Wednesday, February 27, 2008

To Buy or Not to Buy? 10 Questions to ask Yourself


5 REASONS TO BUY
1. Prices in the neighborhood you are interested in are relatively stable. Either they are holding their own or increasing, or the pace of decline is slowing significantly. If you have to move and don't like apartments, the small penalty you pay for missing the bottom may not mean much.

2. You plan to stay in the home for more than five years. If you can stick it out that long before selling, economists say you’ll probably ride out any downturn and come out ahead on price.

3. Your rent rivals a mortgage payment. If you can afford to buy, it can give you one bonus that renting can't: the mortgage-interest deduction on your taxes.

4. You've found the right house in the right area for you. The schools are great. You love the area and know it would be hard to find another house like the one you have your eye on. In a better market, you would most likely have much more competition for that home.

5. You've built equity in your house and are moving to a place where homes are cheaper. In your new market, your money will go a lot further.

5 REASONS TO HOLD OFF
1. You've lived in your house less than two years. Chances are you haven't had enough time to accumulate equity in your home. Indeed, you may have negative equity, if you live in many areas such as California, Florida, Arizona or Nevada.

2. Your job security is uncertain. If your company or business is in distress, it's probably better to stay put until the smoke clears.

3. You don't plan to stay in your next house at least five years. While it's not important to buy at the exact bottom of the market, it is important to stay long enough to ride it out completely.

4. You don't have good credit or a decent down payment. Do you have a job and income you can document? As a result of the subprime lending crisis, lenders are much more careful about whom they're giving their money to.

5. You have an existing home to sell in a neighborhood where prices are dropping precipitously or where the number of foreclosures is spiking. In this climate, you're probably better off waiting out the storm.

Buyers: Should you wait for the market bottom?

Buyers: Should you wait for the market bottom?
The housing market will continue its downward spiral, forecasts say, and that means opportunities for buyers. But waiting for the market bottom may not be the smartest strategy. Here are 5 reasons to buy now -- and 5 reasons you may want to wait.
By Melinda Fulmer, MSN Real Estate

The latest housing headlines are far from encouraging: Foreclosures are up, home prices are down and new-home sales are at record lows. All this dismal news has many buyers sitting on the sidelines, afraid to make a move. But, economists say, waiting for the bottom may not be the smartest strategy.
Calling the market low is a difficult task, and it's most often spotted in the rear-view mirror. For one thing, there's no agreement on when the U.S. real-estate market will officially touch bottom. If you believe the National Association of Realtors, it will happen later this year. Investment bank Merrill Lynch is much more pessimistic, predicting that U.S. home prices will drop another 15% this year and 10% in 2009, with perhaps even more depreciation in 2010. ...

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Thursday, February 14, 2008

Existing-home sales fell in 46 states last quarter

I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but as much as we wish it were not true, statistics do not lie! Even though sales have fallen, buyers can scoop up a great deal!

Existing-home sales fell in 46 states last quarter

Thursday, February 14, 2008 10:28 AM

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sales of existing homes fell in 46 states during the October-December quarter, with metropolitan areas showing growing weakness, a real estate trade group said today.
The fourth-quarter data from the National Association of Realtors underscore the breadth of the housing market's slump.
South Dakota was the lone state to show a sales increase. Existing home sales there rose 8.9 percent from the same quarter a year ago. Sales were unchanged in North Dakota. No sales figures were available for Idaho, Indiana and New Hampshire.
Median home prices fell in more than half of the 150 metropolitan areas surveyed. Out of the 77 that experienced declines, 16 showed double-digit percentage drops, the trade group said. The largest price declines were found in Lansing, Mich., Sacramento, Calif. and Jackson, Miss.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Short Sales?


Are you a licensed Real Estate Agent and do not want to do your short sales? Jeff Jonas will take them off your hands for you! He has been doing short sales for a number of years and also teaches short sale classes. Please email him at: jjonas@kw.com for more information. 25% referral fee to you!!

