Monthly Archives: June 2013

Heavy Rains, Flood Watch Continue In Mt. Kisco | Mt. Kisco Real Estate

 

WESTCHESTER, N.Y. – Westchester remains under a flood watch Thursday while storms continue to dump up to four inches of rain and bring strong winds to the area, according to the National Weather Service.

Thunderstorms with heavy rains and strong winds are expected late Thursday night into Friday morning.  The National Weather Service warns that saturated grounds from recent large amounts of rainfall could make trees and power lines susceptible to falling.

The flood watch began 8 a.m. on Thursday and will continue until 8 a.m. on Saturday.

The storm is caused by a low pressure system, which is expected to intensify as it approaches from Ohio and pass south and east of Long Island by Thursday night through Friday morning.  The low pressure system is forecasted to move out to sea by Friday evening.

Heavy Rains, Flood Watch Continue In Mt. Kisco | The Mt. Kisco Daily Voice.

How to build a better real estate website | Waccabuc Realtor

In a perfect world, building a real estate website would be a seamless experience: fast, easy and cheap. You would just push a button and customers would start lining up at your door.

If it were only that simple.

Really beautiful and profitable real estate websites are hard to come by. If you want some examples, take a look at a recent post on the Top 25 Beautiful Websites in Real Estate. Sadly, many of those sites are ones that we’ve already seen.

Building a website in this industry has been more like participating in an episode of “Fear Factor.” If you’re not careful, your site can become a financial drain and set your online marketing up for imminent failure. But crafty real estate professionals are starting to learn from the rest of the startup world, using clever ways and new technology to spin up and market their websites without breaking the bank. They’re taking advantage of low-cost and free tools combined with creative marketing strategies to dominate online.

Take a look at the infographic below and see where you can step up your website game. Let me know what’s working for you in the comments below.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/next/how-to-build-a-better-real-estate-website-infographic/#sthash.wC7Sdq5D.dpuf

 

How to build a better real estate website [infographic] | Inman News.

How to Achieve Fun, Fame and Fortune Blogging | Cross River Realtor

I don’t know about you but sometimes this blogging gig can be a chore.

Long lonely hours of writing and editing, coming up with the inspiration for the headlines and sitting down to do the work while your friends are out partying. Just getting started is a challenge. What do you want to blog about? Will it work? How do I set up this WordPress technology thing.

Writers block lurks every day. It doesn’t just afflict the beginner but the best. These are some of the challenges that confront us all.

So why should you start and why persist?

Why you should start

When starting, the reasons why are sometimes nothing more than a curiosity driven by a passion for the topic. Sometimes it is the intersection and synergy of multiple motivations. Maybe leave a legacy and learn along the way.

Here are some of the reasons for blogging that I hadn’t really considered when I published for the first time.

Your brand awareness will grow

Open doors to global opportunities

Create business networking opportunities

Position you and your brand as a thought leader and expert

Website will rank higher in search engines

Learn a lot about your business and yourself

Build an online asset that doesn’t sleep

Grow as an individual and as a business

Provide lifestyle freedom

Gain access to free crowd sourced marketing

I am sure there are more but there is something for everyone. Done right it does contain fun, a possible 15 minutes of fame and more and the promise of fortune.

Achieve one of those…then it is worthwhile.

Who has the money?

In looking around it starts to become apparent that there are many ways to make money from new media (blogging). It is not a singular approach but a matrix of multiple opportunities and tactics.

Blogging has evolved rapidly because of the social web and in the past was driven by building email lists which took a lot of time. With the advent of social media their marketing and growth have been supercharged.

Global reach and influence at the speed of a tweet, a Facebook share or a viral video.

To make money from a blog in 2013 you do not have to be a Huffington Post. There are many ways to make a living out of blogging that can enhance your current business and lifestyle that are within everyone’s reach.

Here are 11 different business models in this Slideshare presentation with case studies.

 

Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/06/14/how-to-achieve-fun-fame-and-fortune-blogging/#1FIKyx5R19yMQIzW.99

 

 

How to Achieve Fun, Fame and Fortune Blogging | Jeffbullas’s Blog.

In a hot real-estate market, buyers make their pitches personal | Bedford Hills Real Estate

With painfully few homes on the market and the “sweet” Medford Colonial the perfect place to raise the baby they are expecting, Elizabeth Deutsch and Brian Rosen were determined to vanquish the competing bidders. Not only did they offer $11,000 above the asking price, but they wrote the couple who owned the home a personal note. “Dear Caleb and Autumn,” it began.

 

Small problem: Lisa, not Autumn, is the name of Caleb’s wife. Autumn is their dog, a boxer-terrier mix : beloved, but not a decision-maker in real estate matters.

 

“They got the place anyway,” said their broker, Ed Greable of Keller Williams Realty. “The owners got a laugh out of it.”

 

You would be cheerful, too, if you were a seller in spring 2013. And if you were a buyer, you might also be writing nice notes to sellers.

 

 

With inventory down and prices rising, buyers are exhibiting the kind of frenzied behavior not seen since 2005. It is not enough that they are mobbing open houses, bidding thousands of dollars over asking price, and making all-cash offers. They are going so far as to Google owners and craft pitches in which they pretend to enjoy the same things the sellers do. Family photos are not uncommon.

