Tag Archives: Westchester NY Homes

Westchester NY Homes

11 Brilliant Ways to Crush It on LinkedIn | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Are you using LinkedIn?

Personally I’ve spent most of my social media energy on Facebook.

But lately I’m thinking I should pay more attention to LinkedIn — since millions of businesses are thriving there.

I know LinkedIn has made a ton of important changes over the past year — many of which have caught my attention.

And their mobile app is better than Facebook’s!

So here’s a list of the best resources I could find on LinkedIn. Enjoy & please let me know if they’re helpful.

11 LinkedIn Resources You Can’t Miss

How to Effectively Use LinkedIn For Business

by Kim Garst

According to Kim, LinkedIn is an amazing tool to promote your product or service. It’s a place to start conversations with others in your niche.  It’s a place where having an up-to-date profile can land you your next big opportunity. And if you know how to use it well, the networking & growth potential is astounding.

3 LinkedIn Tools to Grow Your Presence on LinkedIn

by Ian Cleary

LinkedIn can be a very valuable tool for your business but only if you’re using the right LinkedIn management tools? In this article Ian outlines 3 tools that will really help you grow your presence on LinkedIn.

5 Creative Ways to Use LinkedIn Company Pages

by Social Media Examiner

Here Social Media Examiner gives us five brands using their LinkedIn company pages creatively. Check out what these businesses are doing so you can learn to tell your story, generate leads & engage your communities through your LinkedIn page.

LinkedIn: Revolutionizing the World of Recruiting [Infographic]

by MarketingProfs

To find out how LinkedIn is transforming job recruiting, the folks at MarketingProfs did some indepth research. It turns out HR folks aren’t flipping through resumes & paperwork anymore to help companies fill positions. Instead, they’re searching through profiles on LinkedIn, their go-to source for quality recruits.

Turn Your Profile Into Your Portfolio on LinkedIn

by Marketing Pilgrim

LinkedIn now lets you set your profile up to function as a portfolio! So if you have a visual backlog of work, you need to read this post to see how to make it stand out on LinkedIn.

How to Boost Engagement on Your LinkedIn Company Page

by Social Media Examiner

In a recent LinkedIn study, 50% of company followers said they’re more likely to purchase products & services from a business they engage with on LinkedIn. Here are 5 simple ways to boost engagement with your LinkedIn followers.

LinkedIn: Unlock Your Potential on the World’s Largest Business Network

by Kim Garst

LinkedIn is a powerful tool when it comes to finding potential employees, searching for a dream job & expanding your network. It easily outdoes any online job board in all of these areas. Kim covers some easy-to-follow ways to unlock your potential on LinkedIn — and maybe land your dream job.

How to Use LinkedIn to Find a Job

by The 60 Second Marketer

Most people know LinkedIn is used to find new jobs. But are you leveraging LinkedIn in the right way to do that? In this post, the 60 Second Marketer gives you some practical tips on how to land your new job via LinkedIn.

 

 

11 Brilliant Ways to Crush It on LinkedIn – Yahoo! Small Business Advisor.

Former missile silo reborn as a $750K home | Chappaqua Real Estate

Here's another missile …

 

If you’re looking for a peaceful country home that can also keep you safe from natural disaster, social upheaval, disease and even zombies, this home is for you.

A decommissioned Cold War-era missile silo, located in the Adirondock Mountains of upstate New York, recently hit the market for $750,000. While it’s not much to look at from the outside, if you go 40 feet below ground, you’ll find a 3,200–square-foot silo home, including one bedroom, one bathroom, a kitchen and a large living area. (Click here or on a photo to go to a slideshowwith more than a dozen pictures of the home.)

Click on a photo to go to a slideshow of a missile silo home. Photo by Brian Dominic of Select Sotheby's International Realty“It’s very crazy that when you drive up to this silo you cannot see anything because it is all underground,” said Realtor Brian Dominic of Select Sotheby’s International Realty. “There is no curb appeal necessary.”

 

 

Former missile silo reborn as a $750K home | Former missile silo reborn as a $750K home – Yahoo! Homes.

