Tag Archives: Bedford Corners NY Real Estate
Mortgage Approval Rates Rise 18.6 Percent, No Sign of Lower Standards | Bedford Corners Homes
Mortgage approval rates have risen nearly 20 percent over the past 12 months yet there is virtually no evidence that lenders are relaxing underwriting standards, according to the February originations report from Ellie Mae.
In February some 56.8 percent of all mortgage applications, both purchase mortgages and refinancings, were approved by lenders using Ellie Mae’s Encompass360 software, which handles about 20 percent of all U.S. mortgage originations. That’s an increase of 18.6 percent from the 47.9 percent approved a year ago. Approval rates have risen quickly in recent months. For 2012, the average closing rate for all mortgages was only 49 percent, 15.9 percent below the February closing rate.
Home buyers taking out a purchase mortgage to buy a home have been more successful than homeowners seeking to refinance. Some 61.7 percent of home buyers were approved for a mortgage in February compared to 54.7 percent of refinancing homeowners.
The data show almost only a slight decline in only one of the three key factors lenders use for mortgage approvals: FICO scores, loan to value ratios and debt to income ratios. Loan to value ratios have risen to 80 today compared to 76 a year ago, an increase of 5.2 percent but median FICO scores for all approved loans are less than one percent lower than they were a year ago, down from 750 to 745. Debt to income ratios are exactly the same as a year ago: 23 percent and 35 percent when mortgage payments are included.
Despite the improved percentage of approvals, mortgages are taking a little longer to process than a year ago. Purchase loans took 47 days to close in February, slightly longer than the 45 days it took a year ago. Refinancings are taking significantly longer today than a year ago, 50 days compared to 44 days.
National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index drops in March | Bedford Corners Homes
Bloomberg NewsHome builders are optimistic about future sales of new houses; its current sales that are down.
The housing market’s comeback has hit a speed bump — an index of home builders’ confidence slipped again in March.
The index, which is compiled by the National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo, is on a three-month slide after eight months of gains. It’s based on home builders’ perception of current sales for new single-family homes and their expectations for future sales.
Demand isn’t the problem; supply is. There are “frustrating bottlenecks in the supply chain for developed lots, along with rising costs for building materials and labor,” said NAHB Chairman Rick Judson, owners of Evergreen Development Group in Charlotte, N.C.
“Home building is beginning to suffer growth pains as the infrastructure that supports it tries to re-establish itself,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “During the Great Recession, the industry lost home-building firms, building material production capacity, workers who retreated to other sectors and the pipeline of developed lots.”
Other issues facing home builders include appraisals that are coming in too low and mortgages that are too hard to get for prospective buyers.
Despite all of these issues, “builders are much more optimistic today than they were at this time last year,” Crowe said.
In fact, home builders grew more optimistic about future home sales in March; a decline in current sales conditions was responsible for the index’s 2-point drop to 44.
Plus, some regions are doing better than others. The index jumped 4 points in the West, to 58. That’s well ahead of the Midwest’s 47, the South’s 46 and the Northeast’s 39.
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Chappaqua, Bedford Corners See Inventory Drop | RobReportBlog
Chappaqua, Bedford Corners See Inventory Drop | RobReportBlog
Armonk
92 homes for sale
40 homes sold last six months 13.8 months of inventory
53 homes sold, pending, in contract 10.35 months of inventoryChappaqua
103 homes for sale
33 homes sold last six months 18.72 months of inventory
75 homes sold, pending, in contract 8.24 months of inventoryBedford Corners
29 homes for sale
9 homes sold last six months 19.33 months of inventory
16 homes sold, pending, in contract 10.87 months of inventory
Delinquency Rates, Top and Bottom 5 Markets | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Tight Inventories Force Buyers to Start Early | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Realtor.com listing data for February suggest buyers are getting an early start to the 2013 home buying season amid signs that sellers are finally responding to the positive market by increasing depleted inventories.
While inventories remain at record lows, the average age of the inventory was down by 9.26 percent over the month and by 11.71 percent on a year-over- year basis, suggesting that many reluctant home sellers may finally be coming off the fence to take advantage of recent improvements in housing prices. From January to February, the median age of the inventory fell in 145 of the 146 markets tracked by Realtor.com. The national median list price also reversed its recent downward trend, rising by 1.55% over the month and 1.01% on an annual basis. And while list prices continue to decline in many smaller industrialized markets in the Midwest and North East, the number of markets experiencing a decline is beginning to turn around, spelling more good news for the housing market and the US economy at large.
The nationwide median list price f rose to $189,900 in February. While list prices remain about 2.6 percent below their peak during the 2012 home buying season ($195,000)–and 24 percent below their level in January 2007 ($249,900)–if list prices continue to pick up speed as they did last year in the spring, 2013 could prove to be another good year for the housing market.
The total U.S. for-sale inventory of remained at near-record lows in February, with 1,494,218 units for sale. While the inventory was slightly up on a monthly basis, reflecting the beginning of the home buying season, it was down by 15.97 percent compared to a year ago and is less than half its peak of 3.1 million units in September 2007. Record low inventories, combined with list prices that are once again on the rise, are likely to set the stage for continued gains in housing values in the upcoming year.
The median age of inventory of for-sale listings fell to 98 days in February, 11.71% below the median age one year ago (February 2011). While the median age of the inventory is highly seasonal, the year-over-year decline is consistent with a gradual, but persistent downward trend that has been occurring for the past two years.
The strength of housing markets varied greatly by region, with markets in California registering the highest increases in listing prices coupled with the largest inventory declines. Phoenix, Seattle and Denver were also among the top performers. However, although their numbers have begun to decline, many smaller industrialized markets in the Midwest and the Northeast continue to register year-over-year list price declines, as did Philadelphia, Chicago and New York City.
Mortgages rates up on positive jobs report | Bedford Corners NY Homes
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Global luxury real estate market showing ‘strong momentum’ | Bedford Corners NY Homes
The international luxury real estate market remains relatively immune to the economic and political trends that drive the general housing market and is off to strong start in 2013, according to a report from high-end real estate affiliate network Christie’s International Real Estate.
The report compared 10 top property markets around the world: London, New York, Hong Kong, Paris, San Francisco, France’s Cote d’Azur, Toronto, Dallas, Los Angeles, and Miami. The company, a subsidiary of Christie’s auction house, also rolled out a new index, the Christie’s International Real Estate Index, which ranks markets across metrics such as record sales price, prices per square foot, percentage of non-local and international purchasers, and the number of luxury listings relative to population.
The 10 markets were also chosen for the network’s strong market share locally. Christie’s International Real Estate has 125 affiliated brokerages in 41 countries.
London, which topped the index, achieved a record sales price of more than $121 million for a residential property in 2012, followed by an $88 million sale in New York. In all of the cities studied except Dallas and Toronto, the highest sales price for the year exceeded $35 million, the report said.
Economist Robert Shiller has predicted U.S. home prices will rise only one or two percent a year in inflation-adjusted terms for the next half decade due to “lingering uncertainties” in world economies, the report said. By contrast, a study by the The Boston Consulting Group expects global sales of personal luxury goods, such as fine art, to grow about 7 percent annually through 2014, assuming there are no new major economic crises, the report added.
“Except where there is government intervention luxury residential real estate values will likely follow luxury goods and not the general housing market, and are therefore poised to increase in many of the cities studied in 2013,” the report said. “This is particularly true as (high-net-worth individuals) turn their luxury investments toward nonconsumables and experiential luxury products that have lasting value.”







