Tag Archives: Mt Kisco NY

Mount Kisco Police Investigate Crash Between Two Police Cars | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Mount Kisco Police were continuing an investigation into the collision of two Mount Kisco Police cars that resulted in the hospitalization of two officers Saturday.

Mount Kisco Police and members of the Westchester County Department of Public Safety Accident Investigation Unit were investigating the collision involving one marked car and one unmarked car that took place just before 11 p.m. Saturday on Main Street near Gregory Avenue.

Detective Tony Correia was operating the unmarked police car, a 2006 Ford Crown Victoria, and Patrol Officer David DiRienzo was operating the marked car, a  2011 Ford Crown Victoria, police said. Both officers have been treated and released from the hospital, according to a press release from Mount Kisco Police.The offishore injury lawyers from The McNeal Law Firm have dealt with such accident and injury cases.

“Both Detective Correia and Patrol Officer DiRienzo at the time of accident were traveling south on Main Street responding to assist a police officer who had effected a traffic stop of a motor vehicle suspected to have been involved in a crime minutes earlier,” police said in the press release. “Witness statements allege the collision occurred  when the marked police car overtook the unmarked police car.”

Mount Kisco Police Investigate Crash Between Two Police Cars | The Mt. Kisco Daily Voice.

Silicon Valley Real Estate Update: The Craziest Market In The U.S. Just Got A Little Less Crazy | Mt Kisco Homes

Well what do you know! After writing on TechCrunch for the past year about how Silicon Valley’s Gatsbyesque wealth couldn’t find much real estate to buy, Bay Area inventory isup. Bidding wars are down. And rising rates are squeezing buyers who have to borrow money. Below is Redfin’s quarterly rundown of what’s happening in Silicon Valley real estate.

Bidding wars are less intense. Bidding wars are still common, with Redfin agents facing competition on 95 percent of all homes in May 2013, the highest of any of the 21 markets Redfin serves. For example, Redfin Silicon Valley agent Brad Le reports that this nice-enough $2 million Cupertino listing got 12 offers, and likely went under contract in June for well above $2.4 million. But fewer bidders are competing. Since Redfin publishes competitive dynamics for every offer our agents write, we measure the average number of competitors in a bidding war, which has declined from a peak of 16.3 in January to 7.8 in May. As agents, we know that demand is waning not because buyers no longer want a home but because they’ve despaired of ever being able to get one. About one in four of our Bay Area homebuyers have told us at some point in the last three months that they’re taking a break from their search out of sheer frustration.

Also-rans are left behind. The decrease in competition hasn’t changed the pricing of the most sought-after properties. But occasionally, close also-rans languish. Redfin Silicon Valley agent Mia Simon noticed that two nearly identical Mountain View homes, one slightly better looking, sold at the same time last week: The beauty queen sold for $200,000 over asking, drawing all the attention away from its neighbor, which got only one offer and sold for $150,000 less than comparable properties in the area.

Flash sales. The fact that homes are still selling very quickly may reflect a fundamental change in consumer behavior rather than simply a hot market; the median days on market for Bay Area homes that sold in May was 12 days; last year at this time it was 18. Mobile instant alerts triggered by the debut of new listings have been behind this trend, with 302 listings in May going under contract in less than 24 hours. Some of our buyers don’t even like to go into a Costco for too long if it will block the cell signal they need to get instant alerts. This has also put pressure on real estate websites to get inventory quickly. On average, brokerage sites like APR.com, ZephyrSF.com, and Redfin.com getnew listings days earlier than national portals; the reason is that the brokerage sites employ real estate agents with complete, direct access to the Bay Area’s four local Multiple Listing Services.

More homes for sale. Higher prices, and perhaps the fear that higher interest rates could dampen demand later, have at last drawn would-be sellers into the market. Bay Area inventory began the year down 59 percent from 2012, but has now improved to the point that it’s only 28 percent down from this time last year; by year-end we expect 2013 inventory to be up year-over-year for the first time since 2011. Redfin’s own Bay Area listing business has increased more than 100 percent over last year. In 2013, real estate’s spring may come in summer, and summer may come in fall. Sales volume will increase, and price increases may lose steam.

Bay_Area_Real_Estate_Inventory

More new construction coming in the East Bay and in San Francisco: Builders are often slow to respond to inventory crunches, in part because it takes time to finish projects, in part to drive profits from a run-up in demand. This is why we’ve seen line-ups, lotteries and camp-outs among buyers competing to get units as they’re released by builders. But four new projects are releasing units this summer in San Francisco, where the total number of homes has barely budged since World War II: 300 Ivy in Hayes Valley, One Rincon Hill Phase Two near the Bay Bridge, The Icon in the Mission, and Linea-built projects in the Mission like Nove.

