Tag Archives: Armonk NY

Armonk NY

Tennis Great John McEnroe Buys Another Malibu Home | Armonk Real Estate

It’s a case of real estate love, which is far better than “love” in tennis.

Tennis star John McEnroe, best known for winning seven Grand Slam titles, has bought a Malibu home just six miles from his other Malibu residence, Real Estalker blog first reported.

His new beachy digs is a California ranch-style home on 1.5-acres off the Pacific Coast Highway. The home does not sit right on the beach — which makes sense considering McEnroe and wife Patty Smyth paid just $3.345 million — but reportedly does come with deeded access to one of Malibu’s most desirable beaches.

According to the listing, the 1960s-built home offers 2,800 square feet of living space, 4 bedrooms and 3.5 baths. An open floor plan leads from an updated, gourmet kitchen to a great room with vaulted ceilings. Outdoor living spaces include a kitchen and firepit.

It’s hard to say what McEnroe will do with his other Malibu home, just a few miles down the road. He could keep it as a rental or try to hop on the sellers’ market.

 

 

Tennis Great John McEnroe Buys Another Malibu Home | Zillow Blog.

Mortgage delinquency, foreclosure rates decline in Corridor | Armonk Real Estate

Home mortgage foreclosure and delinquency rates in Cedar Rapids and Iowa City fell in May over the same period last year, according to data released by CoreLogic of Irvine, Calif.

 

The rate of Cedar Rapids area foreclosures among outstanding mortgage loans was 1.88 percent for May, a decrease of 0.22 percent from 2.1 percent in May 2012. Foreclosure activity in Cedar Rapids was lower than the national foreclosure rate of 2.61 percent for May, down from 3.46 percent in the same month last year.

 

The foreclosure rate measures the percentage of loans in some stage of the foreclosure process. A foreclosure is defined by the legal process by which an owner’s right to a property is terminated, usually due to default.

 

The foreclosure rate does not represent the number of new foreclosure filings, but rather the current inventory of loans in the foreclosure process.

 

The Cedar Rapids mortgage delinquency rate also declined in May. CoreLogic reported  3.23 percent of mortgage loans were 90 days or more delinquent, compared with 3.55 percent for the same period last year, representing a decrease of 0.32 percentage points.

 

The national rate of mortgages 90 days or more past due was 5.63 percent in May, down from 6.89 percent in the same period of 2012, according to CoreLogic.

 

The rate of Iowa City area foreclosures among outstanding mortgage loans was 0.96 percent for May, a decrease of 0.17 percent from 1.13 percent in May 2012.

 

The mortgage delinquency rate in Iowa City also declined in May over the same period last year. CoreLogic reported 1.72 percent of mortgage loans were 90 days or more delinquent in May, compared with 2.07 percent for the same period last year, representing a decrease of 0.35 percent.

 

Mortgage delinquency and foreclosure rates in Cedar Rapids and Iowa City have generally fallen over the last year, with some occasional single-month increases. The rates have always been lower than the national rates tracked by CoreLogic.

 

Mortgage delinquency, foreclosure rates decline in Corridor | TheGazette.

House prices and rent in England to surge by 2020, warns report | Armonk Homes

House prices in England will soar by 42% by 2020 and rents will rise by even more, according to a report from the National Housing Federationwhich warns of the “colossal strain” facing the generation born in the 1990s.

Many will remain trapped in their parents’ homes as property prices continue to outstrip earnings, warns the NHF. It forecasts that 3.7 millionyoung people will be living with their parents by 2020, as the rate of housebuilding fails to keep up with the rising population.

“By 2020 the price of a first-time buyer’s home will increase by 42% to £245,165. Although wages for 22- to 29-year-olds will increase by 36% by 2020, this poses a huge challenge for those wishing to be homeowners. Low-earning young people would have to spend 16 times their average wage just to buy a home,” said the NHF report.

Rents will be driven even higher as young adults are priced out of the property market. “NHF research shows that private rents are likely to be broadly stable through 2013, but could increase sharply, by about 6% a year, between 2015 and 2020 as interest rates and house prices rise. In 2020, rents are expected to be 46% higher than today. But when the new flood of young adults born in the noughties starts university or a new job, they could push rents even higher in a country already chronically short of decent housing.”

 

 

House prices and rent in England to surge by 2020, warns report | Money | The Guardian.

Track Your Top Videos With New YouTube Analytics Feature | Armonk Realtor

As a video creator or marketer, the analytics package bundled up with YouTube is invaluable for giving you the tools and data to understand what’s working for you and what isn’t. Like the rest of the site, YouTube Analytics is constantly being refined to give you the easiest access to the metrics you need.

