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7 Months of Good News!

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012

Is this the beginning of the end of the Buyers’ Market? View or download the full Market Action Report – March 2012 here.

Summary of the Portland metropolitan market:

  1. Pending sales are up 12.8% over last March; 7.7% up from February, and year-to-date pending sales are up 18.2% over 2011.
  2. Closed sales are up 4.9% over last March; 34.2% up from February, and year-to-date pending sales are up 12.2% over 2011. This is the highest number of closings in the 1st Qtr since 2007 (pre-crash).
  3. Average price and Median price are still down but less than .5% in the former and 1.4% in the latter. We currently compare with pricing in 2004 and early 2005.
  4. Inventory is low (5 months), well down into the ‘normal’ range (<6 months) and many homes are selling very quickly. Average time on the market for the 1st Quarter is 135 days down from 165 days last year same time.

Anecdotally, we are amazed at seeing lower end homes in Portland predictably get multiple offers and sell above asking price. One bank-owned property we helped a client with had 16 offers on it. Another client lost a home after offering about $25k above asking price. Homes can once again go pending within days of listing. What happens in Portland spreads to our areas. We are seeing some of the same and we are seeing good activity including offers in every price range and for every type of property including new construction and luxury/higher priced homes. This week we sell a buildable small acreage property; very rare for 5 years!

Yes, it appears that the buyers’ advantage is dissolving right before our eyes. A return to a balanced market is healthy for both buyers and seller and industry professionals. For buyers right now, the handwriting is on the wall. Buy this year because next year could be very different for choice, and price, and interest rates if the economy follows the housing markets up. Last week I heard Dave Ramsey (no slouch on money management and also still a practicing Realtor®) say on his national radio show that he is buying every good real estate deal he can find right now.

Some important qualifiers:

  • Recovery will likely be very uneven with fits and starts, ups and downs in the short term. Improvement is starting at the bottom where there are more houses and more bargains but it will move up. With many sales, the log-jam of inventory begins to loosen up, the seller becomes the next buyer, and this multiplies as sellers are set-free to move on.
  • Buyers should take this seriously but not panic. Realize that as people become aware that properties are selling, there will be many who are currently sitting on the sidelines who will once again enter the market and try to get their property sold. We also still have a lot of future bank-owned inventory (or all stages of foreclosure) which will be hitting the markets, affecting the numbers, and continuing to offer great deals.
  • As I write this, the national news is much more negative than our local markets would indicate. Remember the maxim, “location, location, location”? That includes within it, “local, local, local. National averages tell you little about your challenges or your opportunities. ALL MARKETS ARE LOCAL- right down to the neighborhoods.
  • Right now I am telling our sellers that we have the best odds of selling their properties than we have had in 5 years. That is hopeful news. It needs to be tempered with this:  Our numbers for the volume of sales are better but they are still much lower than ‘normal’. That means that the market is still very competitive and the buyers are still attempting to cash in on a buyers’ market to pick-up bargains. Prices are still declining but the rate of decline is slowing to a crawl. The return of balance is good but we are way off from a sellers’ market!
  • We are still vulnerable to an economy which seem to be struggling to recover and also suffers from fits and starts. In 5 years we have been hit with multiple crises not just one. We all hope for no more economic tsunamis.

As always, glad to have your thoughts. As always we greatly appreciate your trust of us and our services and thank you for referring your friends, neighbors, family, and co-workers to us.

Best regards,

Randy

Randy McCreith, Principal Broker
Bella Casa Real Estate Group
Cell: 503-310-9147 Fax: 866-281-6653
Randy@TheBellaCasaGroup.com

Selling Lots & Land – an update at the end of the first quarter 2012

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Every six months or so I attempt to delve deeply into the dark underworld of selling lots and land in this housing depression in order to update our clients. Our clients who own buildable parcels of land believed they had some of the best investments in real estate, and they did at one time, but they have become the most disappointing to them and the most difficult of properties to sell. In a former article we analyzed the dynamics of this market niche and the challenges we now have.

In another recent article we noted some very good news in the new construction sector; see Is There a New Construction Renaissance?

If you have followed our monthly Market Action Reports with its commentary you know that we are very encouraged with the housing market’s performance since September of 2011. We now have more than a sign of something good, we have a trend of good which we are optimistic will continue. Our sales numbers are double a year ago, we have more showings, and we are dealing with more offers than in any similar period in almost 5 years.

At the end of this first quarter, I cannot say that there is much that will inspire you but perhaps a bit that will give some hope. In Yamhill County, which is over 700 square miles, there have only been 16 sales in the last 12 months for land over 3 acres. Sales ranged from 5 acres in Willamina for $100k, to 203 acres for $855k (vineyard potential) in Carlton. However, there are currently 4 pending sales and that is a significant improvement consistent with what we have seen in the overall market. What is still foreboding is that there are still 88 active listings to compete with and at the current rate of sales this is another 5.5 years worth of inventory.

Looking longer, in the past 5 years there have been 75 Lots & Land properties of more than 3 acres sold. That is 1.4 properties per month. Since the financial meltdown at the end of 2008, there have been 50 sales or 1.3 ppm. By contrast, In 2012 so far there are already 6 sales or 2 per month plus 4 pending sales. There is some improvement and movement in the right direction and better hope for this year.

