Category Archives: Pound Ridge
Pound Ridge NY Real Estate sees inventory glut | Prices will drop 15% over the next few years
Pound Ridge NY real estate has 100 homes for sale now. Over the past six months 22 homes have sold in the Pound Ridge market. At that rate, 3.6 per month, Pound Ridge NY real estate for sale has a 27 month inventory.
For these homes to sell prices need to come down 15%. Otherwise we need a large pick up in buyers or a lot of sellers neeed to pull their homes off the market.
Over-priced listings are not selling.
Pound Ridge NY Real Estate looks at the Top 10 real estate websites in April | Inman News for Pound Ridge NY homes for sale
Top 10 real estate websites in April
Hitwise: AOL Real Estate growing market share
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AOL Real Estate continued its steady upward climb during April in rankings of the Internet’s most popular real estate websites compiled by Web metrics firms Experian Hitwise.
After rising from 16th to eighth position to break into the Hitwise top 10 in March, AOL Real Estate continued to boost its audience in April, rising to fifth place with a 2.91 percent market share in the real estate category, Hitwise said.
The rankings of the top four real estate sites were unchanged from March.
The latest numbers from Hitwise show Realtor.com was the most popular real estate site on the Internet in April, with a 6.5 percent market share, followed by Yahoo Real Estate (6.1 percent), Zillow (5.52 percent), and Trulia.com (4.75 percent).
Realtor.com operator Move Inc. announced an agreement with AOL Real Estate in January, in which Move is powering the site’s homes-for-sale search and coordinating ad sales to real estate agents, brokers and other advertisers.
Zillow and Yahoo Real Estate have a similar alliance, with Zillow managing a common set of for-sale listings on both sites, and ads agents and brokers purchase from Zillow appearing on both sites.
Hitwise’s numbers show Yahoo Real Estate and Zillow with a combined market share of 11.62 percent, compared with a combined market share of 9.41 percent for Realtor.com and AOL Real Estate.
Hitwise rankings take into account a number of metrics, including visits, page views, and average visit time.
AOL Real Estate’s move up in April bumped Rent.com (2.41 percent market share), Homes.com (2.18 percent) and MSN Real Estate (1.74 percent) down one place in the rankings, to sixth, seventh and eighth places, respectively.
ZipRealty (1.53 percent) hung on to ninth place in the Hitwise top 10, while FrontDoor.com (1.51 percent) bounced back from 57th to 10th place. HGTV’s FrontDoor.com began the year riding high on traffic from a sweepstakes competition, which propelled the site into second place on the Hitwise list in January.
Sites on the Hitwise top 10 list captured 35.1 percent of all visits in the real estate category in April, compared to just under 11 percent for the next 10 most popular sites.
Rounding out the Hitwise top 20, Apartment Guide (1.49 percent) fell one position to 11th in April, followed by MyNewPlace (1.19 percent) in 12th.
Rentals.com (1.15 percent) picked up two places in the rankings in April, reaching 13th as it moved past Re/Max Real Estate (1.13 percent), 16th place Apartments.com (1.1 percent), and 17th place ForRent.com (1.03 percent).
Weichert.com (1.11 percent) moved up one position, to 15th, while LoopNet (0.94 percent) and Listingbook Services (0.92 percent) maintained their 18th and 19th place positions on the Hitwise top 20 in April.
HomeAway (0.87 percent) fell three positions to the bottom of the Hitwise top 20 list. Brokerage site Redfin — which claimed the last spot on the Hitwise top 20 in March — did not make the list in April.
Three sites entered the Hitwise top 100 in April — MyCheapApartments.com (57th), Realestatebook.com (93rd) and California Association of Realtors (100). Dropping off the Hitwise top 100 were OwnerWiz.com, Neighborhood Assistance Corp. of America, and LandandFarm.com.
The top 10 ranked search terms were realtor.com, zillow, trulia, realtor, remax, zillow.com, century 21, real estate, homes for rent, and apartments for rent.
