- The typical home seller has owned their home for nine years.
- The median tenure in home has progressively increased over the last several years from a low of 6 years in 2007.
- Sellers of detached single-family homes, which account for the largest share of homes sold, owned their home for a median of 10 years.
- Younger sellers tend to have the shortest tenure in the home – those aged 18 to 34 sold their home within six years, compared to those aged 65 to 74 who sold their home after a tenure of 14 years.
- Sellers with no children in the home had a tenure in home of 11 years versus 7 years for those sellers that had children under 18 years old in the home.
- For more on the 2011 NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, click here.
Daily Archives: April 10, 2012
What to do When Your Customer’s Tweet is Right and You are Wrong | Bedford NY Real Estate
How To Keep Your Blog From Undermining Your Brand | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate
Bedford Corners NY Real Estate | “Improving Markets” Improve Very Slowly
The list of housing markets showing measurable improvement expanded by just two for a total of 101 “improving” metropolitan areas in April after adding just one market in May.
Thirty-five states (including the District of Columbia) are now represented by at least one market on the National Association of Home Builders/First American Improving Markets Index (IMI). The index identifies metropolitan areas that have shown improvement from their respective troughs in housing permits, employment and house prices for at least six consecutive months.
The 101 markets on the April IMI represent a net gain of two from March, with 13 metros being added and 11 markets slipping from the list while 88 markets retained their places on it. Among the new entrants, areas as diverse as Rome, Ga.; Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; Greenville, N.C.; Brownsville, Texas; St. George, Utah; and Huntington, W.Va., are now represented on the IMI.
“While housing markets across the country continue to struggle under the weight of overly tight lending conditions and other challenges, the April IMI indicates that at least 101 individual metros are showing measurable and consistent signs that they are headed in the right direction,” said NAHB Chairman Barry Rutenberg. “A total of 35 states are now represented on the list, with 10 states having four or more entries. This positive news is in line with what our builder members have observed regarding firming conditions and improved buyer interest in certain locations.”
“After five consecutive months of gains, the IMI recently began to plateau, with many markets holding steady and a few experiencing the ups-and-downs that are typical in a choppy recovery,” observed NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “The IMI is designed to highlight markets that are showing consistent improvement, and those markets that have registered the smallest gains are more susceptible to dropping off the list due to a minor setback in prices, permits or employment,” he explained. At the same time, “as stronger markets approach stability, it will get harder for them to keep charting improvement, which will also limit the expansion of the IMI.”
The IMI is designed to track housing markets throughout the country that are showing signs of improving economic health. The index measures three sets of independent monthly data to get a mark on the top improving Metropolitan Statistical Areas. The three indicators that are analyzed are employment growth from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, house price appreciation from Freddie Mac, and single-family housing permit growth from the U.S. Census Bureau. NAHB uses the latest available data from these sources to generate a list of improving markets. A metropolitan area must see improvement in all three areas for at least six months following their respective troughs before being included on the improving markets list.
Mortgage Litigation Sets a Record | Chappaqua NY Real Estate
Some 244 lawsuits were tracked in Mortgage Daily’s fourth-quarter 2011 Mortgage Litigation Index the highest number since the index’s 2007 launch.
Foreclosure cases dominated quarterly mortgage litigation activity and show no sign of relenting. Case count jumped from 218 in the third quarter and 151 in the fourth-quarter 2010. Among categories to show the worst deterioration were criminal, servicing and mortgage fraud. But investor actions slowed.
“Unfortunately, the phenomena that led to the surge in litigation in the fourth quarter of 2011 have only intensified in 2012, suggesting that we are unlikely to see a significant decline in litigation in the near term,” Christopher Willis, a partner at Ballard Spahr LLP, who prepared an analysis of the data.
Criminal cases climbed to 57 from the third quarter’s 34; activity on litigation related to mortgage servicing grew to 70 cases from 51; and mortgage fraud cases, those typically involving insiders at mortgage firms or a foreclosure-rescue scheme, increased to 23 from just five during the previous quarter.
Meanwhile, cases related to fees leapt to 17 in the fourth quarter from the prior period’s two. Another category with a big increase was “title,” which expanded to 46 cases from 31.
Is Chicago the Next Atlanta? | Armonk NY Real Estate
Will Chicago be the next big city to witness its housing market implode, virtually without warning?
Friday the Treasury Department set off alarms in the Windy City when it spotlighted Chicago’s housing market in its monthly Housing Scorecard, describing its condition as “continued fragility.”
“Fragile” is not a word Chicagoans like to hear others use to describe their homes. Within hours of the release of the Treasury Scorecard the Chicago Tribune carried a report on it, noting that it “shines a national spotlight on Chicago and paints a somber picture of President Barack Obama’s hometown.”
In fact, Chicago has been encountering a rising tide foreclosures over the past year, and they’ve had their impact on prices. The greater Chicago market’s foreclosure count is up 43 percent over a year ago; one in every 302 housing units is a foreclosure, ranking it fourth in the nation, according to RealtyTrac. With an REO saturation level of 35.7 percent compared to 29 percent nationally and it ranks 13th among Clear Capital’s lowest performing markets, with a median 4.4 percent year-over-year price decline. Moreover, foreclosure processing in Illinois, a judicial state, takes an average of 575 days which means distressed mortgages in Chicago remain unresolved in the foreclosure pipeline 50 percent longer on average than in other cities, the Treasury report said.
While much of the nation’s foreclosure concern has been focused on the Sand States, Chicago has fallen victim to a stuttering economy and a high degree of negative equity. Nearly one in four residential properties in the Chicago six county region is underwater, with just under $25 billion of negative equity. The average underwater property has 31.8 percent more outstanding mortgage debt than the property is worth, according to the Woodcock Institute. In fact, Chicago’s housing market faces a full plate of challenges including a high percentage of distressed mortgages, high vacancy rates, a surge in suburban poverty, as well as severely underwater mortgages.
Atlanta was in virtually the same boat a year ago. Atlanta shocked many housing economists last year when suddenly the bottom fell out of prices in the wake of economic woes and a flood of foreclosures.
Beset by economic woes and a flood of foreclosures, the Atlanta housing market surprised residents and experts alike when the bottom fell out of prices last year. In mid-January, the New York Times, citing November 2011 data, called Atlanta “one of the biggest laggards in the economic recovery.” Atlanta topped all metros in the nation in foreclosures sales during the fourth quarter (6,458) and its foreclosure discount, a sign of instability, was fifth highest nationally, at 48.12 percent.
With a declining December unemployment rate of 9.4 percent, down from 10.2 percent twelve months earlier, Atlanta is moving in the right direction. Not only is the job market improving, inventories are shrinking dramatically. The combination of better demand and fewer properties suggests prices will continue in the black for the near future. Nearly 4,600 of Atlanta’s foreclosures are owned by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, ranking it number one in the nation in terms of GSE-owned foreclosures, far outnumbering those in Phoenix, Las Vegas and other major metro areas hit hard by the housing bust, according to a report last month from the Federal Reserve. Plans by the federal government to sell bulk quantities to investors to rent out may help reduce Atlanta’s foreclosure inventory.
Atlanta still has a ways to go though it’s moving in the right direction. Its foreclosure rate of one in every 244 homes in February ranks second worse, ahead of Chicago, but foreclosures are down 4.5 percent from where they were a year ago while Chicago’s are up 43 percent.



