5 markets for real estate investors
Cheap homes aren’t always best indicator
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I live in the surprisingly large suburban city of Mesa, Ariz., ranked No. 38 nationally by population. My house sits about 20 miles from downtown Phoenix (No. 6 in population), so I keep a close eye on the local economy and housing market, all of which have been absolutely miserable since the start of the recession about four years ago.
Indeed, the Phoenix metro is considered one of the great bust-ups of this downturn, along with some metros in Southern California, Las Vegas and Florida. Nevertheless, when considering the top five investor markets in the country, I would put the Phoenix metro at the top of the list for a couple of reasons.
First, because everything is cheap.
As a top-10 foreclosure market, the abundance of bank-owned properties coming back into the market has put extreme pressure on pricing. In February, the median price for homes sold in Maricopa County (home to Phoenix, Mesa, Scottsdale, Tempe, etc.) was $127,500, down dramatically from $140,000 in February of the prior year. However, it was slightly more than in January, which hopefully means the Phoenix housing market is stabilizing.
Cheap homes don’t always make good investor markets, as some cities — such as Orlando, Fla., where prices are also cheap — by some predictions, won’t see pre-crash pricing for another 30 years.
Arizona is still an in-migration state, and most people who come here move to the Phoenix metro. Growth cities generally experience decades-long cycles of real estate boom and bust, which is certainly the history of Phoenix. The metro, called the Valley of Sun, has been in a bust for a while, but it could spring back to a boom.
The unemployment rate is improving, retail sales are up, and the economy shows signs of stabilization. Large-scale investors and Canadians have been bullish on the Valley of the Sun, buying up almost anything with a “Foreclosed” sign.
Another busted market that I have faith in is Riverside, Calif. (No. 61), which is often tag-teamed with San Bernardino in an area known as the Inland Empire. Frankly, I wouldn’t call this the prettiest part of Southern California, caught between the eastern edge of the Los Angeles metro and the desert, but this is a place where people work for a living.
What makes Riverside-San Bernardino cook is that it is the distribution center for much of the goods that come into the port of Los Angeles-Long Beach, which sees a large share of goods imported from Asia. This is a business that is not going to go away anytime too soon.
The trend line for Riverside-San Bernardino looked a lot like Phoenix, with a complete bust during the recession: a huge amount of foreclosures and a deep dive in housing prices (dropped 50 percent since 2006). The good news is housing construction came to a complete halt, which should help the old inventory get absorbed. Some Southern California forecasters suggest home prices may rise this year.
The bad news for the Inland Empire has been a very harsh unemployment rate that earlier this year was almost 15 percent. That should drop about 3 percentage points in 2011, reports the Los Angeles Times, although the newspaper also points out that the unemployment rate won’t drop below 10 percent until 2014.
Sticking with my theme of finding cool investment opportunities in sun-drenched lands, I’ll switch coasts. Florida has been the epicenter of the housing bust, condominium overbuilding and bad condo conversions, so it’s easy to find cheap housing almost anywhere in the state. The trick has been to spot the markets that will come back quickest.
I have not been a fan of the state, as I think it has numerous other problems besides a deflated housing market, including increasing taxes, high property insurance, and more competition than ever for retirees.
In all the weeds, some flowers are still growing, and if I had to choose my Florida market, I would opt for the Tampa Bay (No. 55) metro — and not just because it has decent sports teams.
In March, existing-home sales skyrocketed, up 32 percent — levels not seen in five years, reports the St. Petersburg Times. While residential sale prices fell by 16 percent from March 2010 to March 2011, on a month-to-month basis median prices climbed — for the first time in 10 months — according to the Pinellas Realtor Organization.
Retail sales have improved as well, with strong gains at the start of the year.
The caution for Tampa Bay is the workforce. According to a Bradenton, Fla., press blog, the region was still losing jobs through the third quarter of last year, with average wage growth also remaining negative.
One more for the Sunbelt
For the past decade, North Carolina has been the undercover boom state. Over the past decade, its population jumped 18.5 percent, compared with 9.7 percent for the U.S. overall. North Carolina passed New Jersey as the 10th most populous state. Most of that population movement has been to an area called The Triangle, consisting of such cities as Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro and Wilmington.
This area experienced a classic bust following an unprecedented boom and is still suffering. To quote HousingPredictor.com, “The Triangle housing market suffered through a tough end to 2010, nearly coming to a standstill as foreclosures pressured home prices more than most had ever thought it would.”