 

“The garage would be a great place to store my kayak,” one aspiring buyer, a nonkayaker, wrote to a kayaking owner. Some would-be buyers linger at open houses to eavesdrop on the competition. Greable said one client regularly called him from packed open houses. “The vultures are here,” she would whisper.

 

In a hot real-estate market, buyers make their pitches personal – Lifestyle – The Boston Globe.

Housing Prices Are Up, Up, Up in Southern California | Bedford Real Estate

Housing prices nationwide are up, but in most areas we haven’t seen scary kinds of increases. It’s a different story here in Southern California, though, where home prices have risen 25 percent in the past year:

“We’re deep into uncharted territory,” DataQuick President John Walsh said, citing “razor-thin” inventory, pent-up demand, low interest rates and all-cash purchases by investors and wealthy individuals. “How this all plays out is educated guesswork at this point.”

….Extremely low inventory and mortgage rates have ignited those bidding wars and helped turn the housing market into an economic bright spot — both in the Southland and nationwide. Investors have also played a major role in the recovery that began last year, buying run-down, lower-cost properties to fix up and rent out.

Is this a bellwether for the future—and for the rest of the country? Maybe not. Richard Green, director of USC’s Lusk Center for Real Estate, thinks prices will ease later in the year for a simple reason: “Ultimately, people don’t have the income,” he says. That’s cheery news, isn’t it?

 

Housing Prices Are Up, Up, Up in Southern California | Mother Jones.

New Home Prices Say What’s Different This Time | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Although no two business cycles are alike, most share some common characteristics. The interest-rate-sensitive sectors of the economy — housing and manufacturing — tend to lead on the way up and the way down, for obvious reasons. Inflation ebbs during the recession and in the early stages of the recovery. Credit creation drives the upswing.

The recovery from the 2007-2009 financial crisis has been different all around, just as Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff predicted in their 2009 book, “This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly.” It has been a “protracted affair,” featuring extended declines in asset markets, large contractions in output and employment, and an explosion of government debt: three characteristics common to the aftermath of financial crises.

Yet even in the context of the typical post-financial-crisis recovery described by Reinhart and Rogoff, this one has some peculiarities of its own.

Let’s start with housing, whose rise and fall and associated debt were the proximate cause of the crisis. Residential real estate pretty much sat out the first 2 1/2 years of the recovery before getting traction in 2012, with a lot of outside help. The Federal Reserve drove down rock-bottom mortgage rates even more with its purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, a program that continues to this day.

Prices Beckon

The traditional leader was a laggard this time, and improvement has been slow in coming — at least when it comes to construction and sales. Prices of new homes are a different story.

The median sales price of a new single-family home set a record of $271,600 in April, eclipsing the 2007 peak of $262,600. Some of that reflects an increase in median square footage: 2,390 square feet last year compared with 2,235 square feet in 2007, according to annual data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

“They’re clearly not building for first-time buyers,” said Michael Carliner, an economic consultant specializing in housing.

Another part owes to a greater number of sales of higher-priced homes in more desirable areas of the country. The rest is clearly a response to demand for limited supply: Inventories are near record lows while single-family starts are about two-thirds lower than their 2006 peak. Prices of existing homes, on the other hand, are still being constrained by foreclosure and short sales, in which the house sells for less than the amount owed the lender.

 

New Home Prices Say What’s Different This Time – Bloomberg.

High demand, low supply driving up housing prices in Boston | Bedford Corners Homes

The current housing market south of Boston is hot, with large numbers of buyers driving up prices as they compete for limited numbers of homes, realtors and others say.

“There’s unbelievable pent-up demand,” said Melvin A. Vieira Jr. of RE/MAX Landmark Realtors in Milton. “Everybody is out there. It’s a frenzy because there’s not enough inventory.”

“Properties are selling for full price or above,” said Steve Webster, owner of Success Real Estate in Braintree, which has eight other offices in Southeastern Massachusetts. “We’re getting multiple offers. It’s absolutely insane.”

For example, Webster said a client recently offered $40,000 above the $450,000 asking price for a home in Dedham — and was outbid. The house, he said, was “an average house — nice, but average.”

“It can be discouraging,” he said. “The best advice I can give people is be organized and be ready to make a decision — and bring your checkbook with you.”

In Cohasset, a house on desirable lower Sohier Street came on the market at 8 a.m. on a recent Friday and “we had an offer on it at 10 a.m. for $50,000 over” the asking price of $1.225 million, said Nancy Hamilton of Dean and Hamilton Realtors. The cash sale closed in 30 days, she said.

High demand, low supply driving up housing prices in south suburbs – South – The Boston Globe.

Foreclosures Jump as Banks Bet on Rising U.S. Home Prices | Armonk Real Estate

Home repossessions in the U.S. jumped 11 percent in May after declining for the previous five months as rising prices and limited inventory for sale across the country spurred banks to complete foreclosures.

