Monday, December 9, 2013

Holiday Season is a good time to buy or sell a home




As winter’s end approaches, the housing market wakes up. All key measures of housing activity–searches, prices, starts, sales, and inventories–typically hit their annual lows in December or January. Each year, would-be buyers come out of hibernation first: search behavior starts to pick up in January, reaching its peak in March and remaining strong through August. Sales and inventories peak later in the year.
But local housing markets have their own rhythms. To see when each state’s housing market heats up, we looked at six years of search history – January 2007 to December 2012 – for properties in every state. Of course, Beach Luxury Real Estate has grown dramatically over these years, so we used a seasonal adjustment model to strip out the upward trend and uncover the regular seasonal rhythms of search behavior across the country.
Nationally, the peak months of search activity are March and April. After a slight dip in May, there’s a second peak in the summer months of June and July. As the year ends, search activity drops off. December is the slowest month, followed by November. At the state level, though, the peak month for search activity ranges from as early as January to as late as August. This month, February, is the top month for search traffic in Florida. In these warm states, winter weather is good for home searches and going to open houses. Across much of the country, though, home search activity peaks in the springtime, including in the Midwest, the Plains, and much of the West and Northeast. The summertime – June through August – is the peak for most of the South and a few states in the Northwest and northern New England. No state enjoys peak season in September, October, November, or December.
Even though the two earliest states to peak each year–Florida and Hawaii–are warm, southerly states, and the last two states are northerly Montana and Oregon, home searches generally peak later in the South than in the Northeast, Midwest, and Plains.
So here are some reasons why the Holiday Season is a Good Time to BUY or SELL A Home:
Reason #1: Lower competition means lower prices
Most people think of spring and summer as the best time to buy a house. They want to get their children settled into new schools before the start of the new school year. The warmer time of year therefore creates a seller's market, where buyers have a disadvantage. You'll find competition for the best deals and high prices.
For many people, the holiday season is the time to catch up on gift sales, festivities, and spending moments with loved ones. When you buy a house at this time, you take advantage of the low prices this natural lull in the marketing cycle creates. Like the diligent squirrel in the story, you will be one of the special few spending their time looking at houses.
Reason #2: serious sellers
Less competition means that people are motivated to sell their house. In the holiday season, buyers are a precious commodity. In fact, only 8.1 percent of home sales occur in December. Sellers know that fewer feet will be treading on their carpet, so this small window of opportunity turns you into a serious buyer with a serious edge. If the house has been listed for many weeks, you'll have even more negotiation power, especially since sellers receive a tax deduction if they sell before the end of the year. If you are genuinely earnest about wanting to buy a house and have a reasonable offer, why should a homeowner have to reschedule his holiday plans to continue showing his house and worry about selling? Here you have the leverage in price negotiation.
Reason #3: Better interest rates on mortgages
The drop in demand to buy a home at holiday season means that lenders experience less requests for mortgage money at this time. This phenomenon manifests itself in favorable mortgage terms for you -- a great reason why it's the best time to buy a house. Interest rates drop every December through January on a cyclical basis.
A lender can offer you a low interest rate or even cancel some fees to secure your patronage. Do your homework and shop around (don't forget to include the many online options) in order to get the best rate.
Loan officers advise that it's best to get prequalified with a mortgage broker or lender early because loan closing turnaround times can range from 30 to 60 days.
Reason #4: Tax deduction
Buying a house and closing before the end of the year may give you a much-appreciated tax deduction. You have a good chance to be able to subtract the interest component of the initial mortgage payment from that year's taxable income. Speak to a qualified tax advisor to find out how mortgage interest deduction may be applicable to your circumstances.
Reason #5: Faster closings
Faster closings are historically more available in November and December, because of fewer overall transactions in the industry. Because lenders want to close their books at the end of the year, they may be inspired to close a transaction more quickly for people buying homes at this time.
Reason #6: Enjoy your summer vacation
Finally, do you really want to spend your summer vacation overwhelmed with the demands of buying a house? If you're moved in during the winter, you're freed up to enjoy summer activities. If you do some landscaping work in the winter, you'll even enjoy the warm weather more when the fruits of your labors become a pruned and blooming property in the spring.
If you put in some planning and effort to buy a home during the winter months, then you can relax and enjoy yourself more than those caught up in the spring and summer house-buying frenzy.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Miami, FL is the # 1 City where home buyers are paying cash



