Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Nothing like waiting for the last minute

The House of Representatives voted on Tuesday to extend by three months the closing deadline for the home buyer tax credit, setting the stage for a possible last-minute reprieve with Wednesday’s deadline looming.

The extension of the tax credit worth up to $8,000 isn’t a “sure thing” yet. The Senate still needs to pass the House measure, and President Obama would have to sign it into law.

The Senate had approved a similar provision earlier this month, but it was included in a larger tax package that failed to secure enough votes when it was considered last week. On Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) said he would again try to bring the extension up for a vote, along with other measures, including retroactively reinstating federal unemployment insurance benefits.

In recent weeks, lenders and real-estate companies have warned of bottlenecks that could lead thousands of potential buyers to miss out on the credit that they thought they were getting.

Congress first created a tax credit for homeowners in 2008. It was extended and expanded twice during 2009. The most recent extension said that house purchase contracts would have to be signed by April 30, and home buyers would have until June 30 to close on those sales. The House proposal would give buyers who met April’s contract deadline until Sept. 30 to finalize those purchases. The credit wouldn’t be available to buyers who weren’t under contract before April 30, though the change has raised concerns that some tax-cheats might submit bogus claims.

View original article here: http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2010/06/29/will-congress-extend-the-tax-credit-closing-deadline/

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Monday, June 28, 2010

New Sponsors on www.1000CoolPeople.com

We've had great feedback and response on www.1000CoolPeople.com, our project to inform and entice people to historic downtown Savannah. Check out our updates.

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Mortgage rates at lowest point since mid-1950s

I feel like I'm posting this every week, but mortgages are again at historic lows. I speak often about good news/bad news situations. For home buyers and sellers, this is good news. Nothing is ever bad about houses being more affordable for people.

National average for a 30-year fixed loan dips to 4.69 percent

Mortgages are cheaper today than they've been in a half-century. If only most people had the job security, the credit rating and the cash to qualify for one or refinance.

The average rate for a 30-year fixed loan sank to 4.69 percent this week, beating the low set in December and down from 4.75 percent last week, Freddie Mac said Thursday. Rates for 15-year and five-year mortgages also hit lows.

Rates are at their lowest since the mortgage company began keeping records in 1971. The last time they were any cheaper was the 1950s, when most long-term home loans lasted just 20 or 25 years.

Almost no one expects falling rates to energize the economy, though. Sales of new homes collapsed in May after an enticing tax credit expired.

"As long as prospective homebuyers are still concerned about their jobs and financial well-being, many will be reluctant to take the plunge, even though affordability has never been better," said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst with Bankrate.com.

Rates have fallen over the past two months as investors have become nervous about Europe's debt crisis and the global economy and have shifted money into safe Treasury bonds. The demand has caused Treasury yields to fall. Mortgage rates track those yields.

While mortgages are getting cheaper, low interest rates hurt Americans who are trying to save. Puny rates for savings accounts and CDs are especially hard on people who are living on fixed incomes and earning next to nothing on their money.

Americans normally rush to refinance when rates plummet. But refinancing activity now amounts to less than half the level of early 2009, when long-term rates hovered around 5 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Besides, many people who want to refinance — and are able to — have already done it, said Michael Fratantoni, vice president of research and economics at the trade group. And refinancing costs can total several thousand dollars.

"Rates haven't dropped low enough to justify a second refinancing," Fratantoni said. "The group of people who could potentially benefit is much smaller than it was 15 months ago."

Another factor: Many Americans owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth and can't refinance through the usual channels. The Obama administration has launched programs to help borrowers refinance if they owe up to 25 percent more than their home's value and have their loans guaranteed by mortgage giants Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae.

About 291,000 homeowners have participated as of March — a small fraction of the estimated 15 million homeowners who are "underwater" on their mortgages. And in Nevada and Florida, where home prices have fallen 50 percent or more from their highs, neither record-low rates nor government help can rescue homeowners.

