Tag Archives: Bedford Hills NY

Bedford Hills NY

Freddie Mac releases latest rates | Bedford Hills Homes

Freddie Mac (OTCQB: FMCC) today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing average fixed mortgage rates relatively unchanged from last week following a mixed employment report, and holding steady near their highs for the year.

News Facts

  • 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 4.57 percent with an average 0.8 point for the week ending September 12, 2013, unchanged from last week. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 3.55 percent.
  • 15-year FRM this week averaged 3.59 percent with an average 0.7 point, unchanged from last week. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 2.85 percent.
  • 5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged 3.22 percent this week with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.28 percent. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 2.72 percent.
  • 1-year Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 2.67 percent this week with an average 0.4 point, down from last week when it averaged 2.71 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 2.61 percent.

Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total upfront cost of obtaining the mortgage. Visit the following links for the Regional and National Mortgage Rate Details and Definitions. Borrowers may still pay closing costs which are not included in the survey.

Quotes Attributed to Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist, Freddie Mac.

“Mortgage rates were little changed this week following a mixed employment report. For example, the economy added 169,000 jobs in August, which was below the market consensus forecast, and revisions subtracted another 74,000 from the prior two months. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate fell to 7.3 percent which was the lowest since December 2008.”

Freddie Mac was established by Congress in 1970 to provide liquidity, stability and affordability to the nation’s residential mortgage markets. Freddie Mac supports communities across the nation by providing mortgage capital to lenders. Today Freddie Mac is making home possible for one in four home borrowers and is one of the largest sources of financing for multifamily housing. For more information please visit www.FreddieMac.com and Twitter: @FreddieMac.

Bing Video Search Gets Fancy New Features For A Better User Experience | Bedford Hills Realtor

Bing Video Search Gets Fancy New Features For A Better User Experience

Bing are giving their video search results a much  needed makeover and users of the site will find larger video thumbnails, extra  search filters and pop out hover previews part of the new package. In an  announcement via their blog, the company promised the new  streamlined navigation would lead to a better browsing experience for the video  content it pulls in via YouTube and Vimeo as well as from Dailymotion, Hulu, Vevo, CBS,  MTV and MSN amongst others.

Bing wants to provide a “completely re-imagined search experience” for video  so let’s take a look at some of the new upgrades:

Improved Navigation and Video Overlay Features

The new video overlay tweak allows users to multitask by continuing to browse  through their search results whilst currently watching a video. Bing have also  introduced a side bar of ‘related videos’ to provide the user with more relevant  results.

Larger Video Thumbnails For Easier Recognition

New larger thumbnails should make it much easier for users to scan through  videos until they find the one they want.

Pop-out Hover Previews Keep Users On Bing Longer

Rather than take you off site to see whether the video you have chosen is the  one you want, the new pop out hover preview allows you to see just that. Bing  have provided much more information regarding the video (favicons from the top  sites, descriptions, view counts etc). There is also a new volume control  feature.

 

 

Source:  Bing Video Search Gets Fancy New Features For A Better User Experience

 

http://www.reelseo.com/bing-video-search-new-features/#ixzz2eOvjJPKw

Price appreciation picks up in emerging real estate markets | Bedford Hills Real Estate

The release of the latest S&P/Case-Shiller Home Prices Indices turned out to be anticlimatic as rising mortgage rates spooked the market a bit, causing home price appreciation to subside a bit in key markets.

On the other hand, markets once considered ‘struggling’ saw their prices soar.

The June S&P Case-Shiller report, while still impressive, fell slightly showing a 12.1% gain in home prices year-over-year. That is still comparable to the 12.2% annual home price gain recorded in May — the largest gain recorded since March 2006.

“Case-Shiller put up some big numbers in June, but more current data shows the pace of monthly home value appreciation slowed in both June and July, likely as a result of mortgage rate increases,” said Zillow (Z) Chief Economist Dr. Stan Humphries. “We expect even the Case-Shiller index will begin to show this trend when its July data finally comes out in September, but it will be more muted since the index is looking at a three-month average.”

