NAR President Moe Veissi praises new help for struggling
homeowners. The Federal Housing Finance Agency on Tuesday announced
measures to make “short sales” of underwater homes easier for
homeowners, including extending help to people who have financial
difficulties but haven’t missed mortgage payments.
View the video here.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Good News for Housing: Home Prices Continue Positive Trend
The Case-Shiller indexes of home prices increased again when compared to the previous month or the previous year. Both the 10-city and 20-city seasonally-adjusted indexes rose 1 percent and 0.9 percent respectively from May to June 2012. This is the fifth straight month for steady increases in the SA indexes.
Read the Full Article Here
Read the Full Article Here
New Featured Listing - 76 Club Course Drive
Surrounded on 2 sides by lagoons and a commanding view of
the3rd fairway of the Sea Pines CC Club Course combine to make this 3 BR, 2.5
BA home a great value for the buyer who wants an updated home featuring granite
counter tops in the kitchen and laundry rm., family room with gas fireplace,
dining room with wet bar, spacious living room with cathedral ceilings and
large foyer, main floor master suite, deck with stunning views of the lagoon
and golf course, circular drive and 1 car garage. This home is ideal as a
permanent residence or vacation getaway. MLS# 317737 More Information
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Homebuilder Confidence in U.S. Increases to Five-Year High
Confidence among U.S. homebuilders
climbed in August to the highest level in more than five years,
affirming the improvement in residential construction.
The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder confidence index rose to 37, higher than projected and the best showing since February 2007, according to figures from the Washington-based group released today. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for no change from July’s 35. Readings below 50 mean more respondents said conditions were poor.
Read Full Article
The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder confidence index rose to 37, higher than projected and the best showing since February 2007, according to figures from the Washington-based group released today. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for no change from July’s 35. Readings below 50 mean more respondents said conditions were poor.
Read Full Article
Monday, August 20, 2012
If you can pull it off, a house is a smart investment
Investment opinions are like, um, noses: Everyone has one. Buy stocks,
sell bonds? Go long steel and short copper? Buy sheep, sell deer? It's pretty easy to see both sides of an investment argument. But it's
hard to argue against buying a house now, assuming you can get a loan. Read the full article here.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
New Featured Listing - 9 Newhall Road
This absolutely pristine, light, open floor
plan, 3 BR, 3 BA home backs up to the Newhall Preserve, offering the ultimate
in privacy. Loaded with quality features - living room with a cathedral
ceiling, fireplace and wall of windows, open dining area with tray ceiling,
eat-in kitchen with white cabinetry, hardwood floors and skylight, kitchen open
to family room with tray ceiling and access to the deck. A separate laundry
room leads to a breezeway and access to the 2 car garage. This beautifully
maintained home is a perfect permanent residence or second home. MLS# 317465 More Information
Monday, August 6, 2012
Why You Should Go Buy a House, Maybe Even Two
“If I was an investor that was a handy type and I could buy a
couple of them [houses] at distressed prices and find renters, I think
it’s a leveraged way of owning a very cheap asset now and I think that’s
probably as attractive an investment as you can make now.” Warren Buffet,
February 2012
Buying North American real estate is likely one of the best investments you can make right now.
Record low interest rates coupled with depressed real estate prices mean that housing affordability is at a record high.
Rental property owners are also sitting pretty in many areas of the country as potential buyers hold off from buying a home. Memories of the latest real estate crash are still too fresh to be easily forgotten.
This past weekend I had a drink with a friend who lives in the Boston area. He and his wife just paid a full month's rent just as a finder's fee for their next apartment. That tells me rental demand is back. And the rental property they own in Cape Cod is filling their bank account with cash, having been rented throughout the entire summer.
Certainly some markets are faring better than others. And relatively speaking the Northeast is doing pretty well. But most data shows that the worst of the real estate crash is behind us across the rest of the country too. As a result, homebuilder confidence is surging.
On Tuesday the National Association of Home Builders reported that its
housing market index (HMI) leapt by 20%, up 6 points to 35. Every region
in the U.S. posted gains with the West and the Northeast leading the
South and Midwest.
Gains were recorded on all three variables in the HMI: current single-family home sales volume; projected single-family home sales volume for the next six months; and current buyer foot traffic.
Generally speaking a reading above 50 is bullish for home builders while a reading below 50 is bearish. Note how low this index was over the past couple of years and the dramatic increase in recent months.
We're not in bullish territory yet, but we're certainly improving. And that means now is a good time to increase your exposure to housing.
If you're still on the fence, consider the following:
The inventory of existing homes for sale has fallen to a near-normal level of six months worth of inventory...
In May 2012 builders started 26% more single-family homes than in May 2011...
And the widely followed S&P Case-Shiller Housing Index showed that prices rose in April 2012 by 1.3% after seven consecutive months of declines.
This is all good news, but by no means is this a bull market yet; it's just an improving one.
While data shows things are getting better, sales of existing single-family homes are still below 5 million annually and single-family home starts are around a paltry 650,000.
Both of these are well below historical figures dating back before 2000. And the Case-Shiller Housing Index of 20 cities, while improved in April, is still down by 1.9% year-over-year.
So what we have here is still a soft market, but one that likely has the worst behind it and is going to get better - possibly much, much better. When it does, the right real estate investments you make now should pay off.
Good Investing,
Tyler Laundon, MBA
Editor, Pay Dirt
Buying North American real estate is likely one of the best investments you can make right now.
Record low interest rates coupled with depressed real estate prices mean that housing affordability is at a record high.
Rental property owners are also sitting pretty in many areas of the country as potential buyers hold off from buying a home. Memories of the latest real estate crash are still too fresh to be easily forgotten.
This past weekend I had a drink with a friend who lives in the Boston area. He and his wife just paid a full month's rent just as a finder's fee for their next apartment. That tells me rental demand is back. And the rental property they own in Cape Cod is filling their bank account with cash, having been rented throughout the entire summer.
Certainly some markets are faring better than others. And relatively speaking the Northeast is doing pretty well. But most data shows that the worst of the real estate crash is behind us across the rest of the country too. As a result, homebuilder confidence is surging.
Gains were recorded on all three variables in the HMI: current single-family home sales volume; projected single-family home sales volume for the next six months; and current buyer foot traffic.
Generally speaking a reading above 50 is bullish for home builders while a reading below 50 is bearish. Note how low this index was over the past couple of years and the dramatic increase in recent months.
We're not in bullish territory yet, but we're certainly improving. And that means now is a good time to increase your exposure to housing.
If you're still on the fence, consider the following:
The inventory of existing homes for sale has fallen to a near-normal level of six months worth of inventory...
In May 2012 builders started 26% more single-family homes than in May 2011...
And the widely followed S&P Case-Shiller Housing Index showed that prices rose in April 2012 by 1.3% after seven consecutive months of declines.
This is all good news, but by no means is this a bull market yet; it's just an improving one.
While data shows things are getting better, sales of existing single-family homes are still below 5 million annually and single-family home starts are around a paltry 650,000.
Both of these are well below historical figures dating back before 2000. And the Case-Shiller Housing Index of 20 cities, while improved in April, is still down by 1.9% year-over-year.
So what we have here is still a soft market, but one that likely has the worst behind it and is going to get better - possibly much, much better. When it does, the right real estate investments you make now should pay off.
Good Investing,
Tyler Laundon, MBA
Editor, Pay Dirt
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