10 Plants Sure to Stop Deer in Their Tracks | Armonk Homes

10 Plants Sure to Stop Deer in Their Tracks

 

 

10 Plants Sure to Stop Deer in Their Tracks | 10 Plants Sure to Stop Deer in Their Tracks – Yahoo! Homes.

5 reasons it’s still a great time to buy a house | South Salem Real Estate

After years of sluggish sales and false starts, the real estate market is on a tear this summer, with prices posting double-digit gains every consecutive month since April.

 

Prices have increased so much so quickly in some markets that a few experts are already crying “bubble.” There’s no doubt that the bottom has passed.

Tight inventory and climbing prices have created a seller’s market in most places and realtors are reporting bidding wars in the hottest markets — but that doesn’t mean there’s not opportunity out there for home buyers. “Just because it would have been cheaper to buy a home six months ago, doesn’t mean it’s not a good time to buy one now,” says Trulia housing analyst Jed Kolko.

 

That’s good news for the 68% of renters surveyed in March by JP Morgan Chase, who said they wanted to buy a home. It may be risky in today’s market for home flippers looking to purchase and sell a home quickly for profit. But for those retail buyers who want to buy and live in a house for five or 10 years, here are five reasons to act now:

 

1. Home prices are still rising

The massive gains seen over the past few months make it easy to forget that housing only bottomed out last year, hitting its lowest level in March 2012. While recent prices increases aren’t sustainable, there’s plenty of room for home values to climb. Even with four months of improvement, prices remain about 26% below their 2006 peaks.

 

The chief driver of price gains is constrained supply, reflecting modest homebuilder activity; dwindling foreclosures; and continued foot-dragging by potential sellers who are waiting for prices to improve even further. Total housing inventory at the end of May rose 3.3%, to 2.22 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 5.1 months’ supply at the current sales pace, down from 5.2 months in April, according to the National Association of Realtors. Listed inventory is still 10.1% below a year ago, when there was a 6.5-month supply.

 

Going forward, price increases will vary by region, while prices nationally are expected to see more modest increases of an annualized 3.9% per year through 2017, according to CoreLogic.

 

2. Rates are low by historical standards

Rates, currently at about 4.6%, have climbed a full percentage point since May — but they’re still lower than they were just two years ago and far lower than their long-term average of about 8%. “In the history of America, a 30-year mortgage at less than 5% is a gift,” says Mark Dotzour, chief economist at Texas A&M’s Real Estate Center. “It’s not supposed to be that way, and rates are only that low because of extraordinary monetary policy.”

 

Economists don’t expect the recent surge to continue. The Mortgage Bankers Association predicts rates will remain close to current levels through the end of next year.

 

5 reasons it’s still a great time to buy a house- MSN Money.

10 kitchen storage essentials under $10 | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Garlic keeper

Thanks to a lid that blocks out sunlight and a small grid of ventilation holes, garlic lasts days longer when kept in this tiny terra cotta pot. Garlic Keeper, $9. crateandbarrel.com.

 

 

10 kitchen storage essentials under $10 – MSN Living.

CAR vs. dotloop: Sparks fly in debate over forms software [VIDEO] | Mt Kisco Homes

oel Singer, CEO of the California Association of Realtors (CAR), the U.S.’s largest Realtor association, and Austin Allison, CEO of up-and-coming transaction management platform dotloop, faced off at a special session of Real Estate Connect.

The head-to-head represented a climax to a weekslong public discussion about whether CAR should license its valuable real estate forms so that CAR members, and others using the forms legally, can fill them out by software other than zipForm, a product offered by CAR subsidiary zipLogix.

“As a business, should I have the freedom and ability to choose how I run it?” Allison asked Singer just before placing a cassette tape in a boom box to illustrate an analogy that emphasized his point.

Singer, with copies of dotloop’s terms of use and privacy statements in hand, said that the question about broker and agent choice is moot because ”forms and technology are totally integrated” and zipLogix has add-ons that help agents fill out forms correctly. CAR, as well, he said, has chosen not to work with dotloop because its terms of use and privacy statements are too permissive.

After the 15-minute heated debate on stage, Singer and Allison had a 10-minute cordial, private talk backstage. Allison asked Singer if there was anything dotloop could do to gain access to CAR’s forms, they both told Inman News in separate interviews after their session.