Fast-moving websites included Real Tour Vision (up 171 places to 123rd); RE Technology (up 210 places to 237th); Century 21 Town and Country (up 273 places to 421st); TaxSaleList.com (up 113 places to 182); Bridlegate-Ranch (up 859 places to 1,322); Walk Score (up 114 places to 216); Homebuyerassistant.com (up 29 places to 70th); NNY Homes (up 581 places to 1,504); Arizona Multiple Listing Service (up 160 places to 469); and Johnson City Real Estate (up 831 places to 2,008).
Get a tax break on your Pound Ridge NY real estate loss | Inman News for the Pound Ridge real estate investor
Tax breaks for property losses
Real Estate Tax Talk
We’ve all seen on the news that large portions of the country have been devastated by tornados and floods. Unfortunately, homeowners are not always fully insured — or insured at all — against losses due to such events. Fortunately, the Internal Revenue Service can help because uninsured casualty losses are tax deductible.
What is a casualty?
A “casualty” is damage, destruction, or loss of property due to an event that is sudden, unexpected, or unusual. Deductible casualty losses can result from many different causes, including, but not limited to:
- Earthquakes,
- Fires,
- Floods,
- Government-ordered demolition or relocation of a building that is unsafe to use because of a disaster,
- Landslides,
- Sonic booms,
- Storms, including hurricanes and tornadoes,
- Terrorist attacks,
- Vandalism, including vandalism to rental property by tenants, and
- Volcanic eruptions.
One thing all the events in the list above have in common is that they are sudden — they happen quickly. Suddenness is the hallmark of a casualty loss. Thus, loss of property due to slow, progressive deterioration is not deductible as a casualty loss.
For example, the steady weakening or deterioration of a building due to normal wind and weather conditions is not a deductible casualty loss.
When casualty losses are deductible
In the case of a home used solely for personal purposes, a casualty loss may be deducted only if:
- You itemize deductions,
- Each casualty loss exceeds $100, and
- The total of all casualties suffered during the year exceeds 10 percent of your adjusted gross income after subtracting $100 from each loss suffered.
Losses to business property are not subject to the above limitations.
Amount of casualty loss deduction
How much you may deduct depends on whether the property involved is completely destroyed or partially destroyed, and whether the loss was covered by insurance. If more than one item is damaged or destroyed, you must figure your deduction separately for each.
If your property is personal-use property or is not completely destroyed, the amount of your casualty or theft loss is the lesser of:
- Your property’s adjusted basis (usually its cost, increased or decreased by improvements and/or depreciation), or
- The decrease in fair market value of your property due to the casualty.
If your property is business or income-producing property, such as rental property, and is completely destroyed, and the fair market value of the property before the casualty is less than the adjusted basis of the property, then the amount of your loss is your adjusted basis.
The role of insurance
You may take a deduction for casualty losses to your property only if — and only to the extent that — the loss is not covered by insurance. If the loss is fully covered, you get no deduction. You can’t avoid this rule by not filing an insurance claim.
If you have insurance coverage, you must timely file a claim, even if it will result in cancellation of your policy or an increase in your premiums. If you don’t file an insurance claim, you cannot obtain a casualty loss deduction.
You must reduce the amount of your claimed casualty loss by any insurance recovery you receive or reasonably expect to receive, even if it hasn’t yet been paid. If it later turns out that you receive less insurance than you expected, you can deduct the amount the following year.
If you receive more than you expected and claimed as a casualty loss, the extra amount is included as income for the year it is received.
Disaster areas
Casualty losses are generally deductible in the year the casualty occurs. However, if you suffer a deductible casualty loss in an area that is declared a federal disaster by the president, you may elect to deduct the loss for your taxes for the previous year.
This will provide you with a quick tax refund since you’ll get back part of the tax you paid for the prior year. If you have already filed your return for the prior year, you can claim a disaster loss against that year’s income by filing an amended return.
You can determine if an area has been declared a disaster area by checking the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) website at http://www.fema.gov/news/disasters.fema.
