Category Archives: Mount Kisco

Mount Kisco Chef’s Upcoming ‘Chopped’ Appearance | Mt Kisco NY Homes

MOUNT KISCO, N.Y. – Mount Kisco restaurant Village Social Chef Mogan Anthony upcoming appearance on Food Network’s “Chopped” in a June 13 episode topped this week’s news.

In other top news this week:

 

Mount Kisco Chef’s Upcoming ‘Chopped’ Appearance Tops This Week’s News | The Bedford Daily Voice.

Home prices rising, but no ‘bubble trouble’ | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Home prices are rising sharply, but economists speaking at the National Association of Real Estate Editors conference here are not worried about overinflation.

“We are not in ‘bubble trouble,'” said Jed Kolko, chief economist at the online real estate information company Trulia. “Prices are undervalued 7 percent relative to long-term income and rent norms. We see no signs of overbuilding, and few signs of people overborrowing.”

Noting that prices were 40 to 70 percent overvalued during the past decade’s boom, Kolko said, “Prices would have to keep rising at the current rate (10 percent nationally) for several years to reach another bubble.”

Still, “home price growth is widening very fast,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors. “The good news is it is lifting people out of being underwater and offsetting the effects” of the government’s budgetary sequestration of funds.

“There is no risk of recession” in the next couple of years, he said.

Yun is concerned, however, that home-price growth is outpacing income growth. When mortgage interest rates inevitably rise, “that will negatively impact affordability.”

Price growth is creating “the haves and the have-nots. Owners are smiling.”

Those who would like to be owners are not.

Putting upward pressure on prices, beside consumer confidence and buyer demand, is that home builders are still producing fewer than the historical norm of about 1 million units per year. New home sales, Yun said, are at 28 percent of the 2006 peak, although he acknowledged that was a period of overbuilding.

 

Home prices rising, but no ‘bubble trouble’ | HeraldTribune.com.

Twitter Traffic, How to Double Your Traffic to Your Content With Twitter | Mt Kisco Realtor

Do you use Twitter for business?

Are you wondering how to use Twitter to increase traffic to your blog?

To learn how to use Twitter to grow your business, I interview Kim Garst for this episode of the Social Media Marketing podcast.

More About This Show

Social Media Marketing Podcast w/ Michael Stelzner

The Social Media Marketing podcast is a show from Social Media Examiner.

It’s designed to help busy marketers and business owners discover what works with social media marketing.

The show format is on-demand talk radio (also known as podcasting).

In this episode, I interview Kim Garst, CEO of Boom Social, a company and blog that specializes in social media marketing. One of Kim’s areas of topical expertise is Twitter marketing.

Kim shares how she uses Twitter to promote her content and offers.

You’ll learn about what type of content works best and how frequently you should share it.

Share your feedback, read the show notes and get the links mentioned in this episode below!

Listen Now

You can also subscribe via iTunesRSSStitcher or Blackberry.

Here are some of the things you’ll discover in this show:

Twitter for Business

How do you use Twitter to help your business?

Kim describes many ways to leverage Twitter to help grow your business. One way is to use news updates. Kim refers to Twitter as the “info superhighway.”

A lot of people don’t use Twitter search in the same context as they would with Google. In many cases, the news hits Twitter before it hits the major news channels. There are real people out there who share real information in real time.

With Twitter, you can leverage the search function as a way to keep track of your competition. You can search for keywords and find conversations in real time. It’s a great way to pay attention to trending topics.

 

Twitter Traffic, How to Double Your Traffic to Your Content With Twitter | Social Media Examiner.

Flash Flood Watch Issued For Mt. Kisco Friday Morning | Mt. Kisco Real Estate

WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N.Y. — The National Weather Service issued a Flash Flood Watch Thursday afternoon for Westchester County.

Flash flooding is possible with widespread heavy rainfall coming Friday and into Saturday ahead of Tropical Storm Andrea. The flash flood watch went into effect just after 2 p.m. Thursday and is expected to last until 2 p.m. Saturday, according to the NWS.

