Category Archives: Pound Ridge

Texas homebuyer demographic shifts from singles to marrieds | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Texas homebuyers are buying more new homes and they’re finding them faster, according to the Texas Association of Realtors. This indicates a steadily growing, competitive housing market in The Lone Star State. 

Shad Bogany, chairman of the Texas Association of Realtors, said, “This report affirms the Texas real estate industry as a driving force in our state’s economy. More new homes are being built and homes are selling faster, which bodes well for our thriving Texas housing market and our economy’s future.”

In 2012, 26% of all homes purchased in Texas were new. Additionally, Texas homebuyers only spent eight weeks looking for a home prior to making their purchase. Compared to Texas, only 16% of homes nationwide were new homes and homebuyers spent an extra month searching for the right property.

It seems that the makeup of Texas homebuyers has shifted as well, with 69% of homebuyers being married couples, compared to 65% nationally. This marks the highest share since 2001.

Conversely, the share of homebuyers classified as “single” hit the lowest level since 2001, with singles representing only 16% of Texas homebuyers and 15% nationwide. 

Bogany explained, “The recession led to tighter credit and lending standards across the U.S., which is why you’re seeing less individual home buyers. For many, it required a dual income to afford a home in 2012.” 

 

Texas homebuyer demographic shifts from singles to marrieds | HousingWire.

OCC: Housing market shows strong growth | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Treasury yields have posted historical lows for the past several years, implying strongish economic growth and the potential for higher inflation, the Office of the Currency of the Comptroller said.

In the OCC Semiannual Risk Perspective from the National Risk Committee, the yield curve has stayed positively sloped and relatively steep, which shows higher household and corporate income and revenue growth.

However, for banks, the possible negative effects of higher rates include a decline in the value of investment securities, including many mortgage-related securities, the OCC said.

Meanwhile, net income for 2012 increased 12% year over year to more than $94 billion, with banks of all sizes experiencing improvements in operating performance.

Part of the growth was attributed to the largest banks reporting a 21% reduction in provisions for loan losses.

In addition, mortgage refinance activity helped boost system revenue, but that source of strength may ease in 2013.

Overall, the OCC said, “The housing market showed signs of improvement in 2012 due to increased investor demand and the limited supply of new and existing homes for sale.”

 

OCC: Housing market shows strong growth | HousingWire.

Detroit teams up with group to prevent foreclosures | Pound Ridge Real Estate

In an effort to help thousands of homeowners facing foreclosure, theMichigan State Housing Development Authority on Friday announced a partnership with the faith-based community to spread the word about relief funds available, The Detroit News writes.

One of the first efforts in the partnership is a Tax Foreclosure Housing Fair in Detroit on Saturday for homeowners in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties. It’s part of the Step Forward Michigan program which offers up to $30,000 for homeowners to pay delinquent taxes, mortgage assistance or condo association dues

 

Detroit teams up with group to prevent foreclosures | HousingWire.

Zillow: Luxury Homes Lead Inventory Declines | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Zillow reported today that the greatest year-over-year decreases in inventory have been among more expensive homes, with the availability of top-tier and middle-tier properties each falling 15.7 percent year-over-year. The number of bottom-tier properties for sale on Zillow nationwide fell only 2.5 percent in early June compared to June 2012.

The analysis counters the conventional belief that supplies of lower tier homes have declined more than higher priced homes due to the effects of negative equity, which is more prevalent among mid and lower income homeowners, and declining numbers of distress sales, which are generally lower priced homes.

Other sources show that it is taking two or three times longer to sell higher priced homes than the average priced home. The Institute for Luxury Home Marketing reported Tuesday that the average days on market for homes priced over $500,000 was 161 in the first week of June. The National Association of Realtors reported the median time on market for all homes was 46 days in April, down sharply from 62 days in March, and is 45 percent faster than the 83 days on market in April 2012. The median age of inventory for all homes on Realtor.com was 79 days in May.

 

Zillow: Luxury Homes Lead Inventory Declines | RealEstateEconomyWatch.com.

Energy efficiency improvements could be factored into mortgage underwriting | Pound Ridge Real Estate

A bill aimed at encouraging home energy efficiency improvements by establishing underwriting guidelines for mortgage lenders that factor in cost savings for homeowners has been introduced — again — in the Senate.