All-cash home sales jumped in August, making up nearly half of residential real estate transactions, according to data just released by the real estate data firm RealtyTrac.
Last month, 45 percent of sales were all cash. The last time the nation cracked the 40 percent barrier for all-cash sales was more than a year ago. All-cash transactions are at the highest level they've been since March 2012, when they hit 52%. And in the following 11 big metro areas last month with populations of a million or more, most home sales were all-cash transactions,

11. New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, LA
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 51%
… in July: 36%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 34%

10. Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 52%
… in July: 49%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 36%

(tie) 8. Memphis, TN-MS-AR
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 53%
… in July: 40%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 44%
(tie) 8. Cincinnati-Middletown, OH-KY-IN
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 53%
… in July: 42%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 35%

7. Kansas City, MO-KS
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 54%
… in July: 34%
… a year ago, in August 2012: not available

6. Orlando-Kissimmee, FL
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 63%
… in July: 55%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 43%

5. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 64%
… in July: 60%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 53%

4. Jacksonville, FL
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 65%
… in July: 61%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 47%

3. Las Vegas-Paradise, NV
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 66%
… in July: 68%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 52%

2. Detroit-Warren-Livonia, MI
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 68%
… in July: 59%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 59%

1. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL
Percentage of sales that were all cash in August: 69%
… in July: 67%
… a year ago, in August 2012: 62%

Find more information in: www.beachluxuryrealestate.com / newsletter.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Real Estate Buyer’s Market Over ?

 

You don’t usually find clearance sales on real estate. But the last two years are beginning to look like the deal of a lifetime for anybody who bought a home.
That dynamic may now be changing as home prices surge by double-digits, interest rates rise and the whole housing bust recedes into the past. The latest sign that the buyer’s market is ending is a convincing improvement in foreclosures. Sales of foreclosed homes now account for about 12% of home sales, according to research firm FNC. That’s down from 17% a year ago and 37% in 2009, the low point of the housing bust. At the current pace, foreclosures will fall back to typical pre-recession levels within a year or so, signaling something like a return to a normal housing market.
That’s an important economic indicator that also has a tangible effect on buyers and sellers in the real world. An epidemic of foreclosures has been one of the factors pushing prices down to depressed levels and keeping sellers on the sidelines. With prices as low as they’ve been, many people who bought within the last five or even 10 years couldn’t sell their homes without taking a loss. That stunted the whole economy by preventing people from moving to better areas where there might be more job opportunities and discouraging first-time home owners from moving up to bigger, nicer homes.
With fewer foreclosures, there’s less of a discount on distressed homes, and firmer prices overall. In 2009, foreclosed homes sold for about 25% less than their estimated value, according to FNC. Today, they sell for about 8% less than their estimated value. Since foreclosure discounts drag down prices on all homes, it’s no surprise that home prices fell sharply when there was a spike in foreclosures. Prices bottomed out in the first half of 2012 and are now rising by about 12 percent year over year, according to a variety of home-price indexes.
There’s some evidence now that trade-up buyers are finally, well, trading up. Sales of lower-priced entry-level homes that might typically appeal to first-time buyers are falling, possibly because new buyers are still struggling to get credit. But sales of higher-priced homes that would typically appeal to second- or third-time buyers are rising. “The recovery is partly driven by a rising presence of trade-up buyers who are in a position to take advantage of low home prices,” FNC’s recent report says.
This comes at the same time that 30-year mortgage rates have spiked from about 3.5% in April to more than 4.5% now. That obviously makes homes more expensive, but it might also spur more potential buyers into action, since waiting could expose them to even higher rates. The median sales price of a home, around $214,000, is now high enough for the typical seller to turn a small profit on the sale, which comes in handy for families that are turning around and buying another house. It might even offset higher costs that come with rising prices and higher rates.
That’s why the end of the buyer’s market isn’t the end of the housing recovery. If anything, it marks the return to a more rational market in which buyers and sellers both have some leverage. Among other things, rising prices ought to lure more sellers to put their homes up for sale, increasing the supply of homes and putting a check on rising prices. That seems not to have happened yet, but many economists expect it will soon.
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve is closely watching the housing market as it considers whether to rein in in its easy-money policies, since housing is a huge part of the economy and can make or break a recovery. The Fed could have intervened over the last four months as long-term rates rose, and pushed them back down. But it was conspicuous in its choice not to, which suggest the Fed feels the housing recovery has enough momentum to withstand higher rates. A bit more of a seller’s market would make it official.
- See more at: http://activerain.com/blogsview/4196203/real-estate-buyer-s-market-over-#sthash.lEWa2Fmy.dpuf