Singer, Allison told Inman News, told him that dotloop would need to amend its terms of use and privacy statements and to beef up the security around its e-signatures.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/07/11/car-vs-dotloop-sparks-fly-in-debate-over-forms-software-video/#sthash.6iuqv5Gc.dpuf

 

 

CAR vs. dotloop: Sparks fly in debate over forms software [VIDEO] | Inman News.

Second quarter market trends defy suggestions of housing bubble | Waccabuc Real Estate

 

The average price of a home in Canada increased between 1.2 per cent and 2.7 per cent in the second quarter of 2013, according to the Royal LePage House Price Survey and Market Survey Forecast, released today.

 

According to the survey, markets across the country continue to post gains. In the second quarter, standard two-storey homes and detached bungalows both showed a year-over-year average price increase of 2.7 per cent to $419,614 and $386,547, respectively. Average prices for standard condominiums showed a more modest increase during the same period, rising 1.2 per cent to $248,750. Royal LePage forecasts that house prices will see modest gains throughout the remainder of 2013, projecting a 3.0 per cent increase for the full year when compared to 2012.

 

Dialogue concerning the direction of Canada’s housing market has remained front and centre in recent months. Changes to Canada’s mortgage lending rules in mid-2012 coupled with concerns about consumer debt levels, housing affordability in cities like Toronto and Vancouver and continued international economic uncertainty have prompted a number of analysts to forecast large downward price adjustments.

 

“As we have stated consistently since the current market downturn began late in the second quarter of 2012, this is a normal cyclical correction which brings fewer home sales and softer prices. Those hoping their predictions of a bursting bubble and cataclysmic drops in home values will come true are out of luck again,” said Phil Soper, president and chief executive of Royal LePage. “Price appreciation in most markets across the country has been well below the long-term average for Canada and will remain so through to the end of the year. We expect to see the number of homes trading hands to begin to rise slightly on a year-over-year basis in the second half of 2013, with price softness continuing until mid-2014, at which point we’ll see an emergence from the current cycle.”

 

Recent signals from major financial institutions in the United States and Canada also point to a turn in the tide. In recent weeks, two of Canada’s largest home-loan lenders, Royal Bank of Canada and TD Bank Group, raised their mortgage rates. At the same time, the U.S. Federal Reserve recently hinted that it may start winding up monetary stimulus later this year, should economic improvements continue.

 

“With the economy on both sides of the border performing better in recent months, a move off the record-low interest rates that we’ve experienced over the past few years is likely on the horizon,” explained Soper. “Paradoxically, we expect the first increases in interest rates to be constructive for the housing market. Rising rates would be driven by a strengthening economy, reduced unemployment and improving consumer confidence. Much of the dampening effect that would come with a transition towards higher rates has already been ‘priced in’ to both consumer attitudes and financial institutions’ current lending policies.”

 

As of late, the condominium sector has moved to the forefront of discussions concerning the health of Canada’s real estate market with fears of oversupply in major centres like Toronto. Yet, condominium prices remained flat or posted year-over-year gains in nearly all Canadian cities in the second quarter, with a couple of exceptions in British Columbia. While condominium prices in Vancouver saw a 3.3 per cent decrease when compared to the same period in 2012, signs of an early recovery are evident across the Lower Mainland of British Columbia.

 

Read more here: http://www.heraldonline.com/2013/07/09/5006219/second-quarter-market-trends-defy.html#storylink=cpy

 

TORONTO, July 9, 2013: Second quarter market trends defy suggestions of housing bubble | PRNewswire | Rock Hill Herald Online.

The Strokes’ Nick Valensi & Wife Amanda de Cadenet List Home | South Salem Real Estate

Does a home once showcased on a TV talk show help with a sale? It depends on the home, of course, but in the case of this New England-style traditional, the TV fame is just one more feature added to a list of amenities.

Located at 12701 Hortense St, Studio City, CA 91604, the home is currently owned by The Strokes’ lead guitarist Nick Valensi and wife Amanda de Cadenet, host of Lifetime’s “The Conversation.” The TV show is filmed in the residence, with the British actress and photographer interviewing Lady Gaga, Rita Wilson, Portia de Rossi and Gwyneth Paltrow, among others. Valensi and de Cadenet have it on the market for $1.799 million.

