This Month in Real Estate Novemebr 2011
15 11 2011Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: Buyer, green, Real Estate, Seller
Categories : Agent Info, BUYERS, SELLERS
3 Ways to Survive a Real Estate Downturn
10 10 2011Strategy #1: Don’t sell
How serious is the problem really? Let’s say that the home you live in, your rental property, or the property you bought as a “fix and flip” goes down in value. Well, if you weren’t planning to sell right away, would it matter? Hang on until the market comes back. Historically, in the bigger picture, a real estate market will always come back.
Of course, this sounds really simplistic. Don’t sell. Wouldn’t it be nice if everything was that simple? Maybe it really is, though, if you’ve followed the Tax Loopholes Strategies for making sure you have enough cash for your debt a lot of people forget that when the emotions run high.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the real estate market really started crashing in Phoenix. In 1995, my partner was working with a new tax client. She was a real estate broker in Phoenix. The Phoenix market was recovering well by that time. But, the broker said she’d never own real estate investment property again. She said she’d lost a ton of money in the downturn.
Her story, as it unfolded, was that she owned a number of single family residences that were rented for a positive cash flow. The market turned down and suddenly she was upside down on some of the houses. She panicked and sold all of them. In some cases, she actually needed to come up with money to close the deal.
The part that I didn’t understand was why she felt the need to sell. The properties had a positive cash flow. By selling, she locked in the loss. At that point, someone bought the properties and waited out the downturn to take advantage of the upswing. Why couldn’t she have done the same thing?
She was afraid that the market would get worse. She was afraid that her tenants might move out, and even though there are generally more renters when a market turns down, she was afraid she couldn’t get more tenants. Basically, she was afraid and made an emotional decision.
The market has been running hot in many areas and actually over-heated in other markets.
Strategy #2: Run your investments like a business
I’m going to talk about some strategies that are worst case only. Remember that real estate is nothing more than a product. If you’re good at a business and know how to thoroughly research a product and its market, you can sell toasters or you can sell a house. It’s all the same.
Of course, not too many people rent toasters and toasters don’t appreciate, and that’s why real estate is such an easy business for so many people to jump into. That’s also why there are so many catastrophic failures. It’s too easy to make money in real estate if the market is going hot, even if the investor does everything wrong. They have forgotten (or never knew) the fundamentals of business.
One of the fundamentals of business is to look for a way to create more value in what you’re selling. Remember if you’re renting a property, lease optioning it, doing a rent to own, or straight out selling–regardless of what you’re doing, you’re selling something. And, if no one is buying (or renting), ask yourself why? Is there a way to add more value by making it more desirable for the buyer/renter?
Some ideas might include changing the property–adding additional features that no one else has or making more favorable terms for a potential buyer.
One more comment on the people who say the end is coming for real estate. In a lot of cases, the doomsayers who happen to have money as well, are people who’ve gotten lucky. They’re now afraid that they can never recreate that wealth, and so they’re just plain afraid of everything. They realize, at some level, they had nothing to do with the wealth they’ve gotten, and so they’re afraid they will lose it.
Having strong business skills means you have the ability to look at any market in any climate and figure out what to do next without panicking.
Strategy #3: Keep your eyes on the real goal.
No matter what type of business or investments you have, you need to have fundamental skills. That’s what Strategy #2 was all about.
One of the biggest benefits of investing in real estate is all the great tax loopholes that you get. And, you’ll get those loopholes no matter what happens with the market. Of course, I don’t want you to do anything just for the write-offs. You have to make money, too. At least in the long run.
Are you sure you’re getting all the tax loopholes for your investments? How about your business structures? Are they set up correctly, and are you operating them in the best way possible?
And, probably the biggest problem facing real estate investors, are you accounting for your real estate correctly? If you don’t do the accounting right, you’re going to miss the tax write offs.
Remember, you can make money in real estate regardless of which way the market goes. The key is to have good business skills first.
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Tags: 1980s, 3 ways, early 1990s, emotional decision, emotions, family residences, money, own real estate, phoenix market, positive cash flow, real estate broker, real estate downturn, real estate investment, real estate investment property, real estate market, rental property, single family, tax loopholes, upswing
Categories : BUYERS, SELLERS
Short Sales: Why do They Take so Long?
