Category Archives: Chappaqua

New Realtor.com branding downplays ties to NAR | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Realtor.com has rebranded with a new logo, slogan and website design that the listing portal’s operator, Move Inc., hopes will “bring sentiment and warmth to our best-in-class data” and help consumers “connect emotionally” to the site, which has lost ground to competitors Zillow and Trulia.

Move operates Realtor.com under the terms of a 1996 agreement with the National Association of Realtors. The new Realtor.com logo and website design downplay the site’s ties to NAR.

For years, until last year’s relaunch, the Realtor.com logo featured NAR’s “block R” Realtor, and a prominent declaration next to the logo informed users that the listing portal was the “Official Site of the National Association of Realtors.”

The new Realtor.com logo makes no reference to NAR (although the term “Realtor” itself is a NAR trademark), and features a new slogan, “Where home happens.”

Fine print at the bottom of the page — displayed in a light font that blends in with the background — notifies visitors that Realtor.com is “the official site of the National Association of Realtors and is operated by Move Inc.”

Before the relaunch, Realtor.com devoted a significant portion of its home page to a “National Association of Realtors” section that included more than a dozen links taking visitors to several NAR websites, including HouseLogic.com, Realtor.org and Realtoru.com.

2013 Fair & Affordable Housing Westchester Expo March 9th | Chappaqua Realtor

2013 FAIR & AFFORDABLE HOUSING EXPO

SATURDAY, MARCH 9 2013

10:00 AM TO 3:00 PM

WESTCHESTER COUNTY CENTER

WHITE PLAINS

The Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors, Inc. is joining with homeownership counseling 

organizations, the County government, and area banks and lending institutions to co-sponsor a 

program of seminars and exhibits to help moderate-income and entry-level homebuyers find a home in the Westchester-Putnam region.

“Affordable” in the context of this Expo does not necessarily mean subsidized or low-income. Many attendees will have incomes around $70,000 or even $100,000 or more. Further, there will probably be sellers in attendance who are looking for a short sale or other work-around with their property.

The role of the Realtors in this Expo is to demonstrate the more affordable possibilities in an 

admittedly expensive market. The prospective buyers need everyone’s help, and it is part of our 

mission as a Board of Realtors to try to create homeownership opportunities for everyone.

The 2013 Expo is run as a non-profit public service enterprise, although we certainly expect you to 

do as much business there as possible!

Foreclosure Discounts are All Over the Map | Chappaqua Real Estate

The low prices that make foreclosures attractive to investors also make foreclosures toxic to communities and homeowners. The discount between “normal” priced homes and the prices paid for properties than have been through the foreclosure process can spell the difference between profit and loss to an investor at the same time that they drive real estate values into the ground.

As the Foreclosure Era enters its final years, the differences in foreclosure discounts vary widely across the nation, presenting opportunities to investors and wreaking havoc on homeowners simultaneously. With regional and local conditions playing a greater role than ever in shaping foreclosure supply and demand, the differences between local foreclosure discounts may be increasing to the surprise residents who rely upon reports of “national” average discounts.

FNC, one of the top sources of pricing data used by appraisers, calculated at national average discount of 12.2 percent at the end of 2012 versus 13.4 percent a year earlier. The National Association of Realtors said foreclosures sold for an average discount of 20 percent below market value in January. At the height of the mortgage crisis (2008 and 2009), foreclosed homes were typically sold at 25 percent below their estimated market value, said NAR.

Despite the progress in national average discounts, in a number of markets today foreclosures are worse now than they have ever been. A certain tier of markets, largely in the East and Midwest, are seeing discounts reach levels far below the 12.2 percent cited by FNC or the 20 percent from NAR. In real estate, where there is no national marketplace, the use of national averages sometimes can mask very different local realities.

Several factors, which differ by market, are keeping foreclosure discounts high in some markets. These include large inventories from the continued slow processing of foreclosure due to state laws; higher default and lower rents resulting from unemployment and economic fragility; less than ideal conditions for single family rentals, including low cap rates; overcapacity; and a disproportionate number of unsold damaged foreclosures (See Damaged Foreclosures Beckon Bargain-hunters); and less investor demand compared to the West and Florida, where a culture of small investors has developed and large hedge funds are active.

Fed watches as banks gain mortgage profits | Cross River Real Estate

Fed watches as banks gain mortgage profits