Tag Archives: Westchester NY Homes for Sale

Westchester NY Homes for Sale

America’s Emerging Housing Crisis | Katonah Real Estate

The current housing recovery may be like manna to homeowners, but it may do little to ease a growing shortage of affordable residences, and could even make it worse. After a recession-generated drought, household formation is on the rise, notes a recent study by the Harvard Joint Center on Housing Studies, and in many markets there isn’t an adequate supply of housing for the working and middle classes.

Given problems with regulations in some states, particularly restrictions on new single-family home development, the uptick in housing prices threatens both prospective owners and renters, forcing people who would otherwise buy into the rental market. Ownership levels continue to drop, most notably for minorities, particularly African Americans. Last year, according to the Harvard study, the number of renters in the U.S. rose by a million, accompanied by a net loss of 161,000 homeowners.

This is bad news not only for middle-income Americans but even more so for the poor and renters. The number of renters now paying upward of 50% of their income for housing has risen by 2.5 million since the recession and 6.7 million over the decade. Roughly one in four renters, notes Harvard, are now in this perilous situation. The number of poor renters is growing, but the supply of new affordable housing has dropped over the past year.

So while the housing recovery — and the prospect of higher prices — does offer some relief to existing homeowners, it’s having a negative impact further down the economic ladder. For the poorest Americans, nearly eight decades of extensive public subsidies have failed to solve their housing crisis. Given the financial straits of most American cities — particularly those like Detroit that need it the most — it’s unlikely the government can rescue households stressed by the cost of shelter.

As one might suspect, the problem is greatest in New York, New Jersey and California, say the Harvard researchers .In those three states 22% of households are paying more than 50% of pre-tax income for housing, while median home values and rents in these states are among the highest in the country. According to the Center for Housing Policy and National Housing Conference, 39% of working households in the Los Angeles metropolitan area spend more than half their income on housing, 35% in the San Francisco metro area and 31% in the New York area. All of these figures are much higher than the national rate of 24%, which itself is far from tolerable.

Other, poorer cities also suffer high rates of housing poverty not because they are so expensive but because their economies are bad. In the most distressed neighborhoods of Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit, where vacancy rates top 20%, about 60% of vacant units are held off market, indicating they are in poor condition and likely a source of blight.

America’s emerging housing crisis is creating widespread hardship. This can be seen in the rise of families doubling up. Moving to flee high costs has emerged as a major trend, particularly among working-class families. For those who remain behind, it’s also a return to the kind of overcrowding we associate with early 20th century tenement living.

As was the case then, overcrowded conditions create poor outcomes for neighborhoods and, most particularly, for children. Overcrowding has been associated with negative consequences in multiple studies, including greater health problems. The lack of safe outside play areas is one contributing factor. Academic achievement was found to suffer in overcrowded conditions in studies by American and French researchers. Another study found a higher rate of psychological problems among children living in overcrowded housing.

 

America’s Emerging Housing Crisis – Forbes.

Singapore Home Prices Climb to Record as Loan Curbs Imposed | Bedford NY Homes

Singapore home prices climbed to a record in the second quarter as gains in suburban housing values accelerated, prompting the government to implement new measures on property loans.

The island-state’s private residential property price index rose 1 percent to 215.4 points in the three months ended June 30, extending a 0.6 percent increase in the first quarter, according to revised figures released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority today. The pace of gains in prices in the suburbs more than doubled from the previous three months.

Traffic travels along the Benjamin Sheares Bridge, past a condominium development, in Singapore. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg

Record home prices amid low interest rates raised concerns of a housing bubble and prompted the government to widen a four-year campaign to curb speculation in Asia’s second-most expensive housing market. Singapore on June 28 unveiled new rules governing how financial institutions grant property loans to individuals.

Apartment prices fell 0.2 percent in prime districts in the second quarter, compared with a 0.6 percent gain in the previous three months. Those in the suburbs climbed 3.8 percent, compared with the 1.4 percent increase in the previous quarter, according to today’s government data.

Suburban Demand

Suburban demand was boosted by Singaporeans upgrading from living in apartments built by the state to private condominiums. About 82 percent of Singaporeans reside in government-built units, according to Housing Development Board’s website.