This area will boom again, and when things turn around the hot market to look at in The Triangle is Raleigh. During the downturn, Raleigh (No. 43) appeared to be more stable than its neighbors. Again, according to HousingPredictor.com, the housing-price forecast for The Triangle’s cities in 2011 is -9.2 percent for Wilmington, -8.9 percent for Charlotte and -8.3 percent for Greensboro, but just -4.3 percent for Raleigh.
My one investment market not in the Sunbelt is the industrial city of Pittsburgh (No. 59), which is undergoing an economic renaissance after years of depopulation following the decline of the steel industry.
Local economists are predicting that over the next decade the city’s population will not only stabilize, but increase. The important suburban counties of Washington and Butler have already swung to good growth over the past decade.
Jobs are coming back to the city, which developed a more broad-based economy than many other heartland industrial cities, mostly because of its universities: six four-year institutions, including University of Pittsburgh (strong in healthcare) and Carnegie-Mellon (strong in computer science and robotics).
Tipping-point statistic: in February, average home sales in the five-county Pittsburgh area rose more than 10 percent from the year before, reports RealSTAT of Pittsburgh.
Another key point: Pittsburgh has been a market that major investors and builders have avoided for the past 20 years, so it is underdeveloped.
Steve Bergsman is a freelance writer in Arizona and author of several books. His latest book, “After the Fall: Opportunities and Strategies for Real Estate Investing in the Coming Decade,” has been ranked as a top-selling real estate investment book for the Amazon Kindle e-reader.
via inman.com
Tag Archives: Bedford Hills NY Homes
Bedford Hills realtor finds BlackBerry drops to 3rd in mobile market share | Inman News for the Bedford Hills real estate market
BlackBerry drops to 3rd in mobile market share
Google’s Android platform continues gains
Flickr image coutesy of David Recordon.
For the first time, Research in Motion’s BlackBerry platform has dropped to third in market share among smartphone users, behind Google’s Android and Apple’s iPhone platforms, according to a report by metrics company comScore Inc. released Friday.
Android-equipped smartphones accounted for 36.4 percent of U.S. smartphone users 13 and up for the three-month period ending in April. That’s a 5.2 percentage point rise in market share from the three-month period ending in January. At the same time, Apple’s iPhones rose to second in market share with a 1.3 percentage point rise, to 26 percent.
The BlackBerry platform lost nearly as much market share as Android gained: down 4.7 percentage points to 25.7 percent. Android first eclipsed BlackBerry — the previous market leader — in January’s report.
Overall, smartphone use among those 13 and up in the U.S. rose 13 percent in the three months ending in April compared to the three months ending in January, to 74.6 million people.
Top smartphone platforms % market share (three-month period ending in Jan. ’11) % market share (three-month period ending in April ’11) Percentage point change 31.2% 36.4% +5.2% Apple 24.7% 26.0% +1.3% RIM 30.4% 25.7% -4.7% Microsoft 8.0% 6.7% -1.3% Palm 3.2% 2.6% -0.6% Source: comScore.
Bedford Hills Realtor working for an Hourly rate: The solution to low real estate commission? | Inman News for Bedford Hills NY real estate market
Hourly rate: The solution to low real estate commission?
Letter to the Editor
How much is your time worth? Perhaps it’s time to include an hourly rate in the buyer broker agreement. It’s not too hard to keep track of the time you spend for a particular client performing transaction-related real estate services (not marketing, prospecting, networking, or reading articles about real estate compensation).
The agreement can provide that the client shall pay the greater of the hourly rate calculation and the commission paid to the buyer’s broker. If the hourly rate calculation is greater than the (commission paid to the buyer’s broker), then the buyer will bring cash to closing.
The trick, of course, is recording your time. It’s not too much trouble for a lawyer, but may take some getting used to for Realtors.
Jon Cohen
Real estate broker
Portland, Ore.
10 markets with fastest-rising real estate prices | Inman News for Bedford Hills Real Estate buyers
South accounts for 6 of 10 metros with highest jumps in median list price
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Southern metro areas dominated a list of the 10 markets with the biggest year-over-year increases in median list price in April, according to monthly data released this week by Realtor.com. The data considers 146 metro areas nationwide.
Two Florida markets saw the highest jumps: median list price in Fort Myers-Cape Coral rose 25.7 percent to $225,000, and the median in Miami rose 8.6 percent to $239,000.
