Tag Archives: Waccabuc NY
Albert Brooks Re-Lists Bel Air Home He Bought From Merv Griffin | Waccabuc NY Real Estate
Should Lifelong Renters Consider Buying a Home? | Waccabuc Realtor
Isra Hashmi is one of the lucky ones.
And even so, she’s watched her mother sink under a $700,000 mortgage for a home in California that she never could afford to begin with on a physician’s income. Hashmi’s mother eventually had to walk away from the house. She’s seen her brother have to abandon his home, too, after his clothing business failed and he was foreclosed on. She stood by a friend who lost tens of thousands of dollars in a short sale when it was the last option to get out of a mortgage that was burying her in debt.
But Hashmi herself has never had to face what her friends, family and millions more Americans have as the crippling housing crisis unfolded. She might be the only one she knows who hasn’t.
That’s because, even at the age of 39, Hashmi has never owned a home — and she may never after seeing what’s happened to everyone around her, she said.
A lifelong renter, Hashmi (pictured at left with her husband and three children) is in the minority of Americans who have never taken the plunge into homeownership. (Despite slumping to a 50-year low, the rate of U.S. homeownership was estimated to be 62.1 percent in the second quarter of 2012.) But she’s likely among a majority of lifelong renters who today count themselves blessed or lucky that they’ve never owned a home. These are the few who have made it through the housing crash and resulting foreclosure crisis virtually unscathed.
“I’m still the only one I know who has never owned,” Hashmi told AOL Real Estate.
It’s not that she hasn’t come close. Eight years ago, when Hashmi and her husband lived in Tucson, AZ, they were on the verge of buying a home there.
“It was the middle of the housing boom, and homes were popping up everywhere,” she said.
But when it came time to make an offer, Hashmi’s husband raised a red flag. He realized that the mortgage their bank was offering them was way out of their budget.
“He said, ‘This is freaking me out. I don’t make enough money to afford this,’ ” Hashmi recalled. “He had the sense to realize that we couldn’t afford it. And then we couldn’t understand why we would even be offered this loan.”
Relief when the housing bubble burst
The couple decided against buying. A few years later, the housing crash would hit, as millions defaulted on loans that they couldn’t afford and shouldn’t have been able to qualify for in the first place. Four million people would lose their homes to foreclosure, and more than double that would face the same possibility.
“We looked at each other in relief and said, ‘Do you realize what we just escaped?’ ” Hashmi recalled.
Today, the couple rents an apartment in Boston with their three children, and Hashmi said that they don’t have any plans to buy in the future, even amid record-low mortgage rates and far lower home prices.
Even though renting might have saved people like Hashmi from deep pain as the housing bust took hold, is shying away from buying a home a winning strategy for the future? Not necessarily.
Analysts say buying better financial option
According to Zillow’s breakeven horizon analysis, buying has become a better financial option than renting in 75 percent of U.S. metros, where it takes an average of three years or less of owning a home to break even with what you’d pay in rent over the same time period. (Home prices are down about 30 percent from their peak in 2006.) In Boston, where Hashmi lives, it would take awhile longer to break even: 4.3 years.
Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries said that lifelong renters “have played the smart money for the last five years” by staying out of the buyer’s market, but the fortune in that decision is turning a corner.
He pointed out that historically, over the last century, home prices have risen at an average rate of 0.5 percent to 2 percent per year.
“Despite what’s happened in recent years, housing is generally a non-depreciating asset,” Humphries said. “We think we’ve hit bottom on home values … The steep drops are behind us.”
The renters who avoided catastrophe during the housing slump have a golden opportunity to gain wealth by buying now as home pricesare climbing back, Humphries added.
Golden opportunity?
That’s an argument that could potentially persuade Gerald Poindexter. The 43-year-old San Diego resident (pictured at right) has been a renter all his life, and he said he felt like he “dodged a bullet” during the housing crisis.
“But never say never,” he said about the possibility of buying a home in the future.
Poindexter said he mostly has stayed away from buying because of the overwhelming responsibility of owning a home.
“Your home starts to dominate every aspect of your life,” he said. “You stay in a job you hate just to keep up with the house.” And when the housing bubble burst, it only affirmed his decision to remain a renter.
But “I love a good deal,” Poindexter said, referring to the deals available because of battered home prices. “If the right opportunity came along, I wouldn’t say no.”
Then again, have longtime renters really survived the housing bust without a scratch? After all, rental prices have soared across the country as ex-homeowners who lost their homes have flooded the rental market.
Rents soar in some key markets
Gary Malin, president of New York City-based realty firm Citi Habitats, has seen some of the worst of it. Rental prices in the market that’s already America’s most expensive have beaten record highs multiple times over the last couple of years.
Still, Malin said, judging whether a renter has gotten off scot-free during the housing crisis depends entirely on individual circumstances.