CapitaLand Ltd. (CAPL) may alter the size of its apartments as it seeks to improve affordability to combat government measures, Lim Ming Yan, president and chief executive officer at Singapore’s biggest developer, said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Singapore yesterday.

“We want the right sizing, put in the right layout, so our users will find it a lot more user-friendly and at the same time something they can afford,” Lim said.

Singapore is Asia’s most-expensive housing market after Hong Kong, according to a Knight Frank LLP and Citi Private Bank report released last year that compared 63 locations globally. Hong Kong homes cost an average $28,300 per square meter in 2011 compared to Singaporewhere an apartment would cost $25,600 per square meter, the report showed.

 

Singapore Home Prices Climb to Record as Loan Curbs Imposed – Bloomberg.

How to Lock in Savings as the Real Estate Market Heats Up | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Home prices in the U.S. rose 12.2% year over year in May 2013 according to CoreLogic (www.corelogic.com), which provides data on the real estate markets, and they were up 2.6% from April to May. Home prices rose in all but two states in May.

At the same time that home prices are soaring, interest rates are on the rise, with the average 30-year fixed rate mortgage currently now well over 4%, according to Bankrate.com (www.bankrate.com/mortgage)

Given these trends, some homeowners may think that it is too late to take action to save money on some of the largest home-related expenses. That is not necessarily so. In fact, even with home prices and interest rates up, there are still plenty of money-saving opportunities that could save homeowners hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

Refinance

It is not too late to refinance a mortgage. Sure, mortgage rates have risen somewhat, but they remain low historically. Depending on a homeowner’s situation, there are several possibilities to lower monthly payments by refinancing. For example, refinancing might make sense for:

A homeowner who expects to be in his home indefinitely and who still has a mortgage with an interest rate well above what is available in today’s market. Although a rule of thumb once was that for a refinance to make financial sense, it needed to result in at least a one percentage point reduction in the mortgage rate, in fact, depending on the upfront cost of the refinance, the reduction in monthly payment, and how long the homeowner expects to own the home, even a lesser reduction could be a big money-saver over time.

A homeowner who doesn’t expect to own his home more than five to seven years and can lower his rate by refinancing to a five-year or seven-year adjustable rate mortgage (ARM).

A homeowner who believes that interest rates are likely to continue to go up and, therefore, who wants to refinance an ARM to a fixed rate loan.

 

 

Bedford New York Real Estate | Bedford NY Homes by Robert Paul Realtor » Blog Archive » How to Lock in Savings as the Real Estate Market Heats Up | Mt Kisco Real Estate.

House prices and rent in England to surge by 2020, warns report | Armonk Homes

House prices in England will soar by 42% by 2020 and rents will rise by even more, according to a report from the National Housing Federationwhich warns of the “colossal strain” facing the generation born in the 1990s.

Many will remain trapped in their parents’ homes as property prices continue to outstrip earnings, warns the NHF. It forecasts that 3.7 millionyoung people will be living with their parents by 2020, as the rate of housebuilding fails to keep up with the rising population.

“By 2020 the price of a first-time buyer’s home will increase by 42% to £245,165. Although wages for 22- to 29-year-olds will increase by 36% by 2020, this poses a huge challenge for those wishing to be homeowners. Low-earning young people would have to spend 16 times their average wage just to buy a home,” said the NHF report.

Rents will be driven even higher as young adults are priced out of the property market. “NHF research shows that private rents are likely to be broadly stable through 2013, but could increase sharply, by about 6% a year, between 2015 and 2020 as interest rates and house prices rise. In 2020, rents are expected to be 46% higher than today. But when the new flood of young adults born in the noughties starts university or a new job, they could push rents even higher in a country already chronically short of decent housing.”

 

 

House prices and rent in England to surge by 2020, warns report | Money | The Guardian.

Will 2015 be the year ‘normal’ returns? | Pound Ridge Real Estate

 

As the housing industry makes a slow climb back to pre-boom character, household formation trends, rising home values and low interest rates make 2015 a candidate for the year “normal” will happen, according to Patrick Stone, president and CEO of the title and real estate services firm Williston Financial Group.

