Monthly Archives: January 2013

Link Between Credit and Mortgages: Not What You Think | Bedford Real Estate

Yet some of the results are not exactly what one might expect. Mississippi, with a household income in the low $40,000s, has a higher median credit score on Mortgage Marvel’s list than the national average of 684.

Rick Allen, COO of Mortgage Marvel, cautions that there’s a story underlying the data that might not be obvious to the naked eye.

“There’s a little bit of self-selection going on here,” said Allen. “The people with not-as-good scores don’t apply, because they think without stellar credit they won’t qualify.”

Indeed, while income is a good indicator of where credit scores will end up, the price of real-estate seems to determine who applies, and how good their credit is.

This is especially true of places at the upper end of Mortgage Marvel’s list. While Maryland regularly ranks as the top state for personal income, the state doesn’t make the top ten in the best credit scores for mortgage applicants. That is because Maryland ranks out of the top third for states with the highest average listing price, according to Trulia.com.

California and Hawaii are both ranked among the top four states for average home price.

(Read more: Renting Beats Owning, But Both Take a Bigger Slice)

Those applicants with scores in the mid-700s, said Allen, “are people who can afford a $500,000 home.”

At the bottom of list, income is more of a determinant. In the middle, each one seems to have its story to tell.

South Dakota, number 36 on Trulia’s list for average listing price, ranks at 24 for average credit score. The result, as Allen pointed out, is due to incomes inflated by the upper Midwest energy boom.

The Morning Ledger: Housing Lifts Corporate Results | Pound Ridge Real Estate

WOW SOME SIGNS OF GROWTH IN HOUSING BUT MAINLY IN MULTIPLES NOT MUCH IN SINGLES. WHY?BERNANKES EASY MONEY FOR INVESTORS BUT TIGHT FOR JOE VOTER AS LABOUR MUST MOVE TO GET THEIR SHARE OF THE RECORD PROFITS TO OUTPUT ECONOMIC PIE WITH 10000 BABYBOOMERS TURNING 65 DAILY WITH A 1% RETIREMENT SAVING ACCOUNT WITH SILVER SPOON PROGRAMS WITH A MILLION $ DEFICIT ADDED ONTO A 16.4 TRILLION $ FED .DEBT WE SHOULD ALL BE HAPPY THAT THE CART CONTINUES TO GET FED AND NOT THE HORSE. HOW CAN WE INCREASE EMPLOYMENT WHEN W EFOCUS ON FOREIGN MARKETS INSTEAD OF FEEDING OUR OWN HOUSE FIRST AS WE DO NOT USE TARIFFS BUT DEVALUE OUR CURRENCY TO GROW IN THE GLOBALMARKET.

Local foreclosure activity dropped in December | Chappaqua Real Estate

 

 

There were 265 foreclosure deeds recorded in Massachusetts during December, a 65 percent decrease from the number recorded in the same month a year ago, the Warren Group said Monday.

Foreclosure deeds represent completed foreclosures. The first step in the foreclosure process is a foreclosure petition.

In December, 835 foreclosure petitions were started in Massachusetts, down 17 percent on a year-to-year basis, said the Warren Group, a Boston firm that tracks real estate activity.

For all of 2012, the number of completed foreclosures in Massachusetts dropped by nearly 13 percent to 7,424, the Warren Group said in a press release.

Timothy M. Warren Jr. Photo taken from the Warren Group’s website.

But the number of foreclosure petitions started in the Bay State increased by more than 35 percent to 17,152. In 2011, there was a big drop in petitions as lenders slowed the process as their procedures came under scrutiny.

“Foreclosure activity nationwide is declining, and Massachusetts is following the same path,” Warren Group chief executive Timothy M. Warren Jr. said in a statement. “Deeds were down for the year, petitions declined for the past two months, and I think that will continue.”

Timothy Warren added: “Foreclosures have been trending down for several years now. A robust real estate market will ensure that this trend continues in 2013.”

 

Pending Sales of Existing Homes in U.S. Decreased 4.3% | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Pending U.S. home sales declined in December for the first time since August, showing uneven progress in the housing market.

The index of contracts for the purchase of previously owned homes fell 4.3 percent to 101.7 after a revised 1.6 percent increase, the National Association of Realtors reported today in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey projected no change in the gauge. Compared with a year earlier, pending sales before seasonal adjustment climbed 4.9 percent.

 

Pending Sales of Existing U.S. Homes Decreased 4.3% in December

Pending Sales of Existing U.S. Homes Decreased 4.3% in December

Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg

Cheaper borrowing costs, improved property values and job gains may combine to drive further gains in housing demand, a source of strength for the expansion.