There are two main drivers in the housing industry right now: consumer demand and interest rates, said Quicken Loans chief economist Bob Walters. “Despite rising rates and higher home prices, consumers continue to buy. Today’s 7.1% increase in the second quarter suggests the housing market is improving, supporting the U.S. economic recovery,” he explained.

But what really stood out to some observers is how once outperforming cities are starting to see home prices subside.

“What we are seeing is that the cities that are spiking the most are not Washington D.C., which is really interesting,” said Anthony Sanders, professor of finance in the school of management at George Mason University. Sanders implied that once thriving markets have since leveled off.

On the other hand, markets once doing far worse are starting to see substantial improvement.

Atlanta saw the most home price growth, up 3.4% in June, with Chicago close behind with a 3.32% gain. Las Vegas and San Diego followed with 2.8% and 2.79% monthly gains, respectively. Sanders runs his own blog in which he goes deeper into the data. Washington D.C. grew at a more mild 1%.

The emergence of once distressed markets became clear as cities like Las Vegas saw rapid price appreciation.

“In terms of annual rates of change, San Francisco lost its leadership position with Las Vegas showing the highest post-recession gain of 24.9%,” said David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

According to Sanders, this is an indication that speculators are starting to pull out of the West Coast cities and move into markets that have yet to reach such high home prices. “It has to be investors driving this up,” he said. “This is an unusual switch.”

 

 

Price appreciation picks up in emerging real estate markets | 2013-08-27 | HousingWire.

Classic Harborfront ‘Cottage’ on Vinalhaven Listed for $3.6M | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Location: Vinalhaven, Maine
Price: $3,600,000
The Skinny: Built in 1904 as one in a long line of Maine “cottages,” Stonecropboasts 11 bedrooms and 4.4-acre property that spills downhill to a dock on the edge of the Fox Island Thoroughfare, the channel that separates Vinalhaven from neighboring North Haven. Joined on the property by a pair of historic boathouses, the main shingle-style cottage includes plenty of historic charm, with a stone fireplace, ceiling beams, and “one-of-a-kind beautiful Japanese-style wall panels.” Worryingly, the listing includes no photos of the kitchen or bathrooms, suggesting that after the buyers are done forking over $3.6M for the property, they should be ready to spend thousands more to bring it up to date.

 

 

Classic Harborfront ‘Cottage’ on Vinalhaven Listed for $3.6M – House of the Day – Curbed National.

Decoded: the Most ‘Commanding’ Listings in the Country | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Welcome back to The Brokerbabble Glossary, where Curbed takes a word or phrase that shows up repeatedly in listings and deciphers its true meaning. Ideas? Hit up the tipline.

commandinglivingroom.jpg [4601 NE Royal Ct, Portland, via Trulia]

Sometimes words get misused in real estate listings because they have multiple meanings, or precisely what they mean in the first place is confusing, or because brokers get a little too excited about the positive attributes of a particular house or property. And sometimes there is just no excuse. This is one of those times.

topfloorviews.jpg [8036 12th Ave NW, Seattle, via Trulia]

There might be a reason that these “top floor” views aren’t pictured.

commandingcathedral.jpg [3009 34th St NW, Washington, DC, via Trulia]

Normally, a “commanding view” is from a dominating vantage point, usually overlooking something. You can debate what that means, exactly, but “through a chain link fence” probably doesn’t cut it.

commandingfireplace.jpg [1106 Autumn Rdg, San Antonio, via Trulia]

This is a pretty dinky fireplace. · The Brokerbabble Glossary archives [Curbed National] · The Brokerbabble Glossary archives [Curbed NY]

 

 

read more…

 

 

http://curbed.com/archives/2013/08/30/decoded-the-most-commanding-listings-in-the-country.php

Bedford Hills NY Weekly Real Estate Report | RobReportBlob

 

Bedford   Hills NY Weekly Real Estate Report9/5/2013
Homes for sale34
Median Ask Price$1,357,500.00
Low Price$289,000.00
High Price$30,000,000.00
Average Size4501
Average Price/foot$569.00
Average DOM154
Average Ask Price$3,201,112.00

Why Promoting on the Facebook Timeline is Good and Bad | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Facebook has made another change to how you can market on Facebook.Why Promoting on the Facebook Timeline is Good and Bad

Is this good news or not?

