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West NYS housing market heating up | Mount Kisco NY Real Estate

When Christopher and Amy Capalbo saw the four-bedroom house on Clarendon Place in Buffalo, they just knew they had to have it. They just didn’t expect what it would take.

The parents of two young children had looked at homes in the city for eight months, but “we never really saw anything we liked,” said Chris Capalbo, 36. “Something always was missing from our wish list.”

They already lived in one half of a duplex they owned in Depew, near where Amy worked as an art teacher, so they weren’t in a rush, but they were “slowly outgrowing” what they had after eight years. They considered building a new house in Orchard Park, but many of their friends lived in the city, and a new build “would have been a lot more expensive and our lifestyle would have been different than we had hoped,” said Capalbo, an information technology manager at Sodexho in Williamsville.

So when their agent, Kristan Andersen of Gurney Becker & Bourne, showed them the 2,400-square-foot, three-story house, on a street they liked, “we jumped on it.”

But it wasn’t so easy. Even after offering $10,000 more than the $349,000 asking price, they still found themselves in a bidding war with two other buyers just days after the house was listed. So they raised their price to $362,000, waived the inspection and any contingencies, and agreed to give the seller extra time to move in order to win.

“We had never heard of that in this area, a bidding war,” Capalbo said. “So we were a little surprised by that, but we knew we wanted it.”

The nation’s economy continues to languish in a tepid recovery and developers are still adding new rental apartments to the local scene, but the housing market is heating up in Western New York, particularly in some key neighborhoods and communities.

“This is the best time to buy a home that I have ever seen,” said Dan Symoniak, vice president and general manager for RealtyUSA. “The combination of adequate supply, relatively stable prices over the last several years and amazing borrowing costs have created a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

Demand is high and some homes are selling almost as quickly as they go on, with multiple competing offers happening frequently. Throughout the area, homes are going for an average of 95 percent of the asking price, according to the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors. In many cases, bidding wars are driving prices well above the listed amount.

“Prices are wonderful,” said Ann Edwards, broker and owner of Realty Edge in Amherst. “Homes priced right to sell are going quickly and in many cases to multiple bids over asking. But the rates are so terrific that buyers are doing so well, too.”

Western New York’s affordable housing values have always tilted the buy-versus-rent equation in favor of “buy,” as consumers can own a decent home for as much or even less than they would pay to rent an apartment. The region didn’t suffer the massive decline in housing values that California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada experienced, but it also never experienced the boom that made homes unaffordable in those areas. So buying a home here has remained attractive. “For what you can get in Western New York compared to other cities, it always makes sense to buy, but particularly because the interest rates are so low,” Andersen said. “Your buying power is so much better. You can afford a lot more.”

Also, the supply of rental units is down, because more people are unable to qualify under the more stringent mortgage standards right now, so they’re renting apartments or homes until they can save enough money and improve their credit.

As a result of the demand, rental rates are going up.

So, with interest rates still hovering at record lows, real estate agents say now is a great time to buy.

“This is the best time in a long time to buy,” said Susan Lenahan. a broker at M.J. Peterson Real Estate’s City Office on Delaware Avenue. “I’ve been doing this for more than 30 years. They’ve never been lower. I’ve never seen the rents so high.”

After several tumultuous years of falling prices, weak demand and sluggish sales — tempered only by special tax incentives that propped up the market temporarily — the housing industry is coming back.

The Federal Reserve’s newest economic survey released last week, known formally as “The Beige Book,” found that stronger housing activity helped drive economic growth in 10 of the Fed’s 12 regional banking districts from August through September, and rising home sales drove prices up. That helped overcome generally flat consumer spending and mixed manufacturing activity.

The housing surge is driven heavily by the Fed’s efforts to keep interest rates low to spur more borrowing and spending, particularly by consumers.

The average interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages of less than $417,500 — conforming loans — fell to 3.53 percent at the end of September, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s weekly index. It ticked up a week later after six weeks of declines, but was still “historically low,” the group noted.

Loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration were even lower, at 3.34 percent, while 15-year fixed-rate mortgages were 2.90 percent. Both rates are the lowest in the 20-year history of the MBA’s survey.

As a result, mortgage applications nationwide increased 17 percent in one week at the end of September, according to the MBA. More than 80 percent of the volume stems from refinance applications, but home purchase loans also rose, and that continued into the first week of October. Purchase activity was up 11 percent to 12 percent from the same weeks a year ago, and hit the highest level since June, with both conventional and government loan volume increasing, according to MBA.

“The market is definitely better than it was a couple of years ago,” Andersen said.