What does it take to sell today?

  • Everything is about value right now. In the same way that builders had to let go of the past and deal with today’s realities in order to build again, so the sooner our properties can be price competitive for today’s market the sooner it will sell. Competitive pricing does not mean being the lowest price but being the best value.
  • Being competitive is tough! With 88 choices competing for 16 sales (as demonstrated during the past 12 months) it can seem hopeless. However rural properties are also about the appropriate location for a buyer and the aesthetics of the property. Keep the property in good shape ready for someone to buy and build immediately.
  • Patience: Our clients have been unbelievably tolerant of this market and patient awaiting a return to normalcy. Loyalty to us has been encouraging. We believe this year is a good opportunity but next year perhaps even better. We are trending in the right direction but no one thinks things will move rapidly. We are glad to have your property available for the buyers as they begin again to trickle into the market place.

We are happy to review pricing and we renew our commitments to you with each listing extension. Attached you will find all the current data for the Yamhill County markets and we can custom do the research for you specific to your property just for the asking.

Download the PDF of this article

Best regards,

Randy McCreith, Principal Broke

Randy McCreith

Randy McCreith, Principal Broker
Bella Casa Real Estate Group
Cell: 503-310-9147
Randy@TheMcCreithTeam.com

Is there a New Construction Renaissance?

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

For our Clients and Friends,

For buildable lots and land to begin to sell again, we need the new construction industry to awaken. Below is an article of such an awakening and I think you will find some encouragement even as I have.

I have also provided an overview of the market at the end of the first quarter of this year and looking back 12 months. There is a lot of data to peruse. I have focused on parcels from 3 acres and larger for the data in this email.

I think there is light at the end of the proverbial tunnel. I would love your thoughts and response as always. Let me know what else we can do for you.

Randy

We are approaching five years since the bottom dropped out of the housing industry. Housing has suffered the severest blow of all sectors in the economy. The hardest hit segment of the housing industry has been new construction and selling buildable lots and land.

Is all of that about to change?

There are some builders who are building new homes as fast as they can be constructed; they are all selling as pre-solds, and they are producing acceptable profits for the builders and the lenders. This in spite of the fact that re-sale home pricing in general is below the cost to build. Through our representation of Forest Glen, a gated luxury community in McMinnville we have been exposed to builders such as Tom Liesy of T. A. Liesy Homes (www.taliesyhomesnw.com ) who is successfully building and selling in Happy Valley (Sunnyside/Clackamas area). Happy Valley has been our own version of California’s disastrous housing crash with losses in excess of 50%.

What is happening to change things? Is this a lesson and a pathway for the recovery of new construction and to the restoration of sales for buildable lots and land? I think it is. Here is what we are learning:

1. To invest well, one needs to buy well:

Happy Valley (and Bend etc.) was the focus of wild speculation until 2007. The price of land was at an altitude which is head-spinning. Today all that land has been through foreclosure and/or bankruptcy and lenders have sold this off at bargain rates to anyone willing to risk building. In our area First Federal sold Forest Glen lots at $43k per lot, down from $280k for some lots at the height of the market. Lots were subsequently sold to builders at wholesale prices above that but still at prices allowing the builder to become competitive with re-sale homes. Lesson one: the price of the land is fundamental to making sense of building at a time like this.

2. To sell well, one must provide great value and incentive; more value than the resale markets:

Builders must forget about the past and understand that almost everyone related to our industry has taken losses of at least 30% and commonly up to 50% (and for some more). Buyers today can and do demand high quality, good space, and desirable amenities for a low price or they will not buy. What will you do? Meet the market demand or sleep it off for the rest of the decade? Builders who find ways to become successful now are growing their reputation and market share now, and are well positioned for greater profits in the future as recovery matures.

3. Is there money available for buying land and for new construction right now?

Yes, but not through normal channels. The builders who are successful are using private money which is also known as hard money. It costs more but it is readily available now rather than waiting for conventional financing to loosen up years from now when it is too late to play catch-up. Remember, hard money is also at historic lows. You will not get today’s amazing sub 4% financing for the project, but most builders are not strangers to the 7-10% they have paid in the past. Think bigger picture; someday in the not too distant future, 7-9% will be the norm for everyone.

Some buyers will still come in with cash to purchase the lot or parcel, and some already have construction-to-perm lending set-up, but for most people today that is an overwhelming task. Today’s successful builders build the home on their own dime. When the construction is complete then the transaction can close with the buyers’ traditional financing with whomever they choose (just like buying a re-sale home). Helping buyers avoid the nightmare of new construction financing is not only crucial right now, it is a huge value for the buyer and that is the heart of the issue of getting them back into the new home market. With just earnest money down, their ‘pre-sold’ home is completed and the buyers get their own loan at historically low interest rates (recently as low as 3.6% for 30yr fixed) with their favorite mortgage broker or bank.

4. No Games; No Gimmicks Allowed:

Before the crash, builders often partnered with preferred lenders for a cut of the profits of the loan. Pressure (often flagrantly unethical pressure) was put on the buyer to use their in-house lender so the builder could have another income stream.

We all remember the days of builders (particularly the national and regional builders) pricing the basic home and then hard-selling all the amenities. With every amenity came a huge mark-up and of course no credit for the fixture that was already factored into the price!