More inside jobs: We hear more reports of pocket listings, where the listing agent sells the home to one of his own clients or to one of his partner’s clients, without offering the property to the broader market. The actual data suggests that this is common only for homes priced above $5 million. Few sellers at lower prices would ever bypass the larger market, which can draw in enough buyers to spark a bidding war. But there are other types of inside jobs. “Some Redfin clients are trying to get creative,” reports Landon Nash, Redfin San Francisco agent. “I just closed one deal with a client who asked his landlord to sell, and I have another two — which may or may not close — in the works.”

 

Silicon Valley Real Estate Update: The Craziest Market In The U.S. Just Got A Little Less Crazy | TechCrunch.

Heavy Rains, Flood Watch Continue In Mt. Kisco | Mt. Kisco Real Estate

 

WESTCHESTER, N.Y. – Westchester remains under a flood watch Thursday while storms continue to dump up to four inches of rain and bring strong winds to the area, according to the National Weather Service.

Thunderstorms with heavy rains and strong winds are expected late Thursday night into Friday morning.  The National Weather Service warns that saturated grounds from recent large amounts of rainfall could make trees and power lines susceptible to falling.

The flood watch began 8 a.m. on Thursday and will continue until 8 a.m. on Saturday.

The storm is caused by a low pressure system, which is expected to intensify as it approaches from Ohio and pass south and east of Long Island by Thursday night through Friday morning.  The low pressure system is forecasted to move out to sea by Friday evening.

Heavy Rains, Flood Watch Continue In Mt. Kisco | The Mt. Kisco Daily Voice.

Mount Kisco Chef’s Upcoming ‘Chopped’ Appearance | Mt Kisco NY Homes

MOUNT KISCO, N.Y. – Mount Kisco restaurant Village Social Chef Mogan Anthony upcoming appearance on Food Network’s “Chopped” in a June 13 episode topped this week’s news.

In other top news this week:

 

Mount Kisco Chef’s Upcoming ‘Chopped’ Appearance Tops This Week’s News | The Bedford Daily Voice.

Home prices rising, but no ‘bubble trouble’ | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Home prices are rising sharply, but economists speaking at the National Association of Real Estate Editors conference here are not worried about overinflation.

“We are not in ‘bubble trouble,'” said Jed Kolko, chief economist at the online real estate information company Trulia. “Prices are undervalued 7 percent relative to long-term income and rent norms. We see no signs of overbuilding, and few signs of people overborrowing.”

Noting that prices were 40 to 70 percent overvalued during the past decade’s boom, Kolko said, “Prices would have to keep rising at the current rate (10 percent nationally) for several years to reach another bubble.”

Still, “home price growth is widening very fast,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors. “The good news is it is lifting people out of being underwater and offsetting the effects” of the government’s budgetary sequestration of funds.

“There is no risk of recession” in the next couple of years, he said.

Yun is concerned, however, that home-price growth is outpacing income growth. When mortgage interest rates inevitably rise, “that will negatively impact affordability.”

Price growth is creating “the haves and the have-nots. Owners are smiling.”

Those who would like to be owners are not.

Putting upward pressure on prices, beside consumer confidence and buyer demand, is that home builders are still producing fewer than the historical norm of about 1 million units per year. New home sales, Yun said, are at 28 percent of the 2006 peak, although he acknowledged that was a period of overbuilding.

 

Home prices rising, but no ‘bubble trouble’ | HeraldTribune.com.

It’s Time To Sell Your House | Mount Kisco Homes

Mortgage rates are on their way back up.

U.S. household net worth just hit an all-time high.

These are among the reasons why Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff says it’s now time to sell your house (via Jim the Realtor).

In an appearance on CNBC this morning, Rascoff says an ongoing lack of supply — the result of people still trapped by negative equity — and steady demand will only drive rates up further in coming years,

That means it’ll be more expensive to buy a home at a given price down the road than now.

He explains:

If you have any equity in your home and you’re thinking about selling in the next couple of years,” he continued, “[it’s] probably best to sell now, even though home values are continuing to rise.

Imagine yourself buying a $300,000 home today, and in four years you may want to trade up to a $500,000 home,” he said. “That home is not just that much more expensive—but because mortgage rates are going to be higher—it’s significantly more expensive. So the trade-up market is going to be very troubled in a couple of years.

Here’s the full clip:

SEE ALSO: 25 Reasons Why Chicago Is The Most Underrated City In America >

 

It’s Time To Sell Your House – Business Insider.

Mt Kisco Sales Up 8.6% | Median Price Up 50% | RobReportBlog

Mt Kisco NY Real Estate ReportRobReportBlog
20136 months ending 5/142012
25Sales23
$630,000.00median sold price$418,000.00
$325,000.00low sold price$275,000.00
$3,950,000.00high sold price$1,475,000.00
3188average size2359
$288.00ave. price per foot$239.00
232ave days on market214
$1,055,437.00average sold price$549,706.00
94.59%ave sold to ask93.96%

 

Mt Kisco Sales Up 8.6% | Median Price Up 50% | RobReportBlog.