S. 1106, the Sensible Accounting to Value Energy Act of 2013, is sponsored by Sens. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and Johnny Isakson, R-Ga. The bill — which has the support of many real estate industry groups — has been referred to the Senate Banking Committee, where a previous version of the bill introduced in 2011 died.

According to the Appraisal Institute, the bill “would instruct federal loan agencies to assess a borrower’s expected energy costs when financing a house. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development would issue updated underwriting and appraisal guidelines for any loan issued, insured, purchased or securitized by the Federal Housing Administration or any other federal mortgage loan insurance agency.”

The bill’s primary features — an affordability test and a loan-to-value adjustment — would both be optional.

Borrowers with energy-efficient homes are significantly less likely to default, according to a study by the University of South Carolina Center for Community Capital.

Homeowners who have invested in energy-saving upgrades may have trouble getting fair value for their homes if those improvements are not recognized by buyers, appraisers and lenders. More than 200 multiple listing services provide “green fields”  that allow real estate agents to list a home’s green features.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/06/12/energy-efficiency-improvements-could-be-factored-into-mortgage-underwriting/#sthash.74lNMu8p.dpuf

 

Energy efficiency improvements could be factored into mortgage underwriting | Inman News.

New Home Prices Say What’s Different This Time | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Although no two business cycles are alike, most share some common characteristics. The interest-rate-sensitive sectors of the economy — housing and manufacturing — tend to lead on the way up and the way down, for obvious reasons. Inflation ebbs during the recession and in the early stages of the recovery. Credit creation drives the upswing.

The recovery from the 2007-2009 financial crisis has been different all around, just as Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff predicted in their 2009 book, “This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly.” It has been a “protracted affair,” featuring extended declines in asset markets, large contractions in output and employment, and an explosion of government debt: three characteristics common to the aftermath of financial crises.

Yet even in the context of the typical post-financial-crisis recovery described by Reinhart and Rogoff, this one has some peculiarities of its own.

Let’s start with housing, whose rise and fall and associated debt were the proximate cause of the crisis. Residential real estate pretty much sat out the first 2 1/2 years of the recovery before getting traction in 2012, with a lot of outside help. The Federal Reserve drove down rock-bottom mortgage rates even more with its purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, a program that continues to this day.

Prices Beckon

The traditional leader was a laggard this time, and improvement has been slow in coming — at least when it comes to construction and sales. Prices of new homes are a different story.

The median sales price of a new single-family home set a record of $271,600 in April, eclipsing the 2007 peak of $262,600. Some of that reflects an increase in median square footage: 2,390 square feet last year compared with 2,235 square feet in 2007, according to annual data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

“They’re clearly not building for first-time buyers,” said Michael Carliner, an economic consultant specializing in housing.

Another part owes to a greater number of sales of higher-priced homes in more desirable areas of the country. The rest is clearly a response to demand for limited supply: Inventories are near record lows while single-family starts are about two-thirds lower than their 2006 peak. Prices of existing homes, on the other hand, are still being constrained by foreclosure and short sales, in which the house sells for less than the amount owed the lender.

 

New Home Prices Say What’s Different This Time – Bloomberg.

P. Allen Smith: How to Grow Edamame | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Edamame is a vegetable soybean in the same family as the soybeans farmers grow but there are a few differences. Vegetable soybeans are harvested while they are still green while field soybeans are left on the plant to dry. Vegetable soybeans are larger than field soybeans with a creamier texture and mild, nutty flavor.

If you think edamame is a tasty snack, you should try growing the beans in your garden. Edamame’s flavor is that much better when prepared fresh from the garden and it’s very easy to grow.

Prep

Choose a site with full sun and well-drained soil amended with organic matter such as humus or compost.

Some sources recommend treating the beans with inoculant powder (Rhizobium japonicum inoculant) to help them absorb the nitrogen they need. I find that planting soil with plenty of compost will produce a good crop without inoculating the beans. You can read more about inoculating beans here.

Planting Edamame

Sow edamame soybeans after the last frost date in your area and when the soil has warmed up to 60 degrees F.

Sow seeds 1 inch deep and 3 inches apart. Keep the soil consistently moist, but not soggy, until the beans germinate.

