Daily Archives: September 4, 2014

Charlotte seeing its homes sell quickly | Pound Ridge Real Estate

 

There may be fewer listings on the Charlotte, North Carolina, housing market today than there were a year ago, but what is for sale is selling faster. Closed sales rose nearly 6 percent in July from July of 2013, according to the Charlotte Regional Realtor Association; that, as the inventory of homes for sale fell nearly 5 percent.

“The market is strong, though not everything is selling at the prices the sellers want,” said Bonnie Papandrea, a real estate agent with Wilkinson & Associates Real Estate in Charlotte. “Closer to town, those properties are doing fabulous and getting the price point back to almost 2006.”

 

The median price of a Charlotte-area home that sold in July rose 5.5 percent from a year ago, and sellers are getting on average about 95 percent of their list price. Sellers have been getting a bit more realistic, at least on a national scale, lowering their list prices and negotiating more, according to a report from Redfin, a national brokerage.

Charlotte had been a target of large-scale investors in single-family rental homes, but that demand is easing, especially as home prices rise. Investors need to get bargain-priced homes in order to make the investment work, and there are fewer and fewer distressed homes coming onto the market. There is also more competition in the market.

 

 

read more…

 

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/charlotte-seeing-homes-sell-quickly-153933644.html

 

Luxury Meets Off the Grid in the Aspen Groves | Bedford Corners Real Estate

 

Image 55

 

2015 Colorow Rd, Edwards, CO
For sale: $7.995 million

A sleeker, smarter species of mountain real estate has emerged from the aspen groves of White River National Forest. It’s called Squaw Creek Estate.

“This home is very cutting edge,” said listing agent Matthew Blake of Ascent Sotheby’s International Realty.

For starters, a glass-ceiling elevator leads to an observatory with a research-grade telescope for taking in a commanding view of Gore Range, Lake Creek Valley and Finnegan’s Peak of the Sawatch Range.

“It’s one of the best places for [an observatory] on a ridge line,” Blake said.

The current owners also wanted to add more green features when they bought the property in 2008. Of note, they added solar panels and a geo-thermal pond, paying for half of the 10,561-square-foot home’s energy expenses.

“The gas and electric bills are less than a town home on the valley floor,” Blake said.

They also added a state-of-the-art greenhouse that provides year-round tropical produce including bananas, mangoes and spices. “It can be winter and feel like you’re in Hawaii,” Blake said.

In fact, even with Vail and Beaver Creek ski resorts just 30 minutes away, the home feels and operates like you’re off the grid.

 

 

read more…

 

https://homes.yahoo.com/news/house-week-luxury-meets-off-grid-aspen-groves-183325032.html

 

 

Down to Earth Farmers Market | #Chappaqua Real Estate

 

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FREE Yoga at Ossining Farmers Market;
Seasonal Melon Tastings at Many Markets + MORE

September 4th-10th, 2014

DowntoEarthMarkets.com

What’s New, In Season, and On Sale This Week
Apfelstreusel (Apple Crumble)
Locally sourced
Christiane’s Backstube

Apple Harvest Bread
Made w/fresh, local apples
Meredith’s Bread

Broccoli
Dagele Brothers Produce

Cantaloupe
Gajeski Produce
Mead Orchards

Early Season Apples: Fuji & Gala
Mead Orchards

Farm made Chili Sauce
Wright Farm

Farm made Spaghetti Sauce
Wright Farm

Moon & Stars Watermelon
Fishkill Farms

Sausage and Mushroom Pot Pie
in Horseradish Pastry

Stone & Thistle Farm

Sprite Melon
Alex’s Tomato Farm

Watermelon
Alex’s Tomato Farm


Click on a Market to see all vendor and event details…                  

Westchester
County


Rockland
County

Ossining

Saturdays
8:30 am-1:00 pm


Larchmont

Saturdays
8:30 am-1:00 pm

Piermont

Sundays
9:30 am-3:00 pm

Croton-on-Hudson

Sundays
9:00 am-2:00 pm


Rye

Sundays
8:30 am-2:00 pm

Spring Valley

Wednesdays
8:30 am-3:00 pm


Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow

Saturdays
8:30 am-1:00 pm

New Rochelle

Fridays
8:30 am-2:30 pm


Headed to the city soon?

