Tag Archives: Bedford Hills NY

Bedford Hills NY

The “Vanishing” First-Time Home Buyer; What It Means for the Housing Market | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

Ah, the U.S. housing market, the so-called silver lining in the U.S. recovery—but not for long, as it may be rusting. The U.S. housing numbers are in, and they aren’t spectacular.

In the U.S. housing market, December existing-home sales rose one percent month-over-month at an annualized pace of 4.87 million units. Analysts were expecting December existing-home numbers to come in at 4.93 million. The one-percent increase also has to be taken with a grain of salt, as it was helped, in part, by a downward revision in November existing-home U.S. housing market sales to 4.82 million units. (Source: “December Existing-Home Sales Rise, 2013 Strongest in Seven Years,” National Association of Realtors web site, January 23, 2014.)

The December existing-home U.S. housing market sales of 4.87 million are also 0.6% below the 4.9-million-unit level recorded in December 2012. And sales of existing homes were down 27.9% at an annualized rate for the entire fourth quarter.

First-time home buyers—the fuel of the U.S. housing market—accounted for just 27% of all purchases in December, down from 28% in November and October and 30% in December 2012. That’s a huge drop over the 30-year average of 40% and a number real estate professionals and economists consider ideal. It is also the lowest level since the National Association of Realtors began tracking this metric in 2008.

First-time home buyers, who tend to purchase lower-priced homes, are being pushed out of the U.S. housing market recovery by all-cash sales. All-cash sales accounted for a whopping 42.1% of all U.S. residential sales in December, up from 38.1% in November and 18.0% in December 2012. (Source: “Short Sales and Foreclosure Sales Combined Accounted for 16 percent of U.S. Residential Sales in 2013,” RealtyTrac web site, January 22, 2014.)

 

 

http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/advisor/vanishing-first-time-home-buyer-means-housing-market-172534837.html

‘Overwhelming’ California Mega-Manse Wants $15.9M | Bedford Hills NY Homes

 

27 images

Location: Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. Price: $15,900,000 The Skinny: There’s an extremely fine line between awe-inspiring opulence and self-parody, a line that this newly renovated SoCal mega-manse smashes with a diamond-encrusted sledgehammer and then plows over with a gold-plated Rolls Royce that runs on cognac and burning bales of thousand dollar bills. It’s not that, as a matter of principle, there’s anything necessarily wrong with wine cellars, or wainscoting , or even drapes, if that’s your thing. In practice, however, an unlimited renovation budget combined with a desire to project refinement can lead to real trouble (not to mention an overabundance of reproduction statuary). Still, where one person sees trouble (wall paintings) someone else may see a home full of killer features (shooting fountains), and this mansion’s decor certainly provides plenty of opportunities for judgment-passing one way or the other. Even the brokerbabble pays homage to the sheer physical power of the place: “Upon entering, the beauty of the home instantly overwhelms you,” though whether it’s beauty that overwhelms is an open question. The six-bedroom, 10-bathroom home, which tops out at 12,500 newly bedazzled square feet and also boasts a 100,000-gallon pool, is asking $15.9M.

Australia House-Price Jump Rekindles Bubble Fears | Bedford Hills Homes

Home prices in Australia’s main cities surged in 2014, deepening concern a possible housing bubble may be forming that could potentially derail a fragile economic recovery.

The country’s property market ran hot again last year with prices nationally rising at the fastest pace in more than three years, fueled by record-low interest rates and growing demand for investment housing.

The sharp rises throughout past year have created some of the most expensive property in the world, fanning concern the market may be overheating and that a sudden crash could make jittery consumers even more nervous about spending.

The central bank has cut rates eight times in the past two years to try to get other sectors such as retail and housing to pick up and to compensate for a fading mining boom that is expected to dent the economy in coming years.

The RP Data-Rismark house-price report for December showed home values rose by 9.8% during the 2013 calendar year. Sydney, the country’s largest property market, posted a 14.5% gain over the same period, while property prices in Melbourne and Perth also made strong advances. In December, home values nationally rose by 1.4% from November.

The housing figures came on the same day data showed manufacturing activity contracted in the last month of 2013. It was the second contraction in a row that erased expansions in September and October.

“This latest snapshot is yet another reminder of the urgency for Australia to put itself on a more balanced and diversified growth path,” said Innes Willox, chief executive of AIG Group, which did the survey.

The disparity between surging house prices and weaker manufacturing highlights the key challenge facing Australia’s economic-policy makers, who must find new sources of growth as the decadelong mining boom cools.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303640604579295503032402682

JD Power survey highlights challenges of serving first-time buyers and sellers | Bedford Hills Realtor

Brokerages affiliated with franchisors Prudential Real Estate, Re/Max and Century 21 scored higher than average in overall customer satisfaction among first-time buyers in a J.D. Power study measuring customer satisfaction among first-time and repeat homebuyers and sellers among the nation’s largest real estate companies.

In general, overall satisfaction with real estate companies was higher among consumers who had bought or sold a home before, compared to first-time buyers and sellers. On a 1,000-point scale, the average score among repeat homebuyers was 817, and 803 among repeat home sellers, compared with the industry average of 797.

Companies affiliated with Prudential Real Estate ranked highest with first-time homebuyers in overall customer satisfaction (811), followed by Re/Max (798) and Century 21 (797). Companies affiliated with Coldwell Banker (792) and Keller Williams (787) scored below average. Among first-time sellers, Prudential Real Estate (809), Keller Williams (802), Re/Max (800) and Century 21 (799) were tops, with Coldwell Banker (780) scoring below average.

“Real estate companies remain challenged in adapting their customer service approach to best meet the needs of first-time homebuyers and sellers,” said Christina Cooley, director in the diversified services industries practice at J.D. Power, in a statement.

“They need to educate these customers by explaining the current state of the market, discuss foreclosure and short-sale transactions, and walk them through every step of the closing process.”

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/12/10/jd-power-survey-highlights-challenges-of-serving-first-time-buyers-and-sellers/?utm_source=20131211&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailyheadlinesam#sthash.at475iP0.dpuf