Daily Archives: August 29, 2011

North Salem NY Real Estate | Top presale real estate inspection to-do’s | Inman News

Top presale real estate inspection to-do’s

REThink Real Estate

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Q: As a seller in this tough market, I asked our agent about doing our own inspection that we could present to the buyer. Our home is 60 years old; we know there are issues; have fixed what we can afford; and adjusted the price to reflect what we can’t afford to change. Our agent is completely against it.

Our contract with him is almost up, so should we go ahead and do this before we sign a new contract? We’re not trying to hide anything but think it would be a plus to be able to present a buyer with complete information from the beginning. –Kris H.

A: There are certainly widely varying opinions within the agent community on the issue of presale inspections, by the seller, to be disclosed in advance to prospective buyers. I, personally, am a big fan — here’s why:

If your home is old, as yours is, and there are things that are wrong with it, as with yours, buyers are likely to see or suspect these property ailments, so to speak, too. But buyers tend to walk into a property, see things that need fixing and do one of the following: (a) mentally overestimate what it will actually cost to fix the issues, (b) mentally underestimate what the repairs will cost, (c) decide that the place will just be too costly or take too much work to repair and/or (d) see the list price as a starting point for negotiations.

As a result, sellers like you tend to either get (a) lowball offers, (b) no offers or (c) get into contracts that the buyers later want to renegotiate.

When you provide a pest or even a general home inspection that lists out the issues the home has, you add a layer of reality on top of buyers’ sometimes irrational beliefs about what actually needs to be done, and, almost more important, what it will cost. You create a sense of order and eliminate any unreasonable overwhelm that buyers are just making up in their heads.

(To be fair, there are certainly buyers who might see the reports and decide based thereon that the work is too expensive and that your home is not for them, but it’s best to weed those folks out upfront — before you get into contract with them.)

Providing this information, coupled with some other items I’m going to recommend you include, also creates a sense of calm at your willingness to fully disclose the home’s issues, and can help manage buyer’s understanding of your pricing strategy.

If you do decide to provide some advance reports to your home’s prospective buyers, I’d suggest you make sure to include all of the following along with them:

1. Bids or estimates from licensed contractors. Inspection reports without repair estimates up the fright factor that repairs can cause. Most pest inspections will include a bid, but general property inspections most often do not. Get a licensed contractor (or several) to provide you with written estimates to do the work indicated in the advance reports you obtain.

This can be an especially useful strategy in cases where one inspector calls out a scary-sounding big fix or puts a big price tag on a repair, and you can find other reputable contractors who can do the work for much less.

Ideally, you’d make sure the contractors are going to be OK explaining the estimate to the buyers, if they decide to call up and inquire.

This strategy also enables your agent to market the list price as already reflecting a discount for the needed repairs, for the buyer who will take the property in as-is condition.

2. Recent, comparable sales data. If your list price truly is discounted, show the buyers this by pointing out all the other sales in the area of homes in superior condition, but otherwise similar to yours, that sold for more. This adds much credibility to your contention that the list price is already discounted.

3. A summary sheet with a receipt for the buyers to sign. You can eliminate some of the overwhelm of looking through a book of reports by providing a packet, covered with a sheet that provides bullet points of the more major items, the repair bids for fixing them, and a note about the list-price discount with a receipt for the buyers to sign and include with their offer.

4. A caveat that the reports are “for their information” and a recommendation that the buyers obtain their own inspections. You don’t want the buyers to think that you’ve rigged these inspections, or paid the vendor off to make them favorable to you. You also do not want to create any sort of warranty that these inspections have found every single item that could be wrong with the home.

Let them know that you are still advising them to obtain their own inspections, and will make your home available for that if the buyers and you enter a contract for the sale of your home.

Often, inspectors will extend their insurance or warranties to the side that did not order the inspection if they pay for the inspector to come back out and walk them through the property and their findings at a reduced rate from the full inspection rate.

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is author of “The Savvy Woman’s Homebuying Handbook” and “Trillion Dollar Women: Use Your Power to Make Buying and Remodeling Decisions.” Tara is also the Consumer Ambassador and Educator for real estate listings search site Trulia.com. Ask her a real estate question online or visit her website,

Mt Kisco NY Real Estate | Student housing ripe for investment | Inman News

Student housing ripe for investment

Private sector eyes profits as government budgets shrink

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About a decade ago, when looking for a real estate investment trust (REIT) to put into my stock portfolio, I chose American Campus Communities Inc., an Austin, Texas-based company that specialized in developing and managing student housing.

I enjoyed the REIT dividend and was pleased that the stock held its own through the heart of the recession when the rest of the market tumbled over a cliff like a long line of lemmings.

Otherwise, I really didn’t pay much attention to the student housing sector; then over the past year a couple of items caught my eye. First, toward the end of 2010, Campus Crest Communities Inc. of Charlotte, N.C., a student housing REIT unknown to me at the time, went public, generating net proceeds of $350.6 million.

Then I stumbled upon an interview with a REIT analyst, who, when asked by the interviewer about his favorite companies in the apartment sector, mentioned the two best-known student housing REITs: ACC and Education Realty Trust Inc. of Memphis, Tenn.

Since Campus Crest was new news to me, I decided to give the company a call to see what was up with student housing, which can be defined as off-campus, for-profit housing for college students, or cooperative developments with universities to create student housing on-campus. Others who are independently curious, like me, can also check them out online. There are ressources available at downingstudents.com/student-accommodation/cambridge/ among other great choices. So what is Campus Crest, what do they do, and how can it benefit me aswell?