Shreveport-Bossier City, La., followed with an 8.1 percent increase, to $173,000. Fort Myers-Cape Coral and Miami also saw the biggest year-over-year drops in inventory: -25.3 percent and -29.9 percent, respectively.
The two Florida markets were the only metros in the top 10 to move properties at a slower rate than the national median: 95 days. Median age of inventory for each was 116 and 129 days, respectively.
In order to obtain the median age of inventory for each market, Realtor.com subtracted a property’s listed date from whichever was earlier: its end listing date or the end of the time period, and took the median of all the resulting individual days on the website.
The three other Southern metros to make the list were Charleston, W.V.; Tyler, Texas; and the Virginia segment of the Washington, D.C. metro area. (Realtor.com separates data for metro areas that encompass multiple states.) The Washington, D.C., metro was the fastest-moving among the 10 markets with a median inventory age of 57 days.
In the U.S. overall, the median list price fell 4 percent year-over-year in April, to $191,900.
Two Midwestern metros (Columbia, Mo.; and Peoria-Pekin, Ill.) and two Western metros (Fort Collins-Loveland, Colo.; and Anchorage, Alaska) made the list. No market in the Northeast was among the top 10.
Eight of the 10 metros saw their inventory decline year-over-year last month, six of them by double-digit percentages. Only Anchorage and Tyler saw their total listings rise: 15.7 percent and 3.6 percent, respectively.
Nationally, total listings fell 8.3 percent.
Median List Prices Median Age of Inventory $ % yr.-over-
yr. change# days on site % yr.-over-
yr. changeUnited States $191,900 -4% 95 13.1% Fort Myers-Cape Coral, Fla. $225,000 25.7% 116 8.4% Miami $239,000 8.6% 129 14.2% Shreveport-Bossier City, La. $173,000 8.1% 73 28.1% Washington, D.C.-Md.-Va.-W.Va. (Va.) $369,900 6% 57 14.0% Columbia, Mo. $168,000 5.1% 60 0.0% Peoria-Pekin, Ill. $144,900 3.6% 82 17.1% Fort Collins-Loveland, Colo. $249,900 3.5% 82 10.8% Anchorage, Alaska $289,000 3.3% 60 39.5% Charleston, W.Va. $159,900 2.9% 82 32.3% Tyler, Texas $200,000 2.6% 91 15.2% Source: Realtor.com
Among the 10 markets with the fastest-dropping median list prices, Western metro areas prevailed, accounting for six among the top 10; two are in the South and two are in Midwest. All 10 saw double-digit declines compared to April 2010. No Northeastern market made that top 10 list.
Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, Calif., saw the biggest price decline: down 26.2 percent to $498,250. The market was also one of two to see its inventory rise year-over-year, by 6 percent. The other was Reno, Nev., with a 9.5 percent increase.
Inventory declined by double digits in six of the remaining eight markets. Savannah, Ga., experienced the sharpest decline: -48.3 percent.
Savannah was also one of three markets with a median age of inventory above the national median. The market’s median inventory age was 198 days in April, though that represents an 11.2 percent decline from April 2010.
Median List Prices Median Age of Inventory $ % yr.-over-yr. change # days on site % yr.-over-yr. change United States $191,900 -4% 95 13.1% Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, Calif. $498,250 -26.2% 75 2.7% Detroit $89,900 -18.2% 62 72.2% Fresno, Calif. $160,000 -15.3% 59 3.5% Reno, Nev. $170,000 -14.6% 96 7.9% Atlanta $159,900 -13.6% 81 3.8% Los Angeles-Long Beach $325,000 -12.2% 61 -1.6% Tucson, Ariz. $175,000 -11.8% 88 12.8% Savannah, Ga. $210,000 -11.7% 198 -11.2% Chicago $212,000 -11.3% 102 15.9% Seattle-Bellevue-Everett $309,900 -11.2% 70 16.7% Source: Realtor.com
Bedford Hills NY Landlords Can Check Potential Tenants On-Line | Bedford Hills NY Homes
How to Run an Online Background Check for Free
By Sarah Jacobsson Purewal, PCWorld
I know what you’re thinking–but hear me out. Plenty of reasons for doing an online background check exist, and not all of them are sketchy.