Tom Liesy welcomes buyers to get their own best financing to complete the sale when the construction is complete. He offers his buyers his contractor’s discounts with his vendors on any upgrades beyond his already generous amenities and then does not take builder mark-ups for these upgrades. Any personal choices and changes to amenities and are strictly between the buyer and the vendor. Welcome back, Trust!

5. How can this be model be profitable?

I am certain the public would be shocked at the profits builders were making in the heady days now a long time ago. There was a lot of room for adjustment before pleading poverty. Today, the only way a builder will be able to plead poverty is to remain in the past and stay unemployed for the foreseeable future. Entrepreneurs always find a way to meet market demand with good supply. Determination and creativity can overcome any challenge…

And hard work and intelligent strategy! One must become efficient. Systems and the people to carry out those systems efficiently, are always key to increasing profits and achieving success. Tom can build any home in 75 days. Does that mean it is cheap and poorly constructed? Not if the builder is demanding high standards and the same drive for efficient profitability from his sub-contractors. If the system is thorough and self-policing for quality, then it is a win-win for buyer and builder.

A good sales force is also crucial. The builder should focus on what he is expert at- building quality homes offering the best value to the marketplace and achieving well-earned profits. Select Realtors® can add their expertise to build the brand (the builder), market the project (the neighborhood, the development), create demand, advertise and promote each home, and then manage the entire sales process from farming for prospective buyers to closing happy owners and gaining their referrals for future sales. Even in times of strict accountability for every dollar spent, effective marketing and sales adds value and creates profits.

In the past, builders could not ‘afford’ to pay Realtor® commissions; this myth has been forcefully debunked as former profit margins came to light. Yes, builders could just put a sign out and sell their homes. Today, successful builders partner with competent and proven marketing and sales professionals to create demand and to go out and find buyers. Today builders also need any Realtor® to be willing to bring their clients to talk with builders knowing they will be paid for their services.

There are no longer excuses for the new construction industry to stand idle. Visionary leaders and hard working entrepreneurs are already proving in our markets that it is time for the public to again have options for buying new homes. Bold builders who are willing to face reality straight-on are showing that new construction can compete with the historic low prices of re-sale real estate and win more and more buyers. These pioneers will be tomorrow’s great success stories.

For our clients selling buildable lots and land, the revitalization of the new construction industry will overflow from developments to the countryside.

This is good for all of us!

Randy McCreith, Principal Broker

Randy McCreith

Randy McCreith, Principal Broker
Bella Casa Real Estate Group
Cell: 503-310-9147

Randy@TheBellaCasaGroup.com

September 2011 Market Action Report

Friday, November 4th, 2011

Randy McCreith, Principal Brok

View the full analysis of September’s real estate market performance in the Market Action Report for September 2011 (this includes Yamhill County, Oregon).

  • Sales activity in the Portland Metro area showed improvements in closed and pending sales this September compared with September 2010, and the inventory level remained much lower than the same month in 2010.
  • Closed sales grew 13.4% in September 2011 compared to September 2010.
  • Pending sales were also up 17.5%, and new listings dropped 29.5%.
  • Inventory: at the month’s rate of sales, the 10,666 active residential listings would last about 6.7 months.
  • Average sale price for September 2011 declined 4.2% compared to September 2010. Median sale price also fell 3.8%.
  • Month to month, comparing August 2011 to September 2011, sale price activity was mixed.. Average sale price went down from $271,800 to $268,200 (-1.3%) while median sale price increased from $225,000 to $230,800 (2.6%).

Randy McCreith

Bella Casa Real Estate Group

503-310-9147 Cell
randy@thebellacasagroup.com
www.TheBellaCasaGroup.com
Bella Casa Blog
The Marshall Building
207 NE 19th Street, Suite 100
McMinnville OR 97128
866-281-6653 Fax

Buy. Sell. Be Happy.

Former FSBO CEO sells home the traditional way

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

It’s all too ironic to find out that the founder of the FSBO website, ForSaleByOwner.com, gave up after trying to sell his New York apartment on his own after 6 months and hired a Realtor®.  But irony and validation for our profession aside, it’s important to know what your Realtor® can do for you and why you will benefit from having an expert and a professional working for you when you are buying a home or selling your home.

If you hire a Realtor® to help you sell your home, your Realtor® will, among other things, provide you with a Comparative Market Analysis to ensure your home is priced to attract the right buyers, market your home through hundreds of websites, print and online advertising, negotiate offers to ensure the best possible price agreement is reached and guide you through the selling process until it is complete.  Read these articles on the 5 responsibilities of your Listing Agent for getting your property sold: Price Your Property, Promote Your Property Far and Wide, Present Your Property in Its Best Light, Persuade the Buyer of Your Property’s Value, and Persist Through Challenges Until Closing.

Its also important to have a professional Realtor® working for you when you’re buying a home.  A Realtor® will help you search all properties for sale, but that’s only the beginning.  Once you’ve decided on the property you want to make an offer on, your Realtor® will prepare a report for you to determine the right price to offer, so you don’t pay too much for your investment.  Your Realtor®, among other things, will also guide your through negotiations, inspection, appraisal and closing.  We have 15 informative and useful articles for homebuyers here.  For a free Home Buyer’s Information booklet, please contact us at info@thebellacasagroup.com or by phone at (503) 437-9005 or (503) 538-2085 and we’d be happy to send you one or make it available for you to pick up at our office.