A couple of years ago, they decided to forbid running promotions directly on  the page and made the use of a third party app mandatory. This restriction is  now gone.  You can now run a promotion without using a third party  app.

There are still rules though, and not everything can be done. Nonetheless,  this can be a good option in some instances, or a very poor one in others.

Let’s review the pros and cons of this new possibility.

#1. The good part

So what you can do when  running a promotion on  your timeline and  why can it be a good option?

The new terms  of service and the accompanying FAQ they have put together are pretty clear about what you  can do:

  • You don’t HAVE to use a  third party app anymore to run a promotion on your page (you still can, but it  is not mandatory)
  • If you run your promotion  directly on your page, entries to the promotion can be made by either posting on  the page, liking or commenting a page post, or messaging the page.

If you have a small audience and want to offer a prize, it’s now super  simple:

  1. Post to your page that  people may just “post” or “message” the page or “like” or “comment” a post of the page
  2. Tell them you’ll pick a  winner among the ones who have done so

Super fast, super easy and free!

You can even pay for ads and get the concerned post displayed to more people  than your usual organic reach (between 5 and 50% of your fans). The ad part is probably the main  motivation for Facebook to change its rules by the way, but that’s a different  story.

A good example would be the following:

  • You have a small business  and a couple thousand fans and you are launching a new product
  • You want your fans and the  world to know about it
  • At the same time you want  to engage with the announcement
  • Create a post announcing  the launch
  • include a nice picture  and ask your fans to find a name for the new product using the comments on the  post
  • Pick the name you like  among the comments and you have a winner.

 

Read more…

 

 

http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/09/02/why-promoting-on-the-facebook-timeline-is-good-and-bad/#kxXoFfoBSdZTxRTl.99

Billionaire Neighbors Keep Spying on Calvin’s Glass House | Bedford Hills Real Estate

calvin%20southampton.jpg [Calvin Klein/wikipedia]

According to Page Six, Calvin Klein is feverishly trying to finish his long-aborning glass house on Meadow Lane in Southampton in time for a Labor Day housewarming. Apparently, even his billionaire neighbors (David Koch? Leon Black? Henry Kravis?) keep coming up the driveway to sneak a look inside. Well, who can blame them? The man is a style icon and one of the greatest designers of all time—isn’t everyone dying to see inside? (Besides maybe his ex Nick Gruber, who recently “came out as straight.”) Calvin, don’t forget, our address for the evite is hamptons@curbed.com. · Calvin Klein Takes Movie Break [NYPost]

Monday Morning Cup of Coffee: Housing will take a beating | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Monday Morning Cup of Coffee is a quick look at the news coming across the HousingWire weekend desk, with more coverage to come on bigger issues.

The mooted Federal Reserve tapering of its asset purchases has the capital markets on tenterhooks. So much so, a report in the Financial Times suggests investors are scurrying for riskier parts of the debt markets.

That means junk bonds. Essentially the Fed’s attempt to stabilize the markets may actually harm as those investors exit safe havens as the government does as well.

It’s that old chestnut again: Rising mortgage interest rates and the upward creep of home prices is taking a toll on housing affordability. That is the news from USA Today Sunday report hinged on data from John Burns Real Estate Consulting and Zillow.

The problem is grounded in six key housing markets, five of them in California, and all of them on the Western Seaboard, the newspaper reports. In these cities — which, of course, include San Francisco — home prices have risen dramatically in tandem with the lauded housing recovery.

Furthermore, the cost of housing in 30 of 250 metropolitan areas will exceed historical averages for affordability and the average mortgage rate will pass the dreaded 5% mark.

The Washington Post reported on a weighty potential problem for the wider U.S. economy: the “outsize” influence of the graying population on the housing economy.

According to a study conducted by the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., quoted by the newspaper, baby boomers in the Washington, D.C., area make up just 26% of the total area population but account for 47% of the region’s homeowners.

That could be viewed as a microcosm, a kind of allegory for a nation facing a coming calamity — widely written about and apparently occurring in a number of regions across the country, far outside the Beltway and its close confines.