Lenders took back 38,946 homes, up from 34,997 in April, according to Irvine, California-based data firm RealtyTrac, which tracks notices of default, auction and seizures. Thirty-three states had increases in the number of homes repossessed, RealtyTrac said in a report today.

Banks are more willing to move to the final stage of foreclosure because there is sufficient demand and prices are improving, said Eric Workman of Tinley Park, Illinois-based Mack Cos., which aggregates single-family rental homes and resells them to individuals and institutional investors. U.S. home prices advanced almost 11 percent in the year through March, the biggest 12-month gain since April 2006, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of values in 20 cities.

“For a very long period of time, the market in general and specifically banks were unsure of what these assets were valued at,” Workman, vice president of sales and marketing at Mack, said in a telephone interview. “With increasing stability of the economy and housing prices throughout the U.S., these banks and sellers are getting much more comfortable with the value of their properties.”

Private-equity firms, hedge funds and individuals are all buying foreclosed or distressed homes to turn into rental properties as prices remain 28 percent below their 2006 peak. Companies including Blackstone Group LP (BX), which has invested more than $5 billion to buy almost 30,000 homes, and Colony American Homes Inc., which owns more than 12,000 properties, are helping to increase prices in areas hit hard by the real estate crash by draining the market of inventory as low mortgage rates and improving employment fuel demand from buyers.

High Demand

“There are plenty of companies out there that will buy assets throughout the range of condition because the demand for finished quality inventory is so high,” Workman said.

Metropolitan areas that experienced the brunt of the housing bust and the most foreclosures have experienced some of the biggest rebounds. Median home prices in Phoenix soared 21 percent in May from a year earlier to $175,236, followed by Tampa, Florida, which was up 20 percent to $118,000; Riverside-San Bernardino, California, up 18 percent to $220,000; and Miami, up 16 percent to $160,000, according to RealtyTrac.

 

Foreclosures Jump as Banks Bet on Rising U.S. Home Prices – Bloomberg.

Chappaqua’s Bill Clinton To Receive ‘Father Of the Year’ Award | Chappaqua Homes

As Sunday’s Father’s day approaches, Chappaqua resident and former President Bill Clinton will be honored with “Father of the Year” by the National Father’s Day Council at its 72nd Annual Father of the Year Awards Tuesday afternoon in New York City in a luncheon at the Grand Hyatt Hotel.

Macy’s CEO Terry J. Lundgren will also be honored. Both were deemed with the honor back in January.

“We are extremely honored to have President Clinton accept this award for Father of the Year,” said Dan Orwig, chairman of the National Father’s Day Committee.

“With the profound generosity, leadership and tireless dedication to both his public office and many philanthropic organizations, President Clinton exemplifies the attributes that we celebrate through this award.”

Clinton, whose only child, Chelsea, is now 32 years old and married, was elected President in 1992 and served two terms. His wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, the nation’s former secretary of state. The former president focuses on his William J. Clinton Foundation, which seeks to improve global health, strengthen economies, promote healthier childhoods and protect the environment.

About the National Father’s Day Council: As part of its commitment to support meaningful philanthropies dealing with issues affecting mothers, fathers and children, the National Father’s Day/Mother’s Day Council, Inc., has donated more than $30 million to date to meaningful charities nationwide.

 

Chappaqua’s Bill Clinton To Receive ‘Father Of the Year’ Award Tuesday | The Armonk Daily Voice.

Many Mt. Kisco Village Tax Bills Have Been Lost In the Mail | Mt. Kisco Homes

MT. KISCO, N.Y. — The following is an advisory from Mt. Kisco regarding your tax bill.

ALL 2013 VILLAGE TAX BILLS THAT WERE MAILED OUT ON MAY 31, 2013 HAVE BEEN LOST BY THE WHITE PLAINS REGIONAL PROCESSING CENTER OF THE UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE. WE ARE IN THE PROCESS OF SENDING OUT A DUPLICATE BILLING TO ALL PROPERTY OWNERS BY TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013.

HOWEVER, NYS REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW WILL NOT ALLOW ME OR ANY OTHER VILLAGE OFFICIAL TO WAIVE ANY PENALTY. ALL VILLAGE TAX BILLS ARE STILL DUE BY JULY 1, 2013, WITHOUT PENALTY.

PLEASE KNOW, AS ALWAYS, YOU ARE WELCOME TO PAY YOUR BILL IN PERSON AND WILL RECEIVE A COPY OF YOUR TAX BILL AT THAT TIME IF THAT IS MORE CONVENIENT FOR YOU.

WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS HAS CAUSED YOU. PLEASE BE ASSURED THAT THE VILLAGE HAS COMMENCED AN INVESIGATION WITH THE POSTAL SERVICE AND HAVE ALREADY BEEN ASSURED THAT ANY AND ALL ADDITIONAL COSTS WILL BE PAID FOR BY THE U.S. POSTAL SERVICE.

Joann F. Cerretani
Receiver of Taxes
Village/Town of Mount Kisco
104 Main Street
Mount Kisco, New York 10549
(914) 864-0034

 

Many Mt. Kisco Village Tax Bills Have Been Lost In the Mail | The Mt. Kisco Daily Voice.