Locally, the impact of the low rates is significant because prices are already inexpensive. For example, Symoniak noted that a borrower would pay $422 a month in principal and interest on a $100,000 loan at 3 percent interest over 30 years. For the same loan at 7 percent, which was common several few years ago, the payment would be $665, or $243 more.

And a $500 monthly payment for 30 years at 3 percent would buy a home for $118,594 (not including taxes). The same loan at 7 percent would only pay off a $75,153 loan. “Today, you get over $43,000 more house for the same money,” he said. “In our market, at this price range, that is a major difference in lifestyle.”

Most of Western New York remains a buyer’s market, because there are plenty of homes on the market in most price ranges, so sellers can’t command premium prices. That’s particularly the case with the suburbs. “Buyers are looking for good deals now, and you can definitely find some,” Andersen said. “The suburbs are a little more sluggish. There are a lot more houses, and the houses are not going as quickly as in the city.”

Carlo Zavatti Jr. and his wife, Anna, just bought a 3,701-square-foot, four-bedroom home on Stonebriar Drive in Clarence, to be closer to family members. The sellers had listed it for $439,000, but the Zavattis offered $400,000 to start — and found themselves in a bidding battle with another buyer well below the asking price. They won it for $412,500.

“We kept countering back and forth,” said Zavatti, 40. “We were surprised to see that there was a lot of activity on that street.”

They also sold their former house, also in Clarence, to his mother-in-law, who was downsizing from a five-bedroom home in Amherst, which also sold — all in a couple of months. “It was a quick turnaround,” he said. “There are definitely people out there who are looking.”

The key for sellers, agents say, is to do the research to price a home properly the first time. “It’s all about price right now. If you price your house correctly, it will sell very quickly,” Andersen said. “If you overprice your house, hoping you’ll get more, those are the houses that you’ll see sitting. People are not just going to pay anything.”

By contrast, she said, “homes go pretty quickly” in certain desirable neighborhoods of Buffalo, such as Allentown, the Elmwood Village or the Delaware District. “There is a shortage of housing right now in the city,” Lenahan said. “There are more buyers than there are properties that they want to buy.”

A few suburban villages have particular appeal as well, such as East Aurora or Orchard Park. “You can’t ever find a house,” Andersen said. “They come on the market and they sell quickly.”

Middletown R.I. Town Council Extends Wind Turbine Moratorium | Mt Kisco Realtor

After the lengthiest debate of Monday night’s Middletown Town Council meeting, the council voted 5-1 to extend the existing wind turbine moratorium for six more months beyond the current expiration date of Dec. 7, 2011. But a motion by the one dissenting voter, Councilor Barbara VonVillas, left open the possibility that the Council may exempt small wind turbines from the moratorium.

At its next meeting, which is scheduled for Nov. 21, the council will examine whether to allow small wind turbines to be exempt from the moratorium. Planning Director Ron Wolanski clarified small wind as meaning a turbine that is less than 50 feet high.

The discussion about wind turbines was the result of a memorandum that Councilor Bruce Long had placed on the council’s docket, calling not only for an extension of the moratorium but also for commissioning a privately-funded study on the setbacks and impacts of wind turbines.

“The question has always been, what is the appropriate size and type of wind turbine for Middletown and what are its effects?” said Long, in explaining why he felt Middletown needed its own study, rather than waiting for one that will soon be released by the state.

But the council did not support the study, with several members voicing their belief that plenty of information about wind turbine effects already exists, and a privately funded study might be seen as biased. “Studies are useful only when they are unbiased and they are credible only when they are supported by credible sources,” said VonVillas.

Members of the public spoke for and against the wind turbine moratorium and study. Dick Adams, of Island Drive, urged the council not to extend the moratorium, describing the fact that Calvary United Methodist Church, on Turner Road, would like to build a turbine to address its energy needs, but cannot write any grant applications while the moratorium is in effect. Richard Price, of J.H. Dwyer Drive, however, urged council to extend the moratorium and commission the study: “It will delay things, but if you don’t do it, you will risk wind turbine permit applications coming in without adequate protection on the books.”

In response to Councilor Richard Cambra’s observation that the council needs to know more about what the residents of Middletown want in terms of wind turbines—“small, medium, large, or no wind turbines at all?”—Council President Art Weber suggested that a public hearing be held to gather information about the town’s preferences.

Although there is a moratorium in place, Middletown has an ordinance that allows residents to apply for special-use permits to build wind turbines, but it is generally felt that the ordinance needs to have more parameters. An application in the fall of 2010 from a resident who wanted to build a large turbine on her property, which is located near Second Beach, prompted the calls for closer analysis of the town’s ordinance.

