Daily Archives: November 15, 2010

NAR Reports First Time Buyer Survey in Chappaqua NY | Chappaqua NY Real Estate

Highlights from the 2010 NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers

The National Association of REALTORS® surveys home buyers and sellers annually to gather detailed information about the home buying and selling process. These surveys provide information on buyer and seller demographics, housing characteristics and the experience of consumers in the housing market. Buyers and sellers also share information on the role that real estate professionals play in home sales transactions. NAR’s Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers reports – based on results of those surveys – provide real estate professionals with insights into the needs and expectations of their clients. This year’s data provide valuable insight into how buyer and seller demographics have changed based on shifting market conditions. The latest 2010 NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers* was released during NAR’s annual conference and expo in November. Below we highlight some of the findings of that survey report that focus on home buyers.

Homebuyer Demographics: Who’s Buying

In 2010, home buyers saw the continuation and expansion of the home buyer tax credit. While the original home buyer tax credit only covered first-time buyers, the expansion covered move-up

buyers. The tax credit and record home affordability changed the home-buyer landscape.

One of the most important changes reflected in this year’s findings was the share of first-time buyers. Over the last 10 years, first-time purchasers have accounted for 40-41 percent – on average – of all home buyers during the course of a year. The 2010 survey results show that 50 percent of all purchasers between July of 2009 and June of 2010 were first-time buyers. This is the largest share of first-time buyers in more than 19 years.

Improved affordability has opened the home-buying market to those who would not have been able to purchase a home in the past. Median household income of home buyers declined nationally and in all regions for the last two years. But at the same time, mortgage interest rates declined to historic lows and home prices remained affordable. Consequently, the decline in the median household income of home buyers reflects how improved housing affordability – coupled with government programs supporting home buying – opened the market to home buyers who would not otherwise have been financially able to purchase a home.

Improved affordability and the increased share of first-time home buyers are also reflected in the increased share of single buyers. Single buyers in 2001 accounted for 22 percent of the home-buying market; that share grew to 32 percent in 2010. The role of single female buyers has also been expanding in recent years, and held stable at 20 percent in 2010. This year the share of single male home buyers climbed to an all-time high of 12 percent of the market. The share of married couples declined to 58 percent in 2010 from 68 percent in 2001.

Why They Buy

Among buyers of nearly every age bracket and every household composition – those with children and those without children – the primary reason for purchasing a home was the desire to own a home. This result has been consistent over the years. Nearly 31 percent of all buyers cited this reason in 2010. This was especially true for first-time buyers—53 percent reported the most important reason for purchasing a home was the desire to own a home.

For repeat buyers the most important reason for their recent home purchase was the desire for a larger home and a job-related relocation or move. Affordability as a motivator has increased among first-time and repeat buyers and for buyers who are under 44 years of age.

The Home Purchased

What a buyer purchased depended greatly on the quality of the neighborhood, convenience to job, overall affordability of homes, convenience to friends and family, and the quality of the school

district. Whether a buyer was a first-time or repeat buyer, approximately three quarters of all home buyers purchased a detached single-family home.

Continuing a trend since 2007, the share of home buyers purchasing a previously owned home has increased, while the share purchasing a new home has declined. The typical home purchased was 1,780 square feet, had three bedrooms and two bathrooms, was built in 1990, and was 12 miles from the buyer’s previous residence. Once buyers find the home they are looking for they plan to stay in their home for 10 years.

The Home Search

The Internet is playing an ever increasing role in the home search process. Thirty-six percent of buyers looked online for properties for sale as their first step in their search for a home to purchase. An additional 11 percent began by finding information online about the home buying process. Nine in ten buyers used the Internet in some way during their search process.

While the usage of the Internet in the search process has grown, it does not diminish the use of real estate professionals; rather, it provides a complementary relationship. In fact, home buyers who used the Internet to search for a home were actually more likely than those who did not use the Internet to buy their home through a real estate agent (85 percent vs. 70 percent). Often those Internet users take steps to look at a particular property they saw online. Eighty-eight percent of recent buyers used an agent during their home search process. The use of other information sources has declined in recent years.

The Role of Real Estate Professionals

Home buyers still rely heavily on the expertise of real estate agents to navigate the housing market and help guide them through the home sales transaction. Eighty-three percent of buyers purchased a home through a real estate agent, up from 77 percent in 2009. Fifty-seven percent of buyers found their agent through a referral or used an agent they had used in the past to buy or sell a home.

Buyers most want their agent to help them find the right home to purchase, but they also want help negotiating the terms of sale and with price negotiations. Sixty-six percent of buyers benefited by having their real estate agent help them understand the process.

Satisfaction with one’s real estate professional is very high, and home buyers report that they were very satisfied with the services they received from their agents. More than 95 percent of buyers said they were very or somewhat satisfied with their agent’s honesty and integrity and their agent’s knowledge of

the home purchase process.

In Summary

Buying a home is a complex and at times can be a daunting process. There are many options as well as constraints that households face when searching for the right home that will meet their needs today as well as in the future. However, it is important to know that even amidst market uncertainty buyers want to make an investment through home ownership. Buyers are overall satisfied with the home buying process, with nine in ten reporting they were at least somewhat satisfied. Additionally, 87 percent of buyers would use their real estate agent again or recommend their agent to others.