In the boom period from 2001 to 2006, Stone said, housing vacancy in the U.S. rocketed up to 2.9 percent from a historical equilibrium of 1.7 percent as builders put up 2.3 million more homes (single-family homes and multifamily units) than households were created.

That oversupply led to falling home prices, a great slowdown in new-home construction and a bunch of underwater homeowners, he said.

Patrick Stone

Patrick Stone

In the last five years, household formation outpaced housing construction by 1.1 million, Stone said, but housing, now at 2.1 percent vacancy in the U.S., won’t reach a supply-and-demand “equilibrium,” given current trends, for two or three more years.

“I don’t think new-home construction will catch up to household formation before then,” Stone said.

In the last 12 months, Stone said, equity in U.S. homes rose $2 trillion, to $9.1 trillion, which still falls short of 2007′s equity level of $10 trillion. Rising home values will continue to bring more homes on the market, he said.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/07/19/will-2015-be-the-year-normal-returns/#sthash.vkbvAc81.dpuf

 

Will 2015 be the year ‘normal’ returns? | Inman News.

California Is Proof That Energy Efficiency Works | Cross River Real Estate

California’s 40 years of remarkable success in using energy efficiency to avoid dirty power generation and save utility customers billions, as detailed in a new NRDC fact sheetreleased this week, offers valuable lessons to help meet President Obama’s climate action plan.

Cutting energy waste by improving the efficiency of America’s homes and businesses — and the appliances and electronic devices within them — is essential to reduce the nation’s need to build new power plants and to cut dangerous emissions from existing ones. Power plants are the largest source of America’s carbon pollution, and the president is ordering his administration to take steps to help curb it.

California’s energy efficiency achievements over the past four decades can serve as a model for how to avoid those dirty emissions. And, as we know well in California, investing in energy efficiency programs to allow us to do more with the same or less energy — such as upgrading our lighting or weatherizing our homes — also costs less than half the price of fossil-fuel alternatives. Efficiency also drives innovation and creates jobs.

NRDC is publishing a new fact sheet that highlights the enormous economic and pollution reduction benefits California has reaped thanks to its longstanding and bipartisan commitment to energy efficiency. Our paper also busts some of the myths about the reasons behind the state’s significant progress.

Efficiency’s huge benefits

California’s energy efficiency efforts over the past several decades have helped:

  • Save residents and businesses more than $65 billion
  • Make household electric bills 25 percent lower than the national average
  • Create a more productive economy, generating twice as much economic output for every kilowatt-hour consumed compared to the rest of the country
  • Decrease utility bills for millions of low-income households
  • Cut as much climate-warming carbon pollution as is spewed from 5 million cars annually

Despite the state’s clear success, some naysayers incorrectly claim that it all would have happened even without our efficiency policies. But California policymakers and utilities know the facts: that’s why they continue to invest around $1 billion every year to expand on the state’s success with energy efficiency.

Utilities are required to turn first to energy efficiency to “keep the lights on” before investing in more expensive sources like natural gas-fired power plants. And the state sets standards for new buildings and appliances to minimize energy waste. Thanks in part to these efforts, California’s per capita electricity consumption has remained nearly flat over the past 40 years, while the rest of the United States increased by 50 percent.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration

California’s efficiency success can’t be “wished away”

Nonetheless, there are those who try to “wish away” California’s efficiency success by trying to prove that energy efficiency isn’t the only factor responsible for our flat per-capita consumption. Everyone knows multiple factors affect electricity use, but energy efficiency is a critical one. And just as you don’t have to be an only child for your parents to love you, efficiency doesn’t need to be the only contributor for it to represent an invaluable example to other states looking to cut utility bills and curb pollution.

 

 

California Is Proof That Energy Efficiency Works : Greentech Media.

Q&A: Painting Popcorn Ceilings | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

Q.Several of my customers have “popcorn” ceilings that are old and dirty. Is there any way of painting them short of spray-painting?

A.Dan Greenough, a painting and finishing contractor in the San Francisco Bay area, responds: I always spray-paint popcorn — or blown-on acoustic — ceilings. When you roll them, the material breaks loose and clogs the roller.