The NWS previously issued a hazardous weather outlook for Westchester County for Friday with heavy rainfall and urban and small stream flooding possible. Rain totals are predicted to be 2 to 2.5 inches or more from the low pressure system and its extensive tropical moisture, according to a previous report.

For more on Tropical Storm Andrea, residents are asked to visit the National Hurricane Center website. Residents can also visit FEMA’s website to learn more on how to prepare for hurricanes and tropical storms.

 

Flash Flood Watch Issued For Mt. Kisco Friday Morning | The Mt. Kisco Daily Voice.

Rising prices widen homeownership availability gap | Mount Kisco Real Estate

Across all 100 metros, less affordable markets tend to have high price gains. The correlation between the year-over-year price gain and the mortgage-payment-versus-wage measure is 0.3 (statistically significant at the 5% level). That means that homeownership affordability is becoming more unequal across the U.S. — the gap between more affordable and less affordable markets is growing. To see what this growing gap means for the housing market, read the full blog post byTrulia.

 

Rising prices widen homeownership availability gap | HousingWire.

It’s Time To Sell Your House | Mount Kisco Homes

Mortgage rates are on their way back up.

U.S. household net worth just hit an all-time high.

These are among the reasons why Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff says it’s now time to sell your house (via Jim the Realtor).

In an appearance on CNBC this morning, Rascoff says an ongoing lack of supply — the result of people still trapped by negative equity — and steady demand will only drive rates up further in coming years,

That means it’ll be more expensive to buy a home at a given price down the road than now.

He explains:

If you have any equity in your home and you’re thinking about selling in the next couple of years,” he continued, “[it’s] probably best to sell now, even though home values are continuing to rise.

Imagine yourself buying a $300,000 home today, and in four years you may want to trade up to a $500,000 home,” he said. “That home is not just that much more expensive—but because mortgage rates are going to be higher—it’s significantly more expensive. So the trade-up market is going to be very troubled in a couple of years.

Here’s the full clip:

SEE ALSO: 25 Reasons Why Chicago Is The Most Underrated City In America >

 

It’s Time To Sell Your House – Business Insider.

Will higher mortgage rates kill the housing market? Maybe not! | Mount Kisco Real Estate

Home prices have been soaring over the past year, the sharpest gains in seven years; construction activity is picking up nicely. Both trends have been driven in no small part by a steady drop in home mortgage interest rates, which have made homeownership too good a deal to pass up for millions of Americans.

But the trend on rates has reversed abruptly in the past few weeks. This chart shows the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage since the start of 2011; the spike on the right shows an increase from 3.4 percent to 4.1 percent since May 1.

Source: Bloomberg/BankRate

Source: Bloomberg/BankRate

So what will become of our precious and long-awaited housing boom? Is it a fragile, delicate flower about to be crushed by the boot of higher rates? Or is the housing recovery now resilient enough that there’s no need to fear? Economists at Goldman Sachs have run some numbers through their models of how the housing market works and have come up with some promising answers.

Source: Goldman SachsThe Goldman economists, Hui Shan and Marty Young, start with an analysis built on home affordability. Take the median household income in the United States ($50,000), assume a buyer has a 20 percent down payment and that they can only afford debt payments equal to 25 percent of their income. This chart shows how much house they can afford at any given mortgage rate:

Source: Goldman Sachs

It also shows an initial reason for some optimism. At a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rate of about 3.8 percent, the typical American homebuyer can afford a $279,000 house. That’s 45 percent more than the current price of houses. That suggests that affordability isn’t the thing holding Americans back from buying houses (instead, it may be such factors as tight credit standards, difficulty building up a down payment  or lack of confidence in future job prospects). It also implies that slight increases in the mortgage rate shouldn’t completely undermine the improvement in the housing market; the thing to watch is not rates per se, but what happens on those other factors that are drags on would-be homeowners.