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Foreclosure Florida

Here's a snapshot to the Foreclosure Process in Florida
 Homes in foreclosure: 237,187
 Pct. foreclosed homes vacant: 23%
 Foreclosure rate:1/383
Since the beginning of 2008, home prices in Florida have fallen by more than a quarter, more than every other state except Nevada. Homosassa Springs, Florida, has the highest rate of foreclosure vacancies in the country among large metro areas, with over 40% of foreclosed homes vacant. The state has more than 50,000 vacant foreclosed homes, over a third of the total for the country. Second-place Illinois has only 15,585 zombie homes. The state’s long foreclosure process has likely contributed to the number of homes remaining in foreclosure, as well as the percent of homeowners opting to give up on their foreclosed property. Florida takes 907 days on average for home to be foreclosed, the third longest process in the country.
- See more at: http://activerain.com/blogsview/4191410/foreclosure-florida#sthash.oWG7Dlby.dpuf

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Florida Real Estate Market Lessons


Data show that Florida's housing market might be in a sweet spot. Prices remain low, as Florida was among the states hit hardest by the collapse of the housing bubble, but prices are on the rise, so a purchase now would appear less risky than it would have a year ago.
But Florida also offers some object lessons. Its volatile housing market demonstrates the importance of thinking clearly about the pros and cons of buying a home when you don't have to. Placing the wrong bet can be very, very dangerous.
A large portion of Florida's housing market is driven by people who don't really need to buy, such as retirees who could stay where they are in other parts of the country and second-home buyers who could wait if conditions aren't right. That makes them more fickle than people who must move for a job or growing family. As a result, Florida home prices tend to swing to extremes.
Because of the market's volatility, anyone considering buying a retirement or second home in Florida should pay special attention to some key questions.
First, how easily can the balance of supply and demand change? On many of the barrier islands off the East Coast, for instance, there's not much room for further development, so it's unlikely a flood of new homes will depress prices in these areas. But in many areas just a few miles away on the mainland there's plenty of undeveloped land. As prices rise, developers tend to break ground on single-family homes and condos, and that new supply slows the price gains or reverses them.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Home Prices Are Climbing At The Fastest Pace Since 1977


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RELATED QUOTES

SymbolPriceChange
ITB21.91-0.47
XHB29.85-0.76
 

Home prices (including distressed sales) climbed 11.9% year-over-year in June, according to CoreLogic's latest home price report. This is the sixteenth straight monthly rise in home prices. Prices were up 1.9% month-over-month.
Ex-distressed sales (short sales and REO transactions), home prices were up 11% on the year, and 1.8% MoM.
Meanwhile, in the first half of the year, home prices were up 10%. "This trend in home price gains is moving at the fastest pace since 1977," said CoreLogic's chief economist, Mark Fleming in a press release.
Here are some details from the report:
  • Including distressed sales home prices rose the most in Nevada, up 26.5% and fell the most in Mississippi, down 2.1%.
  • Ex-distressed sales home prices climbed the most in Nevada, up 23.6%, and no state saw home prices fall.
  •  The peak-to-current decline in home prices, from April 2006 to June 2013, was 19%.
  • The CoreLogic Pending home price index suggests that home prices will rise 12.5% on a YoY basis in July, and 1.8% on the month.
Here's a look at the trajectory of home prices from 2002 on:
corelogic june home price

Monday, July 29, 2013

What you need to know before you get a mortgage


You're looking into buying your first home or refinancing your existing loan to a lower interest rate - congrats! But while you probably know the basics of the mortgage process, did you know there are a whole lot of nitty-gritty details that can go into getting the best deal on your mortgage?
In fact, there is a lot of information that could save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars in what may be the biggest financial decision of your life.
If you think you may have missed the boat on getting a lower mortgage rate, you may think it's too late to refinance - especially when you see interest rates rising every week.
In fact, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), on July 5, 2013, the average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage increased to 4.68 - an increase of .10 percent from June 28th. This is the highest rate since March 2012. 
Though this news may dishearten homeowners who didn't jump at the chance to refinance when rates were at rock bottom, our experts say not to give up on the idea of refinancing just yet.