"It's not the desire to refinance. It's the ability to refinance," said Chris Brown, a loan officer with Trinity Mortgage Co. in Orlando, Fla.

Refinancing is generally considered worthwhile for homeowners who can shave at least three-quarters of a percentage point off the rates they pay now and plan to stay in their homes for a long time.

Besides the fees for the mortgage broker or lender, there are fees for title insurance, a new appraisal, document processing and other charges. And in "no fee" mortgages, costs are often added to the loan amount or the interest rate is higher.

To figure the national average, Freddie Mac collects mortgage rates each Monday through Wednesday from lenders around the country. Rates often fluctuate, even within a given day.

Rates on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages fell to an average of 4.13 percent. That was the lowest since at least 1991 and down from 4.2 percent a week earlier.

Rates on five-year adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 3.84 percent, down from 3.89 percent a week earlier. That was also the lowest on Freddie Mac's records, which date to January 2005 for those loans.

View the original article here: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37896585/ns/business-real_estate/

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Good news, bad news?

If you're a homebuilder, seeing new home sales decrease to record lows is bad. If you're a home buyer, that's not necessarily a bad thing--you should be seeing incentives from builders. And of course we have historically low interest rates. So good news for buyers. Bad news for homebuilders. Story below.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- New home sales plummeted to a record low in May, the first month following the expiration of the homebuyer tax credit. This snapped a two-month streak of gains.

New home sales declined 32.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 300,000 last month, down from an downwardly revised 446,000 in April, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. Sales year-over-year fell 18.3%.

This is the slowest sales pace since the Commerce Department began tracking data in 1963. The prior record was set in September 1981, when new homes sold at an annual rate of 338,000.

"We expected a slowdown, but the extent of this decline was a surprise," said Anika Khan, an economist at Wells Fargo. The figure was even worse than her relatively pessimistic forecast of an annual rate of 380,000 in May.

A consensus of economists surveyed by Briefing.com had expected May sales to slide to an annual rate of 430,000.

"Clearly, the lack of a tax credit had a lot to do with it, and it's going to be a bit of a bumpy road ahead as we get a few more months of payback," Khan said.

Home sales had surged in March and April as homebuyers scrambled to sign contracts ahead of the April 30 deadline for the tax credit. First-time homebuyers qualified for a tax credit up to $8,000, while repeat buyers could get as much as a $6,500 break.

Homebuyers have until June 30 to close deals, but the Senate may vote to push that deadline back to Sept. 30.

Khan expects home sales to remain depressed through the third quarter as home construction continues to contract and lending standards remain tight. But, she said, sales should pick up slightly in the fourth quarter.

Although, she added, we are still years away from a normal level of new home sales -- an annual rate between 800,000 and 900,000.

"A full housing recovery is contingent on employment," Khan said. "When we see the unemployment rate abate, and some growth in salaries and incomes, we'll get some sustainable momentum in the housing market."

A real estate industry report released earlier this week showed that existing home sales, based closed sales rather than signed contracts, slipped slightly last month but remained elevated.

Price and inventory: The government report showed that the median price of new homes sold in May was $200,900, down less than 1% from April but a 9.6% drop from May 2009.

An estimated 213,000 new homes were for sale at the end of May, the lowest inventory level in more than 40 years.

Still, at the current sales pace, the government expects it will take 8.5 months to sell through that inventory, up from 5.8 months in April. Six months of inventory is considered normal market conditions.

Sales by region: Sales fell the most in the West, where they decreased by more than 50%; the Northwest saw sales declined by about a third. Sales in the South and Midwest declined by about 25%.