The following article is taken from the online source, Agent Genius.

Former FSBO CEO sells home the traditional way

Founder and former CEO of ForSalebyOwner.com, Colby Sambrotto listed his 2,000 square foot New York condominium on his own through online classified ads and FSBO sites, but after six months, he opted to hire New York broker Jesse Buckler who immediately advised a price change as the listing was not attracting the right buyer.

After giving up on the DIY route, Sambrotto’s decision to hire a broker led to attracting multiple offers, closing for $150,000 over the original asking price. The Wall Street Journal reports the listing sold for $2.15 million including a 6% commission.

Many FSBOs turn to Realtors

The news stands as an enormous validation of the real estate profession and while some may tease, it is no laughing matter and the former FSBO CEO made a good financial decision.

AGBeat columnist Herman Chan said, “If people want to take a stab at For Sale By Owner (ie FSBO), go for it. But well over 80% of FSBO’s eventually have to list with an real estate agent to get their house sold. It’s harder than it looks!”

Not a new dilemma

Marlow Harris, Seattle Residential and Investment Consultant at Coldwell Banker Bain Associates told AGBeat, “The ForSaleByOwner.com founder’s dilemma is one we see quite often and is not unusual. Trying to sell your own property yourself or using a discount brokerage, is not the solution for everyone. Unusual properties, properties in the higher price range, these are more difficult to sell and often require specialization.”

Harris continues, “We see these choices across the board, from single family homes to huge housing developments. For instance, Vulcan, one of Paul Allen’s companies which has invested heavily in Redfin, does not use Redfin to market their many condominium projects. They use traditional real estate firms such as John L. Scott, Williams Marketing and Matrix Real Estate, finding that the do-it-yourself approach to real estate just doesn’t work for these types of sales.”

Finally, A Sensible Solution to Ensure Affordable Mortgage Rates

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

Article by John Feerhery
HouseLogic.com

Many pundits and policymakers insouciantly throw around the idea that Congress ought to get rid of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Sure, Fannie and Freddie have their fair share of warts — they became insolvent after buying bundles of loans, including exotic, high-risk, and undocumented mortgages that helped stimulate the housing crisis. But getting rid of them could have a devastating impact on housing prices and home ownership in the country.

The reason? Fannie and Freddie, along with FHA, have an overwhelming presence in the housing marketplace — they guarantee about 90% of all home loans.

The two entities work behind the scenes to help keep your interest rate payments lower than they might otherwise have been by buying mortgages from primary lenders, such as your local bank. This is called the secondary mortgage market, and the system provides capital to your local bank so it can offer mortgages at lower costs to more qualified buyers.

So it isn’t realistic to talk about closing down Fannie and Freddie. Now is the time for somebody to come up with a real solution.

Somebody has. Reps. Gary Miller (R-Calif.) and Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.) introduced bipartisan legislation earlier this month to replace Freddie and Fannie. Called theSecondary Market Facility for Residential Mortgage Act of 2011 (H.R. 2413), the bill offers a comprehensive strategy for reforming the secondary mortgage market and provides the federal government with a continued role to ensure a consistent flow of mortgage credit in all markets and all economic conditions — good and bad.

That’s important. Although private lenders are necessary for a healthy market, having private capital — i.e., Wall Street — as the sole source of housing finance could result in a system dominated by a few large banks that are “too big to fail” at the expense of consumers. And without a federally backed system, banks could withdraw from the market in tough times, like they did during the housing crisis.

Unlike the two organizations today, the proposed entity would have no shareholders. Some groups, like the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, believe having shareholders pushed Fannie and Freddie to overreach for growth and dividends.

Finally, the proposal spells out plans to protect taxpayers and ensure safety and soundness through appropriate regulation and underwriting standards.

This bill isn’t perfect, but it’s an honest and bipartisan effort to stabilize the housing market and help get our economy moving again. And for that reason, I think the two sponsors deserve a round of applause.

What do you think of this proposed plan for replacing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac?

Market Action Report for May 2011

Sunday, July 3rd, 2011

Randy McCreith, Principal Broker

By now everyone has heard that 2011 is not a good year for real estate sales! It is not a good year for the economy, the unemployment rate, or for consumer confidence. New construction remains a dead industry the likes of which have not been seen since the Depression. Speaking of the Depression, recently I read that the rate of decline in home values is greater than during the Depression. Next month in July, we hit the 4 year anniversary of the bottom dropping out of the housing industry. Last week, on a business show I listen to on the radio, the normally optimistic and upbeat host gave voice to what I have thought too many times now, “It is getting hard to be optimistic anymore!”

Those who hold to negative predictions about our future seem emboldened to be all the more gloomy. I hear their narratives and they are reasonable in light of what is going on. Yes, it could happen and they very well could be right. If so, the current conditions should paralyze anyone. The news and information media picks up on these perspectives and we get showered with depressing forecasts and disheartening anecdotes. As if compulsory, the media then salts in stories which show good signs of recovery; perhaps to limit liability and relieve guilt for sending their readers to find the nearest bridge?

The reality is that no one seems to know what tomorrow holds, and no one seems to know what it will take to slow down the economic free-fall and eventually right the direction of the economy and its attendant industries. Therefore, everyone speculates, and every minor event on any given day is analyzed for signs in the tea leaves.