Full NAR Article

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Fair Housing Rules and Regulations in Westchester NY | Westchester NY Real Estate

Westchester Putnam Association of REALTORS®, Inc.
60 South Broadway, White Plains, NY 10601
914.681.0833

INFORMATION ABOUT FAIR HOUSING IN REAL ESTATE TO WESTCHESTER HOMEBUYERS, RENTERS, SELLERS, AND APARTMENT OWNERS:

The Westchester Putnam Association of REALTORS, Inc., of which I am a member, has asked its member REALTORS to distribute this memo to everyone with whom they do business. The purpose is to promote better understanding of current fair housing laws and the ethical obligations of REALTORS.

Discrimination in the sale or rental of residential property based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, familial and marital status, or disability is prohibited by one or more provisions of federal and state law. In addition, Westchester County and some individual communities have local fair housing laws to supplement the federal and state laws. An abstract of key federal, state, and county laws is printed on the reverse side of this memo.

Real estate agents are subject to these laws. If the real estate agent is also a REALTOR member of the Board of REALTORS, he or she is subject to the additional standard of total nondiscrimination that is a part of the REALTOR Code of Ethics. Violation of the Code leads to

disciplinary action against the REALTOR in addition to the penalties under applicable laws.

But real estate agents and REALTORS are not alone in being subject to the fair housing laws.

IT IS IMPORTANT FOR REAL ESTATE BUYERS AND SELLERS TO KNOW THAT THEY, TOO, ARE SUBJECT TO MOST PROVISIONS OF THE FEDERAL, STATE, OR LOCAL FAIR HOUSING LAWS WHETHER OR NOT A REAL ESTATE AGENT OR REALTOR IS INVOLVED IN THE TRANSACTION. IN PARTICULAR, RACIAL DISCRIMINATION BY ANYONE IN THE SALE OR RENTAL OF HOUSING IS A VIOLATION OF FEDERAL LAW. Although the sale or rental of real property is a private act, it is subject to fair housing laws. Ordinary buyers and sellers, “testers,” and regulatory agencies can and do take legal action against parties who do not deal on an equal opportunity basis. We hope this information clarifies our mutual responsibilities in fair housing. Thank you for your attention.

REALTOR® is a registered mark which identifies a professional in real estate who subscribes to a strict Code of Ethics as a member of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT FAIR HOUSING LAWS

EXCERPTED FROM PUBLICATIONS OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS AND FROM A

WESTCHESTER REALTOR’S GUIDE TO FAIR HOUSING AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY REAL ESTATE

The 1866 CIVIL RIGHTS ACT provided that:

“All citizens of the United States shall have the same rights, in every State and Territory, as is enjoyed by white citizens thereof to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold and convey real and personal property.”

On June 17, 1968, in the case of JONES v. MAYER, the United States Supreme Court held that the 1866 law prohibits “all racial discrimination, private as well as public, in the sale or rental of property.”

Thus, any individual, who feels he or she has been discriminated against, can immediately file a suit in Federal Court. The court can stop the sale of a house, or rental of an apartment, to someone else

or award damages and court costs.

The 1968 Supreme Court decision further held that the 1866 Act protects all individuals against the following:

1. Denial that housing is available for inspection, sale, or rent when it is really available.

2. Discrimination in the terms or conditions of sale or rental lease.

1968 FAIR HOUSING LAW

Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (the Federal Fair Housing Law), declared it a national policy to provide fair housing throughout the United States. This law and subsequent amendment makes discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin illegal in connection with the sale or rental of most housing and any vacant land offered for residential construction or use. The Fair

Housing Law provides protection against the following acts, if they are based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin:

1. Refusal to sell or rent, to deal or negotiate with any person.

2. Denial of a loan or creation of different terms or conditions for home loans by commercial lenders, such as banks, savings and loan associations or insurance companies.

3. Discrimination, by advertising that housing is available only to persons of a certain race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

4. “Blockbusting” for profit i.e. persuading owners to sell or rent housing by telling them that minority groups are moving into the neighborhood.

5. Denial to anyone of the use of, or participation in, any real estate services such as brokers’ organizations, multiple listing services, or other facilities related to the selling or renting of housing.

NEW YORK STATE LAW

New York law prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental or lease of housing accommodations on the bases of race, color, creed, national origin, sex, disability, age or marital status by the owner, lessee, sublessee, or managing agent of housing accommodations or by real estate brokers and salepersons.

The law also prohibits discrimination in:

1. The terms, conditions or privileges of the sale, rental or lease or in the furnishing of facilities or services in connection with any housing accommodation;

2. The printing or circulating of any statement or publication or the use of any form of application or publication for the purchase, rental or lease of a housing accommodation.

There are certain limited exceptions to New York State’s Human Rights Law: (1) the rental of one and two family dwellings where the owners or their families reside in such dwellings, (2) the rental of

rooms in housing accommodations by owners or occupants where such persons or their families actually reside in such accommodations or (3) the rental of all rooms in a housing accommodation to persons of the same sex.

