 12 Federal Reserve Districts reported that home prices were flat or declining in the most recent six-week period, although the Minneapolis, Richmond (Va.) and Atlanta districts reported increased sales activity.

Residential construction activity increased in the Minneapolis District during the current reporting period, but otherwise remained flat or down in the rest of the nation. At the same time, construction and other activity in the rental residential market was generally up across most of the nation, as economic uncertainty, tight credit and foreclosures continue to push more Americans toward rental housing.

There were a few positive trends in residential real estate, but they tended to be weak and scattered about the nation. Sources in many parts of the country reported increasing foot traffic by potential home buyers, but this has not yet translated into increased sales.

 In the Boston District, reports from some states indicated sales were running higher than two years ago, which was seen as encouraging – sales last year are widely regarded as artificially inflated by the homebuyer tax credit. Sources in the district generally expect to see weak sales for the rest of the year, with no significant increase in home sales until 2012.

Sales activity was up in the Richmond District, which contains the Washington, D.C. area, which has been the nation’s best-performing real estate market over the past year, according to various reports. Most of the sales increases were among low- to mid-priced homes, although some areas also reported increased activity at the high-end of the market, with a low inventory of such properties in the D.C. area.

In the southeast, sales activity were up slightly over last year’s levels in the Atlanta District, driven primarily by increased sales in Florida, which has been one of the nation’s hardest-hit housing markets since the downturn. Sales in the Kansas City District remained flat, although with increased demand for entry-level and high-end homes in some Colorado mountain resort areas, possibly due to investors positioning themselves for a rebound.

Otherwise, the Fed reported that overall economic activity continued to grow at a moderate pace, although with the rate slowing in the eastern part of the nation during the six-week reporting period. Consumer spending and manufacturing were up overall, although labor conditions remained soft, with little gains in either employment or wages.

Officially titled the “Summary of Economic Conditions” the Fed’s Beige Book is released eight times a year and reports on overall economic conditions across the nation and in the 12 Federal Reserve Districts.

Bedford Hils NY Real Estate | Riding out a tough real estate market | Inman News

Riding out a tough real estate market

Cycling gives agent a fresh perspective on daily work

Flickr image courtesy of <a href=

It all started off with a small announcement in the community activities paper: “First Annual Fondo.”

“A scenic journey through pine trees, mountain landscape and luscious lake country. Recreational bicyclists and professionals alike will enjoy this fun 85-mile ride through some of the most beautiful country Oregon has to offer.” I was intrigued. I love to bike! My 1988 Schwinn emerald-green-with-black-splatter-paint mountain bike has taken me lots of fun places: the video rental place, the coffee shop, the park. Why not majestic, scenic beauty?

Trending: The best mountain bike under 500.I imagined myself cruising past a clear blue lake and waving at the kids with fishing poles. I casually told my husband this Fondo thing would be a great adventure — like hang gliding or hiking K2. But he agreed with me. “Oh, but it’s next month,” I read. “We’d have to train pretty hard.” He agreed again. What? I was not actually expecting agreement, so this meant I better up-the-ante.

“If we are really going to ride in a bicycle rally we should ride a tandem!” Well … he agreed again! His friend has a tandem we could use. Oh my gosh.

Five hundred and fifty dollars later, I was a dedicated cyclist with a helmet, padded knickers, a “don’t kill me” neon-yellow jersey, and a tandem bicycle with new brakes and tires.

It is a far cry from my Schwinn; it has tiny tires and hooked handle bars because it is a genuine racing tandem. Who knew there was such a thing?

My daughters’ pediatrician heard that we signed up for the 85-mile Fondo on a tandem and his face spread into a wide grin, “This, my friends, will be epic. This is really going to test your marriage.” Ha-ha! Great.

But if anything, we are positive people. We’ve been riding bikes since we were babies. No big deal. I was sold. And this tandem, I thought, would be really fun! So who cares that I just had a baby six months ago? Or that my husband is three times heavier than Lance Armstrong?