And that bodes particularly well:  As we wrote last week, the rise in rates over the past month appears to be driven primarily by improving economic prospects. If that’s the case, even as homes become a bit more expensive, they will be doing so at the same time those other restraining factors dissipate. So rising mortgage rates, if they’re rising for good reasons, could actually be net positives for the housing market if they result from more people having jobs and being confident in their prospects.

 

Will higher mortgage rates kill the housing market? Maybe not!.

Survey says: Hispanic investors face housing challenges | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Despite financial confidence and an overall optimistic outlook, debt remains a top concern for many Hispanic investors, according to a recent survey.

Twenty-five percent of Hispanics surveyed are more concern about losing their home, compared to 12% for the overall population, Wells Fargo ($41.25 0%) said in its latest survey.

While Hispanic investors appear to be taking steps towards saving, there is still anxiety about having enough for retirement.

“Hispanic investors are facing tremendous challenges when it comes to saving for retirement. We are seeing immediate financial concerns like covering household bills and mortgage payments are interfering with their ability to put money away toward retirement,” said David Roda, regional chief investment officer for Wells Fargo Private Bank.

He added, “These are complex challenges where one size doesn’t fit all in terms of a possible course of actions, but we would certainly encourage all investors to double down on their planning efforts, and really seek guidance from an advisor to ensure they are on track to meet their financial goals.”

Living in multi-generational households may also have a significant impact on Hispanic investors’ savings, as a number of respondents are caring for their own children, as well as parents or grandparents, the survey noted.

Nearly one in five, 18%, of Hispanic investors report currently living in a three-generation household and 27% expect to do so within the next decade.

 

Survey says: Hispanic investors face housing challenges | HousingWire.

Foreclosures Disappear Even Faster | Mt Kisco Real Estate

 

Foreclosure inventories fell 24 percent from last year at this time and completed foreclosures fell 16 percent year over year, according to the CoreLogic April National Foreclosure Report.

According to CoreLogic, there were 52,000 completed foreclosures in the U.S. in April 2013, down from 62,000 in April 2012, a year-over-year decrease of 16 percent. On a month-over-month basis, completed foreclosures remained flat at 52,000*, the same number reported for March 2013.

As a basis of comparison, prior to the decline in the housing market in 2007, completed foreclosures averaged 21,000 per month nationwide between 2000 and 2006. Completed foreclosures are an indication of the total number of homes actually lost to foreclosure. Since the financial crisis began in September 2008, there have been approximately 4.4 million completed foreclosures across the country.

As of April 2013, approximately 1.1 million homes in the U.S. were in some stage of foreclosure, known as the foreclosure inventory, compared to 1.5 million in April 2012, a year-over-year decrease of 24 percent. Month over month, the foreclosure inventory was down 2 percent from March 2013 to April 2013. The foreclosure inventory as of April 2013 represented 2.8 percent of all homes with a mortgage compared to 3.5 percent in March 2013.

“The shadow of foreclosure and distress continues to fade, with the annualized sum of completed foreclosures having declined for 17 straight months,” said Dr. Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic. “Six states have year-over-year declines in the foreclosure inventory of more than 40 percent, and in Arizona and California the year-over-year decline is more than 50 percent.”

“The shadow inventory continued to drop in April as the number of completed foreclosures fell by 16 percent on a year-over-year basis,” said Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO of CoreLogic. “Fewer distressed properties combined with improving home prices and a pickup in home purchases are significant signals that the ongoing recovery in the housing and mortgage markets continues to gather steam.”

Highlights as of April 2013:

The five states with the highest number of completed foreclosures for the 12 months ending in April 2013 were: Florida (102,000), California (79,000), Michigan (68,000), Texas (53,000) and Georgia (47,000). These five states account for almost half of all completed foreclosures nationally.

The five states with the lowest number of completed foreclosures for the 12 months ending in April 2013 were: South Dakota (81), District of Columbia (100), North Dakota (461), Hawaii (466) and West Virginia (527).

The five states with the highest foreclosure inventory as a percentage of all mortgaged homes were: Florida (9.5 percent), New Jersey (7.4 percent), New York (5.1 percent), Maine (4.4 percent) and Nevada (4.3 percent).