If you have to roll them, look for a special textured foam roller cover designed for acoustic ceilings. These covers have slits and cross-hatchings that allow the foam to better conform to the irregular ceiling surface. The idea is to apply the paint with the least possible pressure to prevent the ceiling material from breaking loose.

Cutting in the corners can also be tricky. If you try to cut in with a brush, you will have to work hard to avoid lap marks. It may be faster to mask the walls and roll right up to the edge.

It will take several coats of paint on the entire ceiling to produce an even finish. Be advised that the water in the paint will wet the popcorn surface, causing it to roll off with the roller. Apply the first coat and allow it to dry thoroughly before you try to backroll or apply additional coats.

One reason people often want to repaint acoustic ceiling is to hide water stains caused by plumbing or roof leaks. But those stains are water soluble and will telegraph through new paint. To prevent that, always use several coats of a shellac primer to lock in the stain and prevent it from bleeding through.

While you’re at the paint store, inquire about ceiling paints that are engineered especially for acoustic ceilings. Such paints have less resin density than standard smooth-wall paints and will help maintain the acoustic qualities of the rough, textured surface.

 

 

Q&A: Painting Popcorn Ceilings – Painting, Walls, Paints, Finishes And Surfaces, Acoustics – JLC Online.

In Luxury Real Estate, the Rise of the Young Buyer | Katonah Real Estate

Two years ago, when he was 26, Matt Winter paid a little over $1 million for a four-bedroom, Mediterranean-style house in Culver City, an artsy, formerly industrial section of Los Angeles. This month, the now 28-year-old Mr. Winter, who runs his own interior design firm, paid about $1.7 million for his second home, a three-bedroom, Spanish-revival in Westwood, a neighborhood near UCLA.

 

 

A new generation is skipping the “starter home” and betting heavily on high-end real estate. Lauren Schuker Blum reports on Lunch Break. Photo: Alexia Fodere for The Wall Street Journal.

 

“I have always felt that having your money in property is the safest and best thing to do if you want to grow your personal wealth,” says Mr. Winter, who founded his design company at 23. None of Mr. Winter’s assets are in the stock market—he says the market “spooks him” and that he prefers to invest in real estate.

 

Mr. Winter is part of a growing group of wealthy young buyers who are making inroads in the world of high-end real estate, acquiring properties at prices, and at a pace, that brokers say they have never seen before. Real-estate agents say that young people are buying more expensive homes than previously. They are also more likely to buy several properties, and use one as an investment. Buying real estate has grown more attractive, these young buyers say, compared with the stock market, which appears riskier to a generation that entered the workforce during a market correction.

 

 

In recent years, low interest rates coupled with lower real-estate prices had also made it easier for people in their 20s and early 30s—whom demographers refer to as “Generation Y” or “millennials”—to buy.

 

“In the last two months, half the folks I sold homes to were young entrepreneurial types—and they were all buying homes for over a million dollars,” says Michael Rankin, a managing partner at TTR Sotheby’s International Realty in Washington, D.C. “A few years ago, that kind of buyer was invisible. We had young folks buying starter condos for a few hundred thousand dollars. But this new wave is skipping that step entirely and going right for the high-end home.”

 

 

In Luxury Real Estate, the Rise of the Young Buyer – WSJ.com.

Realtor.com: Inventories are Returning to Normal | Cross River Real Estate

While June inventories continue to be down on year-over-year basis, they rose for the sixth consecutive month and are steadily returning to more normal levels. The number of homes listed for sale increased by 4.3 percent in June to 1.9 million homes, the highest level in the last year, according to monthly data released Monday by realtor.com.

Inventories on realtor.com reached their highest level in more than a year, suggesting that market fundamentals continue to be strong and that housing supply in many markets is gradually catching up with housing demand.  At same time, the median age of the inventory increased by just one day in June, suggesting that housing sales are generally keeping pace with new property listings.

Both year-over-year list prices and inventories rose simultaneously. While the median list price has stabilized somewhat, it remains 5.27 percent higher than it was one year ago. Rising inventories appear to be having a moderating effect on median list prices, although on a year-over-year basis, median list prices were up by 1 percent or more in 98 of the 146 MSAs covered by realtor.com, compared to 103 markets in June, while the number of markets with a list price decline of at least 1 percent rose from 23 to 25.