What is certain is what has already happened. A couple of weeks ago at our brokerage meeting we looked back to see where we are now by comparison with the past. To illustrate, we used Yamhill County for our study. Since 2007 the sold volume/number of homes sold has dropped 37% (from 1258 in 2007 to 796 year-to-date). The dollar value of those properties dropped 52% (from $354 million to $175 million). The average sale price is down 23% and the median price is down 22%. The short sale/foreclosure industry was almost unknown to most people and Realtors®; today it is the dominant force driving values affecting all of us.

  1. Inventory is down. It is difficult to find many new homes anymore and the ‘glut’ of homes to sell is down to less than a 7 month supply from a high of a 20 month supply following the financial sector meltdown of 2008 (6 month’s supply is considered in the range of healthy). This helps to stabilize pricing and balances the marketplace from being a completely one-sided buyers’ market. Although a good number, it likely reflects the public’s unwillingness to sell if they do not need to. Also parallel to the unemployment industry, it likely reflects discouraged sellers who have quit trying.
  2. Closed sales are the second lowest (YTD) of the last 5 years but seem to be following the normal seasonal cycle up.
  3. Pending sales are complicated: Pending sales are up by comparison with one year ago because the $8,000 tax credit expired on April 30th 2010 and there was a great push to submit all offers before that deadline. That made May of last year a dead month for accepted offers (pending sales). By comparison, we ‘look’ good this year.
  4. Market time for a sale remains consistently high averaging over 140 days.
  5. The average sales price is at the same level as it was in late 2004.
If you have made it to this point in the email, you have a strong constitution! What can we do about this? Professionals and business owners adapt to changing conditions and relentlessly pursue success in spite of obstacles; it is our nature. People adjust their expectations and their lifestyles to make due until there are better times. The wise hold onto a higher and historic perspective: business cycles come and go; recessions and even depressions eventually end; famines have stricken people for all human history but the famines do not last forever. Prosperity can be rebuilt. This is a particularly tough patch of American history but as in times past and in time, we will heal.

If you need to sell, we just need to find one willing buyer for your property. Last month 84 residential properties did sell in Yamhill County. Yours could be one of those. If you need to buy, the task is easier but it still must be accomplished with caution and foresight. Your needs and our job have not changed because of a different kind of a market, it is just a greater challenge.

I am truly amazed at the high caliber of Principal Brokers (14 of the area’s finest), and exceptional Realtors® (now numbering over 30), which make up our professional cooperative at Bella Casa Real Estate Group. We serve the greater Yamhill County area as well as much of Washington, Marion, and Polk counties, and several of our brokers work the Portland and Beaverton area markets. We are grateful for you who entrust your sales to us. As always, we are grateful for your referrals to family, friends, neighbors, and co-workers.

Best regards,

Randy McCreith, Bella Casa Real Estate Group

503-310-9147 Cell
randy@thebellacasagroup.com
www.TheBellaCasaGroup.com
Tax Credit Incentives  Market Information
Bella Casa Blog
The Marshall Building
207 NE 19th Street, Suite 100
McMinnville OR 97128
866-281-6653 Fax

Buy. Sell. Be Happy.

It Pays to Support Responsible Homeownership

Saturday, June 11th, 2011

Article by Dona DeZube
HouseLogic.com

Helping others become homeowners protects your home’s value and builds stronger communities.

When people move from renting to owning a home, they’re more likely to vote, get involved in community groups, and care about their home’s appearance. The children of homeowners do 23% better in school, according to a 2001 study by Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. And a steady flow of first-time homebuyers makes it easier to sell your own starter home when you’re ready to move up to a larger property.

Make housing affordable

One way to make more people homeowners is to make housing more affordable. All U.S. homeowners benefit from policies like the mortgage interest tax deduction. Many use government-backed mortgage insurance to lower loan costs. A variety of public and private programs offer low-cost loans and downpayment assistance to help Americans become homeowners. Help prospective homeowners save a downpayment by donating to sites like EARN, a non-profit that uses donations to match funds saved by low-wage earners.

Reduce foreclosures and preserve home value

Foreclosure matters because it hurts all homeowners. In 2009, foreclosures will cause property values to decline an average of $7,200 for about 70 million homeowners, resulting in a $502 billion loss in home equity, the Center for Responsible Lendingestimates. Each foreclosure within 1/8th of a mile of your home lowers your property value about 0.744 percent, CRL says.

“One of the sad lessons of the [recent past] is that we aren’t alone,” says Nicolas P. Retsinas, director of the JCHS. “It’s clear that if the family next door loses their home to foreclosure, my home’s value will go down. Therefore, I have a vested interest in ensuring that people become homeowners and that homeownership is sustained over time.”

One effective tool against foreclosure is educating homeowners before they buy. The Joint Center found that loan delinquencies fell 13% with homeownership counseling. People who go through pre-purchase and post-purchase counseling and learn about mortgages, family budgeting, and home maintenance are less apt to face foreclosure, says Michael Berti, senior homeownership specialist at the Rural Ulster Preservation Company in Kingston, N.Y.

Support groups that help homeowners

One way to do your part to help other homeowners is by donating your time or money to some of the many non-profits that promote responsible homeownership.

