Tag Archives: Westchester Luxury Real Estate

BofA CEO: Housing market is fairly stable | Armonk NY Real Estate

According to The Wall Street Journal, Bank of America (BAC) CEO Brian Moynihan said the U.S. housing market is fairly stable, as consumer spending stays solid and the shutdown fails to hinder progress.

Big banks have seen their mortgage banking income decline in recent quarters as refinancing activity fizzles. But Mr. Moynihan said that a decrease in refinancing activity is not indicative of the strength of the overall U.S. housing market. Instead, he said that home purchases, which have grown slightly since the beginning of the year, are what spurs broader economic growth.

He added that he believed the Federal Reserve would keep rates low until the economy starts to show greater signs of growth.

Moynihan also spoke about how the bank has spent more than $40 billion to date putting its legal troubles behind it. He wouldn’t say whether he thinks the government is unfairly “shaking down” big banks with penalties for crisis-era behavior.

                    Source: WSJ

Mortgage applications tumble 7% | South Salem Real Estate

Mortgage applications spiraled down for the week ending Nov. 1, decreasing 7% from a week earlier, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Wednesday.

The refinance index slid 8%, while the purchase index dropped 5% as refinance applications ticked up.

The refinance share of mortgage activity declined to 66% of total applications, slightly down from 67% the previous week.

The average contract interest rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage with a conforming loan limit dropped to 4.32% from 4.33%.

Meanwhile, the 30-year, FRM jumbo rose to 4.37% from 4.46%.

The average 30-year, FRM backed by the FHA grew to 4.07% from 4.06%, and the 15-year, FRM increased to 3.44% from 3.42%.

In addition, the 5/1 ARM tumbled to 3.08%, compared to 3.17% a week prior.

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/27818

 

 

Home Prices Climb in 88% of U.S. Cities | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Prices for single-family homes climbed in 88 percent of U.S. cities in the third quarter as buyers competed for limited inventories that included fewer discounted foreclosures.

The median transaction price rose from a year earlier in 144 of 163 metropolitan areas measured, the National Association of Realtors said in a report today. A third of areas had double-digit increases.

Potential buyers view a home under construction in South Barrington, Illinois. Home prices are extending a recovery across the country, fueled by a tight supply of listings and a smaller share of distressed sales, which drag down values. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Home prices are extending a recovery across the country, fueled by a tight supply of listings and a smaller share of distressed sales, which drag down values. The U.S. housing market had five months of inventory in the third quarter, down from 5.9 months a year earlier, data from the Realtors group show. Completed foreclosures in September plunged 39 percent from a year earlier, according to CoreLogic Inc.

“Most regions of the country are experiencing strong home-price appreciation off a low base,” Neil Dutta, head of U.S. economics at Renaissance Macro Research LLC in New York, said yesterday in a telephone interview. “Cities with the biggest price appreciation are in places that had bigger busts.”

Price gains are at unsustainable levels, with cities such as San Francisco and San Jose, California, approaching records, Fitch Ratings said today in a report. Much of coastal California is more than 20 percent overvalued, the firm said.

 

Biggest Increases

 

The nationwide median price for an existing single-family home rose 12.5 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier to $207,300 the Realtors group said.

The best-performing areas were Sacramento, California, and Atlanta, where prices jumped 41.8 percent. They were followed by Las Vegas and Punta Gorda, Florida, which had a 31.9 percent gain. Other cities with large increases were Los Angeles, with 26.2 percent, and Phoenix, with 25 percent.

The areas with the biggest declines were all in Illinois, led by Peoria, where prices fell 13.9 percent from a year earlier. Following were Kankakee, with a 9.9 percent drop, and Rockford, with an 8.4 percent decrease.

Rising home prices and borrowing costs are causing some buyers to hold back. The average rate for 30-year fixed loans was 4.1 percent last week, up from a near-record low of 3.35 percent in early May, according to McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac.

 

Sales Slip

 

Contracts (USPHTMOM) to buy existing homes dropped the most in more than three years in September, the Realtors association reported last week.

“Rising prices and higher interest rates have taken a bite out of housing affordability,” Lawrence Yun, the group’s chief economist, said in today’s statement. “However, we have the ongoing situation of more buyers than sellers in the market, so lower sales will help to take the pressure off home-price growth and allow them to rise slowly at a single-digit growth rate in 2014.”

