Tag Archives: Westchester Homes for Sale

Westchester Homes for Sale

Homeowners motivated by rising prices | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Analysts toss around the word bubble like it’s free money. But what does the term actually mean? While there is no clear answer, the classic 2004 housing bubble paper composed by Karl Case and Robert Schiller describes their version of a bubble:

Per CNBC:

We believe that in its widespread use the term refers to a situation in which excessive public expectations of future price increases cause prices to be temporarily elevated. First-time homebuyers may also worry during a housing bubble that if they do not buy now, they will not be able to afford a home later.

Following this definition, the article suggests we are not far from a bubble.

People buying homes are citing future price increases as one of the “key factors” motivating them to buy. The most recent survey by the real-estate company Redfin found that almost one third of buyers are motivated by rising prices.

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/print/26800-homeowners-motivated-by-rising-prices

Princess keeps French chateau afloat with opera, fashion shows | Chappaqua Real Estate

Minnie de Beauvau-Craon, known in her tiny French village as “Princess Minnie,” has ruled over the Château de Haroué in the Lorraine region of northeast France since her father died in 1982.

In order to keep the 82-room chateau going, the 59-year-old princess hosts open-air operas attended by thousands on the grounds as well as fashion shows featuring works by Givenchy, Venet and Balenciaga, among others and also featuring the best fashion products like these pure nails pro reviews. Next year she plans to hold art exhibitions, and maybe, one day, an informal pub.

Source: New York Times

 

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/princess-keeps-french-chateau-afloat-with-opera-fashion-shows/#sthash.4ckyQ5qB.dpuf

Most Americans Think Home Prices Will Rise Next Year | North Salem Real Estate

Most Americans think home prices will go up over the next 12 months, especially upper-middle-income households according to a new Bankrate.com report.

Among households earning between $50,000 and $75,000 per year, some 65% expect prices to rise and just 6% expect prices to fall. Twenty-seven percent say they will stay the same and just nine percent forecast a decline.

In July, Bankrate established that 23% of Americans believe real estate is the best way to invest money not needed for more than 10 years. That was the second-most common response, slightly behind cash.

“It seems like Americans’ love affair with real estate has returned,” said Greg McBride, CFA, Bankrate.com’s senior financial analyst. “But there are still some clear headwinds, including rising mortgage rates, stubbornly high unemployment and the relatively low U.S. household savings rate.”

McBride said he didn’t see concern over rising rates reflected in the survey, which was taken during the first week of September.  Rather, he said the data indicated a higher degree of confidence in real estate as an investment than the stock market, which “puts a lot of eggs in the homeownership basket,” he said,

Bankrate found that Americans’ financial security turned negative in September for the first time since February. The Financial Security Index slipped from August’s 100.5 reading to 99.5 in September. Readings below 100 indicate deteriorating financial security compared with one year previous.

The readings on debt, net worth and overall financial situation dropped from August to September. Americans’ comfort level with their debt took the biggest hit; those feeling less comfortable than one year ago (21%) now outnumber those feeling more comfortable (17%).

Savings remains a drag on financial security, with those feeling less comfortable with their savings now compared to one year ago outnumbering those feeling more comfortable by a margin of greater than two-to-one. Whether looking at age group, income bracket or educational attainment, no group feels more comfortable with their savings now versus last year.

 

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/09/6635/

 

Scoop leads off the street with storefront touch screens | South Salem Real Estate

Editor’s note: This post explores a marketing tactic submitted by Halstead Property, the most recent winner of #madREskillz, a weekly Inman News Twitter competition. Every Thursday, Inman News invites real estate professionals and companies to tweet offbeat marketing tricks using the tag #madREskillz. After reviewing the submissions (and retweeting many in the process), we select two finalists and put them to a vote on Facebook. Then we feature the winner in a story.

Interactive ads have proliferated on the Internet for a simple reason: You grab more eyeballs online if your ads move around and actively engage people.

Acting on the fact that the same is true in the real world, Halstead Property, winner of the latest #madREskillz competition, is using interactive storefront displays provided by tech company imageSurge to poach leads right off the street.