The latest tune up is the ability to see how your top 200 videos are performing and two new charts that visualize your channel’s activity. Previously, you could only see the metrics for one video at a time. Networks now also have access to the same data regarding their top 200 channels.

There are two new charts in the View Reports > Audience Retention section of the Analytics reports. The Multi-Line graph shows the site performance of up to 25 videos or channels by the geographic location of the viewer or date by estimated time watched and average % viewed. Each video is colour co-ordinated for easy reference.

Track Your Top Videos With New YouTube Analytics Feature

The Stacked Area graph shows you the data of selected videos, channels or geographic location related to their total metrics.



Source: Track Your Top Videos With New YouTube Analytics Feature http://www.reelseo.com/track-top-videos-youtube-analytics-feature/#ixzz2ZlyhBKA7 
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Track Your Top Videos With New YouTube Analytics Feature.

Monetize Your Platform, How to Grow Sales With Your Online Platform | Armonk Realtor

Have you built your own platform?

Are you wondering how to monetize it?

To learn how you can use your platform to generate real revenue for your business, I interview David Siteman Garland 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 David Siteman Garland, who is the host ofThe Rise To The Top podcast. His video and audio podcasts are focused on equipping bloggers, podcasters and YouTubers to grow a sustainable business with their platforms. He also wrote the book Smarter, Faster, Cheaper: Non-Boring, Fluff-Free Strategies for Marketing and Promoting Your Business.

David shares how he grew his platform and the various ways he has monetized it.

You’ll learn how to get started generating revenue and the price points you need to look at.

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:

Platform Monetization

Why people struggle to make money with their platform

David says it’s a classic problem for most people. The platform space falls into two different categories.

The first one is when it’s a hobby. Here people have great content but don’t know what to do with it.

The second one is where you have the classic “Internet marketers” who have figured out how to make money but their content isn’t great.

David’s advice to those who have great content but struggle to make money is you have to remember that you’re positioned extremely well. If you have great content that’s a side hobby, you can turn it into a legitimate six-figure–plus business.

David started out the exact same way. What he and his friends have achieved shows that it’s very attainable.

the rise to the top home page

David’s platform, The Rise To The Top.

You’ll discover why it’s a good position to be in if you’re a bloggerpodcaster orYouTuber.

A lot of the time, people lack strategy on how to generate revenue. In David’s eyes, the hard part is building your audience, community and trust. Once you have all this in place, the monetization angle can be brought in pretty easily.

The hardest challenge is to start with no platform and no product. If you already have the platform, then you are 50% of the way there.

Listen to the show to find out how you can use technology to accomplish what traditionally businesses had to pay a lot of money for.

What is the platform you have built? 

David started his platform The Rise To The Top in 2008, when it was a simple interview show for entrepreneurs. His show now focuses primarily on what he callsmediapreneurs, who are people with a platform.

He currently has over 7 million community members.

the rise to the top interviews

The Rise To The Top started out as an interview show for entrepreneurs.

When David was on the journey of building his platform, he realized he was pretty good at creating content, building his audience and getting out there. The main struggle for him was how to turn it into a sustainable, long-term business.

There are many ways to monetize a platform. It doesn’t come down to which one will be best, it’s more about which one you are really excited about and want to do. You have to feel comfortable with it.

You’ll discover the many ways you can monetize your platform.

From a content perspective, David publishes two brand-new shows every week on his platform. One is an interview and the other is a video for his The Rise To The Top and DSG TV YouTube channel. You’ll discover what both of these involve and the areas he focuses on and why.

 

 

Monetize Your Platform, How to Grow Sales With Your Online Platform | Social Media Examiner.

9 Creative Ways to Use Social Media to Launch a Product | ArmonkRealtor

Are you looking for creative ideas to help launch your next product (or company)?

Want some actionable tips to employ social media in your next launch?

If so, keep reading as I explore nine ways we used social media to help launch a new project.

You’re sure to find unusual tactics that will help you with your next launch.

Why Social Media for a Launch?

Social media has changed everything when it comes to marketing.

Now, instead of spending a ton of money hoping to get in front of the “press,” you are the media.  Social media allows you to connect with people and encourage engagement with very little money and only a nominal effort.

 

Like Social Media Examiner, you may have a blog or podcast—or perhaps a video series.  This means you are a media outlet and can leverage that following every time you launch.

Even if you don’t produce content, chances are pretty good you’ve developed relationships across social channels. All of these outposts provide a great opportunity to take the launch process to an entirely new level.