A great deal more useful information about deducting casualty losses may be found at the IRS website at www.irs.gov.
via inman.com
Pound Ridge NY Mortgage Rates this week | Mortgage rates for Pound Ridge NY Real Estate buyers
Real estate affordability sets record in Q1 | Inman News for Pound Ridge NY Home buyers
Pound Ridge NY Real estate affordability sets record in Q1
74.6% of homes affordable to median-income households in Pound Ridge
Housing affordability hit a new record high in the first quarter, surpassing the previous high set in fourth-quarter 2010, according to an index released by the National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo today.
The Housing Opportunity Index found that 74.6 percent of new and existing homes sold in the first quarter were affordable to families earning the national median income of $64,400. That’s up from 73.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, and it’s the highest level recorded in the more than 20 years the index has been measured.
“With interest rates remaining at historically low levels, today’s report indicates that homeownership is within reach of more households than it has been for more than two decades,” said Bob Nielsen, chairman of the NAHB, in a statement.
“While this is good news for consumers, homebuyers and builders continue to confront extremely tight credit conditions, and this remains a significant obstacle to many potential home sales.”
more…
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Growing number of real estate agents buying Zillow ads- Why should Pound Ridge NY Homes do this? | Inman News for Pound Ridge NY Real Estate sellers
Can Pound Ridge NY buyer get a mortgage after foreclosure or bankruptcy? | Inman News for Pound Ridge NY Home buyers
‘Cry letter’ to lender can reduce waiting period
For the most part, we are a forgiving society. We believe that people often learn from their mistakes, and everybody deserves a second chance. Our mortgage system incorporates some of that philosophy — up to a point.
The two largest mistakes of consumers that challenge the capacity of the mortgage system to forgive are bankruptcy and foreclosure. Both are recorded in the borrower’s credit file and stay there for an extended period: Mortgage foreclosure and Chapter 13 bankruptcy remain for seven years, and Chapter 7 bankruptcy for 10 years. Check out this article where you will get an extended information about debt relief vs bankruptcy.
Both cause an immediate and sharp reduction in the borrower’s credit score. However, because the scoring system weights new information more heavily than old information, it is inherently forgiving of past misdeeds, provided that the new information generated by the borrower is favorable.
But lenders have a longer memory than credit scorers, and they set minimum time periods for “forgiveness,” independently of and without regard for credit scores. I recently received a letter from a prospective borrower with a credit score of 750 (same as mine) who had been discharged from Chapter 7 bankruptcy three years earlier.
She had used the three years to rebuild her credit. The reason she wrote me was that, despite her good score, she was being turned down for a mortgage.
About 95 percent of all mortgages being written today are sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, or insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). These agencies set the rules that lenders implement. However, lenders can be tougher than the agencies and many are because they don’t want high default rates on the loans they originate.
Fannie Mae requires the following waiting periods before a borrower becomes eligible for a mortgage the agency will purchase: two years after a Chapter 13 bankruptcy; four years after a Chapter 7 bankruptcy; and five years after a foreclosure.
Borrowers who have been foreclosed on, furthermore, must put 10 percent down, have a credit score of 680, and must wait an additional two years before they become eligible to purchase a second home or an investment property. Freddie Mac’s rules are the same.
But the agencies include provisions for “extenuating circumstances,” which, if met, reduce the required waiting periods — to two years on a bankruptcy and three years on a foreclosure.
Extenuating circumstances are credible excuses for the bankruptcy or foreclosure that can be interpreted to mean that the likelihood of a recurrence is very low. The case is made in what lenders call a “cry letter,” which is included in the borrower’s application.
The burden of proof is on the borrower. The agencies will be looking for a multiple-cause explanation for the bankruptcy or foreclosure. People lose their jobs; they get sick; they have accidents; they suffer deaths in the family; they are victimized by fraud; etc. Not one of these in itself is likely to be viewed as an extenuating circumstance, but a combination of them might.
The agencies will also look for evidence that, whatever the causes of the past problem, the current situation of the borrower is one that is reasonably secure against a recurrence. In addition, they want the borrower to document that since the occurrence of the bankruptcy or foreclosure, the borrower’s capacity to handle financial affairs has improved.
A rising credit score and an ability to make a significant down payment on a forthcoming loan are good evidence of this.