Visit a Down to Earth
Farmers Market in NYC!

Announcements
Melon Tastings

Stop by the manager’s tent at your favorite Down to Earth Farmers Market to try some of the season’s best melon varieties. The samples you try will be available from the market’s producers – it’s a great way to explore the season’s unique flavors. Please see our Event Calendar for exact times. ENJOY.

Ossining

FREE Yoga: From noon to 1 pm, join Dragonfly Yoga for a free yoga session in Market Square to celebrate National Yoga Month. Make sure to bring your own mat. After we’re done nourishing our souls, everyone can stop by the market to nourish our bodies with the summer harvest.

Raffle for Reuse: With the goal to eliminate plastic bags from the farmers market, the market manager in Ossining is accepting donations of clean, reusable shopping bags that people would like to drop-off. The donated bags will be offered to customers as an alternative to plastic bags for their market purchases. For each bag donated, customers can enter to win a $25 gift certificate for the market, and a winner will be drawn every 2 weeks.
We support this idea so much that we created this video to show how it works – enjoy!

For additional events, visit our Down to Earth Markets Event Calendar.

Stay tuned to all market happenings via our Down to Earth Markets Facebook page
and follow us on Instagram and on Twitter @DowntoEarthMkts.

Cleaning Up the Planet One Bag at a Time: Essay by Sharon Rowe
ECOBAGS

Down to Earth Markets is pleased to collaborate with ECOBAGS®, maker of sustainably-sourced, reusable shopping bags to encourage people to reduce the use of single-use plastic bags at our farmers markets. Both of our companies are based in Ossining, New York, and together we recently launched the BYOBag program at Ossining’s Down to Earth Market. ECOBAGS® Founder, Sharon Rowe, shares how she pioneered this effort over twenty five years ago:

“I believe that everyone has a right to clean air and clean water in a clean environment and that together we can ‘clean up the planet one bag at a time’.” – Sharon Rowe, Founder and CEO, ECOBAGS®

I started ECOBAGS® because I was tired of seeing plastic bags stuck in trees and floating in the Hudson River. It didn’t make sense that every time I went into a store, I left with a single-use plastic bag. Why use something once and then throw it away? This was back in 1989. So, I decided I would change my shopping behavior. I decided to bring my own cloth bags to the store, ones that I could use again and again, like the bags I used traveling in Europe years before. I wanted to find bags that would conveniently fold up and expand to hold my purchases – traditional string bags. I couldn’t find any in the USA, so I asked some friends to bring bags back from Europe. What happened next is what inspired me to start my company and my brand.

I began shopping with my reusable bags in NYC and people noticed. They wanted to talk with me. I found out, pretty quickly, that I wasn’t the only person tired of using or seeing plastic bags everywhere (and this was 25 years ago!). There was an interest in reusable options, so I decided to start making them and generate market demand. If you have a belief, like I do, that everyone has a right to clean air, clean water, and a clean environment, then being wasteful and seeing litter (and a lot of it coming from single-use) is personally hurtful in a very deep way.

I also began shopping differently when I started using reusable bags. While I hardly ever purchased processed foods, I now chose produce that wasn’t pre-packed and left other packaged items on the shelf. The end result was zero garbage after putting away all my purchases at home.

I started with the idea of creating zero waste. Twenty five years ago, it was an unsexy term called “source reduction.”