 

 

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-11-06/

 

More than 44,000 agents buying ads on Zillow, up 68 percent from year ago | Chappaqua Real Estate

The number of agents paying to promote themselves on Zillow grew 68 percent from a year ago, to 44,749, the company said in reporting third quarter results today. But average monthly revenue per subscriber was essentially flat at $264, compared to $270 during the same quarter last year.

Zillow reported record revenue ($53.3 million), new subscribers (5,942) and average monthly unique visitors (61.1 million) for the quarter, but reported a net loss of $1.2 million on increased advertising expenses.

Revenue for the quarter was up 67 percent from a year ago, with advertising by real estate agents accounting for the lion’s share of revenue ($35.1 million).

“The third quarter was another extremely strong one for Zillow, as we exceeded our outlook and delivered record results,” said Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff in a statement. “We made significant progress toward our priorities to grow audience, grow our Premier Agent business and grow our emerging marketplaces.”

Zillow announced an initiative this year to boost the company’s brand with enhanced spends in advertising on the Web and TV. The company hosted a housing discussion with President Barack Obama in August and a housing forum with Washington, D.C. heavyweights including Federal Housing Finance Agency director Edward DeMarco and Federal Housing Agency commissioner Carol Galante in October.

Zillow’s chief competitors, Trulia and realtor.com, reported third quarter revenue growth of 59 percent and 14 percent, respectively.

 

 

 

 

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/11/05/zillow-reports-record-revenue-subscriber-count-and-web-traffic-in-q3/#sthash.OZtyelh4.dpuf

Schiliro Leads Arden In North Castle Supervisor Race | Armonk NY Real Estate

Councilman Michael Schiliro remains in the lead in the race for North Castle Supervisor as of 11:50 p.m.

Schiliro is leading Supervisor Howard Arden 56 percent to 44 percent with 90 percent of precincts reporting.

Republican Barbara DiGiacinto and Democrat Barry Reiter are pulling away in the race for town board, leading with 29 percent of the vote each. Incumbent Republican John Cronin trails with 22 percent of the vote and Democrat Jose Berra has 21 percent.

Arden, a Republican, was running for a second term as supervisor, is opposed by Schiliro, who has served three terms on the Town Board. Cronin was running for a second term on the board. Cronin campaigned with Diane Didonato-Roth, who was defeated in the Republican primary by DiGiancinto.

Berra and Reiter were running for the first time on the Democratic line.

 

 

http://armonk.dailyvoice.com/politics/schiliro-leads-arden-north-castle-supervisor-race

 

Chris Burdick Leads Bedford Town Supervisor Race | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Chris Burdick has the lead over Don Scott in the race for Bedford Town Supervisor, leading 55 percent to 45 percent with 88 percent of districts reporting, according to Board of Elections officials.

Burdick, a Democrat, has been on the Town Board since 2008, is the director of the Wetlands Control Commission, an officer on the Bedford Village Lions Club and a strong proponent of Bedford’s new filtration plant.

Scott, a Republican, has served as the president of the Kat-Lewisboro Board of Education, Wetlands commissioner for the Town of Bedford and was the fire commissioner for the Katonah Fire Department.

 

 

http://bedford.dailyvoice.com/politics/chris-burdick-leads-bedford-town-supervisor-race

More purchase originations mean more mortgage fraud | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Market participants are fully aware of the beating refinance volumes are currently taking as the majority of mega banks continue to cut jobs by the thousands.

For those who believe the drop in refi volumes is all but a small small bump in the road on the way through a housing recovery, you’ve got another thing coming.

Economists at the Mortgage Bankers Association last week popped that bubble after announcing their predictions for refis to drop to $463 million in 2014.

Purchase originations are expected to rise from only $661 billion to $723 billion, according to MBA data.

If we take into account another two years, originations will modestly grow to $796 million in 2015 — that’s half of what they were during the housing heyday.

Everyone knows that the more originations in coming up years means more options for mortgage fraud risk. But how much will actually take place?

Interthinx created a specialized info graphic (feature below) for HousingWire to answer this very question.

The company revealed that purchases have a higher risk of fraud, with California, Florida and Illinois leading the way as the riskiest states.