The major hurdle facing the borrower who wants to plead extenuating circumstances is convincing the lender. Some loan officers will help borrowers craft the letter, because they know what the underwriters are looking for, but the prospect of success is much lower than it was before the financial crisis.
Every aspect of loan underwriting has gotten tougher, and the ability to plead extenuating circumstances is no exception.
FHA’s rules on bankruptcy, foreclosure and extenuating circumstances are more liberal than those of Fannie and Freddie. For example, under FHA rules a borrower must wait only two years following discharge from a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and they can qualify while they are still in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. They need only to document that all payments within the bankruptcy plan have been made on time for a year, and that they have permission from the court to take a mortgage.
The challenge to borrowers who need an FHA mortgage is that most lenders have more restrictive rules than FHA. They don’t want to take the risk that high default rates on the FHA loans they originate will get them tossed out of the FHA program.
There are a few FHA lenders who are as liberal as FHA, but charge rates and points well above those posted by other lenders. They are the subprime lenders of the post-crisis market, and should be avoided if at all possible.
Pound Ridge NY Real Estate up 40% | Sales Up Prices down | Six Month RobReportBlog
Pound Ridge NY Real Estate up 40% | Sales Up Prices down | Six Month RobReportBlog
Pound Ridge NY Real Estate Report RobReportBlog May 2011
Pound Ridge NY real estate saw Sales up 40% but the median price has dropped to $650,000 from $751,000. The lesson learned is if you want to sell your home price it aggressively.
Pound Ridge NY homes 2011 Sales stats (6 months)
21 homes have sold
$650,000 median price
$3,100,000 high price
$375,000 low price
3499 average size
$244 average price per foot
192 average dom
90.11% sold to ask price
Pound Ridge NY homes 2010 Sales stats (6 months)
15 homes sold
$751,700 median price
$3,325,000 high price
$295,000 low price
4034 average size
$263 average price per foot
195 average dom
93.27% sold to ask price
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Five Things Potential Pound Ridge Home Buyers Don’t Know | Buying a Pound Ridge NY Home
Zillow Mortgage Marketplace‘s most recent survey indicates that there are many aspects of the home buying process that continue to elude prospective home buyers. Here are some of the more surprising results of the findings, along with five things home buyers don’t know, but should:
Mortgage rates vary daily
A whopping 55 percent of prospective home buyers don’t realize that mortgage rates, which are determined by a slew of factors, can – and do – change daily (and sometimes more than once a day if certain economic reports are released.) To get the best rates, you have to monitor them (watch the movement of the 10-year Treasury bond; that’s your best indicator.) and shop around. After all, a change in a rate of a mere .125% to .25% could mean thousands of dollars in savings each year.
Lender fees are negotiable
When you apply for a mortgage, the bottom line is that you’re going to have to pay lender fees. And these fees — from origination fees to credit report fees to appraisal fees and more — can add up quickly. But the good news — and what 34 percent of prospective home buyers don’t know — is that fees not only vary from one lender to the next, but that they’re negotiable. All the more reason to shop around for different mortgage rates from various lenders.
FHA loans are available to all buyers
More than two in five (42%) prospective home buyers think that only first-time buyers qualify for an FHA loan, a mortgage insured by the Federal House Administration. That’s not the case. In fact, these loans are available to all buyers who meet eligibility requirements. Among the key benefits: minimal down payments, relaxed credit score requirements, low costs, and attractive interest rates.
Interest rates on ARMs don’t always reset higher
While interest rates on 5/1 ARMs do commonly increase after 5 years, rates could decrease. Prospective home buyers may not realize this because so many of us — some 57 percent, in fact – simply don’t know how adjustable rate mortgages work. FYI: the interest rate on this product is made up of two parts — the margin, which is fixed percentage; and the index, which goes both up and down with the general movement of interest rates.
Pre-qualified doesn’t mean much
Just because you’ve been “pre-qualified” for a loan doesn’t mean you’ve secured financing, yet 37 percent of prospective home buyers think it does. When a lender “pre-qualifies” you, they simply approximate how much you can afford, but don’t run your credit or request any sort of documentation to verify the information you provide. It is not until a lender has approved your loan application without conditions that you’ve got a firm commitment.





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