May 30, 2009
On January 27, 2009, a home at 221 Churchill Road was listed for sale at $1,590,000. This was an extremely well kept original D’Agostino ranch home on a gorgeous acre lot. It was listed twice – as a single family home and as a building lot. On the Tenafly East Hill, original homes are sought after on their acre properties so that they can be removed and a new luxury home constructed.
A short while after being listed, the price was reduced to $1,425,000. Only 2 weeks later, on February 23rd, an offer was accepted and the home went into the Attorney Review process. Those of us who watched the market took note of this transaction because it demonstrated the strength of the demand for new luxury homes in Tenafly.
What happened next is even more intriguing as an indicator of the real estate market for homes in Tenafly.
On May 22nd the home came back on the market for sale. I called the listing agent who happens to be a very nice person and she told me that the owners were purchasing a short sale property out of the area and that their buyer had become frustrated with the long time it was taking and wanted to close on a home within the near future so the contract fell apart. Short sale transactions can take many many months – sometimes as much as one year. If you are buying a short sale and your buyer is not prepared to wait 6-9 months, it’s not going to work in most cases.
The home went back on the market on May 22nd at the start of the Memorial Day Weekend which, I am sure you will agree, is not the best time to start marketing a house. After all, a lot of your market is on it’s way out of town. The house had multiple offers and it was in Attorney Review again in 5 days.
What this tells you is that the market for luxury homes in Tenafly is still strong and that the market is stronger now than it was at the end of February. But wait, you say, if things are so fine and dandy on the Tenafly East Hill, why are there so many homes for sale? Because they are not marketed correctly. It really IS as simple as that. It is true that upper tier properties are having a hard time in this market but it is not true that you cannot be successful. However, you have to put yourself in front of your buyer and the homes that are for sale there are marketed using traditional methods which no longer work. That is the long and short of it.
Tags: Bergen County, Bergen County Homes, Bergen County Real Estate, east hill, east hill of tenafly, home, homes, house, houses, luxury homes, new construction, real estate, real estate market, Tenafly, tenafly east hill, Tenafly Homes, tenafly nj • • •
Great news for home buyers! U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan announced yesterday, May 29th, that the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) will allow home buyers to apply the Obama Administration’s new $8,000 first-time home buyer tax credit on FHA mortgage loans. Previously the tax credit only applied to conventional mortgages. The only catch is that the tax credit cannot be used towards the minimum 3.5% down payment. But, this is still terrific and a great help for people who need to use a FHA insured mortgage loan.
Secretary Donavan said that the FHA’s objective in doing this was to help stabilize the housing market by stimulating more home sales across the US and it certainly should do so. With the ability to apply the tax credit to purchase costs, buying a home now becomes affordable for thousands of people and affordable enough to get thousands to jump off the fence and into a house.
FHA loans are extremely popular with first time home buyers because qualifying for a FHA mortgage is a lot easier than qualifying for a conventional loan. The ratios are easier and the down payment can be as little as 3.5% although I must tell you that I do not approve of buying a home with such a low down payment. What I tell my home buyers is to wait until you’ve saved up at least a 10% down payment.
While interest rates went up this week, they also came down on Friday so we’re still in the 5-5.5% range for what most people really qualify for in a mortgage. This has been where it’s at for the past several months throughout the spring.
The reason the first time home buyer market is critical to the housing market is because this is where the housing domino chain begins – when a home buyer buys a house, he buys it from someone who often moves on to a bigger house and so on and so on. The entire chain of transactions begins with the first house that is sold and that’s your first time home buyer.
If you look at the real estate market the picture you see is a pyramid with the least expensive homes on the large bottom (mostly first time home buyers) and the most expensive at the very top. Without those large bottom rows of buyers, the real estate market will collapse. So the FHA, by accepting the $8,000 tax credit on its loans, has helped tremendously to maintain the strength and stability of real estate.
Tags: $8, 000 first time home buyer tax credit, 000 tax credit, Bergen County Real Estate, Buying a Home, conventional mortgage, down payment, FHA, FHA loans, FHA mortgage, first time home buyer, first time home buyers, home, home buyer, homes, house, houses, interest rate, interest rates, loan, mortgage, real estate, Tax Credit • • •
May 19, 2009
When people decide to buy a home they naturally start to look at the real estate market, do some number crunching and find statistics which explain the market trends. Lately, a statistic on homes that’s been quite popular is the absorption rate.
Absorption rates simply put tell you how long it will take to sell off the existing inventory of homes. This shows you how properties are selling; it’s measured in months as in how many months it will take to sell all the homes for sale. Understanding market activity is important but I think that looking at absorption rates this early in the year can be misleading.
No matter the economy, the housing market has a unique rhythm of it’s own. Most homes for sale go on the market during the early part of the year and are sold during the summer so statistics for the first few months of the year that track the relationship between sales and available inventory can be tilted in the wrong direction. In fact, absorption rates at this point can be very confusing if you look at the report appraisers use when they do an appraisal on a house. This is the 1004MC Report.
Let’s look at Tenafly, NJ. If you go back 12 months from today, the Tenafly real estate market for homes really looks weird. For example, take a look at the number of Active Listings – it looks terrible doesn’t it? Well, what would you expect for this time of year? It’s always larger now because more houses are on the market between March and June. At the same time, how long a home is on the market for sale is currently half what it was previously. That is extremely important. In truth, Tenafly houses are selling very well. Tenafly homes are always in strong demand. The New Jersey MLS 1004MC Appraisal Report for Tenafly can be found at tenafly-1004mc-report
Tags: absorption rate, absorption rates, Add new tag, appraisal, appraiser, Bergen County Homes, Bergen County housing market, Buying a Home, home sale, homes for sale, housing market, housing statistics, mls, New Jersey MLS, real estate, real estate market, statistics, Tenafly, Tenafly Homes, tenafly nj, tenafly real estate • • •
May 3, 2009
There is a new thief who preys upon homeowners who must put their home on the market as a short sale. Simply put, a short sale occurs when a homeowner can no longer pay his mortgage, has no other assets and the loan amount is greater than the home is worth. As a result there is a shortage between what’s owed on the home and it’s market value. The only way a homeowner can sell his home is by getting the bank to accept this shortage, thus the term “short sale.”
These new thieves market themselves as having all the solutions to your problems because they have a “special” ability to negotiate a short sale with the bank. Nothing could be farther from the truth. What really happens is that a desperate homeowner is taken advantage of by these horrible people because the truth is that they are completely unnecessary.
Realtors do short sales all the time. If you must put your home on the market as a short sale, your listing agent can do the work and negotiate with the bank on your behalf. You can also ask your attorney to do this for you and many people do. What you don’t need is to encumber yourself with an unnecessary expense by hiring one of these charlatans. They are today’s version of the proverbial “snake oil salesman.”
I have worked on short sale transactions successfully. It is a tremendous amount of work and takes a long while. Everyone involved needs a lot of patience but eventually things do work out. Buying a home that is a short sale means a long wait for the buyer. Sometimes a buyer will cancel his contract out of frustration – it takes months and months to see if the mortgage bank will accept the buyer’s offer. But, hiring one of these thieves will not help you – it only wastes your money on these frauds. Every bank has it’s own unique process and no one can make a bank move any faster.
Don’t allow a predator to hurt you – if you have any questions, email me and if I don’t know the answer, I’ll find someone who does.
Tags: bank, Bergen County, Bergen County Homes, Bergen County Real Estate, Bergen County Real Estate Market, buyer, home buyer, homeowner, homeowners, loan, mortgage, mortgage bank, short sale, short sales • • •
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