This would be an adventure we can talk about for years, plus we’ll get in shape — immediately. And anyway, 85 miles isn’t that far. You just take them one at a time.

Training … our first day was dedicated to getting comfortable on the bike. With that in mind, we took our tandem racing bike, our new helmets, and padded shorts up a mountain and decided to ride around it — 20 miles.

Don’t ask me how we conceptualized going from zero experience to 20 miles on our first day. That would just take the fun out of it.

Well, we got on that bike and started rolling downhill, and let me tell you — you start communicating really fast once you realize you’re going 45 miles an hour and keeping pace with that Isuzu Trooper you thought was passing. And that’s going down a hill! Wait for the incline!

As the bike nosed up into the hills we were like two marshmallows, huffing, puffing and gasping up the highway. Where did all the oxygen go? We clicked through the gears, and cranked those peddles around in such a blur you couldn’t even see our feet!

And for all that energy, we moved about a foot every seven seconds. At that point I was sucking down water while the sweat poured down my face, across my back and into my adult diaper … I mean, through those nice new professional padded knickers.

But we made it! Yes, we did! And so today, I am writing this article standing up.

And yet, I feel really good. Encouraged. Bring it on — all 85 miles! So what if I don’t sit for a month? Ha! I’ve been there with childbirth!

I am learning to ride a tandem bicycle with my husband.

And with that in mind: Listing presentation? Ea-sy. Follow-up calls? Vanilla. Buyers want to see that house again? OK. Drop-bys? Maybe drop-bys ain’t that bad after all.

Alisha Alway Braatz is a buyer’s broker for Coldwell Banker Advantage One Properties in Eugene, Ore., and a real estate humorist.

Bedford NY Real Estate | New short-sale scams on the rise | Inman News

New short-sale scams on the rise

Lenders, seniors losing money on ‘back-to-back’ closings

Crooks always look for a new wrinkle, and short-sale scams are quickly moving to the top of the fraud world.

According to a new study just released by CoreLogic, short-sale fraud is expected to rise 25 percent in 2011 with lenders and servers incurring losses in excess of $375 million. The primary states of concern are California, Arizona, Colorado and Florida.

However, short-sale fraud is also popping up in other states. Deb Bortner, director of consumer services for the Washington State Department of Financial Institutions, was one of many state officials to say there was anecdotal evidence that short-sale fraud is on the rise.

A short sale is a real estate transaction in which the borrower, being unable to pay the mortgage on the property, is permitted by the lender to sell the property “short of” — or less than — the total amount due. Hence, the lender accepts a loss.

One of the more glaring results of the CoreLogic study was that short sales resold on the same day had an average of a 34 percent gain ($56,947) between the sale prices.

How is this possible?

According to CoreLogic, the same-day turnaround of a short sale can be achieved by what is known as a “back-to-back” closing. In such, the investor has two separate contracts: a purchase contract with the short-sale lender as well as a sale contract with a third party.

The transactions are choreographed and presented to a title company on the same day. The purchase transaction is first executed, followed immediately by the sale contract.

“Reasonably, an investor may buy a short-sale property, perform verifiable improvements to the home over a period of time, and resell the property for a legitimate financial gain,” the CoreLogic authors wrote. “Nearly one in six (16 percent) ‘suspicious’ short sales is resold on the same day, making legitimate increases in value doubtful.”

One method investors use to obtain profits without improvements or repairs is to list a property they do not have authority to list at a price less than a lender is willing to accept via a short sale.

This is done in the hopes of generating a bidding war from multiple interested buyers. The investor would then choose the highest price, negotiate the lowest sales price possible with the lender, and execute the back-to-back closings on the same day.

This also has occurred to homeowners (typically elderly) who own their homes free and clear but are forced to sell to move into a nursing facility. The scammers list the property at a low price, take the highest offer, negotiate a deal with the senior, and stage a simultaneous closing. The investor pockets the difference.