“Storefronts get hundreds of thousands walking by them on a regular basis,” said Matthew Leone, director of Web marketing and social media at Halstead. “It’s just taking advantage of that.”

With motion graphics and calls to action, the street-side displays invite pedestrians to search online listings at any hour and connect with agents.

They also offer videos and virtual tours with “through-window” audio. And they track analytics, including the number of people who use the display and which properties they view the most. That way, brokers can gauge return on investment and tweak the content featured in the displays.

 

 

read more…

 

 

http://www.inman.com/2013/09/19/halstead-property-scoops-leads-off-the-street-with-storefront-touch-screens/#sthash.7elKhwjk.dpuf

$30 Million Home Is The Bedford Daily Voice’s House Of The Week | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Photo Credit: Douglas Elliman Real Estate

 

BEDFORD, N.Y. – A six-bedroom home at 55 Springhurst Road listed at $30 million is the Daily Voice’s Bedford house of the week.

Check out the details of this home listing:

  • 8,395 square feet
  • six bedrooms
  • nine full bathrooms
  • two partial bathrooms
  • built on 21.70 acres
  • a lake stocked with Koi
  • gym, pool
  • tennis/paddle court with stone pavilion.
  • specimen trees and perennial gardens.

See Douglas Elliman Real Estate for the complete listing.

 

http://bedford.dailyvoice.com/real-estate/30-million-home-bedford-daily-voice-s-house-week

 

Fed holding off on taper | Katonah Real Estate

Citing rising mortgage rates and an unstable economy, the Federal Reserve said that it’s holding off on its decision to pull back on its bond-buying activity.

“Household spending and business fixed investment advanced, and the housing sector has been strengthening, but mortgage rates have risen further and fiscal policy is restraining economic growth,” the Fed said in a statement.

Many, including Inman News columnist Lou Barnes, had expected that the Fed would begin tapering today. U.S. and global bond markets have been highly reactive to the Fed’s taper talk.

“This is incredibly wimpy,” David Kelly, chief market strategist at Morgan Stanley, told CNBC.

Source: CNBC and Federal Reserve

 

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/fed-holding-off-on-taper/#sthash.pOY0uRAz.dpuf

Younger Buyers Dominate Luxury Market | Bedford Real Estate

A new survey by Coldwell Banker Previews International® and the Luxury Institute finds that wealthy younger buyers are driving the luxury real estate market, and they are willing to pay more than similar wealthy buyers age 55 and older.

According to the survey of Americans age 21 or older with a minimum gross annual household income of $250,000, 43 percent of younger wealthy consumers are considering the purchase of residential property in the next 12 months, compared to 21 percent of those age 55 and older. On average these younger wealthy consumers spent more than $2.1 million on their most recent purchase of residential property, approximately twice the average amount spent by older and similarly wealthy luxury buyers, which was $1.1 million.

“This trend towards younger luxury buyers is leading a change in desired home amenities,” said Betty Graham, president, Coldwell Banker Previews International NRT. “Whether these younger buyers have young families or are single without children, they are looking for homes that fit their active and unique lifestyle.”

So what are they buying? The survey found:

  • Younger buyers are significantly more likely than wealthy buyers age 55 and older to want homes with amenities such as a pool, outdoor kitchen, home gym, home theater, wine cellar and four or more garages.
  • Wealthy consumers under age 55 are more than twice as likely (23 percent) to value Green or LEED certified residential properties than their older counterparts (11 percent).
  • Open floor plans and a fully automated and “wired” home environment are the top features wealthy consumers, regardless of age, say have become important to them in the last three years. Less importance is placed on staff quarters, tennis/sports courts and separate catering kitchens.
  • “Luxury homes are for more than successful and retired empty nesters,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute. “Today’s luxury buyer is both dynamic and diverse, and it’s reflected in the homes and products they’re buying.”

For majority of luxury buyers, location is the most important factor when considering the purchase of residential property.  Seventy (70) percent of wealthy consumers identified location as the most important factor in their last residential purchase. Other elements included the condition of the property — brand new with no work required, as opposed to needing major renovations (10 percent), price (8 percent), home amenities (6 percent) and view (6 percent). The most commonly cited reason for wealthy consumers not considering the purchase of a residential property was the desire to keep assets liquid (24 percent).