View original article here: http://money.cnn.com/2010/06/23/real_estate/new_home_sales/index.htm

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Monday, June 21, 2010

$8000 first-time buyer credit extension drama

First-time buyers who were under contract by April 30th and closed by June 30th were eligible for an $8000 tax credit. We had a rush of people getting under contract by April 30th, but now we have a backlog and builders and lenders are having trouble getting these people closed. Historic Downtown Savannah was no exception and we had first-timers looking to take advantage of the tax credit, although not as many as there should have been--I still don't understand why more people didn't take the $8000. Last week the Senate approved a bill to give those buyers an extension on closing until September 30th. I can tell you I've closed all my first-timers except for one, and we are definitely eager to see whether this bill will now be approved by the House, and whether we'll the bill will pass before June 30th. Confused about how a bill becomes a law? A refresher: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mEJL2Uuv-oQ

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Friday, June 18, 2010

It's official--1000 Cool People has launched

We're looking for 1000 Cool People to join us in historic downtown Savannah. I love downtown, and I'd love to see more people living down here, so I'm launching www.1000CoolPeople.com in an effort to promote the greater downtown area. Not only will the site have information about downtown, but I'm creating an incentive package for out-of-towners to make the move to Savannah. Those include discounts on rents or home purchases, discounts from local retailers, and even free meals at downtown restaurants. I'll be announcing all the incentives over the coming weeks, but for now, please check out www.1000CoolPeople.com!

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Mortgage Demand Jumps After Tax Credit Payback

Faithful readers will recall that two weeks ago, I blogged that home loan applications were at lows. Now the numbers have jumped. Not to sound like a broken record--does anyone use that expression anymore in our digital age?--but trying to interpret this data, and figure out the best time to buy your house is impossible. Buy when a house makes sense from a price and payment standpoint, not when you think rates or prices are low, or are getting lower, or higher, or whatever. Get in the market when it makes sense.

Published:
Wednesday, 16 Jun 2010, Reuters

U.S. mortgage demand jumped to a five-month peak last week, with applications to buy homes up from 13-year lows set in the wake of buyer tax credits while refinance loans hit the highest level since May 2009.

Mortgage purchase applications rose 7.3 percent after sinking five weeks in payback for steamy demand before the April 30 deadline for $8,000 in tax credits, the Mortgage Bankers Association said on Wednesday.

Borrowing costs hovering near record lows sparked a rush last week to cut costs on existing loans, driving the refinance applications index up 21.1 percent to the highest level in 13 months.

Total home loan applications, up 17.7 percent in the week on a seasonally adjusted basis, have not been higher since mid-December, according to the industry group.

It is premature to determine that the tax credit hangover has fully played out and the U.S. housing market is crossing the threshold into recovery.

"While it is clear that purchase applications in May dropped sharply as a result of the tax credit induced increase in applications in April, it is unclear whether we are seeing the beginnings of a rebound now," Michael Fratantoni, MBA's vice president of research and economics, said in a statement.

In a sign of ongoing stress in the housing market, builder sentiment sank this month as the end of tax incentives clouded prospects for future sales, the National Association of Home Builders said on Tuesday.

Requests for refinancing continue to overshadow purchases.

About 3 of every four mortgage applications — 74.8 percent — was for a refinancing last week. That was the highest share since mid-December.

Average 30-year home loan rates climbed 1 basis point but stayed low historically at 4.82 percent.

Long-term mortgage rates have fallen as low as 4.61 percent in March 2009, according to the MBA, but remain about ½ percentage point below the recent high of 5.31 percent in April.

View original article here: http://www.cnbc.com/id/37725263

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Housing Starts Drop to Five-Month Low in May

Stories like this are why it's so hard to predict the future of real estate, which is why I always say that you shouldn't be focused on some of these numbers, but more focused on the affordability of your potential home (if you have a good loan, and a good price, and a good house, then it's time to buy. You cannot time to market). There are two ways to look at the news story below. The first is to say that builders aren't building and that's a problem for the housing market. The other way is to say that builders aren't building and that's a good thing for the housing market, because we already have plenty of houses on the market for buyers to choose from, and excess inventory doesn't help anyone. I'm personally happy to see this number drop a bit, as I think reducing the number of homes on the market helps establish more market equilibrium. And by the way, builders ARE building; they are just building less. I wonder if the data included the new construction home my investors are working on in Savannah's Victorian Historic District.