What kind of rate trends do experts predict for the rest of 2013?

Predicting mortgage interest rates is always tricky business. While our experts have different thoughts on the future of interest rates throughout the rest of 2013, neither of them see rates going down in the near future.
We're already starting to see rates rise in 2013, and we expect to see that continue.
That's why we spoke to three experts in the mortgage field who told it like it is.
Truth #1: Prequalification Doesn't Mean Much
If you receive a letter saying you're prequalified for a mortgage, don't start celebrating just yet. That's because when it comes to a mortgage, getting prequalified could mean nothing at all.
Here's why: Anyone can say they make a certain amount and their credit is great and get "prequalified," But that's merely based on words, without any hard evidence.
"So you can pretty much pre-qualify for anything you want, but that's very different than actually filling out a loan application and verifying what's on the loan application," . This process of actually filling out the loan application leads to a preapproval - which is what really counts.
"Preapproval means the loan originator has obtained documentation to support claims that, for example, the borrower makes a certain amount of dollars per month, or the borrower has good credit," .
The moral here? Documentation and approval - which, again, is different than qualifying - is the only assurance that you'll actually get a mortgage.

Truth #2: Not Everyone Gets Approved for the Lowest Rates Advertised

Remember the old adage, "If something's too good to be true, it probably is"? Well, keep that in mind when shopping mortgage rates, or seeing ads that advertise rock-bottom mortgage interest rates.
One problem with these ads, is that often the rates advertised are for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs), or even 10-year mortgages - which are not usually the loans desired by consumers.
"Most people want 30-year mortgages," . But those rates are higher. "It's the classic bait and switch" .
Further, even if the rate is indeed for a 30-year mortgage, usually only a select few borrowers qualify for the lowest rates advertised.
While there are many elements that go into determining your mortgage interest rate,  one of the biggest factors is your credit score, which can run from 300 to 850. And the higher your score, the better interest rate you'll get.

Truth #3: "No Cost" Loans May Not Be Exactly What They Seem

The mortgage business is in fact a business. So just as you wouldn't expect your mattress salesman or auto mechanic to give you products or services for free, don't expect your mortgage lender to either.
When you refinance with no points or fees, what you're really doing is adding those costs onto your loan balance. No closing costs basically means, 'we'll lend you the closing costs.
In other words, they'll build the fees and costs into the amount you are financing so there is no money due up front. This way, you're not only paying the fees and costs, but you're also paying interest on them for up to 30 years. For example, if you have a $300,000 loan with $10,000 in closing costs, your loan amount would be $310,000 instead.
Another scenario is that the lender will actually not charge fees at all,  but charge you a higher interest rate to make up for it.
What they're doing is selling the borrower a higher rate. And so the borrower does pay. They pay in the form of a slightly higher payment every month.
To be fair, there are times when these types of mortgages could make financial sense,  if, for example, you are lowering your current mortgage interest rate by enough.
But the point remains: check the fine print and get the whole truth about your mortgage.

Truth #4: You Should Not Feel Pressured to Lock Your Loan

If you are refinancing your current mortgage or getting a new one for a home you are buying, there will come a time when your mortgage broker or lender will ask you if you want to "lock" the loan. This means that you accept the terms of the mortgage, including the interest rate. After you lock, that is your rate, whether interest rates go up or down in the mortgage market.
And here's the thing: that can be a stressful time, especially if your loan originator is pressuring you to lock, it should not be.
Consumers should never feel under pressure at any time by their loan originator to commit. That's used car salesman tactics. The reason the consumer is being pressured is because the deal that's being offered is not that good. Therefore, the lender wants them to lock so they don't go and shop rates from other lenders.

Rising interest rates mean that many homeowners are left wondering if it's still worth it to refinance.