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In fact, everyone should do at least one online background check on–you guessed it–themselves. After all, if you can find out sensitive information about yourself with a little (free) online sleuthing, there’s no telling what employers, stalkers, and ex-girlfriends or -boyfriends will be able to uncover.
So here’s how to do a thorough online background check without dropping any cash.
If You Know Your Target’s Name
If you know name of the person you’re looking for, the first places you should check are the usual venues–good old search engines and social networks. Google, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter are all good stepping-stones for discovering valuable information about people.
Searching Your Social Networks
Social networks are fantastic sources of information–and it’s all completely self-volunteered. This is why social networks are particularly handy for employers–because if it’s on your Facebook page, it’s not only information about you, it’s information you’ve chosen to share with the world.
Facebook is indisputably the social networking standby–no surprise, as it boasts 500 million users. You can search for people by name and e-mail address, and modify the results by location, school, and workplace. If nothing shows up, they may have made their profile private and unsearchable.
If that’s the case, you can do a site-specific Google search, and any public pages or groups they may have commented on will show up. For example, my personal Facebook profile is private and will not show up in Facebook search results, but if you type site:Facebook.com “Sarah Purewal” into Google, you’ll see that I have commented on PCWorld’s Facebook page. You can now see my profile picture, as Facebook doesn’t allow users to make this private, even if you still can’t search for me using Facebook’s search.
Alternatively, you can use Openbook.org to search across Facebook’s public pages (including status updates) for any search string you want and find search results listed with names, profile links, and pictures–perfect for your background check.
Other social networking sites, such as LinkedIn and Twitter, are also worth a look. LinkedIn usually reveals much less information about a user, because it’s primarily a work-oriented social network. However, it is an excellent place to verify user’s résumés and work histories (though, of course, a user can lie on his or her LinkedIn profile very easily).
Twitter is a different type of social network. Unlike Facebook and LinkedIn, Twitter asks for very little identifying information from their users. Thus, you’ll often find people’s Twitter accounts via their Facebook or LinkedIn pages–not necessarily by searching Twitter. Twitter can still give you a wealth of information, though it’s more likely to give you an insight into their personality, interests, and style, rather than information you can use to find their address or phone number.
Find the Basics: Phone Number and Address
Okay, so you’ve Googled your target and discovered all of their sordid beer-bong photos on Facebook, but what you really want is to be able to contact them. How can you get their phone number and address?
Look up phone numbers with ZabaSearch. (Click for full-size image.) ZabaSearch is a fairly accurate phone number lookup service. It offers a free way to look up people’s phone numbers (you can narrow it down by state), along with premium services for reverse phone number and social security number lookups. I say “fairly accurate” because while ZabaSearch’s database includes listed and unlisted numbers, it’s hit-or-miss when it comes to cell phone numbers–and who doesn’t have a cell phone these days?
WhitePages.com also offers a free phone number lookup, and throws in an address to boot. WhitePages appears to update its database more frequently, as it found a recent address change of mine that ZabaSearch missed (within the last year). However, it does not list unlisted numbers. WhitePages also offers a premium, reverse phone number lookup, and will show you the location of the phone. Of course, this is simply the location of the phone’s origin, and is based on the phone’s area code–when I look up my phone number, for example, it says my phone is likely located in Conway, South Carolina. (This is incorrect, as my phone is currently located in California, but my phone’s area code is from South Carolina.)
Criminal and Public Records
Finding an address or phone number is child’s play. Only when you’re looking for criminal and public records do things start to get interesting. If you want to know if your hot coworker has ever been divorced, or if your neighbor might be running a drug ring out of her apartment, this is how you can find out.
Bedford Hills NY by Robert Paul | Flickr – Photo Sharing!
Bedford Hills NY Weekend Real Estate Report | RobReportBlog
Gas vs. Wood Burning Fireplaces | Bedford Hills NY Homes

You plan to build your dream home. You’ve pored through home plan books, picked out the perfect design, found a beautiful lot in a great neighborhood and worked out a deal with a well-regarded builder.A wood-burning fireplace will appease the die-hard traditionalist in any group. After all, who doesn’t love the rustic scent and the popping sound of a home-brewed blaze? The smell and sound of a true fire evoke images – real or imagined – of cozying up in front of a crackling blaze after a particularly challenging snowball fight or a day of building snowmen.