Published:
Wednesday, 16 Jun 2010
By Reuters

U.S. housing starts fell more than expected in May to their lowest level in five months, a government report showed on Wednesday, as a popular homebuyer tax credit that had buoyed construction activity over the past two months expired.

The Commerce Department said housing starts dropped 10 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 593,000 units, the lowest level since December. The percentage decline was the biggest in 14 months. April's housing starts were revised down to show a 3.9 percent increase, which was previously reported as a 5.8 percent rise.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected housing starts to fall to 650,000 units. Compared to May last year, starts were up 7.8 percent.

New building permits, which give a sense of future home construction, dropped 5.9 percent to a 574,000-unit pace in May, the lowest in a year. That followed a 10.9 percent drop in April and compared to analysts' forecasts for a rise to 630,000 units.

Housing starts rose in March and April as new home construction was pushed forward to take advantage of a government tax credit for home buyers. Buyers had to sign contracts by April 30 to qualify for the tax credit.

In the wake of the end the tax credit, home builder sentiment fell sharply in June. Analysts, however, believe the pullback in housing will be temporary, citing the gradual improvement in the economy. Demand for loans to buy homes rebounded from 13-year lows last week.

Groundbreaking for single-family homes tumbled 17.2 percent to an annual rate of 468,000 units in May after a 5.6 percent increase in April. The percentage decline in May was the largest since January 1991 and snapped four months of gains.

However, starts for the volatile multifamily segment surged 33 percent to a 125,000-unit annual pace.

Home completions fell 7.4 percent to a 687,000-unit pace.

The inventory of total houses under construction fell 2.3 percent to a record low 475,000 units in May, while the total number of units authorized but not yet started dropped 4 percent to 91,200 units, the lowest since November.

View the original article here: http://www.cnbc.com/id/37726837

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Friday, June 11, 2010

10,000 square feet of renovations

Not to toot my own horn (TOOOOOOOT), but with two of my clients going under contract last night on a 2000 square foot major renovation in Savannah's Landmark Historic District, that means that my clients are now currently restoring 10,000 square feet in historic downtown Savannah. I'm kind of proud of that, especially as 8000 square feet of these renovations were in buildings NO ONE wanted to touch. All of them were on the market forever and we got the deals done and on their way to restored perfection. If you're interested in historic real estate in downtown Savannah, don't be afraid of fixers--they can be done and right now you get a lot more for your money!

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Is this good or bad--US Foreclosures Fall, Bank Repossessions Hit Record High

So, once again I will be the agent who is actually honest and takes the permasmile off his face and shares the bad news. And the good news, which is that buying opportunities will continue to make themselves available--and we know that interest rates are ridiculously low. If you wanted to play a 7-year housing recovery curve, you could lock into a 7-year mortgage at 3.75% right now. That's just nuts. The bad news is that if you're selling your house, you are going to continue to have lots of competition--and some of those will be foreclosures. And those foreclosures are going to be less expensive than your house in a lot of scenarios. So you need to price right the first time and not get caught in a downward spiral. As always, feel free to ask me your questions or have your friends ask. I'm here to help, even if you might not like the answers.

US Foreclosures Fall, Bank Repossessions Hit Record High
By: Joseph Pisani, CNBC News Associate
Published: Thursday, 10 Jun 2010 | 4:03 AM ET

The national foreclosure rate continued to fall in May from the previous month, according to a new report released Thursday.

However, bank repossessions reached a record high during the same month, a sign that lenders are focusing on their backlog of foreclosure inventory before tackling new distressed loans, according to foreclosure database website RealtyTrac, which released the report.

