Monthly Archives: June 2013

Jumbo rates come in lower than conforming rates | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Loans are usually categorized in three tiers: conforming loans to $417k, high-balance conforming loans from $417k to $625k and jumbo loans above $625k.

In addition, rates usually move up the three tiers by loan amounts.

According to a blog by Julian Hebron, jumbo rates are currently about .25% lower than high-balance conforming rates.

It could be a short term phenomenon that jumbo rates are the same or lower than conforming loans, but for now it’s good news for rate consumers with loans above $417,000.

 

Jumbo rates come in lower than conforming rates | HousingWire.

Short-term money and investors dominate real estate market | Chappaqua Real Estate

The trend in high institutional investor activity isn’t new, but it takes on added relevance as their share of purchases increases, having an “outsized impact on housing prices.” The institutional housing trade is a highly localized phenomenon, particularly relevant in some of the worst-hit markets—the same ones which are experiencing some of the most impressive gains in prices, writes Forbes.

 

Short-term money and investors dominate real estate market | HousingWire.

Rising rates bad news for builders | Armonk Real Estate

The most well known home builders are now trading at valuations that fully account for the recent rebound in the housing market. These stocks are vulnerable to a significant decline as mortgage rates pressure the industry. The Motley Fool recommends locking in any gains in the sector today, and selling these stocks before they sustain further declines.

 

Rising rates bad news for builders | HousingWire.

Boost Your Content: The Power of Quality Images | Cross River Realtor

A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words – and more!

Have you ever asked yourself “How do I get more people to read my content?” Of course you have. There may be things you can adjust or do differently to increase your readers’ interest and attention span to your website and your blog. But the reality of our busy, fast-paced, visual world is that people are just moving way too fast to see it. Something has to make people stop long enough to want to read your blog or to find out what you have to offer. You have to stop people in their tracks and gain their attention in 3 seconds or less. A thousand words can’t do that but one image often can.

Increase Sharing with Visual Content

No One is Reading to the End of Your Content, HubSpot

I am often surprised to find excellent content that fails to give me a usable image to pin on Pinterest or share on Facebook. And “B2B” (business-to-business) companies are not off the hook. If an article has great information but does not give me a usable image or graphic, I will be hesitant to share that article on LinkedIn. These bloggers and companies are missing an opportunity and failing to reach so many more people with their content.

The HubSpot blog is one of my favorite online resources for inbound marketing content. The information is tremendous. But I also have to admit that I just love to share their content because the images they use are so fun and compelling. It’s silly but I am willing to admit I have shared their articles on more than one occasion based solely on the great image they put with it. Now, that is safe to do with HubSpot because it is always great, relevant content for my network. However, on a very busy day even though I’m greatly interested in their content and trusting its consistent value, I may miss it if they don’t stop me in my tracks. Hint: cute dogs always stop me!

Make it easy to Share your Visual Content

Unlike the HubSpot blog, there is another site I visit regularly that often leaves me frustrated.  They have great content and they often feature great images on the home page, but then they don’t use an image on an article. A few times I actually saved the feature image from their home page and then created a pin myself in order to share a really great article. And, there were many more times I just clicked away and didn’t jump through hoops to share an article, even though it was share worthy. Don’t make your readers jump through hoops to share your content. Make it easy for them with images that support your content.

  • Use high quality images that are large enough to share at 400×400 pixels.
  • If possible, use square or portrait-styled images to avoid your image being cropped awkwardly or reduced to fit when it is shared. This has been a problem in the past, particularly on Facebook.
  • Give readers a Pinterest “Pin It” button. Pinterest share buttons provides readers a direct ability to hover over an image and just click the “Pin It” button. Using this widget on each image reminds and encourages people to share your great content on Pinterest! You can find this tool and similar options for your site inPinterest’s Tools for Business.

 

Boost Your Content: The Power of Quality Images | Find and Convert.

Silicon Valley Real Estate Update: The Craziest Market In The U.S. Just Got A Little Less Crazy | Mt Kisco Homes

Well what do you know! After writing on TechCrunch for the past year about how Silicon Valley’s Gatsbyesque wealth couldn’t find much real estate to buy, Bay Area inventory isup. Bidding wars are down. And rising rates are squeezing buyers who have to borrow money. Below is Redfin’s quarterly rundown of what’s happening in Silicon Valley real estate.

Bidding wars are less intense. Bidding wars are still common, with Redfin agents facing competition on 95 percent of all homes in May 2013, the highest of any of the 21 markets Redfin serves. For example, Redfin Silicon Valley agent Brad Le reports that this nice-enough $2 million Cupertino listing got 12 offers, and likely went under contract in June for well above $2.4 million. But fewer bidders are competing. Since Redfin publishes competitive dynamics for every offer our agents write, we measure the average number of competitors in a bidding war, which has declined from a peak of 16.3 in January to 7.8 in May. As agents, we know that demand is waning not because buyers no longer want a home but because they’ve despaired of ever being able to get one. About one in four of our Bay Area homebuyers have told us at some point in the last three months that they’re taking a break from their search out of sheer frustration.