The five states with the lowest foreclosure inventory as a percentage of all mortgaged homes were: Wyoming (0.5 percent), Alaska (0.6 percent), North Dakota (0.7 percent), Nebraska (0.8 percent) and Virginia (0.9 percent).

*March data was revised. Revisions are standard, and to ensure accuracy, CoreLogic incorporates newly released data to provide updated results.

Foreclosures Disappear Even Faster | RealEstateEconomyWatch.com.

New home sales rise, but market still a long way from ‘normal’ | Mount Kisco Real Estate

We’ve been hearing consistently good news on the housing front for a solid year now. Prices are up, sales are accelerating, and new construction is coming along. But while this week brought another round of positive signs, the United States is still a long way from what can be considered a “normal” housing market.

Both new and existing home sales improved last month. New home sales increased 2.3 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 454,000 homes (March was also revised upward to a 444,000 rate), according to a joint release from the US Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. That’s a 29 percent increase from the level seen a year ago.

“Not only did we have the increase in April, about as expected, but we had upward revisions for prior months and an acceleration in new home buying even compared to last year,” David Berson, chief economist for insurer Nationwide, said in a phone interview. “The level of sales and pace is the best that we’ve seen since the middle of 2008, when the economy was just beginning to fall into the Great Recession.”

Existing sales, which are calculated in a separate survey from the National Association of Realtors, crept up 0.6 percent to a 4.97 million annualized rate (again, with a revision upward for March). “April’s existing home sales is evidence of continuing momentum in the residential real estate market,” John Tashjian, principal owner of Centurion Real Estate Partners in New York,” wrote in an e-mailed analysis. “We have watched the market move swiftly into the recovery stage of a cycle and predict continued growth in sales followed by price appreciation, throughout 2013 and 2014.”

“On existing homes, demand is coming form investors who are taking distressed homes off the market and renting them,” Mr. Berson adds. “But that helps on the new home side, too.”

Prices have also accelerated, driven by tight inventories of existing homes and increased buyer demand. Another hopeful sign: the sales percentage of distressed homes continues to fall, down to 18 percent of sales in April.

But Berson warns that the market still has a long way to go. “These are numbers that historically aren’t huge,” he says. “Even if you look in the ‘90s, new home sales ran in a range of anywhere between 600,000 and a million. We’re only at about half of where we should be, and it’s going to take a while. We saw 1.2, 1.3 million during the housing boom, but that’s unsustainable. We need to get back to a pace of sales justified by the demographics, say, 900,000″ annually.

Two things are going to make getting to that point a slow climb, according to experts. The first is inventory, which is tight for both new and existing homes. “Unsold new home inventory are pretty close to all-time lows, because builders are being cautious,” Berson says. In the case of existing homes, the inventory squeeze is having a marked effect on certain areas of the country.

“Tight inventory – especially in the West, where the median price was up 17.5 percent from a year earlier – is clearly playing a role,” IHS Global Insight economists Patrick Newport and Stephanie Karol wrote in their e-mailed analysis. “Since housing starts are currently running well below underlying demand (1.3 to 1.5 million, according to our estimates), and since it takes on average about seven months to complete a home on getting a permit, inventories will probably remain lean through next year.”

The other culprit, at least according to the real estate industry, is stricter lending standards, which make it more difficult to get approved for a home loan.  “We don’t want to go back to 2003, but it’s probably a little too tight today,” Berson says.

This housing recovery is different than others, he adds, in that in the past the generally reliable real estate market has been the sector that leads the economy out of recessions. This time, it was the area of the economy that was “hurt most by the recession and recovered relatively modestly this time.

Still, “the housing market will continue to improve and outperform the rest of the economy over the next few quarters,” Mr. Newport and Ms. Karol from IHS write. “Existing home sales should climb about 8.5 percent in 2013 and 12 percent in 2014.”

 

New home sales rise, but market still a long way from ‘normal’ (+video) – CSMonitor.com.