“What it looks like is that the lenders are focusing on processing the delinquent loans they already have rather than initiating new foreclosures,” said Rick Sharga, senior vice president of RealtyTrac. “They’re managing inventory to prevent a free fall in home prices.”

Foreclosure activity dropped 3.27 percent in May from the previous month, and was up 0.45 percent from May 2009. In all, 322,920 properties generated a foreclosure notice. One in every 400 homes in America received a foreclosure notice in May. (Foreclosure notices are defined as a default notice, auction sale notice or bank repossession.)

Bank repossessions (known as real estate owned properties or REOs) hit a record high in May for the second month in a row. Lenders repossessed a total of 93,777 properties during the month, a 1 percent increase from the previous month’s record and a 44-percent jump from May 2009. All 50 states reported a year-over-year increases in REOs, according to RealtyTrac.

So far this year, the U.S. foreclosure rate has been falling slightly on a month-to-month basis. And in April, RealtyTrac reported a year-over-year decline in the foreclosure rate for the first since the firm began reporting data in 2005. RealtyTrac still projects that over 3 million homes will receive a foreclosure notice over the course of this year, said Sharga.

The ten states with the highest foreclosure rates were little changed from the previous month. According to the RealtyTrac report, Nevada remains No. 1 with one in every 79 properties in the state getting a foreclosure notice, five times the national rate.

Arizona ranked second with one in every 169 households receiving a notice, followed by Florida (one in 174 households), California (one in 186 households) and Michigan (one in every 223 households.)

Vermont had the lowest rate, with one in every 16,454 properties receiving a foreclosure notice.

© 2010 CNBC.com

View the original article here: http://www.cnbc.com/id/37599834

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Fancy a Chateau? France Sells Buildings to Cut Debt

This would be the ultimate time-share! Anyone want to go in on a chateau with me? Maybe about 100 of us at $10k each? You must be able to get something decent for a million...

The French government says it's selling off 1,700 properties including chateaux, barracks and Parisian mansions, in part to cut the country's heavy debt.

The announcement Wednesday was the first time the government laid out such ambitious sell-off plans.

Budget Minister Francois Baroin said he wants to ensure the sales are transparent.

He says France has a disproportionately high amount of state property and has been trying to shed "useless and unadapted" buildings.

He says reducing some of the country's 1.49 trillion euros ($1.79 trillion) debt is part of the reason for the sales, although less than 20 percent of proceeds will go directly to debt payments.

The rest goes to new government investments.

State property sales in the past four years brought in 3 billion euros ($3.6 billion).

View original article: http://www.cnbc.com/id/37591679


Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Skinny lot new construction

Anyone following this blog--my loyal legions of followers--know that I love what the Postgreen folks are doing up in Philadelphia with their 100k House (http://www.100khouse.com/2010/05/18/excellent-new-video-on-the-100k-house/). On Duffy Street, in downtown Savannah's Victorian Historic District, we've filled in a 25 foot wide lot with a new construction home and are renovating the house to the right of it. I thought it would be fun to see what the house and the lot used to look like--dig the old roof line. You wouldn't think a house can squeeze in there. And yet, it did. The siding is up on the new house and the renovated house is being framed for the new windows as I write--you can see one window on the first floor of the house. I know people like open floor plans, but we will indeed be closing off the front of the renovated house on the right. The house under renovation is under contract, and the new home is still available, but attracting a lot of interest.




Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

10 Easy Ways to Green Your Home

We all want to be green. In downtown Savannah's Landmark Historic District, we also want to avoid new vinyl windows. As such, if you're replacing windows downtown, you do need true divided light, single pane windows. What is true divided light? It means if you have a six pane window, you need to have six panes. Not one big pane with mullions glued on the pane to give the appearance of panes. And if you're paying for those true divided light windows, which are much more, you'll definitely feel a big pain. All in the name of historical accuracy--not the greenest solution, but probably worth it in the balance of things--it would be no fun walking down Jones Street and seeing cheap vinyl windows.

http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2008/real_estate/0808/gallery.green_homes.moneymag/index.html

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Should You Rent or Buy?