According to the study, “suspicious” transactions are short sales that may have caused the lender to incur unnecessary losses. “Suspicious” short sales are defined as:

  • A new transaction less than one month after the short sale where the new sale price is at least 10 percent higher than the short-sale price;
  • A new transaction less than three months after the short sale where the new sale price is at least 20 percent higher than the short-sale price;
  • A new transaction less than six months after the short sale where the new sale price is at least 40 percent higher than the short-sale price.

The study examined more than 450,000 short sales of single-family homes in the past three years. It noted that some legitimate property rehabilitation and “flips” — where repairs and improvements were made — have occurred within the “suspicious” time frame.

Neither the lender nor the homeowner wants to go through the foreclosure process. It is time-consuming and expensive for both, and the credit damage a foreclosure can do is significant. While both sides also lose in a short sale, it is viewed as the lesser of two evils.

And, where there is anxiety and loss, there always seems to be someone there to make things worse.

Tom Kelly’s book “Cashing In on a Second Home in Central America: How to Buy, Rent and Profit in the World’s Bargain Zone” was written with Mitch Creekmore,  senior vice president of Stewart International, and Jeff Hornberger, the National Association of Realtors’ international market development manager. The book is available in retail stores, on Amazon.com and on tomkelly.com.

Pound Ridge NY Real Estate | Home improvement apps for iPhone | Inman News

Home improvement apps for iPhone

Free and paid mobile downloads

Editor’s note: The following is a list of free and paid home improvement apps for iPhone, based on a keyword search of the phrase “home improvement” at TopAppCharts.com, an app-ranking site.


Source: TopAppCharts.co

Bedford Corners NY Real Estate | Oodle offers Facebook recommendations app | Inman News

Oodle offers Facebook recommendations app

Client testimonials appear alongside paid subscribers’ ‘Marketplace’ listings

Online classified ad service Oodle has launched a Facebook “recommendations” app that allows real estate brokers and agents and other businesses with Facebook pages to solicit testimonials from clients.

Recommendations are shared with the reviewer’s friends in their Facebook news feed, posted on the agent’s wall, and in the recommendations tab hosted on their page.

For Oodle Pro subscribers, recommendations can also be added to listings displayed within Marketplace, Oodle’s “social classifieds” on Facebook, and Oodle.com. Oodle says Marketplace has more than 14 million monthly users, and is available on iPhone and Android phones.

The app allows users to share information on new listings, and when agents have email addresses for clients or prospects they can recruit them to become a fan and leave a recommendation.

Users can set up the Oodle recommendations app by entering an email address and allowing for notification and moderation of new recommendations. The agent has the choice to thank the reviewer, respond if a portion of the review needs to be addressed, or remove it if the agent deems it inappropriate.


Chappaqua NY Real Estate | Talking about a real estate revolution | Inman News

Talking about a real estate revolution

Could discontent lead brokers to break away from MLS?

SAN FRANCISCO — A broker revolt over multiple listing service policies could become a reality if the playing field among brokerages is perceived to be uneven, and some participants in a two-day Data Summit event also suggested that a new national entity be established to help the industry manage its data.

In referencing a controversial franchisor IDX (Internet Data Exchange) policy that was approved by the National Association of Realtors in November 2010 and amended in May 2011, Robert Moline, president and chief operating officer for Home Services of America, said that “each and every broker has always had their own choice on where their data went,” while the controversial policy — still under review — could dictate “where your data is going to go.”

He added, “If it gets to the point that brokers are paying the cost, and getting very little … (they) are going to move. Not all brokers will agree, but enough will that I think you’ll see some major changes for MLSs.

“If they’re pushed far enough, some brokers will show leadership,” Moline said. “A lot of things will change, at the end of the day.”

The controversial NAR policy, which allowed franchisors to index and display Internet Data Exchange listings in any market where they had received permission from their own franchisees, is under review by a work group that will prepare a report for consideration at NAR’s upcoming annual meeting in November.