Let me show you how. Below are nine ways we employed social media to help launch a new initiative called My Kids’ Adventures.

Tip #1: Create a Teaser Campaign on Facebook

When your idea is nothing more than a thought, start brainstorming ways you can employ social media to hint that something exciting is coming.

My teaser campaign was code-named “Project Torch” and I referred to it every now and again on Facebook. As you can see below, a lot of folks were intrigued and wondered what I had up my sleeve.

I posted the result of a brainstorming session on Facebook, with the words blurred on the clipboard

Starting months before launch, I regularly posted random images of torches, Indiana Jones and updates about my progress on “Project Torch.”

People were private messaging me, calling me and emailing me (family, friends and business peers) wondering what in the world this secret project was.

Tips when doing a teaser campaign:

  • Experiment using Facebook posts with and without images.
  • Share progress images (I showed fuzzed-out logos we were working on).
  • Reference your “code name” in all of your updates to create natural curiosity.
  • Be very careful not to reveal too much too early (even to your closest friends and employees!).

Tip #2: Create a Video That’s Personal

Social media provides an amazing opportunity to connect with people. Why not create a video that reveals the need you hope to address while simply hinting at the solution?

The video below was put together in less than two weeks. Part was filmed with my iPhone while I was on vacation and the other part was done with the help of a guy at my church on a Saturday afternoon.

 

This video played an instrumental role in setting the tone for our new project.

How I unveiled the video

The above video was first formally revealed at Social Media Marketing World, following my keynote presentation.

I pulled a Steve Jobs and said, “But wait, there’s one more thing…”  I showed the video and spoke for about 5 minutes and that was it.

 

 

Read more….

http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/social-media-product-launch/

U.S. News’ best nursing homes | Armonk Real Estate

An estimated 3.3 million Americans will live in the nation’s nearly 16,000 nursing homes during 2013. That number translates to 1 in 7 people ages 65 and up, and more than 1 in 5 of those 85 and older. They and their families will want and need a way to find a source of the best possible care. For many, it won’t be easy.

To help them, U.S. News has collected meaningful data and ratings about nearly every nursing facility in the United States, and built from them a searchable database designed to highlight the highest-rated homes likely to meet each user’s needs.

The data behind Best Nursing Homes come from Nursing Home Compare, a website run by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. CMS sets and enforces standards for nursing homes enrolled in Medicare or Medicaid, as most are. The agency also collects information from states and individual homes and assigns each home (other than a few too new to have built up enough months of data) a rating of one to five stars in each of three categories:

  • State-conducted health inspections
  • Nursing and physical therapy staffing
  • Quality of medical care

On January 2013, 3,036 nursing homes earned an overall rating of five stars from the federal government.

Top Places to Find Nursing Home Care

When it comes to finding a top-quality nursing home, residents of some states face a far easier task than others. While California and nine other states have at least a hundred top-rated nursing homes in U.S. News & World Report’s Best Nursing Homes ratings, several states have only a handful of nursing homes that meet the same standards.

 

 

U.S. News’ best nursing homes – 2013 – Caregiving – MSN Healthy Living.

REOs and Short Sales Drive up Prices | Armonk Real Estate

Though in past they have been a drag on local home values, foreclosures and short sales actually are now rising in price so much faster than normal homes that they are driving up price increases and pulling normal homes with them.

In a reversal of their traditional relationships, since at least April distress sales (REOs and short sales) have been driving the price recovery on a national level, according to the latest home price data from CoreLogic.

April home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased 12.1 percent on a year-over-year basis in April compared to April 2012. On a month-over-month basis, including distressed sales, home prices increased by 3.2 percent in April compared to March.

However, excluding distress sales, prices rose only 11.9 percent in April year-over-year basis compared to April 2012. On a month-over-month basis, excluding distressed sales, home prices increased 3 percent in April compared to March.

Distress sales outpaced normal homes by an even greater margin in May, according to CoreLogic’s monthly price report released today. The gap between year-over-year national price increases without and with distress sales grew from .2 percent in April to .6 percent in May.

Home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased 12.2 percent on a year-over-year basis in May compared to May 2012, a slight increase over April. This change represents the biggest year-over-year increase since February 2006 and the 15th consecutive monthly increase in home prices nationally. On a month-over-month basis, including distressed sales, home prices increased by 2.6 percent in May compared to April.

 

REOs and Short Sales Drive up Prices | RealEstateEconomyWatch.com.