15 08 2011
A short sale defines the process of selling your property for less than the amount of debt you owe, thus short of the outstanding obligations secured by your property. The process is both cumbersome and includes two separate negotiations in order to complete.
The first part of this transaction is similar to a traditional sale in the sense that it involves finding a buyer interested in purchasing your property at a particular price under certain conditions. Just like a traditional sale, you as seller, would likely find a licensed REALTOR®, list your home for sale, reflecting current market value, and work diligently to find a ready willing and able buyer. At the same time, your Realtor or a member of their negotiation team would begin the process of notifying your lenders of the unfortunate financial circumstance and your intention to sell the property to avoid impending foreclosure. I should note that it is possible to complete a short sale even if you are not in default on your loan; however you and your agents face the difficult task of convincing your lender that it is a better financial decision for them to allow you to sell for less than you owe.
If you have alternatives other than foreclosure, they are unlikely to agree to the loss. Here’s where time stands still… Banks are facing record numbers of foreclosures and are woefully understaffed. The overwhelming numbers of defaulted loans, loan modification requests, short sale requests, and foreclosure proceedings have simply over-taxed the system. Their only choice to address the onslaught is to automate and outsource. To meet this demand with few experienced employees, some of the larger banks have broken down tasks into different divisions, creating several layers of customer service reps, loss mitigators, asset managers, collection departments, and so on to address only certain aspects of your file. “Escalating” your file can take days, even weeks, before the right person has the opportunity to confirm receipt and begin discussing your situation.
Perhaps the least pleasant part of the process for most homeowners is the collection of financial records, bank statements, tax returns, pay stubs, hardship letters, and all the other documentation that is needed for the bank to consider your request. For many the list seems endless and sharing financial difficulties are, well, difficult. Yet each bank requires full and complete short sale packages to be submitted before they begin reviewing your request. If you present an incomplete package your file is simply closed.
It would make things easier if you and your Realtor could start the process immediately, right? Unfortunately it’s not that simple. Like a MASH unit behind enemy lines, the war on foreclosures requires banks to focus on homeowners with the most critical need. This means banks will only consider opening a short sale file with a valid offer from a qualified buyer. Therefore, you cannot begin your discussion with the bank until you have found a buyer willing to write an offer at or near current market value. Patience is a virtue… You can imagine how frustrating it can be for a buyer who writes an offer to buy your home and is then required to wait weeks for a response. To compound the problem, the bank’s response is not likely to be, “Yes, thank you for offering to pay us less than what is owed, we gladly accept your offer.” Most sellers and their buyers are lucky to get any sort of response other than “no,” or “rejected.”
For smart sellers and Realtors who properly price homes for sale, multiple buyers have presented themselves at the ready. For those, we move past a verbal acceptance and begin the middle innings of the short sale process. The Broker Price Opinion or BPO. There are two discussions that occur at the bank while deciding which direction to go on your file. First, what is the current market value of the home in question? Second, how much would we net today with the offer at hand, versus how much would we make several months from now if we continued into foreclosure and sold the home when it became an REO? To answer these questions the banks hire other real estate agents, known as BPO agents, to give their unbiased opinion of value after a thorough interior inspection (the exception to this statement is FHA loans, which require licensed appraisers to determine market value).
This process alone can take up to one week to order and allows for up to one week (sometimes longer) to complete. What about the details? Assuming you’ve come this far, and your buyer is still interested, a BPO value within an acceptable range of the offered price will begin the process of determining the net vs. gross to the bank. Details like who pays for title, escrow and transfer tax? Are there physical defects that need to be cured, and what about the termites? Since the seller is not receiving any financial gain (profit) at the time of sale, he or she is unable to pay for any of the customary or negotiated costs incurred at the time of sale. These seller costs (including Realtor commissions) ultimately falls on the lender at closing. Although small fees on their own, these fees can add up to 10 percent of the sale price on each transaction. Always looking to protect their investors interests, banks will fight tooth and nail to minimize these costs on the HUD-1.
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Tags: BPO, Broker Price Opinion, FHA, foreclosure, home, HUD, lender, MASH, Realtor, REO
Categories : Agent Info, BUYERS, SELLERS
This Month in Real Estate: August 2011
9 08 2011
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Tags: Real Estate
Categories : Agent Info, BUYERS, SELLERS
Holding an Open House: Are you doing the best you can?