The amended policy gives brokers the choice, by opt-in, whether their listings will be displayed on franchisors’ national websites.

Ira Luntz, vice president of data products for LPS Real Estate Group, said during a separate session at the conference that Moline “is at the center of a firestorm that’s potentially brewing — I think there could be a concerted dismantling of cooperation” depending on the outcome of the franchisor IDX issue.

“If we don’t think about it and make some changes, my personal opinion is that the brokers are going to step up — that you’ll see brokerages pull listings from the MLS.”

And he suggested that brokerages could potentially set up their own listings cooperative as an alternative to a traditional MLS.

“There’s nothing to say that a bunch of brokers in a given community couldn’t put listings up, share them, and there you go,” Luntz said.

Jay Thompson, a Phoenix real estate broker who participated in an MLS committee workgroup that reviewed the franchisor IDX policy, said he is skeptical that the issue will be resolved soon.

While Thompson said that “IDX allows me to eat. That’s my entire brokerage. It’s my livelihood — I have to have it,” he also said, “I don’t think (the franchisor IDX issue) is going to get resolved at the November meetings.”

Luntz said he has a vision for a new framework for sharing listings: “Maybe the time has come to … stop IDX completely.”

He proposed a system for “single-source syndication” — an entity to manage licensing and distribution of “the massive quantity of information” generated by the real estate industry.

The entity could offer up industry data under certain terms and conditions. “If we don’t come to an understanding for a national vehicle to deliver data, that everyone can trust and everyone can agree to … if we don’t do that, we have a disassociated marketplace,” he said.

He said the industry is doomed to the same circular data conversations it’s been wrapped up in for more than a decade if it can’t establish “an entity or group or some sort of definition for this” data pool.

“We have this quandary of different syndication models, the inaccuracy of data. We have to move ourselves away from that.”

John Heithaus, chief marketing officer for MRIS, a mid-Atlantic regional MLS that is the nation’s largest MLS, said the Nasdaq and New York Stock Exchange and Carfax vehicle history reports provide models for what an MLS system could be.

“I think we need to rethink the whole context (of the MLS). We are fighting today’s battles with yesterday’s tools,” he said, and suggested that open-source solutions could power a wave of innovation for MLSs.

Luntz said, “If you don’t speak up, don’t speak the vision, it’s never going to happen.”

Mike Myers, co-founder of MLS Data Marketing, said he is already working on a plan to bring more than a dozen MLSs together in a common goal to improve listings syndication and data quality. The project, which he has embarked on with industry veteran Bud Fogel, is known as the MLS Internet Data Cooperative.


Armonk NY Real Estate | The rise of consumer-centric real estate | Inman News

The rise of consumer-centric real estate

Keep clients top of mind when it comes to tech

SAN FRANCISCO — Reluctant to engage in social media? Wary of sharing too much of your real estate data? Camera-shy? Get over it — a successful real estate business plan puts the consumer, not the agent, at the center, said several speakers at this week’s Agent Reboot event in San Francisco.

“The consumer does not care how many awards you have on your business card. They couldn’t care less that you’re No. 1 since 1987 in your service area. They care about the service you’re going to provide. It’s a consumer-centric era,” said Sherry Chris, CEO of Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate.

“The consumer is king. Case closed. Period. There is no going back.”

When Chris first started in real estate 30 years ago, the industry was “very broker-controlled” and then shifted to focus on the agent, she said.

“We told the consumers what they were going to look at. We were trained to show them only three or four houses and then pressured them to make a decision,” Chris said.

Now consumers come to agents with a list of homes they want to see and a plethora of information they’ve gleaned from the Internet. That puts consumers in the driver’s seat.

“Our role as a real estate agent has changed. We used to be the gatekeepers of information, and now we’re the collaborators,” Chris said.

Echo boomers, the 73 million-strong children of baby boomers, have changed how the world communicates — they share everything, she said. “We’re in a collaborative environment now. There cannot be any more secrets in our industry.”