Also-rans are left behind. The decrease in competition hasn’t changed the pricing of the most sought-after properties. But occasionally, close also-rans languish. Redfin Silicon Valley agent Mia Simon noticed that two nearly identical Mountain View homes, one slightly better looking, sold at the same time last week: The beauty queen sold for $200,000 over asking, drawing all the attention away from its neighbor, which got only one offer and sold for $150,000 less than comparable properties in the area.

Flash sales. The fact that homes are still selling very quickly may reflect a fundamental change in consumer behavior rather than simply a hot market; the median days on market for Bay Area homes that sold in May was 12 days; last year at this time it was 18. Mobile instant alerts triggered by the debut of new listings have been behind this trend, with 302 listings in May going under contract in less than 24 hours. Some of our buyers don’t even like to go into a Costco for too long if it will block the cell signal they need to get instant alerts. This has also put pressure on real estate websites to get inventory quickly. On average, brokerage sites like APR.com, ZephyrSF.com, and Redfin.com getnew listings days earlier than national portals; the reason is that the brokerage sites employ real estate agents with complete, direct access to the Bay Area’s four local Multiple Listing Services.

More homes for sale. Higher prices, and perhaps the fear that higher interest rates could dampen demand later, have at last drawn would-be sellers into the market. Bay Area inventory began the year down 59 percent from 2012, but has now improved to the point that it’s only 28 percent down from this time last year; by year-end we expect 2013 inventory to be up year-over-year for the first time since 2011. Redfin’s own Bay Area listing business has increased more than 100 percent over last year. In 2013, real estate’s spring may come in summer, and summer may come in fall. Sales volume will increase, and price increases may lose steam.

Bay_Area_Real_Estate_Inventory

More new construction coming in the East Bay and in San Francisco: Builders are often slow to respond to inventory crunches, in part because it takes time to finish projects, in part to drive profits from a run-up in demand. This is why we’ve seen line-ups, lotteries and camp-outs among buyers competing to get units as they’re released by builders. But four new projects are releasing units this summer in San Francisco, where the total number of homes has barely budged since World War II: 300 Ivy in Hayes Valley, One Rincon Hill Phase Two near the Bay Bridge, The Icon in the Mission, and Linea-built projects in the Mission like Nove.

More inside jobs: We hear more reports of pocket listings, where the listing agent sells the home to one of his own clients or to one of his partner’s clients, without offering the property to the broader market. The actual data suggests that this is common only for homes priced above $5 million. Few sellers at lower prices would ever bypass the larger market, which can draw in enough buyers to spark a bidding war. But there are other types of inside jobs. “Some Redfin clients are trying to get creative,” reports Landon Nash, Redfin San Francisco agent. “I just closed one deal with a client who asked his landlord to sell, and I have another two — which may or may not close — in the works.”

 

Silicon Valley Real Estate Update: The Craziest Market In The U.S. Just Got A Little Less Crazy | TechCrunch.

Inventory Levels Easing As Home Prices Rise, Negative Equity Retreats | North Salem Homes

For months the pool of available homes has dramatically dwindled as more buyers have jumped into the recovering housing market. Burgeoning demand for that shrinking supply has fueled home price increases across most of the U.S. and in the most sought-after areas, full-fledged bidding wars amid claims ofnascent housing shortages.

Now that inventory crunch is beginning to ease.  More owners are starting to list their homes for sale, according to Realtor.com. The San Jose, Calif,-based listing site, owned by Move MOVE -1.09% Inc., says listing inventory has surged 25% since the start of the year, outpacing seasonal increases associated with the Spring/Summer selling season. In May inventory levels grew by nearly 6%  from April, to about 1.85 million homes for sale.

“Overall, we’re seeing seller confidence beginning to respond to consumer demand,” said Steve Berkowitz, chief executive of Move, in the report. “Nationally, there are more homes going on the market for a shorter amount of time. And this is happening in our hot markets on a much larger scale.”

Confidence among prospective sellers is rising. A recent survey from Fannie Mae found that 40% of Americans believe now is a good time to sell. That’s up from 30% a month ago and 16% a year ago.

In markets that Realtor.com refers to as “previously hot” like Sacramento and Stockton, Calif., a wave of newly listed homes has begun replenishing inventory levels. Sacramento’s available inventory swelled 35% from a month earlier while Stockton’s surged 37%. Other areas welcoming more listings are Daytona Beach, Fla. and Washington, D.C., with inventory jumping nearly 22% and 13% respectively.

 

Inventory Levels Easing As Home Prices Rise, Negative Equity Retreats – Forbes.

New Mexico, Nebraska Realtor associations sign up with dotloop | South Salem Homes

Transaction management platform provider dotloop announced today it has signed up state Realtor associations in Nebraska and New Mexico to use its service, and brought on two new local associations — the Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches and the Toledo Board of Realtors.

In December, dotloop announced that the Delaware, Georgia, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont state Realtor associations had signed up to use its platform.