Habitat for Humanity partners with new homeowners to build affordable housing. Habitat homes aren’t free. Homeowners work hundreds of hours, get homeownership counseling, and make mortgage payments.

The United Way supports many local programs that build affordable housing, help families build financial assets, and teach financial management skills. If you donate to United Way, you can direct your contribution to those causes.

HomeownershipSF, in San Francisco, tries to intervene where people facing foreclosure have the resources to catch up on their loan. If “the home can’t be saved, we try to get a first-time homebuyer we’ve worked with into the home as quickly as possible to stabilize the neighborhood,” says Interim Director Christi Baker.

Government programs support homeownership

Supporting federal state, and local programs that help create homeowners is another way you can expand responsible and affordable homeownership.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Federal Housing Authority provide mortgage loan insurance or guarantees that let people buy homes with only a small downpayment and borrow at lower interest rates.

Government-sponsored groups Fannie MaeFreddie Mac, and government-run Ginnie Mae buy and securitize mortgage loans made by banks, freeing up money, so banks can keep lending.

Sites like Govtrack and RollCall help you stay on top of laws that affect homeowners.

HUD’s HOME program provides financial support to state and local housing authorities to build and renovate for-sale and rental housing for lower-income Americans.

In U.S. cities of all sizes, the HOPE VI program has funded plans to replace deteriorating public housing with new low-rise, mixed-income homes. These developments sell most homes at market rates, but designate a percentage for use by low-income homeowners.

How to get involved

You can support responsible homeownership in many ways. Retired construction contractors France and Bill Moriarity travel the country in their RV managing Habitat construction projects. “We like it because it’s a hand up, not a hand out,” France Moriarity says. Habitat volunteers don’t need construction skills and can sign up to work as little as one day at a time. Groups can volunteer together. Organizations like Rebuilding Togetherand NeighborWorks America sponsor once yearly volunteer events that help lower-income homeowners repair their homes.

In San Francisco, Gregg Lynn convinced 150 people from his professional network to donate a percentage of their income to EARN. Follow his lead by asking your professional network, trade association, or social group to contribute.

Dona DeZube has been writing about real estate for over two decades. She lives a suburban Baltimore 1970s rancher on a 3-acre lot shared with possums, raccoons, foxes, a herd of deer, and her blue-tick hound.

Why Its Time To Buy

Tuesday, June 7th, 2011

Published in The Wall Street Journal
June 4th, 2011
Article by Ruth Simon and Jessica Silver-Greenberg

Back in June 2006, when the housing market peaked, the prospect of a five-year national housing bust seemed unimaginable to most people. And yet here we are, with the latest Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller index showing that prices hit new bear-market lows, falling back to 2002 levels nationally and to 1990s levels in some battered regions.

Despite all the gloom, however, there are growing indications that it is a good time to buy. Mortgage rates, which fell to 4.55% for the week ending June 2, according to Freddie Mac, are near 50-year lows. Homes have become more affordable than they have been in years: According to Moody’s Analytics, the ratio of home prices to income is now 20.9% lower than the 15-year average through 2010, and 12.5% lower than the 1989-2004 average. A historic glut of homes, meanwhile, has created a buyer’s market: There were about 15 million vacant homes in the U.S. last year, according to John Burns Real Estate ConsultingInc.—some 3.1 million more than normal.

Such conditions might not last long. Moody’s Analytics predicts that the number of distressed sales will begin to fall in 2013, and that prices will begin to edge upward then. Home building is at a virtual standstill, so the supply overhang isn’t likely to get much worse. Meanwhile, demographic indicators such as “household formation”—the number of new households each year—are on the rise, and promise to take a bite out of the glut in coming years.

The upshot: “While we might not see rapid growth in the next couple of years, there are a tremendous number of positive signs that could lead to a rebound,” says Anthony Sanders, a real-estate finance professor at George Mason University.

The short-term outlook isn’t encouraging. Job growth remains weak, foreclosure sales are making up more of the market, and economists are predicting that home prices will fall more in the coming months.

But the long-term benefits of homeownership remain very much intact. For now, at least, you can deduct the mortgage interest on your taxes—a big perk for people in higher tax brackets. You get to paint your walls any color you wish, without having to clear it with a landlord. And assuming you can buy a home for about the same price as you can rent one, buying will give you the ability one day to live rent-free. Come retirement time, a paid-off mortgage means your monthly expenses are significantly reduced, and you have a chunk of equity to play with.

So what might the next five years look like? Once the foreclosure mess begins to clear up, say housing economists, the traditional drivers of the housing market—demographics, affordability, loan availability, employment and psychology—should take over.

Here is a glimmer of what the future may hold: While overall home prices fell by 7.5% in April over the same period a year earlier, according to CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif., provider of real-estate data and analytics, if you exclude distressed sales, prices were off just 0.5%. So if you are in a market that isn’t battered by foreclosures, you may be close to a bottom already.

“The regular marketplace is hanging tough,” says CoreLogic chief economist Mark Fleming.

Here is a look at five key factors that will govern local markets over the next several years:

Household formation fell during the economic downturn as a weak economy led some people to stay in school, double up with roommates or move in with family members. According to Moody’s Analytics, the number of new households renting or owning a home dropped to 578,000 in 2008 from nearly 2 million in 2005, just before the peak of the housing boom.