Cheaper borrowing costs, improved property values and job gains may combine to drive further gains in housing demand, a source of strength for the expansion. 


 

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) — Susan Wachter, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, and Keith Jurow, author of a report on the U.S. housing market for Minyanville, discuss the outlook for the housing market. They speak with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Cheaper borrowing costs, improved property values and job gains may combine to drive further gains in housing demand, a source of strength for the expansion. The Realtors group said fewer homes in inventory are holding back sales after the best year for the industry since 2007.

“Our expectation is that the U.S. housing market will deliver more of the same in 2013 — increased start activity, modest home price appreciation, and continued cleansing of the stock of shadow inventory,” Michael Gapen, a New York-based senior economist at Barclays Plc, said in a research note before the report.

Estimates in the Bloomberg survey of 37 economists ranged from a 5 percent drop to a 5 percent gain after a previously reported 1.7 percent increase.

Another report today showed orders for durable goods rose more than forecast in December, reflecting gains in demand for aircraft, communications equipment and electronics. The 4.6 percent surge last month followed a 0.7 percent gain, according to the Commerce Department in Washington. The median projection in the Bloomberg survey called for a 2 percent advance.

By Region

Three of four regions showed a drop in pending home sales last month, including an 8.2 percent decrease in the West and a 5.4 percent drop in the Northeast. Sales contracts advanced 0.9 percent in the Midwest.

Pending sales are considered a leading indicator because they track purchase contracts in advance of actual transactions, which are tabulated a month or two later. Existing or previously owned homes account for more than 90 percent of the housing market.

Sales of U.S. existing homes unexpectedly dropped in December, restrained by the lowest supply of properties in more than a decade, the Realtors group reported last week. Purchases fell 1 percent to a 4.94 million annual rate last month.

“The supply limitation appears to be the main factor holding back contract signings in the past month,” Lawrence Yun, the Realtors group’s chief economist, said in a statement. Still, “buyer interest remains solid.”

New Homes

New-home sales, logged when contracts are signed, declined 7.3 percent in December to a 369,000 annual pace, following a revised 398,000 rate the previous month that was higher than previously estimated and the strongest since April 2010, the Commerce Department reported last week.

For all of 2012, 5.02 million new and previously owned homes were sold, the most since 5.03 million in 2007.

Borrowing costs have remained affordable for those who qualify for financing. The average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage was 3.42 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac. A reading of 3.31 percent in November was the lowest in data going back to 1972.

Low interest rates are driving activity for lenders such as Atlanta-based SunTrust Banks Inc. (STI), which saw gains in 2012 bolstered by refinancing applications.

Sales Improving

“We do expect a current favorable mortgage market to remain, certainly for the near-term,” Chief Executive Officer William Rogers said on a Jan. 18 earnings call. “There are a lot more clients that can benefit from refinancing, the purchase market is improving and so is the overall housing market.”

Rising home prices also have helped heal the real-estate market that triggered the last recession. The S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values in 20 cities increased 4.3 percent in the year to October, the biggest 12-month advance since May 2010, according to data released Dec. 26. The group will report November figures tomorrow.

 

 

Dr. Lawrence Yun on Real Estate: Speed Up Foreclosures? | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Speed Up ForeclosuresAt the Washington Realtors’ legislative hill day this year we had an opportunity to hear from the National Association of Realtors’ chief economist, Dr. Lawrence Yun.  Dr. Yun spoke about the improving real estate market in Washington state and his optimistic outlook for our state’s housing prices to continue rising at a rate faster than the nation as a whole.

At the same time, he was concerned with the persistence of high levels of “shadow inventory” in Washington, even while those levels have been shrinking significantly across the nation as a whole.  Dr. Yun surmised that the legal system in Washington was one that provided more obstructions to the foreclosure process, and that was creating a huge backlog of foreclosures that should have already been back on the market.  The striking lack of inventory in our current market is holding back a large crop of eager buyers and stifling home sales in general.

The essence of Dr. Yun’s point was that we should speed up foreclosures.  On its face, that’s not an argument you’re likely to hear from real estate professionals.  Our organizations are constantly working for property owners’ protections and rights, and fighting fraudulent or predatory practices that force homeowners out of their homes.

This issue, however, is more complex than simply pitting banks against homeowners.  When we really examine the broken foreclosure process in our state, and nationally, we have to make clear distinctions between the protections that distressed homeowners already have in place, and the unacceptable extensions of the actual foreclosure timelines taking place in the market.