One of the key features of dotloop’s platform, the latest version of which was released last week, is the ability for all members of a transaction to fill out digitized forms from a secure location in the cloud. That capability becomes available to agents when the owner of the forms libraries licenses them to dotloop, as the above associations and about 40 others have done.

The ability to license forms, which allows users to fill them out in its software, is a key component of dotloop’s business.

In many markets where dotloop doesn’t license forms or partner with a Realtor association, users still fill out the forms digitally using the platform, said Gregg Larson, CEO of Clareity Consulting, who’s looked into the issue. It’s not clear whether dotloop is knowingly maintaining those users’ form libraries or not, but many have been found on the platform, Larson said.

In April, the California Association of Realtors, which is not a dotloop partner, sent dotloop a cease-and-desist letter telling the company to stop allowing users to fill out CAR forms in the platform.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/06/13/new-mexico-nebraska-realtor-associations-sign-up-with-dotloop/#sthash.PgyhCdbG.dpuf

 

New Mexico, Nebraska Realtor associations sign up with dotloop | Inman News.

Demand for architects recovers along with housing market | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Apparently feeding on a stream of new buyers, architects are reporting that business is better than it’s been in eight years, with demand for their services in designing move-up homes, custom or luxury homes, and starter homes sharply increasing in the first quarter of 2013, the American Institute of Architects’ first-quarter 2013 Home Design Trends Survey suggests.

The trade group’s Home Design Survey Index for last quarter registered a score of 67 out of 100 for billings and 75 out of 100 for inquiries for new projects. Any score above 50 reflects positive business conditions, AIA said.

“With business conditions at residential architecture firms at the strongest growth level since 2005, this is a very encouraging sign for the housing sector and broader economy in general, especially when you look at the year-over-year improvement in the marketplace,” said AIA Chief Economist Kermit Baker.

An index that captures demand for specific types of homes found that demand for architects in designing move-up homes improved from a score of -3 in 2012 to 32 in the first quarter of 2013. During the same period, demand for starter homes jumped from -7 to 21, and demand for custom and luxury homes increased from -2 to 16.

In addition, a majority of architecture firms reported that demand for kitchen and bath remodeling, additions, in-home accessibility, informal spaces and open-space layouts increased in the first quarter.

“We’ve seen over the past few years, an increased interest in seamlessly blending indoor and outdoor spaces and building in more informal spaces into homes,” Baker said. “Because lot sizes don’t show any signs of increasing, it’s clear that homeowners want to maximize their current square footage to its highest potential, as opposed to increasing it.”

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/06/14/demand-for-architects-recovers-along-with-housing-market/#sthash.mgGMNzNV.dpuf

 

Demand for architects recovers along with housing market | Inman News.

Rates fall on prospect of US intervention in Syria | Bedford Real Estate

In the last 24 hours long-term rates have pulled back from the brink of panic. The first leg down came as thinking replaced short-selling: The Fed does not want to abort the mini-maybe-recovery under way. The second leg came overnight with safety buying after the U.S. announced it will intervene in Syria.

Somebody today with perfect credit and 40 percent down might get a no-point mortgage below 4 percent, but the 10-year T-note still sits at 2.11 percent, halfway between max-panic 2.27 percent and the 1.95 percent when Fed Chair Ben Bernanke scared everyone to death on May 22.

This interest rate volatility has little to do with economic data. Maybe nothing.

May retail sales crept up 0.6 percent, and industrial production was flat after two-straight monthly declines. The NFIB survey of small business had one of its best readings during the Great Recession, but not a breakout. For the time being, assume that all confidence surveys are boosted by better housing markets, although those are still not remotely sufficient to pull the economy into a normal recovery.

A lot is going on under the surface of Bernanke’s “taper.”

A term common to Fed-watching prior to the Bernanke era — “jawbone” — had been lost in his faculty-club collegial cacophony.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/06/14/rates-fall-on-prospect-of-us-intervention-in-syria/#sthash.JfZEXG1W.dpuf

 

Rates fall on prospect of US intervention in Syria | Inman News.

Rustic Cottage on 20 Secluded Nantucket Acres Wants $3M | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Location: Nantucket, Mass.
Price: $2,999,000
The Skinny: On Nantucket’s sparsely populated southern shore—just down the beach from a bunker built for JFK during the Cold War—this 20-acre parcel seems even larger, thanks to the surrounding conservation land. Divided by a private road, the property enjoys 600-feet of oceanfront, but the existing house is set back from the beach, leaving a lot for possible development to the south. Conservationists would probably prefer that the buyer stick to the modest four-bedroom, but at these prices—the property is listed for nearly $3M—few would be surprised if a giant McMansion popped up on the oceanfront lot. In fact, it just happened next door. The sellers made such gargantuan oceanfront building possible by relocating the existing house from its waterfront perch in 2006.

 

Rustic Cottage on 20 Secluded Nantucket Acres Wants $3M – House of the Day – Curbed National.