1 08 2011
When you, as the agent, hold an open house there are a couple of crucial things you can do to ensure high quality traffic during your showing. Here are some tips to increase your open house’s potential.
First: Most agents out there hold open house’s on the weekend to try and lure people who normally work during the week. This is normal practice and relatively effective. If you decide that the weekend is for you, first look at the neighborhood and find a time that suits everyones schedule. If its Sunday don’t hold the showing from 9-12 cause most people will be in church or just getting up. Instead maybe shoot for a 1-4 showing to catch the people after lunch while there out and about.
If you really want to get tricky think about holding a open house during the week at dusk say 6-8. This approach allows the home to glow in the night’s sky. Turn all the lights on and invest in exterior lights to help highlight exterior features like trees, exterior building accents or walkways. Most showings only focus on highlighting the interior of a home why not turn that model on its head and make the home stand out in the night time neighborhood.
Second: When showing a home always clean up first. The week leading up to the open house have the tenant, owner or current occupant clean the house of all personal items (ie: photos, dvd’s, any countertop items). The reason you do this is to allow any prospective buyers to mentally move into a home and make it their own. If they see family pictures, tooth brushes, shoes, etc. it ruins the illusion that this could be their home. Ideally you want to make the home look as though it is a furnished home but no one lives there.
Third: When it comes time for the showing, make sure to turn on all the lights in the home. Next open the windows, light a candle and turn on some light music. Make the environment seem inviting, well lit and clean. You want people to walk in and say wow I can see my self living here. When a home is closed up and dark it feels unwelcoming and smaller. You do not want people focusing on the pile of clothing in the corner or the dirty dishes in the sink instead of the amazing view and the huge backyard.
Fourth: Even though this is number 4 don’t think that this is the least important. During the first open house listen to the comments of people viewing the home. Find out what they like and dislike. A buyer who is turned off on the first go around is the best thing you could ask for. Take their gripes and dislikes and fix them! Don’t live in the disillusion that your home is perfect, in most cases it is not. Listen to what is bothering people when they view it and address those issues. This step will be one of the most costly steps, but sometimes the most important. Remember though, you are in the business of selling this home not remodeling it. Pick your battles and only fix what you think will help bring value to the home. Examples of these good fixes may be, paint, new appliances, re arranging furniture, adding extra lamps and lighting, new linens and window coverings and light landscaping etc. What not to fix unless you want to do a full remodel would include, full kitchen remodel, adding a pool, new windows, floors.
Hope this helps when you do your next open house. If you leave this blog with nothing else remember that when you are trying to sell a home first walk through as though you were the buyer and ask your self….would I buy this place and if not why not.
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Tags: clean, Holding Open Houses, home, neighborhood, Open house, organizing, Real Estate, Real Estate Agent, remodel, Staging
Categories : Agent Info, SELLERS
San Diego Home Prices, How to they Compare?
29 07 2011
How do home prices in San DiegoCounty compare to those across the country?
According to Tuesday’s S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, the local region’s figures are still above those seen in other major markets, when analyzing them together.
San Diego’s index in May was 154.78, up from April but down 5.1 percent from a year ago. The leading economic indicator reported the price index for the 20 U.S. metros tracked was 139.87, up 1 percent month-over-month but down 4.5 percent year-over-year.
S&P analysts follow repeat sales. That means when a property sells, they return to that home and find out what it sold previously.
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Tags: home, San Diego
Categories : Agent Info, BUYERS, SELLERS
Has the Market Bottomed Out?
9 07 2011This was a quote from the Secretary at HUD (Housing and Urban Development).
I think it’s very unlikely that we see a significant further decline. I think the real question is when will we start to see sustainable increases? Some think it will be as early as the end of the summer or this fall, others think it will be next year. And I wish I had a crystal ball on that. My sense, though, is in the long run it’s a good time to buy, whether it’s five months away or a year away, to see sustainable increases.
–HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, being interviewed by Candy Crowley, anchor at CNN. Crowley asked Donovan if he believes the market has “bottomed out.”
Its positive thinking and hopefully we will see a substantial upswing in home values. I have been reading quotes like these for a while and we have had a couple of up tics follow closely but a couple down tics in home vaules. Either way its nice to hear hear others being optimistic about our house market. For example…..
Ranked on a scale of 1-9, with 1 being “abysmal” and 9 being “excellent,” San Diego scored 5.63, compared with 5.04 in last year’s report.
