Tag Archives: Waccabuc Homes for Sale

Bank committed fraud in order to show ownership | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

JPMorgan Chase (JPM) created and recorded false documentation that showed the bank owned the mortgage of two California residents in order to foreclose on their home, the California Court of Appeals stated in a ruling Monday.

In 1998, Jan and Rosalind Kalicki obtained a mortgage loan from Headlands Mortgage Company for a home in San Marcos, California. Headlands originated the loan and Washington Mutual became the servicer of the loan. When WaMu was placed in receivership in 2008, Chase purchased “certain interests” of WaMu in the Kalicki’s loan, according to court documents.

The Kalickis sued WaMu in 2009, alleging that the bank wrongfully foreclosed on their property in 2008. In 2010, Chase was granted a motion to intervene because it had purchased WaMu’s assets and held the interests in the loan.

 

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4 Costs New Homeowners Have to Plan For | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

We all know that buying a home is a huge financial decision that requires adequate funds and thorough research. But there’s more to owning a home than just buying it. Beyond what you pay to own the home, be sure you take into account the additional costs that come with being a homeowner.

Moving

Moving may seem minor but it’s a cost that often comes very soon after forking over a large sum of money. Once you’ve purchased the home you want to live in, you have to get there. Whether you rent a truck and do the heavy lifting yourself or you have full-service movers take care of the hard work, there will be a cost to move all of your things from your current home into your next home. This is important to remember when you are figuring out how much of a down payment you can afford. You want to make sure you have enough left over to get to that wonderful house once you buy it!

Mortgage Payments

While renters are usually used to paying on a monthly basis, owning a home almost always comes with monthly mortgage payments. This includes the repayment portion of the principal as well as interest. The monthly expense depends on the amount borrowed, interest rate and whether your mortgage is fixed-rate or adjustable-rate. Be sure to do the research and make an agreement with a monthly cost you can afford.

Taxes and Insurance

As a homeowner, you have to pay property taxes and home insurance. The construction materials and location of your home affect the cost of insurance — and insurance can rise over time. You may also need supplemental insurance if you live in an earthquake or flood zone. These expenses are often paid each month, and are often rolled into your monthly mortgage payment

 

 

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http://finance.yahoo.com/news/4-costs-homeowners-plan-113000333.html

 

Two charts show where Americans stand on housing | Waccbuc Homes

 

More than two in five adults believe that the housing market continues to be a serious problem, according to a recent survey from the MacArthur Foundation on people’s attitude toward the housing crisis.

chart 1

(source: MacArthur Foundation: click image for larger view)

The survey polled a sample of 1,355 people in April 2014.

“While economists and housing experts say that the housing crisis is behind us, large proportions of the American people are not feeling the relief. Very high proportions of the public continue to believe that we are still in the midst of the housing crisis or that the worst is yet to come,” the report stated.

And this is not the only negative news for the market.

Two-thirds of the public believes that it is less likely today than it was 20 or 30 years ago for a family to build equity and wealth through homeownership.

But it is not all bad. Some indicators suggest that the American public’s views about the housing crisis are shifting slightly toward the positive.

“We see an uptick in the proportion of the public who believe that the housing crisis is behind us and a decrease in the proportion who characterize the housing market as a serious problem,” the report said.

“However, even with these shifts, concerns about housing continue to outweigh optimism, and the public has a real sense that affordable housing is a challenge for many Americans,” it added.

 

 

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Two charts show where Americans stand on housing

From Queasy Colors to Killer Tables: Your Worst Decorating Mistakes | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

I recently wrote an article for Houzz in which I acknowledged the dumbest decorating decisions I’d ever made. More than 300 of you responded with your own tales of woe. Most of them fell into four categories:

1. Painting anything yellow.
2. Furniture that wouldn’t fit through doorways.
3. Leaving town while someone worked on your home.
4. Painting anything yellow.

Because it can take a while to read 300 comments, I collected some of the most memorable tales from fellow Houzzers to share with you. Schadenfreude alert: Some of the following stories may cause involuntary laughter. Don’t resist.

Note: Photos are for illustration purposes only and do not portray the actual disasters described.

How I Raised My Credit Score 67 Points in 3 Months | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

You can’t blame Eddie for feeling like trying to build better credit was a lost cause. In the spring of 2011, he lost his job. When he found another one three months later, he had to take a significant pay cut. He managed to keep paying his mortgage, car payment and utilities on time, but his four credit cards “went into the toilet. That killed my (credit) score,” he wrote in an email. At the end of that horrible year, he found a better-paying job, but by that time, he said, “the damage was done.”

And when he thought things couldn’t get worse, they did. On Jan. 25, 2013, he was in a near-fatal car accident. The other driver was uninsured, and because he didn’t have collision insurance, Eddie had to come up with the difference between what the insurance covered and what he owed on the car, as well as try to buy another car immediately. With his credit in poor shape, he shopped around for a car loan for bad credit, creating “16 inquiries over 15 days.” The only loan he could get was at 17.99%, and the inquiries were another setback for his credit.

