Monthly Archives: July 2014

Property firms were major contributors in first half of year to governor’s re-election campaign | Armonk Real Estate

 

The top four donors who contributed during the first half of this year to Governor Andrew Cuomo’s re-election campaign are all in the real estate industry, a review of state campaign filings show.

Leonard Litwin’s Glenwood Management, which has been Cuomo’s top donor overall, was the highest contributor, providing $219,200 to his coffers. The firm was followed by $205,000 that members of the Dolan family and their company Cablevision donated, followed by $125,000 given by limited liability companies owned by Richard LeFrak’s LeFrak Organization. Rounding out the top four: three entities affiliated with Stephen Ross’ Related Companies. The trio gave a total of $125,000, the review of the latest campaign filings show.

The filings are for donations provided to Cuomo’s campaign coffers between January 12 and July 11. During that time, he raked in a total of $8.4 million from all donors.

Other large real estate contributors include Ron Burkle, the California billionaire who purchased stakes in several Meatpacking buildings and the Soho House company. He gave $60,800.

Real estate developer Joseph Moinian, CEO of the Moinian Group, donated $30,000. Andrew Farkas, a real estate investor, donated the same. Jane Goldman, an heir to the Sol Goldman fortune and head of the company Solil Management, donated $25,000.

Others who gave $25,000 were Sheldon Solow, the owner of 9 West 57th Street; Michael Mattone, an executive vice president at the development firm the Mattone Group; and Kenneth Fisher, a partner at builder and owner Fisher Brothers.

 

 

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Teatown Lake Reservation News | North Salem Real Estate

 

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July 16, 2014
PROGRAMS THIS WEEK:
Advanced Registration is required for all programs. Unless noted, all programs meet in the Nature Center and are $7 per person or FREE for members. Please register by calling (914) 762-2912 ext. 110.

Wake Up and Hike!
Saturday, July 19
9 – 11 am

Start your day with a hike through Hidden Valley before the heat of the day settles in, and see what is up and about. This is an adult program.

Exploration on Bailey Brook
Sunday, July 20
10 – 11:30 am

What’s living in the brook? Be prepared to get a little wet and muddy as we search for insects, crayfish, turtles and fish in the cool water. All Welcome

Visit Teatown

1600 Spring Valley Road
Ossining, NY 10562
Teatown Lake Reservation’s
mission is to inspire our community to lifelong environmental stewardship.
Nature Center hours:
9 am – 5 pm daily
Trails are open 365 days a year from dawn to dusk.
Click here for Teatown membership benefits, details,
and to purchase or renew
your membership online .

Your donation can make

an immediate impact and help

support our environmental education programs and the stewardship of our 1,000 acre preserve.

Upcoming Events and Workshops:
What a Hummer!
Saturday, July 26
2 – 3:30 pm

Hummingbirds are winged jewels of the bird world. Learn more about these birds and make a hummingbird feeder to attract them to your yard. All Welcome. $5 per feeder

In the Nature Center Gallery:

Nature Center Gallery Richard Pileggi

Quiet Landscapes

Photography

By Richard Pileggi

On exhibit

July 5 – August 30

Click here for more info

Announcing the publication of:

Teatown’s Wildflower Island

by Lisa Fleck Dondiego

A privately printed, 80-page photo book with an Index identifying the flowers.

Foreword by Leah Waybright Kennell, Curator of Wildflower Island.

This wonderful book is available for

purchase in Teatown’s nature store for $45 plus tax.

Teatown in the News:
Invasive Species Awareness Week at Teatown
Photo by Anthony

New York State celebrated its first Invasive Species Awareness Week from July 6 through 12.
At Teatown we watched and learned about our local invasive species as our staff removed Oriental bittersweet from Wildflower Woods, black swallow-wort from Cliffdale’s fields, and water chestnut from Teatown Lake.
Click here to learn how you can help stop the spread of invasive species.

JP Morgan; If Foreclosures Are More Difficult Then We’ll Lend Less On Mortgages | Mt Kisco Real Estate

 

An interesting example of the verity that no good deed goes unpunished. JP Morgan has pointed out that precisely and exactly because foreclosure on a defaulted mortgage is more difficult these days therefore they are lending less on such mortgages. This is, of course, something of a pity as one of the great strengths of the US economy has always been the speed with which economic mistakes get cleaned up. Whether bankruptcies (corporate or personal), foreclosures, loan defaults and so on, the system has always, until now at least, been very swift in cleaning them up. So that economic assets can be moved on to someone who can make better use of them.

Here’s the point that JP Morgan is making:

JPMorgan Chase JPM +0.86% & Co, the second-largest U.S. mortgage lender, is backing away from making home loans to less creditworthy borrowers after losing faith in its ability to recover much money from foreclosing on homes, even with government guarantees.