First, a little background: Campus Crest was founded in 2004 by two Duke University business school buddies, Michael Hartnett and Ted Rollins. The latter serves as co-chairman and CEO, while Hartnett shares co-chairman responsibilities plus sits in as chief investment officer.

The company’s May recap of first-quarter business reported average occupancy had risen 100 basis points to 88.6 percent as compared to the same period a year ago, which seemed to be an average performance considering the bigger competition, ACC and Education Realty, were boasting average occupancy above 90 percent. A little better was same-store net operating income, up 5.1 percent as compared to first-quarter 2010.

The company suffered a bit of softness during the recession, which was surprising, as it appeared the sector was almost recession-proof.

Not recession-proof, Rollins corrected me, “recession-resistant.”

Retail, industrial, office, lodging and even the apartment property sectors experienced, as Rollins said, “a material shift in occupants,” which was a technocrat’s way of saying everybody escaped town leaving nothing behind but empty space. That didn’t happen to student housing. However, due to one or both parents either losing a job or just the fear of unemployment, student decisions on housing were delayed. Secondly, rental rates flat-lined.

Heading out of the recession, as the economy recovers, “We are now seeing less price sensitivity,” Rollins said. “We see a little uptick — after all, education is a fundamental expense for mom and dad.”

Except for the apartment sector, owners of hotels, industrial buildings, offices and shopping centers still have to worry about whether the trend lines going forward will be beneficial to their sectors and empty space worries will finally dissipate.

Here’s where student housing goes its own rebellious and separate way from its brethren in the property sector. The tea leaves portend munificence.

Demographically speaking, the children of the baby boomers (echo boomers) are reaching the peak of their college attendance years; a higher percentage of high school attendees are graduating; a higher percentage of graduates are electing to attend college full time; and the average time period that young adults attend college has been stretching from four years to five years and beyond.

“We have this demographic wave of echo boomers that is almost the size of baby boomers,” said Paula Poskon, “a REIT analyst with Robert W. Baird & Co. Inc. “Projected college enrollment is predicted to be quite strong for probably the next decade.”

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, college student enrollment will continue to increase through 2019.

All of this means universities have to prepare for more students and how to house them. Unfortunately, many schools are already working from a position of weakness, and with state and city budget crises, the situation won’t get any better.

“Universities are ill-equipped to meet this growing demand because they have housing inventory that is old and obsolete, and they don’t have the money, expertise or desire to build new housing,” said Haendel St. Juste, a REIT analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.

“In addition, the large state schools are dealing with budget caps. When you talk about funding to build new housing, this is not at the top of the priority list.”

This is where the private sector comes in.

“The student housing REITs have the development capability, but more importantly they have access to capital via the public market. And also, because they are large, established organizations they have access to construction financing to meet this need for housing,” St. Juste said.

While new construction elsewhere remains dismal, Rollins said his company is completing six projects this summer and will be kicking off another six to eight developments in the autumn.

“Student housing remains a highly fragmented industry,” Poskon said. “There are three publicly traded REITs, but there are a whole slew of local and regional players, some of which are sizable” — which can be a problem because it is relatively easy to overbuild small college markets.

Student housing revenues are less affected by economic forces such as job growth, changing interest rates, the spread between cost to own vs. rent, and the strength or weakness of the homebuying market, Poskon said. “Most people think about student housing as a tangent to multifamily, but the drivers are different: enrollment for student housing, and job growth for multifamily.”

And, oh, by the way, none of this should hurt the small-time real estate investor who buys a house or two near a campus for student rentals. The evolution of students’ housing needs hasn’t changed since the 1950s: freshman live in dorms; sophomores and juniors stay in dorms or move to apartments; seniors and grad students find a rental house.

There’s no new learning curve for this business.

Steve Bergsman is a freelance writer in Arizona and author of several books. His latest book, “Growing Up Levittown: In a Time of Conformity, Controversy and Cultural Crisis,” is now available for sale on Amazon.com.

Katonah NY Real Estate | Zillow estimates 4.3% decline in home prices

Friday, August 26th, 2011, 11:51 am

Standard & Poor's is likely to report a 4.3% decline in June home prices year-over-year and a 1.2% increase from the previous month when it releases its June Case-Shiller Home Price Indices study next Tuesday, Zillow said Friday.

Zillow, an online real estate marketplace, released its forecast of the S&P Case-Shiller results on Friday, saying the S&P 10-City Composite Home Price Index for June could drop as much as 3.5% year-over-year while still increasing 1.2% from May.

Zillow's second-quarter home price report was released earlier this month, showing a 6.2% drop in 2Q from a year earlier and a slight 0.4% gain from the first quarter.

Declining home prices remain a consistent drag on the nation's overall economy, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Friday. In a much-anticipated report from Jackson, Wyo., Bernanke noted volatile home prices are disrupting consumer spending.

"For example, the sharp declines in house prices in some areas have left many homeowners underwater on their mortgages, creating financial hardship for households and, through their effects on rates of mortgage delinquency and default, stress for financial institutions as well," Bernanke said in his speech to the nation. "Financial pressures on financial institutions and households have contributed, in turn, to greater caution in the extension of credit and to slower growth in consumer spending."

The S&P Case-Shiller report will be released Tuesday morning.

Write to: Kerri Panchuk.