Mt Kisco Real Estate | 30-Year Fixed Mortgage Rates Increase for First Time Since March

Mortgage rates for 30-year fixed mortgages increased this week, with the current rate borrowers were quoted on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace at 3.39 percent, up from 3.25 percent at this same time last week. This represents the first rate increase since late March.

The 30-year fixed mortgage rate hovered between 3.26 and 3.30 percent for the majority of the week before jumping up near the current rate on Friday.

“Last week, mortgage rates reversed their month-long decline on a stronger-than-expected jobs report,” said Erin Lantz, director of Zillow Mortgage Marketplace. “This coming week, we expect rates to remain fairly stable with limited news or economic data slated for release.”

Additionally, the 15-year fixed mortgage rate this morning was 2.56 percent, and for 5/1 ARMs, the rate was 2.32 percent.

What are the rates right now? Check Zillow Mortgage Marketplace for up-to-the-minute mortgage ratesfor your state.

05-07-13 0951AM

YouTube, Get On This (Part 2): The YouTube Wish List Continues | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Earlier, we talked about some things that needed to be improved with YouTube.  But that was only the beginning.  There are so many more things that could make the experience better.  So without further ado, let’s take a look at Part 2 of the YouTube Wish List.

These Are Things We Want, YouTube (Part 2)

Tim Schmoyer, who gives us Creator’s Tips every Thursday, has quite a few awesome suggestions, and I still have a roster of wishes from Ronnie Bincer at Video Leads Online, which will complete this (initial) list.  So in no particular order:

A More Robust Editor

One of the big problems with uploading your videos is if something is just a bit off, you can’t do too much to it without re-uploading, and especially if you have a video with lots of views, you don’t want to start all over again.  A more robust editor would be great for tweaking older videos, adding outro slates, updating your video intro/bumper, etc.

More Access to YouTube Live Stream

This is by invitation only, for accounts in good standing, and there’s nothing you can particularly do to get on it.  But YouTube Live would be pretty awesome for those who would like to use more than a webcam for their events and putting them on Google Hangouts.  You can set up multi-camera events with this thing.  And you can even put ads on it.  So you see how valuable an option this would be for most people.  But, the help section does promise this is rolling out soon, so stay tuned.

Better Analytics Concerning Subscriber and Non-Subscriber Engagement

Tim mentioned this one, and I said, “Yes!”  This is a big one, because it’s very difficult to see how your subscribers are interacting with the video versus non-subscribers.  When you see your view count, how many times are your subscribers contributing to that total?  How many times do they comment?  You don’t need to know any personal information, just the general stuff.  Another big thing Tim mentions is “how does one video perform in converting non-subscriber views into subscribers versus another?”  And how many people see the video in their feed and don’t watch it?  These kinds of analytics would be extremely helpful in figuring out how your audience watches your videos.

Allow for More Than One External Linked Website

A few months ago, YouTube made it so that you could link  your videos to an external website.  Finally, you were able to get people to click on an annotation that took your audience off YouTube so you could do things that YouTube doesn’t allow you to do, like sell your own merchandise.  With reason, YouTube wants you to link to a site that is “all you,” and not something that tricks viewers into going to a non-relevant site.  But what if you have a bunch of relevant sites?  You can’t link to all of them, just the one.  So having the ability to send people to multiple relevant sites would be pretty awesome.

Better Ways to Collaborate and Interact with Your Audience

Right now, you can make comments, and maybe interact with people through social media.  And that’s about it.  But “video responses” could be much more interactive than they are now, where you could respond to a comment, common comments, or multiple comments, with video.

Improved System to Help People Know that the Annotations Are Not On

You may have turned them off, or didn’t know you ever turned them off.  So a little message somewhere in the bottom part of the player might be helpful.

Analysis of Average Retention

Right now, YouTube tells you the total watch time for your videos, but not the average retention, or how long a video is keeping viewers watching.  Knowing which ones keep the most interest can make it easier to know which ones to feature on the channel page and which ones to link to in the outro slate.  And going back to the subscriber/non-subscriber data, being able to distinguish the retention between those two groups would be helpful.

Mass Updates to Annotations

YouTube came out with Bulk Actions a few weeks ago, and you could do use almost everything with it except annotations.  If you have annotations that need to be updated, you have to go to each video and change each one individually.

Mobile Analytics

This is apparently coming soon, but right now you can only really see the views from a mobile device.  You can’t separate all the other data, though, from desktop viewing.

Is That All?

I’d like to thank Tim and Ronnie for giving me suggestions.  All of these would make running a YouTube channel better.  Read Part 1 here and comment below if you have any others to share.