Was just having this conversation yesterday with a buyer, in regards to how we arrive at a value for the sales price of a house. If buying a house is a viable alternative to renting--especially if you can get a low downpayment loan, like a VA or FHA loan--then we know the market is stabilizing and reach equilibrium. When you have a speculative run-up in prices, like we had the last few years, where people are literally afraid not to buy, in the event that prices will be too high at a later point, that drives irrational price increases. Now that we're out of those woods, people are getting back to basics--does it make sense to buy this place, since it will cost me pretty much the same as renting? To me, that makes a lot of sense and there are a number of homes on the market now, even in Historic Downtown Savannah, where buying is the better alternative to renting. Story below...

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Is it better to buy or rent in Omaha, Neb.?

If you guessed buy, you'd be wrong. According to the new Trulia Rent vs. Buy index, it makes more fiscal sense to rent in this farm city due to the huge gap between rental and purchase prices.

Until recently, the perennial real estate question of whether to rent or buy was dead. During the boom years, the question was largely irrelevant as people rushed to pay ever increasing prices for already expensive real estate. But now that national home prices have slid substantially and potential buyers are being more cautious, the debate has been reinvigorated.

Many people hunting for a home these days are considering both alternatives, according to Tara-Nicholle Nelson, a spokeswoman for Trulia, the real estate website. "We did a survey of site visitors and found that 30% of them were thinking either of buying or renting," she said.

In response, on Thursday the company will launch a Rent vs. Buy index for 50 major cities.

To determine which option is better, Trulia compares the costs of buying a two-bedroom condo with the costs of renting one. Then, Nelson said, the results can be extrapolated to other classes of homes, such as larger single-family houses.

Another factor, of course, is price stability. Unlike home prices, rents tend to rise or fall just a few percentage points each year. Even 2009's record decline in average rents was a paltry 2.9%, according to Reis Inc, which tracks the rental market.

On the other hand, the national median home price jumped 12.2% in 2005 and fell nearly 20% in 2008, according to housing, according to housing groups.

Minneapolis was the city on Trulia's index where it makes the most sense to buy. The average listing price for a two-bedroom there was about $150,000, while the average annual rent for one came to about $20,400. Buying, therefore, costs less than eight times the annual cost of renting. Economists generally hold that anything below 15 times the annual rent is a buyer-friendly city.

Trulia also signed off on purchasing in Arlington, Tex., Miami, Fresno, Calif., and San Antonio, Tex..

In Manhattan, on the other hand, renting is a much better deal. The price-to-rent ratio of 33 was by far the least favorable for buyers, seven points higher than the runner-up city, Omaha, Neb.

That's despite very high rents, an average of more than $42,000 for a two-bedroom apartment. Gotham selling prices are so astronomical -- $1.38 million for a two-bedroom condo -- that it still makes more sense to rent.

Seattle, Portland, Ore., and San Francisco were also much more expensive to buy.

These stats cover the costs of buying vs. renting; they don't take into account future price appreciation or depreciation. If, for example, prices rapidly decline in Minneapolis, the total cost of ownership could exceed rental cost, especially when the transactional costs, such as real estate broker commissions, taxes and mortgage origination costs are factored in.

On the other hand, soaring home prices have made New York a good place to buy in the past, and it's possible, although unlikely, that it could again.

More likely though, is that prices in many cities will remain sluggish for a number of years; home price appreciation should not be a strong consideration when deciding whether to rent or buy.

These analyses are also just a general guideline; individual circumstances matter, too. People in higher tax brackets, for example, may get more bang for their purchase buck because they're able to deduct more interest costs and property taxes.