There are an increasing number of homeowners who have realized that, even though their home is underwater and they have no intention of keeping it long-term, they can live in the home without making a payments for years on end.  As long as the lender is inhibited from closing the actual foreclosure sale, the number of people living in homes for two and even three years, rent free, continues to build.  The homes are a drag on the community, as these long-term foreclosures deflate nearby housing prices, instead of being resold and fixed up by the new homeowners.  The homeowners can’t just abandon the property, because it is still legally in their name (see Zombie Titles).

The effort to shorten the timelines on these foreclosures would make no changes to the protections already built into the process for the truly distressed homeowner.  There are already a number of steps for that person to repay their debt, work out an adjusted payment schedule, or find another means to save their home.   These people usually have at least a year from the time they stop making payments until the foreclosure sale goes through, and those protections can and will continue to exist for them.

For those homeowners who have already been through the normal foreclosure process and are one, two, or even three years behind on payments, the process needs to be expedited.  These folks have accepted that the home will be foreclosed upon, and the only question is when.  It will be better for the neighborhood and, frankly, better for these former homeowners to move on with their lives and begin to rebuild their credit.  This artificial backlog of foreclosure inventory has an eager market of buyers ready to move in, and our communities could benefit from a healthy gain in home sales as we continue to recover.

So, should we speed up foreclosures?  If the current legal protections are preserved, but the unnecessary multi-year extensions can be avoided, then the answer is “Yes.”  Sometimes, facing up to reality and moving forward is the only way to begin correcting the difficult times we’ve been through.

 

 

 

Town of North Castle cancels activities | Armonk Homes

Due to the snow and ice forecast, Byram Hills Schools are having early dismissal.  All afternoon and evening activities of the Byram Hills Schools are cancelled.

 

Therefore, all afternoon and evening activities of North Castle Recreation which are held in Armonk are cancelled.  Additionally, Open Studio for adults and Jump Start Kinder Prep for pre-school children are cancelled today.  Programs will be made up, by adding an additional class to the end of the session. 

 

The drop in for seniors will be held at Hergenhan Recreation Center but may be forced to end early due to the weather.  There will be limited bus service.

  

No determination has yet been made for Kidz Club or any other programs at the North Castle Community Center in North White Plains.  Please call us if you have any questions, 273-3325.
To Reach Us

  

If the North Castle Recreation staff can be of any assistance to you, please call us at 273-3325 or visit us at Hergenhan Recreation Center. In general, Recreation Office hours are weekdays 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM. We can also be reached by e-mail at  recreation@NorthCastleNY.com. 

  

Best Regards

Susan Snyder,  Superintendent 

U.S. home prices crawl upward | Chappaqua Realtor

U.S. home prices continued to inch their way up, showing a 0.5% increase from October to November, according to the latest Lender Processing Services home price index.

Home prices grew 5.1% year-over-year, based on LPS’s analysis of homes in 15,500 ZIP codes.

The LPS HPI is a study of non-distressed home sales and discounts the influence of REO sales and short-sale transactions.

The average price for a home sold in the U.S. in November reached $207,000, dropping from a peak of $266,000 in June 2006, but up from $197,000 in November 2011.

The states that saw the greatest price appreciation in the report were Florida (prices up 1.5%); New York (prices up 1.1%); Washington D.C. (prices up 1.0%); and Georgia, Minnesota and Nevada (all up 0.9%).

Conversely, Rhode Island and Massachusetts both saw negative monthly movement, dipping 0.1% and 0.2%, respectively.

Individual metros that saw strong price gains included Chicago (prices up 0.7%), Dallas (prices up 0.3%), Los Angeles (prices up 0.8%), New York (prices up 1.0%) and Washington (prices up 0.5%).

Click on the table below to see the recent HPI changes.

 

 


Jonathon Weiner, vice president of research & development at LPS Applied Analytics believes the upward trajectory of home prices will continue throughout the year.

“Given the duration and strength of the recent upturn, and the absence of any obvious short term cause, it is probably related to a fundamental demand for housing,” said Weiner. “While there are any number of external events which could yet impact home prices, barring any unseen developments, we expect this trend to continue through 2013.”

 

 

Twitter Blog: Vine: A new way to share video | Armonk Realtor

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Today, we’re introducing Vine: a mobile service that lets you capture and share short looping videos. Like Tweets, the brevity of videos on Vine (6 seconds or less) inspires creativity. Now that you can easily capture motion and sound, we look forward to seeing what you create.

You can read more about the app on the Vine blog. Vine is currently available on the iPhone and iPod touch. You can download it for free from the App Store. We’re working now to bring it to other platforms, so stay tuned for that.

Rather than tell you more about the app, we thought we’d just show you some of our favorite videos:

Posted by Michael Sippey (@sippey)
VP of Product

Posted by @twitter at 8:10 AM