Growing Edamame

Caring for Edamame Plants

Caring for edamame is pretty simple. Just keep the area weeded and give the plants 1 inch of water each week.

Harvesting Edamame

Expect all the beans on a plant to mature at once. They are ready when the pods are plump and bright green. With the right weather and growing conditions you can expect about a quarter pound of beans per plant.

Edamame Seeds

Edamame Seed Sources

Gardeners in areas with a short growing season should select early maturing varieties.

P. Allen Smith Garden Home.

How millennials will affect homebuilders | Pound Ridge Real Estate

These 95 million people ages 10 to 32 outnumber their baby-boomer parents by 10 million. The young adults among them, sobered by the recession, have relatively modest material expectations; many say they’d be happy with smaller living spaces.

The housing industry will have to convince the next generation that home loans are as necessary and prudent as the student debt so many of them already carry, writes the Los Angeles Times.

 

How millennials will affect homebuilders | HousingWire.

Bad loans to friends and family may be tax deductible | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Are you a soft touch? Have you lent money to relatives or friends and never been repaid?

If so, you may at least be able to get a tax deduction for the bad loan.

As far as the bad debt deduction is concerned, there are two types of debts: business and nonbusiness.

Business debts arise from the conduct of your business.

Nonbusiness debts arise from your nonbusiness activities, such as making personal investments or personal activities. Money you lend friends, relatives and others for purposes other than use for a business in which you actively participate is a nonbusiness debt.

So if you loan money to your no-good brother-in-law and he never pays it back, can you deduct the amount from your taxes as a bad debt? Maybe.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/06/07/bad-loans-to-friends-and-family-may-be-tax-deductible/#sthash.dOcpJ2Rv.dpuf

 

Bad loans to friends and family may be tax deductible | Inman News.

Will the housing rebound crush the job market? | Pound Ridge Real Estate

For the past few years, economists have been waiting for the housing market to rebound so the job market can finally — crash? Wait, no. It’s the opposite. Right?

On Friday, we’ll get the latest look at how the job market is doing. Hiring is improving, but the unemployment rate has stayed stubbornly high. The go-to explanation among economists has been the weak housing market. Where are all those construction workers going to find work? Nursing? (That’s actually a pretty good idea.)

Housing prices are jumping again, and some people are even saying there’s a new bubble. We’ve pointed out you shouldn’t expect the economy to come roaring back just because the housing market is. But two economists are taking an even more extreme stance: that a good real estate market, where more people buy houses instead of rent, will throw more people out of work.

The paper by David Blanchflower of Dartmouth and Andrew Oswald of the University of Warwick titled “Does High Home-ownership Impair the Labor Market?”, has been out for a month or so but was only published by the National Bureau of Economic Research on Monday. Among the findings:

States with more homeowners, fewer renters, tend to have higher unemployment rates.

It’s not the homeowners that tend to make up the majority of the unemployed.

So we really don’t know why this happens. But it does, so there.

Also, maybe homeowners are less likely to start new businesses, because property makes people lazy I guess.

That makes the study interesting for another reason. Not only are the authors saying the conventional wisdom of a weak housing market and a weak job market improving in tandem is wrong. But also the reason we say such things.

Most people believe the reason high homeownership in a housing bust creates stubbornly high unemployment is because the out of work can’t afford to sell their houses — they owe too much — and move to an area of the country where their job prospects are better.

But Blanchflower and Oswald insist it’s not the homeowners who are the unemployed, or at least the overwhelming majority of them. So the “trapped in a house” storyline doesn’t work for them. Instead, they say homeownership creates a sort of economic rigidity that hurts the job market for everyone, but they don’t say how.

Homeownership, though, was rising throughout the 2000s, and yet the unemployment rate dipped below 4% in the middle part of the decade. Would it have gone lower? It’s only recently that homeownership seems to be holding us back.

Another funny thing about the study is that one of the first economists that Blanchflower and Oswald thank in the beginning of their paper is Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and a prominent liberal economist. It’s odd because Baker disagrees with Blanchflower and Oswald, which he says he told the two authors before they published the paper.

 

Will the housing rebound crush the job market? – The Term Sheet: Fortune’s deals blogTerm Sheet.