When he posted a comment on the Credit.com blog earlier this year, he figured he might as well give up on any hope of rebuilding his credit:

Now that I know my REAL score is 560-ish, it doesn’t matter. I will not get out of this hole before I die. I have one small credit card that I use 10% of and pay to $0 every month, but that is only going to buy me a few points a month. That’s like tossing deck chairs off the Titanic to try and keep it from sinking.

Despite his frustrations with the credit system — including the fact that increasing his income didn’t help his scores, and that his credit scores varied widely from source to source — he kept reading, learning and plugging away. He monitors his free credit scores at Credit.com and other sites, and he tries to make sure the advice he is following is reliable. And his hard work is paying off.

Recently, he emailed me with the following update:

Just wanted to get back with you. When I first contacted you, my scores were 598 across the board. Now, based on my having a Capital One credit card with a $200 limit, using $30 a month and paying it on time (early in fact) down to $0, that card has increased my limit to $500.

Also, the next reporting period after 12 of my inquiries reached one year, my score changed. My last report showed my scores to be 665. I have no need to apply for more credit right now, and I will refrain for another year and see what the combination of another year of positive reporting from Capital One plus more age on the current 4 inquiries does for me.

I don’t know if the 6 months of positive reporting from the credit card or the inquiries aging had more of an effect, but my score jumped 67 points in 3 months, from Jan to March. Those inquiries were 12 months old as of Feb 14th. So many people on the blogs don’t seem to get that even if you get the credit you applied for, it’s still an inquiry.

 

 

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http://finance.yahoo.com/news/raised-credit-score-67-points-143054700.html

 

Zillow, Trulia and realtor.com strengthen their hold on consumers | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

Zillow, Trulia and realtor.com captured more than a third of all visits to real estate sites from desktop computers in April for the first time.

Real estate’s three largest portals have been slowly growing their overall real estate Web traffic share from desktop computers for at least the last 18 months, according to Experian Marketing Services data.

Horse race image via Shutterstock.
Horse race image via Shutterstock.

(Unlike its digital analytics competitor comScore, Experian measures Web traffic by total visits rather than unique visitors and currently does not report traffic from mobile devices or mobile apps. See recent Inman News story analyzing comScore March data).

Zillow, Trulia and realtor.com captured 34.4 percent of the 360 million visits to real estate sites last month – 8.2 percentage points above their collective Web market share in April 2013.

As it has for the last few months, Zillow came in at No. 1 by a wide margin, capturing 17.39 percent of desktop traffic in April, nearly twice the desktop traffic of Trulia and more than twice that of realtor.com.

 

 

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http://www.inman.com/2014/05/05/zillow-trulia-and-realtor-com-strengthen-their-hold-on-consumers/?utm_source=20140505&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailyheadlinespm

Clinton Hill Mansion Owned by Two Ex-Mayors Wants $9.875M | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

23 images

↑ In Clinton Hill, this gorgeous, 9,000-square-foot mansion is, according to the listing, “SPLENDID BEYOND BELIEF.” For once, that’s some brokerbabble we can really get behind. William Tubby built the house for Brooklyn mayor Charles A. Schieren before Brooklyn and Manhattan were consolidated and, according to rumor, Prohibition-era mayor Jimmy Walker also lived in the house for a time. There’s a lovely library with floor-to-ceiling shelves, a living room with “a hidden projector screen,” six wood-burning fireplaces in total, and a massive backyard and patio. It kind of looks like a less-whimsical/cluttered version of that house from The Royal Tenenbaums. Last year, it hit the rental market for $14,000/month, but now it’s looking to sell for an impressive $9.875 million.

 

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http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2014/05/04/clinton_hill_mansion_owned_by_two_exmayors_wants_9875m.php

Teatown Lake Reservation | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

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April 30, 2014
PROGRAMS THIS WEEK:
Eastern Box Turtle

On the List!
Saturday, May 3
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Mother/Daughter Hike at Cliffdale Farm
Sunday, May 4
10:00 am – 12:00 pm

For more information about this program
fishing-pole-handles.jpg

Fishing at Teatown on Saturdays – MEMBERS ONLY

NEXT EVENT:

Teatown’s Annual Plant Sale
A gardener’s paradise!!
FIRST PICK SALE!
Friday, May 9th
4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
$10 admission per person
Saturday, May 10th
9 am – 2 pm
Teatown Camp:
Summer is Just
Around the Corner!
Summer Camp

Teatown’s Natural

Science Day Camp!
Four sessions this summer
TESA
Teatown’s Environmental Science Academy
for Teens
Visit Teatown
Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterFind us on PinterestView our videos on YouTube
1600 Spring Valley Road
Ossining, NY 10562
Nature Center hours:
9:00am-5:00pm daily
Trails are open 365 days a year from dawn to dusk.
Teatown Lake Reservation’s
mission is to conserve open
space and to educate and
involve the regional community
in order to sustain the diversity
of wildlife, plants and habitats
for future generations.

Your donation can make

an immediate impact to help

conserve and protect the

diversity of wildlife, plants

and habitats…

today and into the future.