121 Smith Avenue, Mount Kisco NY Commercial Property | Mt Kisco Real Estate

05/18/2011

121 Smith Avenue, Mount Kisco NY Commercial Property | Mt Kisco Real Estate

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121 Smith Avenue, Mount Kisco NY, 10549  for Sale

 

 

2000 square feet of professioanl space available for sale in Mount Kisco.

Convenient to all. Walk to train. Close to highways.  Lots of parking.

 

 

Mt Kisco Comercial Properties

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Housing Flipping Dead For 2011 | Mt Kisco Luxury Real Estate

We keep hearing about what’s popular in 2011 for home design — but how about what’s not? Builder Magazine writer Jenny Sullivan asked industry experts to weigh in on design fads that you won’t likely see in the new year. Here are some of the fading home trends experts mentioned:

1. Trophy space: Forget those two-story grand entrances. Builders are seeking more affordable, energy efficient design so they are getting rid of large, volume spaces in homes.

2. Just for show: Fancy, overdone rooms won’t cut it in the era of the practical, cash-strapped buyer. Lavish industrial-grade kitchen ranges or fancy master bath spa tubs– that are hardly even used anyway–will fall to the wayside. “The kitchen is once again becoming a working part of the home and not just a showcase,” architect Don Taylor of DW Taylor Associates in Ellicott City, Md., noted in the article. “It needs to provide all of the latest conveniences and technology, but with practical applications in mind. The faux commercial kitchen look may have reached its summit.”

3. Egocentric houses: It’s not just about the interior of a home that makes a home.

Buyers are caring more about its curb appeal and what’s nearby the home as well. Parks, amenities and neighborhood connections create a sense of community, said John M. Thatch, principal with Dahlin Group Architecture and Planning in Pleasanton, Calif. While most infill homes on the boards are 10-20 percent smaller in size, Thatch notes that buyers are willing to trade extra space for a more appealing neighborhood.

4. Home flipping: Gone is the trend of buying a “starter” home or a home for short-term investment. Buyers are now buying for keeps and it’s changing the way they view homes. “The idea of a home as a short-term money maker is essentially gone, so when people do buy they’ll do it with the intention of staying ten years instead of two or three,” says Jim Chittaro, president of Smykal Homes in Chicago. As such, he says buyers will care more about the design of the home and they won’t want it to feel cheap.

NAR Article

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Mt Kisco NY Restaurant Names Soup After Governor Elect Cuomo | Mt Kisco NY Real Estate

A restaurant in Mount Kisco has unveiled a new soup in honor of Gov.-elect Andrew Cuomo, who lives in New Castle (but has a Mount Kisco mailing address). Via Vanti! is now serving “Lago di Cuomo” soup. It is a “puree of warming winter greens served with a crostini topped with goat

cheese, chopped tomato and fresh basil,” the restaurant Founder Jimmy John said in a news release. The soup is vegan and non-dairy, and a gluten-free crostini is available upon request.

The soup, while named for Cuomo, is also inspired by the Lago di Como resort destination in northern Italy, according to the restaurant. Customers will get a free taste of the “inaugural soup” during January. Lago di Cuomo will be one of Via Vanti!’s seasonal soups, and $1 from every purchase of it will be donated to the Food Bank of Westchester.

The 2-year-old restaurant is located in the historic Mount Kisco Train Station at 2 Kirby Plaza.

Existing Sales Rise 5.6% In November According to NAR | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Existing-home sales got back on an upward path in November, resuming a growth trend since bottoming in July, according to the National Association of REALTORS®.  

Existing-home sales, which are completed transactions that include single-family, townhomes, condominiums, and co-ops, rose 5.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.68 million in November from 4.43 million in October, but are 27.9 percent below the cyclical peak of 6.49 million in November 2009, which was the initial deadline for the first-time buyer tax credit. 

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, is hopeful for 2011. “Continuing gains in home sales are encouraging, and the positive impact of steady job creation will more than trump some negative impact from a modest rise in mortgage interest rates, which remain historically favorable,” he said. 

Yun added that home buyers are responding to improved affordability conditions. “The relationship recently between mortgage interest rates, home prices and family income has been the most favorable on record for buying a home since we started measuring in 1970,” he said. “Therefore, the market is recovering, and we should trend up to a healthy, sustainable level in 2011.” 

The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $170,600 in November, up 0.4 percent from November 2009. Distressed homes have been a fairly stable market share, accounting for 33 percent of sales in November; they were 34 percent in October and 33 percent in November 2009. 