“If you were in a position to buy at the height of the market but didn’t, then you’re still way ahead of the game,” he said. But if you were only financially capable of paying average rents at the height of the market — when they were much lower than they are now — then today’s surging rental costs are likely hurting your bottom line a lot more, he added.
Hashmi admitted that rising rents have been a struggle for her family. Their rent has gone up every year for the past three years that they’ve been in their Boston apartment. She said they are considering moving outside the city to find cheaper rental rates. But for her, that still doesn’t outweigh the comfort of being free of mortgage debt.
“It’s the most amazing feeling to go to bed at night and be debt-free,” Hashmi said. “There’s nothing else like it.”
3 Steps to Living an Authentic Life Online | Waccabuc NY Realtor
Whether you like it not, social media is taking over Internet.
Research tells us that one in five of every minutes spent online is currently being spent on a social media channel. Business has always been about getting the attention of customers. That’s why the newspaper salesman used to peruse the busy city sidewalks, shouting at the top of their voices “Read all about it! Read all about it! Read all about it!”
The time and place may have changed, but the heart behind the messages that are being shouted at the minions who walk by is still the same.
Businesses, attention hungry artists and entrepreneurs who are building their own platforms are standing on the social sidewalks of cyberspace shouting at the top of their voices. “Look at me! You want this! You need this! Come buy from me.”
The problem is the people on the sidewalk aren’t stopping anymore, there is too much noise, too many interruptions, they’re just covering their ears and walking as fast as they can.
How can an authentic artist, a good business person, or a brilliant entrepreneur actually get traction in this noisy world?
Here are my three secrets for creating an authentic web presence.
1. Leave the sidewalk
You will never get any healthy attention on the sidewalk. It’s time to stop selling, it’s time to go into your storehouse and pull the curtains across the windows and lock the doors. You need to breathe clean air for a while. Some people would call this a social media detox; I think of it more as simply deciding not to swim in shark-infested water.
What is your storehouse?
Your storehouse is your authentic center; it’s who you really are, it’s the reason you went into business, picked up that musical instrument, or came up with that product line in the first place.
Breathe and remember.
The dog eat dog, rabidly competitive world of cyberspace can cause a person to forget their humanity; it caninizes them.
Sometimes we spend so much time on the sidewalk, we forget to look after our storehouse and it gets pretty messy inside. This kind of social media strategy, which focuses more on the market, more than it does on the product and the services you are offering will always end in burn out and decay.
No one else will tell you this BUT I think for the sake of your soul, you need to keep the doors locked until you’ve rediscovered the “real reason why.” The why is always greater than dollars, it’s above status and far out reaches any amount of social significance; the thing that captivated your heart in the first place?
What was it?
Almost certainly it will involve at least one of the following…
- a deep desire to connect with other people in a positive way
- a heart for justice or a desire to improve thing.
- a profound love of creativity.
When you are alone in the quiet of your storehouse, drink deeply from the ancient river of your inspiration. Let the fresh waters wash over you and heal you from the rampant busyness of the sidewalk. Relax; you will know when it’s time to unlock the door.
2. Inviting others in
When you are refreshed and ready, your storehouse although now beautifully in order; it will begin to feel strangely empty, even though it is in fact full. That burning desire to share all you have with others will begin to grow inside you again, until you find it is almost impossible to resist. Yes it is time to re-engage, but it would be foolish to venture out onto the wintery sidewalks of cyberspace again.
What do I suggest?
Go into the kitchen and take your finest cut of lamb out of your refrigerator. Cook that lamb. Let rich aroma of that beautiful meat satiate every corner of your storehouse. Stoke up your fire in the hearth; warm your storehouse to the point of total comfort. Now go to the front door, open it and let the warmth and the rich essence of who you really are spill out onto the sidewalk.
You don’t need to shout anymore, your authenticity, the smell, the warmth of your genuine self, will do all the talking for you. In the cold, wild, attention-grabbing world of cyberspace, you have created a safe haven and a place of nourishment.
The tired, angry, frustrated and cold souls busily marching down the social media sidewalks are desperately in need of what you have to offer. One by one they come in, to escape, to breathe, to get warm again and to gain nourishment and strength. Your website, your business, your product or your song, is so pure in its authenticity that it is just what they needed, it’s literally saving their souls.
Perhaps this is real reason you went into business or picked up that instrument in the first place; to feed the hungry, to bring health to the sick, to be a friend to the lonely?
3. The best messages are whispered between friends
But how will people know if you don’t tell them?
The temptation to shout and move back out onto the sidewalk is very strong BUT shouting nearly always forces a person to cower, step back, or put their hands over their hands. There are very few people who can shout effectively, and why would you want too, when there is a much better way.
The best messages are almost always whispered amongst friends.