That trend applies to various aspects of real estate, from social media marketing to video to real estate websites.

Because of the explosion of social networks in the past several years, a social media presence is a must for any agent that wants to be “part of the conversation,” said Nicole Nicolay, host of Agent Reboot and co-founder and chief creative officer at Agent Evolution, a company that offers social media training and WordPress Web design.

“Who is not part of the conversation? That’s a broadcaster,” Nicolay said. A broadcaster is someone she described as expecting clients to come to them, on their terms.

That’s “someone who is agent-centric, not client-centric,” she added.

The same applies to video. While the vast majority of homeowners say they are more likely to list with an agent who uses video to market properties, less than 1 percent of agents actually do so, said Darin Persinger, founder of ProductivityJunkies.com, a real estate training company.

Why? Agents say they’re overwhelmed by the technology, don’t know where to start, are afraid the video will look amateurish, or they’re camera-shy, among other reasons, Persinger said.

To that, he responded, “It’s not about you. It’s about you providing better solutions to your clients so they make better housing decisions.”

A Web page with video has a 50 times better chance of ranking on page one of Google, Persinger said, and YouTube gets more than 2 billion page views a day —  nearly double the prime-time audience of all three major networks combined.

He recommended agents film short (two minutes or less) videos featuring subjects consumers are interested in: property tours, tours of the local community, local real estate market data, and client testimonials.

One attendee, Soledad Garcia, an agent at Keller Williams Tri Valley Realty in Pleasanton, Calif., said Persinger had inspired her to get over her reluctance with putting herself in front of the camera.

“It doesn’t matter what you look like, but what are you delivering to the people out there,” she said.

Agents thinking of adopting technology tools also need to keep consumers in mind. Forty percent of email, for example, is read on a mobile phone, said Chris Smith, Inman News’ chief evangelist, in a session about mobile tools.

“Email needs to be mobile-optimized,” Smith said, especially when used as part of a marketing strategy.

Tools such as mobile applications are available to consumers and agents alike, so “please don’t let consumers have more information than you,” Smith added.

At the same time, some consumers are not as tech-savvy as others. Attendee Denise Dilbey, a broker at Royal LePage Meadowtowne Realty in Ontario, Canada, said most of her clients are over the age of 50 and wouldn’t know where to look for her if she started blogging or marketing on social media.

“Some clients aren’t quite there yet as far as (being) comfortable with technology,” Dilbey said.

The most “techie” thing she does now is plug her recently acquired BlackBerry into her laptop to get Internet access while she’s out in the field with her clients.

“That’s more important for right now. It will change,” Dilbey said.

On the other hand, fellow attendee Garcia has found electronic signatures a hit with her clients. She recently started using zipLogix Digital Ink, offered as a free member benefit through the California Association of Realtors.

“It’s very useful for me to use with my clients because they work all day and just want to get (the paperwork) signed. They don’t want me to go to their house,” Garcia said.

Brad Andersohn, industry outreach manger for property search and valuation site Zillow, offered 15 widgets to “pump up” real estate websites with information most relevant to consumers.

Top 5 content widgets:

1. Local news: twitter.com/about/resources/widgets

2. Photo and video collections: www.cooliris.com/yoursite/

3. Walkability scores: walkscore.com/services

4. Weather.com: weather.com/services/weather-gadgets

5. Translate into 50 languages: translate.google.com/translate_tools

Top 5 social widgets:

1. Share Facebook information: Facebook.com/Badges

2. Go viral: Sharethis.com

3. Combine multiple RSS feeds in a single stream. Include content from your lender, title company, appraiser, stager, home warranty person, etc.: Rssmix.com

4. Share your Web activity: friendfeed.com

5. Allow people to come to your site and subscribe to your content: Feedburner.com

Top 5 contact widgets:

1. Online calling: Google Voice

2. Text messaging: RETechBlog.com

3. Free calling: Jaxtr.com

4. Free contact form: Zillow.com/Webtools

5. Free chatting: Zopim.com