Sunday, February 28, 2010
Things to consider when looking for your retirement home.
Modest Signs of Life?
Thursday, February 25, 2010
What to take to bed with you.....not a joke!
Tell your spouse, your children, your neighbors, your parents, your Dr's office, your friends, the check-out girl at the market, everyone you run across..that you trust. Put your car keys beside your bed at night.
If you hear a noise outside your home or someone trying to get in your house, just press the panic button for your car. The alarm will be set off, and the horn will continue to sound until either you turn it off or the car battery dies. This tip came from a neighborhood watch coordinator. Next time you come home for the night and you start to put your keys away, think of this: It's a security alarm system that you probably already have and requires no installation. Test it. It will go off from most everywhere inside your house and will keep honking until your battery runs down or until you reset it with the button on the key fob chain. It works if you park in your driveway or garage. If your car alarm goes off when someone is trying to break into your house, odds are the burglar/rapist won't stick around. After a few seconds, all the neighbors will be looking out their windows to see who is out there and sure enough the criminal won't want that. And remember to carry your keys while walking to your car in a parking lot. The alarm can work the same way there. This is something that should really be shared with everyone. Maybe it could save a life or a sexual abuse crime.
P.S.** This would also be useful for any emergency, such as a heart attack, where you can't reach a phone. My Mom suggested to my Dad that he carry his car keys with him when he's out in the yard in case he should fall outside and she doesn't hear him.. He can activate the car alarm and then she'll know there's a problem.
Please pass this on even IF you've read it before. It's a reminder.
Foreclosure Bargains Getting Harder to Find
The number of foreclosures that are available for sale nationwide fell to 617,000 in December, down from 845,000 in November 2008, reports Barclays Capital.
Not only have attractive homes in popular neighborhoods already been snapped up, but also government help for distressed buyers is delaying more foreclosures.
Demand is driving up prices. Investors say typical prices have climbed from 75 percent of appraised value to 85 percent or higher when there are bidding wars.
Source: The Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty (02/23/2010) Courtesy Realtor Magazine
Monday, February 22, 2010
Could the tax credit be extended?
The first $7,500 tax credit was passed in 2008 and required first-time buyers to repay the credit over 15 years. A few months later in 2009, Congress expanded the credit to a maximum of $8,000 that didn’t have to be paid back.
At the end of last year, Congress extended the benefit again until April 30 with an extra two months on top of that to close. A new credit of $6,500 was added for move-up buyers, too.
Now representatives of the housing industry are lobbying for another extension. Some experts, including Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com, who supported the earlier credits, think the time has come to let it go.
“It’s worn out its benefit,” he says. “If you extend it again, it isn’t going to do much, and what you’re doing is providing a tax break to folks who bought anyway.”
Source: The Wall Street Journal, Nick Timiraos (02/22/2010)
Bankers: The End of Foreclosure Crisis is Near
“The continued and sizable drop in the 30-day delinquency rate is a concrete sign that the end may be in sight,” says Jay Brinkmann, MBA’s chief economist, in a published statement.
Brinkmann said that normally there is a large spike in short-term mortgage delinquencies at the end of the year because of high heating bills and holiday expenditures. This year, there was not only no spike, but the 30-day delinquency rate actually fell from 3.79 percent to 3.63 percent.
Thirty-day delinquencies have historically been a leading indicator of serious delinquencies and foreclosures, Brinkmann said.
“[This] gives us growing confidence that the size of the problem now is about as bad as it will get,” he said.
Source: Mortgage Bankers Association (02/19/2010)
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Tips for Lowering Homeowner's Insurance Costs
1. Review the Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange (CLUE) report on the property you’re interested in buying. CLUE reports detail the property’s claims history for the most recent five years, which insurers may use to deny coverage. Make the sale contingent on a home inspection to ensure that problems identified in the CLUE report have been repaired.
