Tag Archives: Property Types

Google home searches up 243% in four years!

Real estate-related searches on Google.com have grown 253 percent over the past four years, according to a joint study from the National Association of Realtors® and Google called The Digital House Hunt: Consumer and Market Trends in Real Estate.

“These results parallel the trends shown in NAR’s economic research reports,” says NAR President Gary Thomas. “As home sales and prices continue to trend up, more people are regaining confidence to invest in their future through homeownership.”

According to the analysis, buyers used specific online tools at different points during the home search process. Buyers tend to rely on search engines and general websites when they begin their search, use maps more in the middle of the process, and engage mobile applications most toward the end of their search.

In their online search queries, first-time buyers frequently searched terms like “FHA loan,” “FHA,” “home grants,” “home loan,” and “home buyer assistance.” Last year, more than four out of 10 first-time buyers purchased their homes with a Federal Housing Administration-insured mortgage. Mirroring the Google/NAR study, search activity on Realtor.com has also picked up significantly in recent months – a 31 percent increase nationwide between March and October.

According to Google internal data, the five states with the highest number of online queries from people who can be presumed to be first-time buyers were Delaware, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Dakota and Wyoming. Queries related to retirement homes were highest in Nebraska, North Carolina, Oregon, Virginia and Washington. For vacation home searches, the top five states were Florida, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina and South Dakota.

Another change of note: Mobile devices are significantly changing the way people search for homes. According to results from Google’s home shopper research with Compete, 48 percent of people who used a mobile device in their home search used the device to get directions to homes for sale, and 45 percent used the device to request more information about specific home features or real estate services.

“Increasingly, online technologies are driving offline behaviors, and home buying is no exception,” says Google Head of Real Estate Patrick Grandinetti. “With 90 percent of home buyers searching online during their home buying process, the real estate industry is smart to target these people where they look for and consume information – for example through paid search, relevant websites, video environments and mobile applications.”

Source: Florida Realtors®

Is the Strain of Foreclosure Crushing You? You have options!

Is The Strain of You Mortgage Crushing You?A lot has changed since you bought your home.

If you or someone you know is among the 10 million homeowners who are falling further behind every single month because of an unmanageable mortgage payment, then that weight may feel unbearable. But there is actually some encouraging news: Government incentives, coupled with banks willing to help stem the foreclosure tide, are providing new opportunity.

You have options, and foreclosure is not one of them!

As a real estate professional with the Certified Distressed Property Expert (CDPE) designation, I offer all of my clients the benefit of the best expertise and insights when it comes to foreclosure avoidance.

Take a look at my site and download a copy of my free report entitled “Is the Strain of Foreclosure Crushing You?” Then contact me for a free, confidential consultation.

Brian Pearl,
REALTOR, CRS, CIAS, CDPE
[email protected]
www.pearlrealestategroup.com
www.flshortsaledept.com

New Single Family Home Development in West Boca Coming Soon…

NEWS RELEASE

Limited Opportunity To Buy Exclusive West Boca Homes:

Minto Communities Announces New Model At Boca Reserve

Six home designs in Mission, West Indies and Palm Beach styles offer breathtaking beauty for 44 single-family homes in exclusive enclave community.

BOCA RATON, Fla. – October 26, 2012 – In a community internationally known for its culture, arts and luxury, Steve Svopa, vice president of Minto Communities, today announced the construction of its first furnished model in Boca Reserve, an enclave community of 44 limited edition homes that raise the bar even higher.

Paying homage to great Palm Beach, Mission and West Indies styles of yesterday and today, Minto’s model features towering rotundas, dramatic foyers with symmetrical staircases, a luxurious master bedroom and an airy gourmet kitchen. Prices start in the high $400s.

“As we developed communities in West Palm,WellingtonandFort Lauderdale, home buyers told us of the need for elegant new homes inWest Boca,” states Svopa. “Through our special enclave community of 44 homes, we fill that need with exceptional value for innovative designs, features and quality.”

The furnished model, called The Callista, includes four bedrooms, three and half baths, den and family room under 3,652 A/C Sq. Ft. The two-story model also features a four-car garage, covered patio and balcony and a beautifully landscaped lot.

The Callista, like all 44 limited edition homes in Boca Reserve, includes ENERGY STAR® certified products and a generous offering of premium standard features such as:

  • 10’ tray or vaulted ceilings
  • 18” ceramic floor tile
  • Complete GE® Energy Star® appliances
  • Granite countertops in kitchen, baths and laundry rooms
  • Low-E double pane, insulated windows
  • Upgraded kitchen cabinets

The private enclave community also features water front and conservation homesites with stunning views.

Boca Reserve is located onWest Palmetto Park Road, west of US-441 in West Boca.