After years of rental apartments and settling for less, you’ve earned this home. You’ve promised yourself some of the amenities you’ve always wanted and, not surprisingly, a few well-placed fireplaces top that list. Your new home will include a fireplace in the family room so that, after a day of sledding, the kids can warm chilled fingers and toes and hang soggy mittens and mufflers up to dry.
A second fireplace in the living room adds an elegant touch to formal gatherings, and in the master suite, yet another fireplace serves as a romantic backdrop. Perhaps even more important than adding some old-time charm and comfort to your new home, a fireplace also answers that nagging question, “Where will we hang the Christmas stockings?”
Before you settle down in front of a warm blaze with a comforting beverage and your favorite novel, you need to make an important decision about whether you want a gas or a wood-burning unit. Today’s marketplace offers new-home builders plenty of choices when it comes to fireplaces, and consumers need to study up before making a choice.
To choose which type of fireplace works best for you, learn the differences between the two and define your priorities.
Even today’s “old-fashioned” wood-burning fireplaces present more choices than those of the past. High-energy models from a number of manufacturers often include insulated fireboxes that keep cold outside air outside and trap warm air that would otherwise escape up the chimney or out the sides.
Many of these models also feature blower systems that redirect heated air from the chimney out into the room.
Because traditional wood-burning fireplaces can emit gases and particles that harm the environment into the air, some communities regulate or even prohibit them.
Heatilator offers an outside air kit system that reduces lost energy by using outside air for combustion.
Another option available with some wood-burning fireplaces is a filter that helps eliminate dust and smoke from inside air.
A gas fireplace, which combines ease of use with the heating ability of a furnace, will appeal to those people who cringe at the idea of prying themselves off the sofa every couple of hours to fetch another round of wood.
At the flick of a switch, you’ll enjoy the warmth of a realistic blaze. A couple more flicks of the switch adjust the flame height and heat output.
In recent years, gas fireplace manufacturers have worked hard to create a blaze that resembles a real fire. Ceramic logs, tall, dancing flames and burning “embers” underneath imitate traditional fires.
Because gas units do not include a chimney, they also allow the homeowner some versatility when choosing a spot for the new fireplace.
Bedford Hills NY Real Estate Market Report | November 2010 | RobReportBlog
Bedford Hills NY Homes reports forty-one (41) homes are for sale in Bedford Hills NY. Prices range from a low of $375,000 to a high of $8,900,000. The Median Price of a Bedford Hills NY Home is $740,000. The average home is 3804 square feet, has been on the market 176 days and is asking $403 per foot.
Over the last three months five (5) Bedford Hills NY Homes have sold. The market is flat compared to 2009. The low price of a sold home is $392,000 and the high priced of a sold home is $3,325,000. The Median Price of a sold Bedford Hills NY Home is $510,000. The average sold home is 2576 square feet, takes 123 days to sell, sells for $335 per foot and 95.20% of asking.

In 2009 five (5) Bedford NY Homes sold over the same three month period. The low price was $205,000 and the high price $840,000. The Median Price of a sold 2009 Bedford Hills NY Home was $400,000. The average sold home in 2009 was 1919 square feet, sold in 105 days, sold at $227 per foot and 88.33% of asking price.
9 Tips for Getting Vacant Homes Ready for Winter | Bedford Hills NY Real Estate
Houses that will sit empty through the winter need attention to avoid frozen pipes, reports Long Island American Water, which is part of American Water, the largest investor-owned U.S. water and waste water utility company
The company offers these tips for ensuring that pipes don’t burst:
· Search for pipes that are not insulated, or that pass through unheated spaces such as crawl spaces, basements, or garages. Wrap them with pre-molded foam rubber sleeves or fiberglass insulation.
· Wrap really vulnerable pipes with electric heating tape with a built-in thermostat that only turns heat on when needed.
· Seal cracks and holes in outside walls and foundations with caulking to keep cold wind from pipes. Look for areas where cable TV or phone lines enter the house, to be sure holes are tightly sealed.
· If hot-water radiators heat the home, bleed the valves by opening them slightly. Close them when water appears.
· Before really cold weather sets in, make certain that the water to outdoor hose bibs is shut off inside the house and the lines are drained.
· Drain any hoses and air conditioner pipes.
· Wrap the water heater or turn it off.
· Make sure gutters and downspouts have been cleaned to remove debris that could freeze and cause clogs during cold weather.
· Know where the main water shut-off valve is located in case it needs to be shut off during an emergency.
Source: Long Island American Water (11/16/2010)