The debate over eminent domain continues apace. Of late, Richmond, Calif., has been ground zero over planned use of the controversial measure.

The city government intends to put the legal mechanism to work to seize troubled mortgages within its limits from bondholders — under the pretext of saving communities. In response, the municipality is facing a legal fight from investors. The Federal Housing Finance Agency, guardian of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, may also take adverse action.

But one voice emerged late last week in support of the Richmond eminent domain plan in a prominent financial organ. Stephen Mihm, associate professor of history at the University of Georgia, wrote a column for Bloomberg claiming the Richmond case had merit, unlike, he wrote, with other examples where state authorities had excessively used eminent domain powers. He argues in favor of a train of thought that says by using eminent domain to keep homeowners in their properties, the risk of default likely would decrease, thereby benefiting the mortgage investors.

“In fact, the city’s plan relies not on a novel use of eminent domain but on one endorsed by the conservative Supreme Court of 1935,” wrote Mihm.

Some more negative press for foreclosure attorneys: The Denver Post carried a report alleging a number of homeowners in Colorado had become the victims of large legal bills in relation to “phantom court cases against them.”

“The Post found 126 foreclosures since January 2012 in which homeowners in 11 counties were told by county public trustees to pay the charges associated with the filings or the foreclosure would continue,” the newspaper reported. “But, in fact, no foreclosure lawsuit was filed.”

Fannie and Freddie appear to be continuing their befuddlement of different points on the investment vehicle spectrum.

 

 

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Monday Morning Cup of Coffee: Housing will take a beating

Preparing Gracie Mansion for a New (Live-In?) Mayor | Bedford Hills Real Estate

A convoy of vans and pickup trucks swarmed the house on Tuesday morning, a home-repair SWAT team armed with ladders and paint brushes, scaffolding and plywood.

By 9 a.m., the driveway was jam-packed, so four of the vehicles hopped the curb and unloaded equipment in a nearby park.

The beneficiary of all the frantic sprucing up: the next mayor.

As Michael R. Bloomberg prepares to leave office, his staff has ordered a last-minute gussying up of the stately home where he has never lived but where his successor undoubtedly will.

Workers from New York City’s parks department have descended on Gracie Mansion to repaint and re-wallpaper, not to mention fix railings and rooftops before the weather turns cold and a new occupant arrives.

Outside the house, a laborer described the work as the “big push by the mayor to leave the home in ——”

A passer-by jumped in to ask, Pristine condition?

Yes, the worker said. “Pristine.”

Gracie Mansion is no stranger to periodic work: at Mr. Bloomberg’s direction, it has undergone extensive remodeling and redecorating. Soon after his election, the mayor asked his adventurous longtime decorator, Jamie Drake, to make an effort at updating the house, originally built in 1799 and located at what is now 88th Street and East End Avenue.

A few months and $7 million later (all of the money was privately raised), the mansion had new floors, plumbing, lighting and ventilation, as well as fanciful touches like a four-post mahogany bed, an 1820s chandelier and fake-bamboo furniture.

This time, much of the work is on the outside. Workers will repoint the base of a chimney, repair a damaged section of fence, repaint shutters and replace security lighting on the roof.

City Hall on Tuesday called it routine summer maintenance, not unlike that in 2010, when the fake-marble floor in the foyer was restored, or 2008, when ultraviolet protection was applied to windows on the second floor.

The wear and tear has intensified since Mr. Bloomberg, who chose to remain in his town house on East 79th Street throughout his mayoralty, opened Gracie Mansion to the public in 2002 as a kind of living museum. “It’s 200 years old and now sees a couple hundred thousand visitors a year,” said Marc LaVorgna, a spokesman for Mr. Bloomberg, “so it requires a lot of regular maintenance like this.”

This, however, will be the last round of beautification during Mr. Bloomberg’s tenure, and it is extensive, bearing all the hallmarks of the mayor’s keen eye for detail: even the brick steps in the basement are to be repaired.

read more…

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/28/nyregion/preparing-gracie-mansion-for-a-new-live-in-mayor.html?_r=2&