Stocks of home builders rose Friday after JP Morgan Chase analyst Michael Rehaut said in a note to clients that business is better and home price declines are ending.Rehaut said that over the long term, “We believe the builders are significantly better positioned to gain share exiting this recession (than they were after the previous recession 20 years ago), given their large cash balances and capital advantage over private builders.”Source: The Associated Press (09/18/2009)
© Copyright National Association of REALTORS®, Reprinted from REALTOR.org with permission.”
September 22, 2009
Analyst Helps Stocks Climb
September 14, 2009
Navigating Short Sales: What to Do When the Sale Price Leaves You Short
If you’re thinking of selling your home, and you expect that the total amount you owe on your mortgage will be greater than the selling price of your home, you may be facing a short sale. A short sale is one where the net proceeds from the sale won’t cover your total mortgage obligation and closing costs, and you don’t have other sources of money to cover the deficiency. A short sale is different from a foreclosure, which is when your lender takes title of your home through a lengthy legal process and then sells it.
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September 3, 2009
1 in 25 Million
Congratulations, you are part of a growing online community. And maybe you are one out of a possible 25 million users this month. Using real estate web sites such as this gives you an opportunity to learn about communities, search for properties and become more informed on purchasing and selling real estate. We welcome you and look forward to your comment, email or call.
Traffic to Real Estate Web Sites Increasing
Home sales rose over the last couple of months–and so did visits to real estate Web sites.
Nielsen Online reports that traffic to real estate Web sites rose 11 percent from 20.7 million visitors in June to 23.1 million in July. Year-over-year growth from July 2008 to July 2009 was 18 percent.
The most likely visitors were people living in two-person households. This demographic was 50 percent more likely than the average Web user to visit a real estate site. Potential homebuyers between the ages of 25 and 34 were 29 percent more likely to look at a real estate site, and people with no children were 32 percent more likely.
Source: Nielsen Wire (09/01/2009)
Copyright National Association of REALTORS®, Reprinted from REALTOR.org with permission.”
August 27, 2009
August 21, 2009
What Has the Housing Crash Cost Americans?
The Federal Reserve estimates that the total market value of U.S. homes fell 18 percent from $21.9 trillion to $17.9 trillion or about $13,000 per person from the end of 2006 through March 31, 2009.
This collapse in equity makes it difficult for potential buyers to sell their homes and trade up, which many experts say will weigh heavily on the housing recovery.
Source: The Wall Street Journal, Brett Arends (08/20/2009)
Copyright National Association of REALTORS®, Reprinted from REALTOR.org with permission.”
Strong Gain In Existing-Home Sales
For the first time in five years, existing-home sales have increased for four months in a row, according to the National Association of REALTORS®.
Existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – rose 7.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.24 million units in July from a level of 4.89 million in June. Sales are 5.0 percent above the 4.99 million-unit pace in July 2008. The last time sales rose for four consecutive months was in June 2004, and the last time sales were higher than a year earlier was November 2005.
August 12, 2009
Law of Odd Numbers
I have not found much information on the psychology of pricing and odd numbers. I once took a class in which the instructor referred to the “Law of Odd Numbers.” Googling “Law of Odd Numbers” does not reveal very much. Yet, for some reason the pricing of items in a store at $1.99 instead of $1.90 or $2.00 results in more sales of that item. Following is an article from The Washington Post about real estate agents and the importance of their favorite or lucky numbers. Have you a “lucky number?”
Some practitioners are convinced that selling real estate is a numbers game – a lucky numbers game.
Washington D.C.-area Long & Foster associate Juliet Zucker made multiple offers on a condominium on behalf of a client, but none of them were successful. Finally, she wrote an offer that ended in the number “18,” which in Hebrew symbolizes “chai,” which means life. The ploy was successful. Her client signed a contract for $384,118.
When Margaret Rome, a Baltimore-are practitioner, began selling homes 20 years ago, she drove a Porsche 944. In its honor, she ended the price on her first listing with 944. It sold within a week. Since then she, has used the number for every property.
Why is this? Nobody knows for sure. "You shouldn't sweat the weird stuff, because it will just drive you nuts,” Kelman says.
Source: Washington Post, Ylan Q. Mui (08/08/2009)
Copyright National Association of REALTORS®, Reprinted from REALTOR.org with permission.”
August 11, 2009
Short Sale Info & Report
A new report entitled “Short Sales Tips for Sellers” is now available under the “Free Reports” tab on our site. Here is a synopsis of the report:
If you’re thinking of selling your home, and you expect that the total amount you owe on your mortgage will be greater than the selling price of your home, you may be facing a short sale. A short sale is one where the net proceeds from the sale won’t cover your total mortgage obligation and closing costs, and you don’t have other sources of money to cover the deficiency. A short sale is different from a foreclosure, which is when your lender takes title of your home through a lengthy legal process and then sells it.
Read the entire report to gain more information on the short sale process, timing and risks.