And, once people purchase, their home-buying costs tend to be fairly stable. Fixed-rate loans don't go up ( although taxes and maintenance costs can.) Rents usually do.

There are also many intangible benefits for both buyers and renters, according to Trulia's Nelson. Buyers often feel more invested in their communities, more likely to put down roots, make friends and join local organizations. Home ownership often brings them pride and joy.

Renters, on the other hand, may not want the responsibilities of home ownership or being tied down. If another place comes along that suits them better, they can easily move. They're also freer to pursue employment opportunities in other cities without worrying about selling their old homes and buying new ones.

The new index addresses none of those intangibles, but Nelson said it's still a useful tool for consumers: "You have to make the decision on whether you want to buy based on your lifestyle choices more than anything else."

View the original article here.

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

The Best US Cities to Buy a Foreclosed Home

I remember in the mid-2000s, when real estate was hot, I was looking at various cities--Salt Lake City, El Paso, and Baltimore come to mind--for investments. I wound up in historic downtown Savannah, but I still love to see these reports. The grass isn't necessarily greener in Cincinnati, which shows up on this list, or Pittsburgh, or Syracuse, but you can get wonderful old homes cheap. The tradeoff is you have to deal with the cold weather.

Click here for a slide show of the best US cities to buy a foreclosed home according to CNBC.

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

US Home-Buying Loan Demand Falls for 4th Week

Short version of the article--low rates, lower sales, good for buyers. Not great for sellers, but on the other hand, IF YOU HAVE A WELL-PRICED HOME, there are great loans for buyers right now. And the buyers are indeed looking...

Demand for loans to buy U.S. homes fell last week for the fourth straight week, holding 13-year lows, as the housing market adjusted to a selling environment without the federal tax credits that had stoked April sales, the Mortgage Bankers Association said on Wednesday.

Home buying ran out of steam after eligible borrowers sprinted to meet the April 30 deadline for up to $8,000 in tax credits. The incentive pulled house sales forward and triggered the largest monthly construction spending gain in nearly a decade.

Total loan applications eked out a 0.9 percent rise in the week ended May 28, seasonally adjusted, as a 2.4 percent in refinancing demand offset a decline of 4.1 percent in purchase loan requests to the lowest level since April 1997.

"Purchase applications are now almost 40 percent below their level four weeks ago, while the refinance share, at 74 percent, is at its highest level since December," Michael Fratantoni, MBA's vice president of research and economics, said in a statement.

Average 30-year mortgage rates rose 0.03 percentage point to 4.83 percent last week, but the low rate drove more homeowners to apply for refinancing.

The rate rose as high as 5.31 percent in early April before euro zone market troubles triggered a flight to safety in U.S. Treasurys, driving down their yields, which are used as a peg for mortgage rates.

A so-called "hangover" from more than a year of the tax credits had been widely expected, and most economists expect U.S. housing can stand on its own footing as the year progresses.

"This volatility in activity is the price paid for higher average levels of sales across the year as a whole than would have occurred without the tax credit," Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote on Tuesday.

Buying a home, for qualified purchasers, remains affordable with mortgage rates historically low and prices down about 30 percent on average from their peaks in 2006.

But at least in the weeks since the tax credits expired, homeowners are concentrating on shaving costs by refinancing.

The MBA's refinance applications index has risen for four straight weeks to its highest level since October 2009.

Still, refinancing is also experiencing "burnout," with fewer people acting to refinance each time mortgage rates fall near current levels, Fratantoni said in an interview.

The refi index, at roughly 3,300 last week, is well below the most recent peak of about 7,400 in early January 2009 when 30-year mortgage rates were roughly similar. In 2003, when the loan rate was just under 5 percent, the refinance index shot up to about triple last week's level.

"A lot of people would benefit from getting a lower rate but they don't have equity, they don't have income, they don't have credit," Fratantoni said. "You're getting a response, but it's a fairly muted response."

From Reuters on CNBC. View the original article here.

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