Key Market Indicators for June 2013

June 2013

Year-over-Year % Change

Month-over-Month % Change

Number   of Listings

1,931,713

-7.29%

4.26%
Median   Age of Inventory

80

-15.79%

1.27%

Median   List Price

$199,900

5.27%

0.45%

Despite six consecutive months of steady growth, inventories continue to be down by 7.29 percent on a year-over-year basis, although they are now approaching more normal levels. The median age of the inventory rose to 80 days in June, up by one day (1.27 percent) over the month but down by 15.79 percent on a year-over-year basis.

The geography of low inventories changed during June. The top ten markets reporting year-over-year inventory declines are no longer dominated by California markets but now include Boston, Lansing, Grand Rapids and Monmouth NJ.  Their potential shortfalls in supply are likely to support robust house price appreciation going forward.  Inventories remain depressed in markets where prices have not improved significantly or where negative equity is greater than elsewhere, making it difficult or owners to sell

 

 

Read more…

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/07/realtorcom-inventories-are-returning-to-normal/print/

 

Commercial real estate key to Las Vegas economic rebound | Mt Kisco Real Estate

As someone who has spent most of his adult life working in commercial real estate in Southern Nevada, I often find myself explaining to others why they should care about my industry. The short answer is that as commercial real estate goes, so goes the overall economy.

We all know the Great Recession hit Las Vegas harder than most places. And few industries felt more of this pain than commercial real estate. For proof, look no farther than the nearest half-finished shopping center or office building.

Recent reports suggest we might finally be seeing some light at the end of this tunnel. According to the National Association of Realtors, the market is starting to improve nationwide, and commercial real estate professionals are regaining confidence.

Most members of the Commercial Alliance Las Vegas seem to share that sentiment.

NAR recently released its 2013 Commercial Member Profile. It shows that annual income, transactions and sales volume have all increased over the past year for commercial real estate professionals. NAR members who practice commercial real estate reported a median annual gross income of more than $90,000 in 2012. This is the highest level since 2008 and is more than $4,000 above the 2011 figure.

NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun recently pointed out that vacancy rates are falling and commercial rents are gradually rising nationwide.

As with the housing market and other areas of the economy, Las Vegas has lagged the rest of the country in bouncing back from the recession. But fortunately for those of us who make our living in this industry, we’re starting to see some bright spots here, too.

Vacancy rates for office space are still hovering around record levels. For example, as of March 31, CB Richard Ellis reported the vacancy rate for Class A office space in the Las Vegas area was 29.4 percent. But even the local office market is showing signs that it has hit bottom and is on the road to recovery.

One example of this gradual rebound came in early July, when it was reported that the stalled mixed-use project formerly known as Manhattan West is being finished by new owner the Krausz Cos. Inc., which is calling it The Gramercy. The company spent $20 million in June to buy the 20-acre project in the southwestern part of town, announcing that it plans to spend an additional $30 million to finish its office, residential and retail components. As with the announcement that construction would resume on the previously stalled Shops at Summerlin shopping mall, this is a great sign for our local industry and economy.

As NAR points out, commercial real estate is the basis for much of the growth in the American real estate industry and economy. This is especially true in Southern Nevada, where real estate has traditionally trailed only the gaming and tourism industries in economic impact. Any improvement in commercial real estate will provide a much-needed boost to our overall economy.

We’re not out of the woods yet. Remaining hurdles on the road to recovery include too many commercial real estate projects still struggling to find financing.

According to NAR’s Commercial Real Estate 2013 Lending Survey, members reported a significant disadvantage when it came to financing for buyers of properties under $2 million, which makes up 85 percent of all commercial clients NAR members handle. These small business are typically financed by private investors or local and regional banks. Fifty-two percent of commercial members reported they had commercial transactions fail in the past year due to a lack of financing. We’ve seen our share of that here, too

 

 

Read more…

http://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion/commercial-real-estate-key-las-vegas-economic-rebound