We could, of course, say that this is a good idea. They’re now not looking just to equity value of the home itself, nor to the various government guarantees, but also taking a closer look at the credit worthiness of the borrowers themselves. But there’s a little more detail as well:

“The cost to take a customer through the foreclosure process is just astronomical now,” Kevin Watters, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase’s Chase’s residential mortgage banking business in New York, told Reuters in an interview.

In addition to federal standards, states, and in some cases local governments, have written their own rules making it more expensive for banks to recover loan losses, he said. According to foreclosure data firm RealtyTrac, it took an average of 120 days to foreclose on a home at the beginning of 2007, just as the housing bubble was starting to burst. In the first quarter of 2014, it took 572 days, or more than 1.5 years.

In any economic system there will be those who make mistakes. And sure, it’s great that the system starts to analyse those who are likely to make such mistakes a little more. But on the other side it’s also true that the speed with which such mistakes are cleaned up is important. There’s nothing worse for an economy in general than having useful economic assets sitting unused simply because the bankruptcy (or foreclosure, whatever) process takes too long to come to some sort of resolution. We do, of course, want to be fair to people who get themselves into financial trouble. We also would prefer not to be turfing families out into the streets. But at the system level it is also hugely important that such mistakes be resolved, and resolved quickly. One of the reasons for the vibrancy of the US economy is that bankruptcy is both easy and not all that big of a deal. Mistakes can be written off and dealt with and everyone can then go on to try again.

 

 

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http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2014/07/16/jp-morgan-if-foreclosures-are-more-difficult-then-well-lend-less-on-mortgages/

Luxury Home Price Gains Slower Than Rest | South Salem Real Estate

 

Given the recent string of record-breaking sales of ultra-luxury homes –$147 million in East Hampton, $120 million in Greenwich–one might get the idea that the value of high-priced abodes is skyrocketing. But that’s not the case at all. In fact, it turns out that prices for non-luxury homes are rising much faster.

To get at the real numbers, we asked Trulia TRLA +2.15% and Zillow Z +0.89% to cull their data on home prices. Looking at all for-sale, non-foreclosure listings, Trulia found that from May 2013 to May 2014, national home prices rose 6% in top-tier neighborhoods (zip codes where prices are in the top 10% for each city). Prices in neighborhoods not in the top tier rose at a significantly higher rate of 9.3%.

The trend is a reversal from the prior year (May 2012 to May 2013), when national home prices in luxury zip codes rose 9.2% and non-luxury rose 8.4%. (Before that, from May 2011 to May 2012, price gains in both luxury and non-luxury zips were about the same: 0.4% and 0.3%, respectively.)

Looking at the data another way, Zillow explains part of the reason that non-luxury prices are growing faster than luxury. As the graphic below shows, the top third of the residential market fell less dramatically during the housing crash than the bottom third of homes. It’s also come up less in the past three years–but it had less far to travel to recover.

 

 

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http://www.forbes.com/sites/erincarlyle/2014/07/16/data-driven-luxury-home-price-gains-slower-than-rest/

Homebuilder Sentiment Higher in July | Waccabuc NY Homes

 

U.S. homebuilder sentiment rose in July to a six-month high as the view on both current and expected sales brightened, data from the National Association of Home Builders showed Wednesday.

The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market index rose to 53 this month from 49 in June, the group said in a statement. Economists polled by Reuters had predicted the index would hit 50.

Readings below 50 mean more builders view market conditions as poor than favorable. The latest reading above 50 was in January, when the index hit 56.

“An improving job market goes hand-in-hand with a rise in builder confidence,” said NAHB chief economist David Crowe in a statement. “As employment increases and those with jobs feel more secure about their own economic situation, they are more likely to feel comfortable about buying a home.”

The single-family home sales component rose to 57 from 53. The gauge of single-family sales expectations for the next six months rose to 64, matching the highest since last September, from June’s reading of 58, while prospective buyer traffic edged up to 39 from 36 in its third consecutive monthly advance

 

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http://www.foxbusiness.com/economy-policy/2014/07/16/homebuilder-sentiment-higher-in-july/

 

 

Realtor.com takes a swing at Zillow, Trulia | Cross River Homes

 

In the ongoing war for online real estate domination, the combatants lob (metaphorical) grenades at each other quite frequently.

Most recently, Move (MOVE), which operates Realtor.com for the National Association of Realtors, and Zillow (Z) have been involved in what looks to be a particularly nasty legal battle over the hiring of Errol Samuelson.

Samuelson is currently the chief industry development officer for Zillow. He was hired away from Move and Realtor.com in early March. Later in March, Move and NAR sued Zillow for breach of contract, alleging that Samuelson stole trade secrets and intellectual property from Move and brought it with him to Zillow.

In early July, Move and NAR won the opening battle in the suit, when Washington State Superior Court Judge Barbara Linde issued a preliminary injunction in the case, finding that Samuelson misappropriated trade secret information by acquiring it using improper means, and by copying it without authorization.

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/30648-realtorcom-takes-a-swing-at-zillow-trulia

Amazingly accurate Paul Krugman predictions from 2011 | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

Earlier today, HousingWire posted some coverage of the alleged circumstances around the pending resignation of New York Times columnist Paul Krugman from his professorship at Princeton University.