 

 

 

Here Now, a Look at ‘Outlandish Homes on Impossible Sites’ | Pound Ridge Real Estate

While Brooklyn-based painter Dean Monogenis is obsessed with architecture—an interest that began after 9/11, when he “realized that [buildings] were like people in that they could live and die,” he recently told Wired—he has zero interest in actually learning the technical aspects of design. He much prefers to keep his work in that middle-gray area between the surreal and real, where the ultra-modern homes he paints look somewhat possible at first, yet perhaps less so as one looks a little closer. “In a painting you can completely ignore things like gravity and engineering,” he says. “As a painter I am free to make a building as plausible or implausible as I like.”

Gizmodo sums up Monogenis’ scenes, which often feature scaffolding, cranes, and other construction elements, as “outlandish homes on impossible sites,” adding, “it’s as if the entire series is based on an architect’s renderings for a massive speculative development planned for a growing population, unearthed long after that civilization had vanished.”

ku-xlarge-6.jpgPainting by Dean Monogenis via Wired

Head to Wired for more of Monogenis’ work. For other eye-popping examples of architectural paintings, see: Paul Davies’ Pop Art-esque midcentury houses, Sunga Park’s dream-like watercolors of European buildings.

· Gorgeous Architectural Paintings From a World Without Gravity [Wired Design via Gizmodo] · All Artistry coverage [Curbed National]

Westchester Opens Commuter Parking Lots For New Haven Line Riders | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Four temporary parking areas will be set up to provide people who normally ride Metro-North’s New Haven Line access to trains on the Harlem Line and to the subway, Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino announced Sunday.

Service on the New Haven Line in Fairfield County has been substantially reduced due to a power outage that arose Wednesday. Repairs are currently underway by Con Edison.

Connecticut riders looking for an alternate route to New York City can try out the four park-and-ride lots. The lots are free and offer a total of 8,600 additional parking spaces along with access to trains and the subway. Here are the locations:

  • The garage at 8 E. 153rd St. near Yankee Stadium will have 1,500 parking space and allow walking access to Yankees-East 153rd Street Station on the Hudson Line Service.
  • Orchard Beach at Pelham Bridge Road/Shore Road and Orchard Beach Road will offer 5,000 parking spaces and a free shuttle to Pelham Bay Park’s #6 Subway.
  • Rye Playland will offer 1,500 parking spots and a bus to the White Plains Station on the Harlem Line. The free bus trip is about 10 miles.
  • Kensico Dam at Park Drive West in Valhalla  will offer 600 parking places and a bus to the North White Plains Station for Harlem Line Service. The bus trip is about a mile.

The parking areas will be open at 4:30 a.m. daily and shuttle buses will start running at 5 a.m. Shuttle bus service will continue throughout the day, the county said. The focus will be on the morning and evening commute, and the schedule will be assessed daily, Astorino said.

“The disruption of service on the New Haven line has caused tremendous inconvenience to thousands of commuters,” Astorino said. “Westchester County government immediately reached out to Metro-North to offer our assistance in making additional parking, buses and other resources available to help get New Haven line commuters to work as quickly and easily as possible.”

The parking lot at Playland, where the amusement park has closed for the season, has spaces for 1,500 cars.  At Kensico Dam Park, parking can be established for up to 600 cars by using the grass field.

The county will be reimbursed by Metro-North for its costs, Astorino said.

The Real Douglas Elliman’s Townhouse on the Market for $18M | Chappaqua Real Estate

Douglas Elliman, who founded the eponymous brokerage in 1911, is sometimes credited with being the man who made uptown chic. So it stands to reason that he got in on the ground floor, commissioning a six-story Neo-Federal red brick townhouse from architect S.E. Gage in 1909. It also stands to reason that that townhouse has proved to be quite the solid real estate investment, selling—most recently—for $5 million in 1999 and $9.5 million in 2006. Now, 177 East 71st Street finds itself back on the market again, asking $18.25 million. The brokerage handling the sale is, of course … Brown Harris Stevens? Ouch. (Sotheby’s had the listing last time around.)