Not All Sunsets Are Beautiful…

 

In 2007, the Mortgage Debt Relief Act was passed in an attempt to help the millions of homeowners who, due to the housing crisis and economic crash, suddenly found themselves in danger of losing their home to foreclosure.

The act has helped many distressed homeowners find solutions to avoid foreclosure and opened up options to them that were previously unavailable.

The Mortgage Debt Relief Act, however, was only intended to be a temporary solution and is now set to expire at the end of 2012. There is a bill in Congress that would extend it, but it is unclear if it will pass. For distressed homeowners, this means that time is limited to take advantage of this program.

Time is running out. But there is still a chance to change your financial direction and avoid foreclosure.

Don’t let time run out on you.  Contact me today and visit my website for more information and FREE reports:

www.FLShortSaleDept.com

Lennar announces new luxury lakefront development in Parkland, Florida

Parkland has long been known as one of Broward County’s most desired, prestigious addresses with a variety of intimate, luxurious residential enclaves and neighborhoods. Lennar is about to raise the bar with the introduction of MiraLago, their gated master-planned community, slated to open later this fall.

“The uniqueness and splendor of this community starts with the intrinsic ‘wow factor’ of the actual site – the largest lake in Parkland. The existing shoreline is comprised of a number of ‘peninsulas’ that will provide the majority of the home sites with expansive, panoramic lake views,” explained Carlos Gonzalez, president of Lennar’s Southeast Florida Division.

Residents of MiraLago will also enjoy a spectacular clubhouse, perfect for families of all ages. Once completed, Club MiraLago will offer both indoor and outdoor amenities that will easily compare to a luxury resort. With its great location, residents will be close to everything they enjoy, including fine dining and retail establishments, shopping and local attractions. Plus, children will have the opportunity to attend A-rated Parkland schools.

While the homes at MiraLago will represent exceptional luxury, they will also offer some of the best values in homebuilding today. With Lennar’s “Everything’s Included,” buyers are given a wide variety of luxury features and upgrades included in the price. The program’s recent enhancements include more features and enhanced energy efficiency and technology at no additional charge. What others call options, Lennar calls standard features,” said Gonzalez.

Will rentals thrive in a seller’s market?

There’s been plenty of talk about how the housing bust propelled the rental market to new heights as people skipped buying a home and decided renting made much more sense.

But now as the housing market enters an unsteady recovery phase, the relationship between the two sides of the market is shifting. Now it seems that markets favoring sellers are often places where apartment developers are looking to build. So in this case rentals would benefit not from a weak housing market, but a strong one.

The best places to sell your home are almost exclusively in the West and Southwest of the country, according to a new report from real-estate listings service Zillow. The best places to buy, generally, are on the East Coast or in Midwestern Rust Belt cities. Zillow’s calculation is based on a number of factors, including a comparison of sales prices and list prices and the number of days it takes to sell a home.

In many of the cities where sellers have the most negotiating power – San Jose, Calif., San Francisco, Austin and Phoenix, for example – apartment construction is heating up as well. That’s according to apartment pipeline data from Axiometrics Inc., a real-estate data firm that recently launched a research tool that tracks the number of planned apartment units.

The trend makes sense: Developers deciding to pull the trigger on construction of new apartment building look at a lot of different factors, including the renting versus owning balance of a market. If a city is a true sellers’ market, that’s a sign that more of the population moving there or starting a new household will turn to rentals until the market comes back into balance.

Similarly, in markets where buyers have the upper hand, like Cincinatti, Cleveland, Providence, Jacksonville and Hartford, Conn., developers have less interest in building rentals, a sign that apartment builders are shying away from the competition from for-sale single-family homes.

There are, of course, some exceptions.

Perennially an outlier, New York City is considered by Zillow to be the nation’s No. 4 “buyers’ market,” but Axiometrics shows that 111 projects, with nearly 40,000 new apartments, are planned for the next few years. That’s probably because New York, with its strong job market and a population that’s almost continually turning over, has seemingly endless demand, despite rising apartment rents.

On the other side, some markets that have seen steep price declines, like Las Vegas, Sacramento, Riverside, Calif., and Salt Lake City, are considered “sellers’ markets” by Zillow because of bidding wars that have erupted as investors, often paying all-cash, look to convert foreclosed homes into rentals.

But none of those markets have much in their apartment pipelines. Apartment builders know they can’t really compete with single-family rentals or a market where retail buyers can still purchase a home cheaply from a bank or an investor looking to get rid of it quickly.

Source: WSJ Online

Increase in short sales give market a little breathing room

It’s a tarnished silver lining for people at risk of losing their houses and homeowners in neighborhoods blighted by bank-owned properties, but the robosigning scandal that slowed the foreclosure process to a crawl appears to have increased lender interest in short sales.