But household formation increased to nearly 950,000 last year, says Moody’s, and should average 1.2 million over the next decade.

That, combined with increased obsolescence and higher demand for second homes, should begin sopping up excess inventory in much of the country over the next two years, Moody’s says.

“Whatever the excess supply of housing is, it is shrinking pretty fast,” says Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist.

Some of the uptick in household formation is likely to come from the leading edge of the echo baby boomers, who have been waiting for the economy to recover before striking out on their own, says William Frey, a demographer with the Brookings Institution. That is likely to fuel an increase in demand for both rental apartments and starter homes.

The portion of people moving across the country has fallen to the lowest level since World War II, he adds. That is a sign that many people have put their lives on hold because of the weak economy.

“When things do pick up, there will be this pent-up demand for everything involved with starting a household,” Mr. Frey says.

Of course, when prices in healthier regions begin to rise, many would-be sellers who have sat on the sidelines could begin putting homes on the market, muting the price gains at first, says Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. Even so, she expects home prices to stabilize and begin to strengthen over the next two or three years.

There also are some powerful demographic cross-currents worth considering. The first baby boomers turned 65 in January, an age when demand for new homes falls and many begin to think about downsizing. “The baby-boom generation pushed prices up as they got older,” says Dowell Myers, a professor of urban planning and demography at the University of Southern California. But in the coming years, “boomers will start flooding the market on the supply side” with larger homes, while fueling new demand for smaller properties with more services and amenities.

Rising home prices made renting cheaper than buying in many parts of the country. But that dynamic has begun to change: Housing affordability, as measured by the ratio of median home prices to median household incomes, has fallen below pre-housing bubble levels in just over two-thirds of the country, according to an analysis of more than 380 metro areas by Moody’s Analytics.

Renting is still cheaper than buying in most markets, but rising rents and falling house prices mean that, in some areas, this won’t be the case for long. Buying a home is already cheaper than renting in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Orlando, Fla., according to Moody’s Analytics. In other markets, including Dallas, Las Vegas and Sacramento, Cailf., the equation is likely to soon turn in favor of homeownership if current trends persist, the firm says.

In Ann Arbor, Mich., where home prices fell 11.2% between 2007 and 2010, according to Fiserv Case-Shiller, housing affordability has risen well above historical levels, according to Moody’s Analytics.

That is good news for home buyers such as Steven Upton, a 42-year-old photographer, who in June will close on four-bedroom brick house on 10 acres in an upscale community in Ann Arbor. Mr. Upton paid $400,000 for the home, which previously listed for $600,000. “It’s a tremendous deal,” he says.

Before buying a house, it is wise to compare rental prices for similar properties. To be ultraconservative, wait until the monthly outlays, including taxes and insurance, are equal. You also could factor in the tax savings of owning, which would make buying more attractive even if the gross monthly outlay is slightly higher.

The strength of the housing market depends largely on the economy. Rising incomes and increased employment tend to give more would-be buyers confidence and buying power. For now, job growth remains sluggish: On Friday the Labor Department reported that just 54,000 jobs were created in May, far below expectations.

But signs of how a stronger job market could fuel housing demand are evident in the Dallas metro area, which added 83,100 new jobs in the 12 months ending in April—the largest gain in the nation, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Dallas never had a big housing boom or bust and has benefited from trade with Mexico, a strong telecommunications sector and a central location.

The opportunities for a job with more responsibility drew Duane and Linda Elmer to Dallas from Des Moines, Iowa, where Mr. Elmer was a banker for nine years. The couple has agreed to pay $415,000 for a four-bedroom, four-bath house with a Jacuzzi and pool. Their Des Moines home, purchased nine years ago for $410,000, is on the market for $390,000. “We are willing to take the loss for the opportunity to live in a more diverse community and to take a job with greater breadth of responsibilities,” Mr. Elmer says.

Borrowers like the Elmers who are relocating for job opportunities are a big driver of home sales in nearby Plano, Texas, says Harry Ridge, a real-estate agent. He says such sales accounted for 20% of his business last year.

A similar influx of job seekers is fueling housing demand in the Washington area, where 25,700 new jobs were added in the 12 months since April 2010. Washington was the only one of the 20 cities tracked by Standard & Poor’s and Case-Shiller that saw home prices rise both on a month-to-month and year-over-year basis.

Mortgage financing remains plentiful for borrowers with good credit scores and solid employment histories. But for borrowers who don’t fit traditional lending standards, getting a loan can still be nearly impossible. In the first quarter, about 10% of banks tightened standards for nontraditional loans, according to the Federal Reserve. Meanwhile, higher down-payment standards are locking some would-be buyers out of the market. Just 35% of renters have the minimum 3.5% down payment needed for an FHA loan on the median-priced home in their market, according to a recent survey by Zelman Associates.

Credit is likely to remain tight for at least the next six months, says Clifford Rossi, a former Citigroup Inc. consumer-lending executive who teaches at the University of Maryland.

But conditions should improve over time, he says: “There’s no question that it will gradually get easier.”