Why We Do What We Do
Support Teatown this Spring:

Imagine for a moment, Teatown without…

Dogwoods blooming in the Spring on the Back 40 Trail

– Or maples on display in all their glorious fall colors at Vernay Lake

– Or walking the Lakeside Trail without the sound of bird song

– Or without a forest at all

These are very real threats to the biodiversity of Teatown’s preserve. So, what are we doing? How is Teatown leading as part of the solution?

Read on and become part of the solution…

Events at Teatown:
Fishing at Teatown, Members-Only
Saturdays in May and June
(must pre-register, rules apply)
More information about Members-Only Fishing

Teatown’s Annual Plant Sale

($10 First Pick on May 9, Free May 10)
Movie on the Lawn, Members-Only
Friday, June 6 at 7:15
More information about Members-Only – Movie on the Lawn


Not a member, but want to participate in the Members-Only programs? Become a member today here!
Teatown is Seeking an EMT Health Director for Summer Camp

Teatown is seeking an EMT to act as Health Director for its science day camp, June 30th-August 22nd. Responsibilities include responding to camper illness or injury, coordinating first aid supplies and medications, and speaking with parents about camper health issues. Candidates must be at least 21 years old, physically active and comfortable navigating through a natural setting on foot or by an off-road vehicle. Please contact Lisa Baugh at lbaugh@teatown.org or call 762-2912 ext. 137.

I Love My Park Day

Saturday, May 3, 9:30 am – 2:30 pm
On the Old Croton Aqueduct Trail

Co-sponsored by Teatown, join friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct on “I Love My Park Day” on the Old Croton Aqueduct Trail in Cortlandt/Ossining and lop vines, remove invasive plants and bushes and learn invasive plant ID and pruning/removal techniques.

Reigster in advance here
Walk-ins also are welcome.

In the Nature Center: Seeing Connections

Ready-Made Art in Nature

By Ashya Venjara

On exhibit May 1 – 31, 2014

Reception: Saturday, May 3, 3-5 pm

…Nature being the richest form of inspiration one can imagine,

I work with a macro lens to capture the finest of details and draw attention to beauty on a miniature scale. The images I find in nature are ready made, which I then extract into something original…Seeing connections in nature is a path to greater awareness of our relationship to the universe.

Home sales finally thaw, but just slightly | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

U.S. home buyers signed more contracts to buy existing homes in March, as weather in much of the country warmed and as more listings came onto the market. An index of so-called “pending” home sales from the National Association of Realtors rose 3.4 percent from February, the first gain in nine months, but is still down 7.9 percent from March of 2013.

“After a dismal winter, more buyers got an opportunity to look at homes last month and are beginning to make contract offers,” Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors. “Sales activity is expected to steadily pick up as more inventory reaches the market, and from ongoing job creation in the economy.”

Regionally, sales in the Northeast increased 1.4 percent, but are 5.9 percent below a year ago. In the Midwest, sales slipped 0.8 percent and are 10.1 percent below March 2013. Pending home sales in the South rose 5.6 percent, but are 5.3 percent below a year ago. The index in the West increased 5.7 percent monthly, but is 11.1 percent below March, 2013. The Realtors still predict overall home sales for 2014 will come in lower than last year, at 4.9 million units sold.

Fast-rising home prices have caused at least some of the slowdown in sales during this spring season. In fact, prices in several major metropolitan markets hit new peaks in February. With median home values well above the national average, Denver, San Jose, Austin, Dallas and Houston hit new price highs, according to Black Knight Financial Services. Metropolitan markets in California made up eight of the top ten biggest price gains in February, with Portland, Ore., and Seattle, rounding out the list. Home prices fell in several Northeast and Midwest markets, like Cincinnati, Allentown, Pa. and Atlantic City, N.J. Nationally, home prices are still 13.5 percent below their June, 2006, peak, but that gap is closing fast.

 

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https://homes.yahoo.com/news/home-sales-finally-thaw-just-140000849.html

New-Home Sales in U.S. Unexpectedly Slump to Eight-Month Low | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

Sales of new U.S. homes unexpectedly plunged in March to the lowest level in eight months, reflecting a broad-based retreat that signals the industry is facing bigger challenges than just bad weather.

Sales dropped 14.5 percent to a 384,000 annualized pace, lower than any forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg and the weakest since July, Commerce Department data showed today in Washington. The median forecast of 74 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for the pace to accelerate to 450,000.

The housing recovery has slowed as higher borrowing costs and rising prices make properties less affordable. Shortages of buildable lots and skilled labor also have hindered construction as the market heads into its busiest time of year.

“The housing market is in a rut that’s so far not showing signs of getting better,” Guy Berger, a U.S. economist at RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut, said before the report. “They don’t have enough lots, they don’t have enough workers. That’s playing a big role.”

Stock extended earlier losses after the report. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 0.3 percent to 1,874.04 at 10:05 a.m. in New York.

Economists’ estimates ranged from 428,000 to 476,000. The Commerce Department revised the February reading up to a 449,000 pace from a previously estimated 440,000.

 

 

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http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-04-23/new-home-sales-in-u-dot-s-dot-unexpectedly-slump-to-eight-month-low