Despite Lower Prices, 40 Million Households are Burdened by Housing Costs | Armonk Real Estate

Since 2007, the number of households are paying more than half of their income for housing despite the crash in home values and bottom basement interest rates has increased by 2.6 million.

As of 2011, over 40 million households were at least moderately cost burdened (paying more than 30 percent of their incomes for housing), including 20.6 million households that were severely burdened (paying more than half of their incomes for housing), according to the State of the Nation’s Housing 2013 released yesterday by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University.

The latest increases in the number of severely burdened households represent a jump of 347,000 from 2010, 2.6 million from 2007 when the recession began, and 6.7 million from a decade ago.

The most recent increases were almost entirely among severely burdened renters, whose numbers soared by 2.5 million from 2007 to 2011, pushing the share to 27.6 percent. While up only 173,000 over this period, the number of cost-burdened homeowners had already surged by 2.7 million in 2001-07 amid the sharp rise in house prices and the widespread availability of easy mortgage credit.

However, the incidence of cost burdens has not fallen much more dramatically among owners despite the substantial decline in home prices and low interest rates. Indeed, the share of severely burdened owners rose from 12.1 percent in 2007 to 12.6 percent in 2011. The lack of progress reflects the difficulties that many owners locked into excessive mortgage debt face in attempting to refinance and the still-weak state of the economy. In fact, the overwhelming majority of underwater homeowners continue to make payments on mortgages that exceed the present value of their homes, the report said.

While increasingly prevalent at all income levels, severe hous­ing cost burdens are much more common among households with the lowest incomes. Nearly seven out of ten households with annual incomes of less than $15,000 (roughly equivalent to year-round employment at the minimum wage) are severely burdened. With income inequality worsening over the past decade, the share of households with these low incomes has continued to grow.

Meanwhile, the stock of low-cost housing that these households can afford continues to shrink. Between 2007 and 2011, the number of renter households with extremely low incomes (less than 30 percent of area medians) increased by 2.5 million. Over the same period, the number of available housing units that households at this income level could afford to rent declined by 135,000. As a result, the gap between the supply of affordable housing and demand from extremely low-income renters dou­bled in just four years to 5.3 million units. Given that the typical unit completed in 2012 rented for $1,100 per month, new hous­ing development is unlikely to alleviate this affordability gap.

The dramatic increase in the burden of housing costs was one of a number of topics discussed at a webinar that originated at the Center’s offices in Cambridge.

 

Despite Lower Prices, 40 Million Households are Burdened by Housing Costs | RealEstateEconomyWatch.com.

Housing Market: From Recovery to Bubble–Already? | Armonk Real Estate

Only a year after the housing market bottomed, “bubble” talk has surfaced as soaring, double-digit price gains sweep markets across the country.

An open house in Cheviot Hills—a neighborhood in West Los Angeles—attracted 150 people and brought in 14 bids before the home sold for 7 percent above the listing price at $2.9 million.

A loft in Manhattan’s SoHo district recently sold for $3.25 million after a bidding war pushed the price 10 percent above the asking price.

In Chicago’s Wrigleyville area, a two-flat greystone was bid up to $850,000, 6 percent above asking price, and sold to a single-family home converter who plans to add another floor and put it back on the market for $1.8 million.

“Prices in some areas are just out of control,” said Scott Tamkin, an agent with Keller Williams Realty in Los Angeles. “As soon as a good property comes on the market at a reasonable price—bam! It’s gone in multiple offers, often times in cash.”

U.S. home prices surged 12.1 percent in April from the same period a year ago, the biggest jump since February 2006 and the second straight month of double-digit gains, CoreLogic reported at the start of June.

Tight inventories, cheap money, and investor appetite are driving prices through the roof in some cities; particularly in hard-hit markets such as Phoenix and Las Vegas.

To be sure, not all areas are overheated nor have some even recovered since the downturn. But in most big cities, demand is hot, deals are quick, and many properties are getting bid up before selling for cash.

And even though home values are still a far cry from their peak in 2006, economists caution that prices in some areas have risen too far, too fast.

“It’s clearly not sustainable,” said Stan Humphries, chief economist at Zillow.

Wells Fargo Senior Economist Mark Vitner seconded that: “If investors don’t back off soon, it could lead to a bit of a price bubble.”

Prices have risen despite a lack of major improvement in fundamentals—namely jobs growth and incomes.

“Home prices need to moderate,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors. “It’s bad news in terms of affordability and certainly not sustainable for prices to rise and incomes to lag.”

 

Housing Market: From Recovery to Bubble–Already?.