That will be welcome news to borrowers like Greg Silver. The 50-year-old real-estate developer would like to buy a second home, but hasn’t been able to secure a jumbo mortgage because his income consists of capital gains from sales of the properties he develops. Mr. Silver closed three sales in the past 12 months, netting him a total of more than $25 million, but didn’t record any capital gains in 2008 and 2009. Sure, he could use some of that cash to buy a home outright, but he would prefer to mortgage it, get the tax deduction and keep his cash free for business purposes.

“It’s a little devastating,” says Mr. Silver, who is living in Greenwich, Conn.

The long-term case for buying over renting remains in force. Yet nowadays, “People are simply scared,” saysAaron Galvin, chief executive of Luxury Living Chicago, which finds rental apartments for wealthy clients.

Mr. Galvin says he has seen a 30% increase in business in the last year, driven by would-be home buyers who can afford to purchase a property but are choosing not to do so.

The portion of Americans who believe homeownership is a safe investment dropped to 66% in the first quarter from 83% in 2006, according to Fannie Mae, the government-controlled mortgage company.

But it isn’t clear whether the fear will result in a prolonged change in attitudes, as during the Great Depression, or have little long-term impact, as was the case for the housing bust that shook California and the Northeast in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Eighty-seven percent of people surveyed by Fannie Mae said they preferred owning to renting, though access to schools, control over one’s environment and other quality-of-life issues now are seen as the key benefits of homeownership, with building wealth and other financial factors viewed as less important. In addition, 67% of renters surveyed by Zelman Associates said they planned to buy a home in the next five years.

Jeffrey Connor may be a bellwether for the future of the housing market. The 40-year-old finance director at a corporate law firm says he thought briefly about buying a house when he moved to Chicago from Washington in October. But he opted instead to rent a luxury two-story apartment in downtown Chicago for $3,559 a month. Mr. Connor says it will take substantial job growth and a sharp drop in foreclosures to convince him to buy.

“The market is clearly soft,” he says, “especially when we consider it good news that the unemployment rate is hovering around 9% instead of 10%.” Mr. Connor says he isn’t worried about missing out on today’s low interest rates and will consider buying once unemployment falls to 6%.

Other buyers are showing less willingness to wait for the absolute perfect time to buy. Doug Yearly, chief executive of luxury builder Toll Brothers Inc., told investors in May that “some of our clients, after waiting so long, are starting to move off the fence and into the market, motivated by attractive pricing, low interest rates and, most important, the desire to take the next step in their lives. The family with elementary-school kids and a puppy when the housing debacle began five years ago now has middle-school kids and the dog weighs 80 pounds.”

What Is a 203k Mortgage?

Friday, May 27th, 2011

Article by Shauna Zamarripa, ehow contributor
Published March 23rd, 2011
ehow.com

FHA 203K loans are an option for property rehabilitations.

When consumers use FHA financing, the most traditional source of funding is an FHA 203b loan. However, FHA 203b loans have specific requirements of a property for purchase; namely the condition of the property and habitability requirements. However, for properties that are severely damaged, an FHA 203k rehabilitation loan can be used.

History

Historically, FHA loans were created to boost home ownership sales by decreasing down payment requirements on mortgage loans. As a result, conventional non-FHA loans typically require down payments of 10 percent or higher, while FHA loans can require down payments of less than 4 percent.

FHA loans are federally insured loans that require the buyer to pay an upfront insurance premium at closing, as well as a monthly insurance premium designed to protect the lender from loss in the event of default and foreclosure. Due to the nature of the insurance required to obtain an FHA loan, the government did not — in general — want to back loans on properties that were considered uninhabitable; that is, in need of roof replacements, plumbing work or other major repair items.

Significance

FHA 203k loans allow the buyer to roll in the costs of repairs to rehabilitate the property into the mortgage loan. The formula to do so is quite simple. The bank takes the “as is” market value of the property and adds the costs of repairs to the loan. Upon closing, the repair work is completed and the buyer can take possession of the property.

The minimum amount of repairs required to utilize an FHA 203k loan is $5,000 and the maximum is $35,000. However, this is not considered a second mortgage or home equity or improvement loan. This portion of the loan is added on to the primary note.

Function

FHA 203k loans are applicable to single family homes or multiple family dwellings of up to four units. This means that an FHA 203k loan can be used to rehabilitate or repair single family detached properties, condominiums, town homes or small apartment facilities.

In addition to streamlining costly repairs for a property, a FHA 203k loan can be used for modernization of an existing home. This is useful for homeowners who want to update a kitchen or bathroom in a home that they purchase. These loans can also be used for room additions or other home expansion projects.

Considerations

When taking into account loan qualifying amounts on an FHA 203k loan, the purchase price must be less than the sales price after the amount of repair work is finished. The best way to ensure that an FHA 203k loan is approved is to have contractors provide estimates of repairs or updating on a home prior to entering into a real estate contract for purchase. This way, a consumer can be prepared for the total loan amount, knowing that she qualifies for the property after its improved value has been assessed.

Expert Insight

Due to the meticulous requirements and nature of FHA 203k loans, consumers should consult an FHA 203k loan specialist. Not all lenders who are familiar with standard FHA 203b loans know how to structure and prepare the necessary paperwork for an FHA 203k loan. Talk to several lenders about their experience with this specific type of loan. If they have little to no experience, they are likely not the right choice to handle a loan this complex.

For more information about 203K rehab loans, please visit the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developement’s website or contact your local mortgage broker.