2. Seek insurance coverage as soon as your offer is approved. You must obtain insurance to buy. And you don’t want to be told at closing that the insurer has denied your coverage.
3. Maintain good credit. Insurers often use credit-based insurance scores to determine premiums.
4. Buy your home owners and auto policies from the same company and you’ll usually qualify for savings. But make sure the discount really yields the lowest price.
5. Raise your deductible. If you can afford to pay more toward a loss that occurs, your premiums will be lower. Avoid making claims under $1,000.
6. Ask about other discounts. For example, retirees who tend to be home more than full-time workers may qualify for a discount on theft insurance. You also may be able to obtain discounts for having smoke detectors, a burglar alarm, or dead-bolt locks.
7. Seek group discounts. If you belong to any groups, such as associations or alumni organizations, they may have deals on insurance coverage.
8. Review your policy limits and the value of your home and possessions annually. Some items depreciate and may not need as much coverage.
9. Investigate a government-backed insurance plan. In some high-risk areas, federal or state government may back plans to lower rates. Ask your agent.
10. Be sure you insure your house for the correct amount. Remember, you’re covering replacement cost, not market value.
Be Aware of Identity Theft During the 2010 Census
THE CENSUS will be mailed to 134 million households on March 1. The form has 10 questions about your age, date of birth, race and whether you rent or own a home. It does not ask for your social security number or information about your taxes and income. If you do not return a completed Census Form by April 1, it is likely that a Census Taker will either call you or come to your door to obtain the information.
BE CAUTIOUS AND USE THE FOLLOWING SAFETY TIPS:
1. The Census does not ask for your Social Security Number – do not give that information out to anyone claiming to be with the Census Bureau.
2. Never invite a Census Taker into your home.
3. All Census Takers carry official government badges marked with just their name, a Department of Commerce watermark, and an expiration date.
4. The Census Worker is supposed to provide you with a letter from the Census Director on official letterhead.
5. The Census Bureau will not contact you via email.
6. Do not click on any websites that pop up disguised as a census survey. The Census Bureau does not solicit information over the internet.
7. The Census does not ask for credit card or bank account information.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
5 lessons from the housing-bubble bust
Look beyond the plummeting prices and mounting foreclosures to learn a few lessons that can help us avoid making the same mistakes in the future.
By Tamara E. Holmes of Bankrate.com
The pop heard ’round the world when the housing bubble
But with all bad times comes a slew of good lessons to be learned, says Shari Olefson, author of “Foreclosure Nation: Mortgaging the American Dream.”
Depressed home prices
Lesson No. 1: Adjust your expectations. Years ago, people purchased a home, lived in it all or most of their lives, passed it down to their children and enjoyed a gradual increase in wealth as the home gained value. But in the last decade, people bought a house expecting it to increase in value about 5 or 10 percent in a couple of years, and they’d move on to something bigger, says Brendon DeSimone, a real-estate agent with Paragon Real Estate Group in San Francisco.
If the housing-bubble nightmare has shown us anything, it’s that you can’t count on a home to be worth more than you paid for it when you’re ready to sell. “It’s back to basics,” DeSimone says. “You have to be in it for the long haul and you can’t be looking at your home value
Lesson No. 2: You can’t time the market. When home prices were skyrocketing, many people bought homes they could barely afford — or couldn’t afford — thinking they’d ride the wave of rising equity since the market was on the upswing. Likewise, today, many potential home buyers are sitting on the sidelines waiting for the market to reach its ultimate low.
“You will never sell at the all-time high and you’ll never buy at the all-time low by planning it,” says Tim Burrell, a real-estate agent for Re/Max United in Raleigh, N.C. “The market will time you. You will sell, and on occasion you may happen to hit the all-time high or happen to hit the all-time low, but to study it and plan it and figure out and actually do it — it doesn’t happen.”
Instead, take a long-term approach to real estate and look for a home that enhances your life and will increase in value over time.