FAIR HOUSING AMENDMENTS ACT OF 1988

This Act strengthened the enforcement of the 1968 Fair Housing Law. It also provided substantial additional protection for disabled persons seeking housing, and limited restrictions on purchasers or

renters on account of familial status or age. Sellers or landlords who would decline to sell or rent to persons on account of handicap or familial status are advised to consult an attorney beforehand.

WESTCHESTER COUNTY HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION

In 1999 the Westchester County Board of Legislators passed a County Human Rights law and created a Human Rights Commission to enforce compliance and promote equal and fair opportunity in Westchester County. In addition to the protected

classes addressed in Federal and State law, the Westchester law also prohibits discrimination by owners and real estate agents based upon an individual’s alienage or citizenship status, or their

sexual orientation.

North Salem NY Real Estate Report | RobReportBlog | Robert Paul Realtor

      
      
Actives71    
Median$675,000    
Ave DOM149    
High Price$24,900,000    
Low Price$159,000    
Ave Size3900    
Ave Price/ft$387    
      
      
Sold North Salem NY Properties Over the Last SIx (6) Months     
      
 11/15/2010 11/15/2009  
Sold20 20  
Median$475,250 $550,000  
Ave DOM140 200  
High$2,050,000 $1,750,000  
Low$190,000 $115,000  
Ave Size2212 2707  
Ave Price/ft$278 $223  
Sale price/Ask93.71% 93.52%  
      
North Salem NY Homes     
North Salem Luxury Homes     

History of Mortgage Rates in North Salem NY | North Salem NY Real Estate

 
We keep hearing that mortgage rates are the lowest in recorded history and it is true. Presently, the 30-year fixed rate on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace is 4.16 percent, the 15-year fixed is 3.56 percent and the 5/1 ARM is 3.03 percent.

Take a look at the history of the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate each year since 1972, when Freddie Mac started keeping track:

1972 – 7.38
1973 – 8.04
1974 – 9.19
1975 – 9.05
1976 – 8.87
1977 – 8.85
1978 – 9.64
1979 – 11.20
1980 – 13.74
1981 – 16.63
1982 – 16.04
1983 – 13.24
1984 – 13.88
1985 – 12.43
1986 – 10.19
1987 – 10.21
1988 – 10.34
1989 – 10.32
1990 – 10.13
1991 – 9.25
1992 – 8.39
1993 – 7.31
1994 – 8.38
1995 – 7.93
1996 – 7.81
1997 – 7.6
1998 – 6.94
1999 – 7.44
2000 – 8.05
2001 – 6.97
2002 – 6.54
2003 – 5.83
2004 – 5.84
2005 – 5.87
2006 – 6.41
2007 – 6.34
2008 – 6.03
2009 – 5.04

Article

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What Do Land Surveyors Do In Lewisboro, NY? | Lewisboro NY Homes

 
What do land surveyors do other than stand behind a transit and wave their arms at other people that we can’t see, or set up traffic cones and road barriers that force us to change lanes and drive through a watery pot hole after having just washed our car?

The answer is simple. Understanding it is not.

Surveyors mark the boundaries of land, create maps and legal descriptions, and plan and organize the development of property.

We deal with a lot of important issues in our lives but the three that seem most timeless and universal are our families, our health, and our rights to our land. Our welfare is directly affected by our ability to define our space. That’s one of the land surveyor’s most important jobs, to mark, describe, and map property ownership. His or her work creates a stable framework on which we can build our homes and communities, and generate the wealth necessary to sustain those communities. If we don’t know the location of the boundaries of our land we can’t enjoy any unique use of it. We could not buy, sell, mortgage or develop land in an orderly and predictable fashion. The land surveyor provides that knowledge.

Although the rules of land surveying may vary depending on whether you practice in the states of the original 13 colonies, or in the Public Land Survey System (everything else), There’s one fundamental principle that governs our work. In the words of Justice Cooley of the Michigan Supreme Court, “ No man loses title to his land or any part of it merely because the evidence of where it once was becomes uncertain.” The perpetuation of property rights and title is tied to the land.

Land surveyors use computers, precise measuring tools, and mapping systems to gather and analyze data (evidence) in the field. They then interpret that data to establish the most probable location for property corners. Their opinions are formed from knowledge of common law, rules of evidence, state and federal laws, and local standards of practice. In many ways it is much an art as it is science.

Another important part of the land surveyor’s professional activity involves understanding and “decrypting” the often-confusing language in legal descriptions. Just what did the author of the deed mean to convey? If you really want to get a land surveyor talking, ask him to describe how many different ways there are to go “North.” The list is probably similar to the number of words for snow in the Inuit language.

Despite the fact that there are a lot of flashy new tools available now to make expert measurers out of novices, we will never really know the true location of boundary lines if we don’t understand the value of what is being measured. That is the expertise of the land surveyor, and one of the reasons that you may see someone carrying a red and white pole (with something that looks like a Frisbee on top of it) peeking under the sod in your front yard.

Surveys

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