It’s the private conversations in cyberspace that will really; truly dictate the success of your business or career.
When you feed people, when you connect with them on a level that goes deeper than simply a product, a business or a song they simply cannot help BUT share their experience with others. And this is the true and democratizing power of social media; not that it connects strangers with strangers; but that it connects friends and that enables friends to share truly good things with each other.
So what does this all mean?
What are the practical implications here?
When there is a lot of shouting, people long for quietness. When there is a lot of incessant selling, people long for generosity. So be authentic and genuine, but also be judicious and intimate. Don’t give pearls to pigs or they will trample what is truly good into the manure of the sty.
In today’s brave new world, perhaps the best way of spreading your message is to insist on keeping it a secret.
Making an offer on a ‘contingent’ listing can pay off | Waccabuc NY Homes for Sale
Why Content is the Foundation of your Social Media Marketing | Waccabuc Realtor
Waccabuc Real Estate for Sale | Secrets of the Staging Pros
Secrets of the Staging Pros
We asked staging experts to reveal some of their favorite tools, accessories, and strategies when home staging.–>Inspired by Nature
Barb Schwarz, credited with being the creator of home staging and CEO of www.Stagedhomes.com, says one of her favorite staging tools is pulling from the natural elements of nature. For example, Schwarz says she’ll creatively use “twigs, branches, seashells, green cuttings from the outdoors, orchids, real trees as possible, hand woven baskets, cotton, linen, burlap fabrics, real leather, and earthy colors as well. You cannot lose when using the colors of nature. This creates a comfortable, natural look and setting in any home for sale.”
Easy-to-Move Furniture
Stager Charlene Storozuk, owner of Dezigner Digz, says a must-have tool for staging properties is furniture sliders. “I have two sets: one with felt backing for moving furniture across wood and tile flooring and another set with plastic backing for broadloom,” Storozuk says. “All I have to do is lift the corners of each piece of furniture, one at a time, and slip a slider underneath. Once all four corners have a slider in place, I can easily move the furniture around on my own. Not only do the sliders save me from throwing my back out, they also save the home owner some money since I don’t have to pay an assistant to help me move furniture.”
Information at Your Fingertips
Ashley Whittenberger, owner and principal of Interiority Complex LLC, says her iPhone is a must-have tool for staging. “I can access real estate comps, easily share my database of preferred vendors who can help my clients get their home into tip-top shape, take pictures of the property for my records, share sample photos of items I might suggest to purchase, and of course, access the Real Estate Staging Association’s Home Staging Savings Calculator,” Whittenberger says.
Evoking Buyers’ Senses
Susan Tokarz-Krauss with Real Estate Designed to Sell in Grants Pass, Ore., says creativity goes a long way in staging properties. “Whether I lightly stage, redesign, or do a full staging of a vacant home, it’s very important to engage the buyer’s senses,” Tokarz-Krauss says. ”I use lighting — on timers — to set the mood and provide security. I use ‘soft’ scents such as vanilla to create that special ambiance, and I play light jazz or seasonal music in the home. Colorful pillows and accents make the room ‘pop,’ but the scents, music, and overall ambiance is what helps potential buyers personally engage with the home.”
ADP Employment, Mortgage Purchase Applications | Waccabuc Real Estate
Each day the Research staff takes a look at recently released economic indicators, addressing what these indicators mean for REALTORS® and their clients. Today’s update discusses ADP employment figures and mortgage purchase applications.
- Solid job gains, according to ADP, a company that processes payroll checks for many private sector companies. A net 216,000 private sector jobs were added in February.
- ADP does not measure government sector jobs, which have been declining by about 20,000 each month as state and local governments are trying to balance the budget. So the official job figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics this Friday will likely show about 195,000 in net new job creation. Depending upon whether labor force participation recovers, the unemployment may not necessarily fall even with job gains.
- Remember, in the past 3 years, many people enrolled in schools, took early retirement packages, or simply dropped out of the labor force because of job search frustration. A re-entry of these people into the job market can keep the unemployment rate elevated. But for home buying and commercial real estate occupancy, it is all about job creation, and more demand is being added with each passing month.
- Separately, productivity rose 0.9 percent in the fourth quarter of last year. It simply means we are able to pump out 0.9 percent more products and services because of improvements in technology. The rise in productivity is the source of long run prosperity. America has become the economic superpower, surpassing Britain about 100 years ago because of faster productivity growth in the U.S. Looking over the shoulder, however, productivity growth in China is notably higher than in the U.S.
- Finally in today’s economic data, mortgage applications for a home purchase rose 2 percent in the past week. Even with this increase, there has not been any notable pick up in this data, and it has not corresponded in an upturn in home sales. Application data misses out on all-cash deals and the data is only about applications and not approvals.