When you decide to question what is really “convenient,” you quickly run into, as Al Gore said, “Inconvenient Truths”. When you “choose to reuse” you can gain insights that will connect you more deeply to the environment. Don’t be surprised, if bringing your own bags to the market leads you to create other changes in your life. Simple actions can and do change the world. As Margaret Mead said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”

Rotating* Vendors This Week
*Vendors who rotate through various markets during the season.
They enjoy getting to know many communities, and here’s where to find them this week:

Croton-on-Hudson

#Freedom Craft Brewery

Larchmont 

Flourish Baking Company
Hudson River Apiaries
Kontoulis Family Olive Oil
Trotta Foods

Ossining 

Sisters Wicked Good Soap

Piermont 

Bombay Emerald Chutney Company
e-Desserts
Kontoulis Family Olive Oil
Tuthilltown Spirits Farm Distillery

Rye

Christiane’s Backstube (Locally sourced, German-inspired baked specialties)

Down to Earth Markets 173 Main Street Ossining, NY 10562 Phone: 914-923-4837
DowntoEarthMarkets.com

Tour a Totally Livable 242-Square-Foot West Village Apartment | Armonk Real Estate

 

[All photos by Max Touhey.]
27 images

Jourdan Lawlor bought her tiny apartment on West 12th Street, in a quaint former dormitory for Hudson River dockworkers, in 2011—three weeks before she met Tobin Ludwig. The director of sales development at The Daily Meal, she was tired of renting and decided to buy, scouring the city for a downtown apartment under $300,000 before settling on this prewar option, a high-ceilinged ground-floor studio that clocks in at a diminutive 242 square feet. That includes closets, cabinets, and a 29-square-foot storage nook above the bathroom door.

Of the 425-square-foot Upper West Side apartment Curbed toured earlier this year, Lawlor said, “That’s huge!”

Having eyed a snazzy Murphy bed from Resource Furniture for about five years, she said, “buying the bed was almost an excuse to buy the apartment.” Lawlor and Ludwig, who heads up a bitters purveyor called Hella Bitter, had been dating nine months before they decided to move in together. “We agreed to renovate and maximize the space,” Lawlor said. “If one if us said the safe word, I would put the apartment on the market the next day. But no one said it. We forget what the word was.” Added Ludwig: “I had not envisioned living here with Jourdan. I thought it would ruin my relationship with her.” (Spoiler alert: it did not.)

 

 

read more…

 

 

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2014/09/03/tour_a_totally_livable_242squarefoot_west_village_apartment.php

10 things your landlord won’t tell you | Mt Kisco Real Estate

 

1. Your real landlord might be Wall Street

The bursting of the housing bubble, and the recession that came with it, have led more Americans to rent rather than own their homes. In the first quarter of this year, 64.8% of American families owned the homes they lived in, the lowest level since 1995—and far from the peak of nearly 69% of households in 2006.

Fewer owners means growing tenant demand for rental property, and that has allowed landlords to raise prices. Apartment rents in the U.S. rose at the fastest pace this year since the Great Recession, according to the property research company Axiometrics, as April occupancy rates reached 94.8%. And for many Americans, the rent is too damn high, at an average of 30% of monthly household income—the highest in 30 years, up from an average of around 25% from 1985 to 2000, according to data from Zillow Z, +0.51%

The housing bubble and its aftermath also created an opportunity for Wall Street, as investment firms used the opportunity to snap up cheap foreclosed homes and build rental empires. Private-equity firms, hedge funds and other institutional investors accounted for nearly 6.5% of single-family home purchases in 2012, according to a recent research note from the Federal Reserve, up from less than 1% in 2004. Read: Apartment rent hikes are slowing — finally.

Those parties now own about 200,000 single family homes nationwide, the investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods estimates. Blackstone Group BX, -1.66% which Bloomberg News estimates is now the largest single-family landlord in the U.S., owns about 43,000 rental homes across the country, from Phoenix to Tampa, through a subsidiary called Invitation Homes

What’s it like when Wall Street is your landlord?

“They handle you beautifully from the door but once you get in the house, all hell breaks out,” says Chanda Mason, who moved into a three-bedroom, two-bath rental from Invitation Homes in Dallas, Ga., outside Atlanta, last July. She says she was greeted by moldy oven racks and a giant crack in the driveway, where her van got stuck each time she tried to drive in or pull out. Mason is one of a vocal group of Invitation Homes tenants who have complained about maintenance. When Mason complained, the corporate offices would “glaze over the situation and get me out of their face,” she says. “When it comes to getting something fixed, good luck. You’re going to have an issue,” she adds, noting that she will not renew her lease when it expires in July.