The main reason for Krugman’s decision?

The Forbes coverage points to Krugman being “thoroughly indicted and publicly eviscerated for intellectual dishonesty by Harvard’s Niall Ferguson in a hard-hitting three-part series in the Huffington Post, beginning here, and with a coda in Project Syndicate, all summarized at Forbes.com.”

Soon after posting, I received an email from a popular economics blogger, who took me to task for publishing the article in the first place.

“Ferguson has become a laughing stock among analysts (remember his declaration that public employment was soaring under Obama – ignoring the temporary Census hiring! ROFLOL),” they wrote.

“Ferguson has been wrong about everything from inflation to employment … one good historical book doesn’t make him an expert on everything,” they added.

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/30647-amazingly-accurate-paul-krugman-predictions-from-2011

Fed Study Says FHA Lenders Tighten Standards |Bedford NY Real Estate

 

A new report from two Federal Reserve economists says lenders have been applying strict underwriting conditions to keep borrowers who can’t afford a large down payment out of the Federally guaranteed program that is designed to make it possible first time and mid to lower income applicants become homeowners.

The report sets down in black and white what has been rumored for months: that the steep declining in FHA loans in recent months is due in part by a concerted effort by FHA lenders to reduce their exposure and improve profitability by rejecting applications by applying tough underwriting standards.

Federal Reserve economists Jordan Rappaport and Paul Willen found that from early 2007 to mid-2010 the median FICO score on a conforming mortgage increased by almost 50 points as lenders raised standards for conventional loans. Lower income borrowers who could not meet those standards turned to the FHA program. The median FICO score for the combination of conforming and FHA-guaranteed mortgages increased only 10 points.

But rather than cutting off access to mortgage credit for a subset of households, lenders tightened credit for all households through strict underwriting procedures.

“Lenders required conservative appraisals, meticulous documentation and the curing of even the slightest questions of title. To the extent that these standards constitute sound lending practices, adhering to them is a positive development. But the level of vigilance suggests that regulatory uncertainty may also be playing a role,” the Fed economists said.

“Lenders fear that departures from the evolving standards will result in considerable costs, including the forced buyback of loans sold to Fannie and Freddie and the rescinding of FHA mortgage guarantees. The associated uncertainty has caused lenders to act as if strict interpretations of possible restrictive future standards will apply,” they said.

 

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http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2014/07/fed-study-says-fha-lenders-tighten-the-screws-on-applicants/

Zillow and Trulia continue to set records | Pound Ridge Real Estate

 

With each passing month, the giants of online real estate continue to break records for web traffic. In June, both Trulia (TRLA) and Zillow (Z) set records for unique visitors.

That follows record-breaking traffic for both sites in May as well.

Zillow has increased its traffic in each of the last five months, topping out at just shy of 83 million in June. That eclipsed May’s total by 1.5 million visitors.

The site had a year-over-year increase of 49% from June 2013, when the site had 55.7 million visitors, to June 2014, when the site had 82.99 million visitors.

Trulia broke its own record in June as well. The site welcomed 54 million unique visitors in June, which is up 55% from June 2013. The company’s traffic was up 3 million from May 2014.

Trulia said that its rate of growth is increasing. “This was an acceleration from 42% growth in Q1 2014 compared to Q1 2013, and the 47% annual growth rate in May 2014 compared to May 2013,” the company said.

“Trulia’s marketing campaign continues to deliver strong results in attracting more transaction-ready consumers to our platform,” said Pete Flint, CEO and co-founder of Trulia. “The marketing campaign, combined with our leading consumer products, are contributing to the acceleration of our audience growth amidst the busiest part of the home buying and selling season.”

Both sites’ increasing traffic has done wonders for their stock prices as well. Trulia’s stock is up 16.76% year-to-date and 23.38% from the same date last year.

 

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Zillow and Trulia continue to set records

Banks aren’t being stingy on mortgage lending | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

The general feeling in the mortgage markets is one of constricted lending.

Many reasons are given: tighter regulations, a high cost of origination, stronger underwriting standards.

Neil Cavuto in Fox Business says don’t blame the banks because you can’t get a mortgage.

After all, they’re not being stingy, they’re being smart, he argues:

My friends, banks aren’t being tight-fisted, they’re just returning to form — and I like to think a fiscally-prudent form at that. Their demands may seem out of the recent norm, but they are very much the historical norm. You have to have a good credit score, a good employment history, and likely a good amount of dough to put down to show you’ve got serious intent. What’s more, you have to prove that intent. You have to prove promise. You have to prove you’re not flipping through the process, you’re understanding the process and the responsibility that comes with owning a home.

These might seem like outrageous demands to some today. We’re just going back to the simple demands pre go-go days! For previous generations they were the way things were done — so what’s so dangerous about returning to those basic standards now?

 

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Banks aren’t being stingy on mortgage lending