Lesson No. 3: Don’t treat your home like a piggy bank. At the height of the real-estate market boom, “We had a whole bunch of people refinancing high-interest credit cards with a low-interest second mortgage on their homes,” Olefson says. Today, some of those people have lost their homes or are in danger of doing so because they were unable to handle the mortgage debt.
“As a country, we’ve all gotten way too comfortable with credit and having debt in our lives,” Olefson says. “But the problem really came when that morphed into our homes.”
As the market rebounds, “We need to promote the value of owning your home free and clear again, because residential real estate really is the backbone of our country. It’s the biggest asset for most people,” Olefson says. Likewise, instead of depending on your home for all of your wealth, continue to build up your cash reserves, Burrell suggests.
Lesson No. 4: Do your own research. Some people ran into trouble before the real-estate market crash when they took the advice of mortgage professionals without doing their due diligence and making sure the advice was in their best interest. The wisdom of speaking to a financial adviser, calling a nonprofit housing agency or even reading books on real-estate transactions before signing on the dotted line became apparent as homeowners struggled with changing terms on mortgages that they didn’t understand. It also makes sense to check the credentials of anyone advising you. “Be careful who you trust, take time to educate yourself, and first and foremost, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is,” Olefson says.
Lesson No. 5: Think long-term financing. Adjustable-rate mortgages appealed to those who wanted the lowest possible interest rates and expected to be able to either sell their homes or refinance them before the mortgages reset. However, after the real-estate market crash, many didn’t have enough equity to refinance and houses began to sit on the market as prices went into a free fall. When it comes to financing, “you can’t just look at the next six weeks or two months or next year,” DeSimone says. “You have to say, ‘What happens to me in five years?’”
Ultimately, the real-estate market collapse was a lesson in learning to adapt, experts say. “When you see over exuberance, expect that it’s going to change,” Burrell says. “The only thing constant is change.”
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Shadow Inventory Unlikely to Hurt Market
Nearly 5 million houses and condos, of which the mortgages are delinquent, will go through foreclosure over the next few years, a new study by John Burns Real Estate Consulting Inc. concludes.
This represents more than half of the 7.7 million households now behind on their mortgage payments. The situation is worst in Arizona, California, Florida, and Nevada. Burns calculates that there is an inventory equivalent to 27 months of sales in Orlando, 24 months in Miami, and 18 months in Las Vegas.
Consulting firm CEO John Burns says there is strong investor demand for these properties, so as long as employment continues to recover and interest rates remain moderate, these sales won’t have much impact on overall prices.
Source: The Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty (02/16/2010)
55th Annual Arabian Horse Show runs thru the 21st
Watch it live! Click Here. Or to arrange a behind the scenes peek? Click Here.
Secure a Lender Quickly for Tax Credit
Even buyers without A-plus credit should be able to get a loan. "If you go to enough lenders, you can typically get a loan even with a low credit score. The terms, of course, are not as attractive," says Spencer Rascoff, chief operating officer of Zillow.com.
Another possibility is to propose a lease-purchase deal or land contract to the seller. If the deal is structured properly, both buyer and seller could walk away winners.
Source: CNNMoney.com, Jean Chatzky (02/15/2010)
Must see! Unbelievable deal in Old Town Scottsdale
UNBELIEVABLE VALUE
Villa Monterrey in Old Town Scottsdale
Scottsdale, AZ
Priced for quick sale: $249,900
2 Bedroom / 2 Bath approx 1400 Sq. Ft.
2-car carport.
Side Entrance.
ALL NEW inside.
Custom Cherry Cabinets (Kitchen & Bathrooms)
Granite countertops (Kitchen & Bathrooms)
Wood & Tile throughout, Double pain windows & doors
All new fixtures, Plumbing & Electrical
All new plumbing, Hot /
cold piping and drains to the street. All installed by licensed & bonded contractors.
New roof coating with 5 yr. written warranty.
Washer / Dryer included.
55 +
Community; HOA, Club House, Pool, Spa