“Foreclosure sales are pretty devastating,” said Faith Schwartz, executive director of Hope Now, a resource for homeowners facing foreclosure. “We’d much prefer a modification, but if [homeowners] don’t quality, then the next best alternative is deed-in-lieu or short sales.”

Short sales, in which the lender agrees to let the owner sell the home for less than the amount owed on the mortgage, and foreclosures both climbed in 2010, but while short sales rose by 26,000 this year, the number of foreclosures fell by 255,000, according to Hope Now. Short sales, along with deed-in-lieu of foreclosure deals in which the lender takes the deed essentially as payment for the mortgage, still upend families, torch credit ratings and hurt neighboring property values, but they’re far less toxic than foreclosures.

Short sales are better for homeowners. They can stay in their homes, and the quicker process means they can begin rebuilding their credit sooner. Credit scoring firm Fair Isaac Co., which developed the FICO score, says foreclosures and short sales slash the same number of points from a homeowner’s credit score. Homeowners with short sales may be able to obtain a loan sooner than foreclosed homeowners, though, which can improve their credit.

In some states, mortgage lenders can pursue a delinquency judgement against homeowners for the difference between the amount due on the mortgage and the purchase price at a foreclosure auction. A delinquent homeowner engaging in a short sale has an opportunity to negotiate away the bank’s right to sue for that judgement.

The biggest plus for banks is that they stand to make more from a short sale than a foreclosure. According to foreclosure specialists RealtyTrac.com, the average price of a foreclosed home in the second quarter of 2011 was $164,217, while the average price of a short sale was $192,129.

Besides yielding less, foreclosures also cost lenders more in legal and administrative resources. “The incentives against foreclosing are even larger now,” Karen Dynan, co-director of the Economic Studies program at the Brookings Institution, said via email. “Servicers are facing enormous staffing constraints because they are trying to deal with so many distressed properties, so it is probably even harder now to find the staff to do the paperwork for the foreclosure.”

Lenders are also spending more on due diligence, she said. “Servicers and lenders are being heavily scrutinized right now so they probably are more worried than ever about making a mistake in a foreclosure that could subject them to legal liability in the future.”

Neighborhoods also benefit from short sales rather than foreclosures. “Short sales typically sell at less of a discount than foreclosure sales do,” Jed Kolko, chief economist at real estate website Trulia.com, said via email. “Also, foreclosed homes often sit vacant while short sales are re-occupied more quickly. For both these reasons, short sales tend to depress neighboring property values less than foreclosures do.”

Another issue that plagues foreclosures is vandalism, either from opportunistic criminals preying on vacant homes or from disgruntled homeowners. “It’s often not a friendly process so you frequently have cases where people deliberately vandalize homes,” Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said.

Some economists worry that the drop in foreclosures is less an indication of lenders’ willingness to compromise and more a function of a huge backlog of foreclosures that haven’t been processed. “Foreclosures are going to be a drag on the market for along period of time,” Baker said. Until these distressed homes are resold and assimilated back into the market, real estate prices can’t stabilize.

Baker added, though, that lenders facing years’ worth of legal wrangling and costs to execute a foreclosure may be more willing to accept a buyer’s offer in a short sale.

The other caveat is that short sales aren’t an option for all distressed homeowners. Short sales are contingent on the ability of sometimes multiple lenders to agree on a price that a buyer is also willing to pay. For people who took out multiple mortgages or have other liens, this presents a challenge. “It’s just a little more complicated when you have more parties involved,” Schwartz said.

Source: Associated Press

Finally some good news! Inventory of homes for sale shrinking in South Florida.

The number of homes and condominiums for sale across South Florida has steadily declined over the past two years, an encouraging sign for the region’s battered housing market.  Broward County had 19,869 properties on the market in July, down 35 percent from July 2008, according to a multiple listing service report compiled by the Keyes Co. Palm Beach County’s inventory of homes and condos slid 31 percent to 23,947 during the same period.  The supply of new homes being built in the two counties also has decreased sharply in the past two years, said Brad Hunter of the Metrostudy research firm in Palm Beach Gardens.  In 2005, sellers rushed to list their homes, hoping to fetch record prices during the housing boom. But the frenzy led to a collapse and prices plummeted.  Thousands of foreclosures and short sales have clogged the market ever since, giving buyers plenty of choices and little reason to pay top dollar.  “You won’t get price appreciation until you get the inventory in balance,” said Mike Pappas, president of Keyes. “We’re making great strides.”  Declines in homes for sale already have helped stabilize prices recently.  The median price in Broward rose 7 percent during April, May and June to $209,800 from a year ago, the Florida Realtors said Wednesday. Palm Beach County’s median increased at the beginning of the year but dipped 2 percent in the second quarter to $235,500.  Pappas said his firm is handling fewer transactions involving foreclosed homes, and he thinks that’s an indication the foreclosure market has peaked.

Copyright © 2010 Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Paul Owers. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.