Foreclosures, which accounted for two-thirds of the distressed sales share, sold at a median discount of 15 percent in November, while short sales were discounted 10 percent in comparison with traditional home sales. 

Inventory Drops
Total housing inventory at the end of November fell 4.0 percent to 3.71 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 9.5-month supply at the current sales pace, down from a 10.5-month supply in October. 

NAR President Ron Phipps said good buying opportunities will continue. “Traditionally there are far fewer buyers competing for properties at this time of the year, so serious buyers have a lot of opportunities during the winter months,” he said. “Buyers will enjoy favorable affordability conditions into the new year, although mortgage rates are expected to gradually rise as 2011 progresses.” 

According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage rose to 4.30 percent in November from a record low 4.23 percent in October; the rate was 4.88 percent in November 2009. 

“In the short term, mortgage interest rates should hover just above recent record lows, while home prices have generally stabilized following declines from 2007 through 2009,” Yun said. “Although mortgage interest rates have ticked up in recent weeks, overall conditions remain extremely favorable for buyers who can obtain credit.” 

A parallel NAR practitioner survey shows first-time buyers purchased 32 percent of homes in November, the same as in October, but are below a 51 percent share in November 2009 from the surge to beat the initial deadline for the first-time buyer tax credit. 

Investors accounted for 19 percent of transactions in November, also unchanged from October, but are up from 12 percent in November 2009; the balance of sales were to repeat buyers. All-cash sales were at 31 percent in November, up from 29 percent in October and 19 percent a year ago. “The elevated level of all-cash transactions continues to reflect tight credit market conditions,” Yun said. 

Single-Family Homes Sales Jump
Single-family home sales rose 6.7 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.15 million in November from 3.89 million in October, but are 27.3 percent below a surge to a 5.71 million cyclical peak in November 2009. The median existing single-family home price was $171,300 in November, which is 1.2 percent above a year ago. 

Existing condominium and co-op sales declined 1.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 530,000 in November from 540,000 in October, and are 32.2 percent below the 782,000-unit tax credit rush one year ago. The median existing condo price was $165,300 in November, down 5.5 percent from November 2009. “At the current stage of the housing cycle, condos are offering better deals for bargain hunters,” Yun said.

NAR

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HUD Sets New Rules to Sell HUD Owned Homes in Mt Kisco NY | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Overhaul of U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) REO sales program features a superstore website, new management composition, increased bidding advantages for owner occupant purchasers, new real estate commission structure, and new policies and procedures that leave non-Realtor licensees scrambling for access to HUD properties.

HUDHomeStore.com is a one-stop shop for all information and resources pertaining to HUD Homes.  The new website replaces a clunky, confusing myriad of government and regional contractor websites that made the search for HUD Homes a laborious, time consuming chore. Yardi, Santa Barbara based property and asset management software developer, built the supersite.

The new website gives real estate agents and consumers access to extensive information about properties, and all contracts, disclosures, and property condition reports can be downloaded at property detail pages. Agents and brokers register at HUDHomeStore.com prior to placing bids on HUD homes, and agents and consumers can sign up to receive automatic e-mail notices when new listings come on the market.

Daily property listings replace weekly announcements.

HUD’s new M&M III Contractor Program is the first overhaul of the agency’s REO sales system since 1999, when the agency outsourced management of its foreclosed FHA inventory as part of Al Gore’s “Reinvent Government” initiative.  HUD is rolling out a new asset distribution method to streamline operations, capitalize on expertise of potential vendors, and provide flexibility in a changing environment.

“These new [M&M III] contracts epitomize FHA’s continuing effort to reduce risk, increase net returns, decrease holding times and improve efficiency in the resale of its inventory of foreclosed properties,” said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. “It is critically important that FHA successfully and efficiently sell its inventory of these properties and these contractors will help us do that.”

HUD’s current inventory of foreclosed FHA property is approximately 44,000 homes. That is up from the usual average level of 35,000 to 40,000.

The M&M III program replaces a single contractor design, separates marketing and maintenance responsibilities, and establishes a management trio in each market area — Asset Managers, Field  Service Managers, and Mortgagee Compliance Managers.

Asset Managers assign HUD properties to Local Listing Brokers and award commissions up to three percent to those listing brokers. A commission based on percentage of sale price replaces a nominal flat fee listing brokers received prior to M&M III. The listing broker commission schedule is designed to incentivize listing brokerages to engage in agent and consumer outreach to spur more HUD Home sales. Selling broker commission caps are reduced from five percent to a maximum of three percent, in an amount corresponding to the Local Listing Broker commission in that market area.

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