Invitation Homes spokesman Andrew Gallina says the company takes complaints and requests seriously, and that residents of a sprawling network of houses all hold different expectations. Invitation Homes has 1,600 employees in 35 field offices to handle tenant issues and offers a 24-hour emergency hotline, he says. Tenants can submit maintenance requests online, which enter a database that tracks when calls are put in, the average response and completion time for different types of work and homes’ repair histories. “We’ve invested in state of the art technology, which your average mom and pop landlord will not,” Gallina says.

Still, some commentators worry about whether any entity, high-tech or not, can do a good job managing a big, far-flung portfolio. These investors “may pose risks to local housing markets if investors have difficulties managing such large stocks of rental properties or fail to adequately maintain their homes,” potentially lowering the quality of neighborhoods, or even pushing prices down, the Federal Reserve note says.

 

read more…

 

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/10-things-your-landlord-wont-tell-you-2014-06-13

How these amateur home flippers found their niche in real estate | North Salem Real Estate

 

As the number of available foreclosure properties dwindle and home values improve, house flipping in the U.S. is on the decline.

Recent data from RealtyTrac shows only 31,000 single-family homes were flipped in the second quarter of 2014, making up just 4.6% of all home sales — down from 5.9% in the first quarter and 6.2% in the last quarter of 2013 (house flipping is defined as buying and then selling a home within 12 months).

Lower-end house flipping has seen the steepest decline. While sales of homes flipped for $750,000 or more increased by 21% this year, homes sold for less than $100,000 dropped by 5%, according to RealtyTrac.

Low-end house flippers played a crucial part of the housing recovery, says Ardell DellaLoggia, a Seattle real estate agent. In areas wracked with foreclosures , flippers swooped in to rehab homes that otherwise might have been left in disrepair. But with the inventory of distressed homes on the decline, there’s less opportunity for “mom and pop” flippers  to invest.  There’s also no guarantee they’ll net a solid return on their investment. Home flippers averaged a gross return of 21% this year, which is nothing to sniff at, but represents a 10% drop from one year ago, according to RealtyTrac. 

“If you have enough flippers, you will not have those neighborhoods filled with [vacant homes],” DellaLoggia says. “For a [first-time home buyer] who would be thrilled to death to be able to afford a house that’s liveable, flippers are wonderful.”  

For now at least, it will continue to be a high-end flipper’s market. But we tracked down some home flippers who are still sticking it out on the lower end of the market. They aren’t making massive profits and they don’t have tons of cash to throw around, but they’re still managing to make home flipping a worthwhile investment.

 

read more…

 

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/how-these-amateur-home-flippers-found-their-niche-in-real-estate-155020348.html

 

Mortgage Rates Hold Steady | #Waccabuc Real Estate

 

reddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing average fixed mortgage rates holding largely steady for the third straight week amid light economic reports.

News Facts

  • 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 4.10 percent with an average 0.5 point for the week ending September 4, 2014, unchanged from last week. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 4.57 percent.
  • 15-year FRM this week averaged 3.24 percent with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.25 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 3.59 percent.
  • 5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged 2.97 percent this week with an average 0.5 point, unchanged from last week. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 3.28 percent.
  • 1-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 2.40 percent this week with an average 0.4 point, up from last week when it averaged 2.39 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 2.71 percent.

Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total upfront cost of obtaining the mortgage. Visit the following links for the Regional and National Mortgage Rate Details and Definitions. Borrowers may still pay closing costs which are not included in the survey.

Quotes
Attributed to Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist, Freddie Mac.

“Mortgage rates were little changed amid a week of light economic reports. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rate remained unchanged from the previous week at 4.10 percent. Of the few releases, the ISM’s manufacturing index rose to 59.0 in August from 57.1 the previous month. This was the highest reading of the index since March 2011.”