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/27812-infograph-more-purchase-originations-mean-more-mortgage-fraud

 

Free FICO credit scores offered to millions | South Salem Real Estate

Millions of credit card customers of Barclaycard US, the payments business of Barclays in the U.S., and First Bankcard, the credit card division of First National Bank of Omaha, can now access their FICO credit scores for free.

The two banks are the first to participate in the FICO Open Access Program, which in addition to offering free FICO Scores, allows customers to see the two most important factors affecting their score and provides them with FICO educational materials to help them better understand credit scoring and what behaviors impact their FICO Score. The program is open to all consumer lenders, including mortgage lenders.

“This new program provides individuals with the specific FICO Score used by lenders to make credit decisions regarding an individual customer,” said James Wehmann, executive vice president of scores at FICO, in a statement.

“In 2012 approximately 10 billion FICO Scores were bought by lenders for risk management purposes, and we are prepared to allow all of them to be shared with bank customers without any additional score fee charged by FICO to lenders.”

FICO expects more than 25 million Americans to have access through the program within 12 months.

Source: FICO

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/free-fico-credit-scores-offered-to-millions/#sthash.mMbN7TKy.dpuf

What $2,900/Month Can Rent You Around New York City | Chappaqua Real Estate

Welcome back to Curbed Comparisons, a column that explores what one can rent for a set dollar amount in various New York City neighborhoods. Is one man’s studio another man’s townhouse? Let’s find out! Today’s price: $2,900/month.

↑ In Battery Park City, this 2BR/1BA apartment is going for $2,960/month. The foyer has an alcove “large enough for a four person dinning room table” and the building offers such amenities as a doorman, concierge, pool, gym, and laundry.

↑ A spacious open studio in Greenwich Village rents for $2,800/month. It’s in an elevator building with laundry and has fairly high ceilings.

↑ On the Upper East Side, a fourth-floor walk-up 2BR/2BA with weird floors wants $3,000/month. It has two “walking closets.” Watch out for those closets, they’re walking all over the place!

↑ This 2BR/1BA pad in Williamsburg is “right in the heart of where it’s happening” and wants $2,900/month. The floors and bathrooms were recently refinished.

↑ On the Upper West Side, this nice-looking 2BR/1BA has a decorative fireplace and mantle in the living room. It wants $2,849/month. There’s also an eat-in kitchen.

This 2BR/1BA in Gramercy is going for $3,000/month. Good photography.

1001 total votes.

· Curbed Comparisons archives [Curbed]

Mayoral Candidate Pitches Aerial Gondolas To Cross The Bay | Bedford NY Real Estate

Miami Beach Mayoral Candidate Steve Berke (who is also, by the way, a comedian, marijuana activist, and documentarian of said Mayoral run) has some grand ideas for solving Miami Beach’s transit woes. The first idea, a light rail system circling South Beach is very good but not new and already an aspect of the recently revived Baylink idea. The second idea is the real headline grabber: an epic aerial tramway zooming over Biscayne Bay to Miami, ski-slope gondola style, that at the least would be an absolutely wild ride.

As for the routes each system would take, well, Berke’s light rail zigzags all over the beach like a cat on crack. A whole loop goes to Belle Isle, because apparently walking from there to Sunset Harbor is just too far. Halfway up Alton, the train doglegs over to West Avenue and then, wouldn’t ya know it, doglegs back a few blocks later. It basically makes curlicues around the Bass Museum. Meanwhile, gondolas full of tourists will depart South Point Park and immediately have to ascend hundreds of feet vertically above the tallest cruise ships before zooming over PortMiami’s working post-panamax container port. Oh, and on the other side of the port, the gondolas will pass directly through PortMiami’s turning basin, getting in the way of the ships. Apparently, those cruise ships just gonna have to flip it in reverse and back their asses out. Beep, beep.

Curbed Miami does not endorse any candidate in the Miami Beach mayoral race, but to give credit where credit is due, it is extremely refreshing that the island city’s hellish transportation situation is being addressed as a serious issue in this election instead of being swept under the rug. On the other hand, we’re not transportation engineers, but neither Steve Berke, and boy is it obvious.

UPDATE: A previous version of this story claimed that Berke brought a mariachi band to the last Miami Beach Mayoral debate. There was a mariachi band present, but according to Berke it was not he who brought it.

 

 

 

http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2013/10/07/