Downtown Parking Garage Gains Council Approval

Monday, February 4, 2008 11:09 PM

By Dean Narciso
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

Additional parking is essential to keep business Downtown, and plans will move ahead to build it, Columbus City Council concluded tonight.
Council’s unanimous vote came a week after charges that an eight-story, 773-space parking garage at Front and Rich streets would depreciate adjacent commercial property owned by Ohio House Minority Leader Joyce Beatty and her husband, Otto Beatty Jr., a Downtown Commission member.
The couple didn’t attend tonight’s meeting. But council was responding to objections that the Beattys had raised at a Jan. 28 council meeting, which prompted the tabling last week of legislation to move ahead on the project.
The couple had said that city officials have been unwilling to listen to their concerns that the garage would decimate business at Mrs. Beatty’s clothing shop and drive other tenants away....
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How to Sell a Home in 2008

How to SellA Home in 2008
By Amy Hoak From MarketWatch

If you're planning to sell a home in 2008, it's time to start thinking about how to make that home stand out from the rest.
But beware: Homeowners aren't able to recoup as many improvement costs as they did in recent years, according to a recent study by Remodeling magazine. In selling a home, "it's more important that it's neat, it's clean and it looks spacious, rather than making sure it's the top of the line," says Cheri Kuhn, owner of Waters Realty in Minnetonka, Minn.
"The thing I find with sellers -- if they do a lot of remodeling -- they will take the cost of the remodeling and add it to the cost of the home and ask the buyer to pay for it," she says. But often they're not going to get that higher price.....(click link for rest of story)

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

"Housing Rebound on the Way?"

Mike Pramick
The Columbus Dispatch
Jan. 25, 2008


Local home sales declined for the second straight year in 2007, further evidence that the national real-estate crisis has touched central Ohio.
What's going to happen in 2008? It depends on whether you believe in statistics or optimism.
The Columbus Board of Realtors said yesterday that sales of single-family homes and condominiums in central Ohio dropped by 6.9 percent last year to 24,445. The properties sold for an average of $172,531, down 1.2 percent from the previous year...

Best and Worst Places to Buy a Home

Best and Worst Places to Buy a House
by Danielle BabbThursday, January 24, 2008
provided by Entrepeneur.com

Whether you're looking for an investment property or a place to live, here's a look at the cities you should seek out and avoid in 2008.
The housing crunch and the excessive inventory -- exceeding 10 months on resale homes -- continues to take its toll on housing prices. But over the long term, housing is still a good investment. In fact, it's more than an investment; it's a home. Plus, you're not really saving anything by renting, as the costs of renting and owning are about equal (well, owning may be a little more). The tax benefits of home ownership far outweigh renting, too. With good housing prices in many great areas, this may indeed be the time to buy.
So now that I've convinced you this is a good time to buy a home, the next question is, Where do you buy one? No matter where you look, you should check out some basic economic fundamentals before buying. Is job growth stable in the area? Is income keeping up with inflation? Is crime above the national average? Is there a higher-than-average rate of foreclosures? These issues and others play a factor when deciding where to buy a house.
More from Entrepreneur.com: • Checking Out Online Investment AdviceTaking Your Annual Financial PulseTaking the Emotions Out of Investing
As a real estate investor and analyst, it's my job to provide buyers with qualified information on where to buy -- and where to stay away from. Here are my thoughts for 2008 based on the indicators noted above.
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Thursday, January 3, 2008

Homefront: Check this Mortgage Worry off You List

Dec. 27, 2007- Knight Ridder Tribune Business News
By: Jim Wasserman

For households mired in mortgage troubles, there's one less worry this year.

That's the nasty tax consequence of avoiding foreclosure by selling a home through a "short sale" or other loan rearrangements. Worry no more. A bill signed by President Buch last week lests homeowners off the hook for a little-known tax bite that occurs when mortgage debts are forgiven. The reprive applies to households that use short sales or other mortgage relief efforts during 2007, 2008 and 2009. The National Associations of Realtors is among those saluting the president's action, calling it "an issue of fairness and not kicking people when they are down." First, the definition of a short sale.

It is where the bank agrees to accept less that it's owed when a home sells. These sales, which enable banks to avaid the end costleier process of foreclosing and selling the house in a delining market, have become increasingly common this year. Under the standard short-sale scenario, if you sold your house this year for $350,000, but owed the bank $400,000, you'd have hefty tax consequences in 2008. The IRS would count that $50,000 in canceled debt as taxable income. It's what's known as "forgien debt" and typically triggers a 1099 tax form. But now, the IRS in required-for three years--to abandon its traditional tax rules on canceled debt.