“An ideal buyer is a family with kids who love the proximity to Studio City’s best park and new library,” said listing agent Craig Knizek of The Agency. “It’s a wonderful neighborhood to walk your dog [or] have kids ride a bike past friendly neighbors.”

According to property records, Valensi and de Cadenet bought the home for $1.3 million in 2011. Built in 2009, the 4,000-square-foot house has an open floor plan, with the family and living rooms centered around a chef’s kitchen with center island. The 5-bedroom house includes a main-floor guest suite, and the space above the garage has been permitted for a 2-bedroom guest apartment. Currently, Valensi is using the space for his music. The walkable residence is filled with top-of-the-line finishes and tucked away behind every celebrity’s favorite feature: high-privacy hedges.

“A unique attribute about the house is what it retains from your own treasured past — memories of how you grew up and felt comfortable and safe,” Knizek said.

 

The Strokes’ Nick Valensi & Wife Amanda de Cadenet List Home | Zillow Blog.

Bedford sales up 17% – Prices down 2.5% | RobReportBlog | Bedford Real Estate

Bedford Village NY Real Estate ReportRobReportBlog
20136 months ending 7/52012
40Sales34
$887,500.00median sold price$910,250.00
$370,000.00low sold price$450,000.00
$8,200,000.00high sold price$4,750,000.00
3419average size4133
$388.00ave. price per foot$313.00
189ave days on market217
$1,326,444.00average sold price$1,355,990.00
93.37%ave sold to ask93.26%

 

 

Bedford sales up 17% – Prices down 2.5% | RobReportBlog | Bedford Real Estate.

First-time home buyers getting shut out | Chappaqua NY Real Estate

U.S. home prices have risen for 14 straight months, but first-time buyers have been increasingly on the sidelines.

 

In May, first-time buyers accounted for 28 percent of existing-home purchases, down from 34 percent a year before and 36 percent two years ago, according to the National Association of Realtors.

 

The declining share of first timers means that many have missed out on low interest rates, which recently moved up from near-record lows, and home prices that have risen sharply from their bottom.

 

“The people buying homes today … are participating in home price growth. Younger people, they are being left out,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the NAR. “It remains to be seen when the first-time buyer can return.”

 

First-tme buyers are critical to a housing recovery because they help existing-home owners sell and move up to larger or more expensive homes. But their presence is being reduced by:

 

• Competition. Cash buyers accounted for 33 percent of existing home sales in May. Investors, who are often all-cash buyers, accounted for 18 percent of purchases, the NAR says.

 

Cash buyers are tough competitors, especially in markets with limited inventory and for first-time buyers who often use low down-payment loans to finance purchases.

 

The first-time buyer “is being squeezed out of the market a lot,” says Zillow economist Svenja Gudell.

 

There are also more repeat buyers in the market, given that higher home prices have enabled more people to sell homes and buy others, says Glenn Kelman, CEO of brokerage Redfin.

 

• Tight credit. Home loans are harder to get than before the housing bust, and that’s true for first-time buyers, too.

 

Almost half of first-timers get low down-payment loans through the Federal Housing Administration, NAR data show.

 

New FHA home loans in the last three months of 2012 went to borrowers with an average credit score of 696, vs. under 660 in 2007 and 2008, FHA data shows. Credit scores, which run up to 850, for conventional loans have also risen.

 

• Recession. It hit the 25- to 34-year-old group with higher unemployment than for adults overall, says Jed Kolko, Trulia economist. Young people have made a strong recovery, but it takes years of steady employment to save a down payment and build strong credit, he says. High levels of student debt will also delay homeownership, Kolko says.

 

Increases in home prices and mortgage rates since last year have made a big difference in costs.

 

In May, the median value of the bottom third of homes in San Francisco was $287,500, Zillow says. With today’s 4.4 percent interest rate and 20 percent down, the mortgage payment runs $1,154, that’s $313 more than at last year’s prices and rates, its data shows.

 

“You’re getting a double whammy with higher prices and rates,” says Ashley Krause, 31, of Boston, who’s been trying to buy her first home for six months with a down payment of 5 percent or less.

 

The hospital pharmacist has lost two bids to others.

 

 

First-time home buyers getting shut out | Sheboygan Press | sheboyganpress.com.