Washington ranked first, but its 7.01 score in investment was still below “excellent.”
The top 10 markets and their scores on the 1-9 scale for 2011, ULI says, are:
- Washington, 7.01
- New York, 6.56
- San Francisco, 6.34
- Austin, 6.29
- Boston, 6.20
- Seattle, 6.09
- San Jose, 6.08
- Houston, 6.02
- Los Angeles, 5.84
- SAN DIEGO, 5.63
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Tags: California, Candy Crowley, CNN, Coronado, DIEGO, home, home value, HUD, Investment Property, la jolla, Los Angeles, Mortgage loan, New York, Real Estate, Refinancing, SAN, San Diego, Secretary Shaun Donovan, sustainable, ULI
Categories : BUYERS, SELLERS
New Map Feature Helps Renters and Owners Spot Crime
16 06 2011Trulia.com always has stood out from other real estate websites with its clean, modern pages and extensive use of maps and infographics to show off home information.
Now, the San Francisco-based company has added another sharp, polished tool for agents and people interested in moving somewhere new: crime maps.
The web app, still in testing (beta) phase, combines a map interface with up-to-date crime statisticsfrom a variety of sources — including other mapping websites — allowing potential buyers and renters to check into the safety of their future home.
Where this tool differs from its partners and other websites such as San Diego Regional Crime MAPS is its use of a “heat map” to show areas with the most activity, reducing the clutter found on other apps and organizing the data by neighborhood or cross street.
But notably, Trulia’s crime map uses a Facebook commenting system for the areas and neighborhoods, allowing the people who live in and frequent those places to discuss recent events, ask questions and give first-hand accounts of incidents that happened.
On the downside, the maps may take longer to load on older, lower-end computers or look choppy while scrolling because they’re made up of multiple images.
The crime maps aren’t part of Trulia’s mobile-app selections but they run fine on the latest smartphone browsers.
While the company has no timetable for the release of a final version of its crime tool, it hopes to integrate crime data into existing maps, add more functions and update the information more quickly.
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Tags: App, Balboa Park, Coronado, Iphone, la jolla, pacific beach, Real Estate, San Diego, Trulia
Categories : Agent Info, BUYERS, Hoods, SELLERS
San Diego home prices, sales fall from 1 year ago
13 06 2011From San Diego Union Tribune
Home prices and sales in San Diego County fell in May from one year ago, following the same downward trend seen throughout Southern California, which remained in record-low sales territory last month.
Numbers from DataQuick Information Systems show May’s median price for all sales in San Diego was $324,500, down 4.6 percent from last year but up 0.9 percent from April. Sales fell 20.4 percent in May from a year ago to 3,087 and dropped 5.8 percent from April.
Looking at the six major counties in Southern California, prices remained at their three-year low and prices continued to slide year-over-year for the 11th straight month, DataQuick researchers said.
San Diego County had the steepest year-over-year sales drop among the six counties in the company’s monthly analysis. Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino counties saw drops in the 18 percent range.
San Diego’s price drop year-over-year was the lowest among the Southern California counties. Los Angeles’s home prices fell the most, at 7.2 percent.
Thoughts with Pat:
This update may came as a surprise to a lot of you. The news can sometimes confuse and mislead people into thinking that we as individuals are up, down, going to die etc. With so much happening in the US and World economic markets these days it only seems natural that housing prices would ride the same roller coaster ride. Take a deep breathe and look around you. Your still alive, your still working, don’t get caught up in the day to day retardness that the news and stat companies throw at you. Its all how you look at it. Don’t look at this down turn as a negative that the world is ending, instead look at it as an amazing time for you to get into a home that you could not have afforded 5 years ago. The San Diego and California Markets are in SALE mode!! My recommendation is go find your agent and get out there and look at whats on Sale right now, you are going to be surprised at what is now affordable to you.
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Tags: California, Coronado, Home Prices, la jolla, pacific beach, Real Estate, San Diego
Categories : BUYERS, Investment, SELLERS
Tips on how to Stage Your Home for Sale
18 05 2011- Disassociate Yourself With Your Home.
- Say to yourself, “This is not my home; it is a house — a product to be sold much like a box of cereal on the grocery store shelf.
- Make the mental decision to “let go” of your emotions and focus on the fact that soon this house will no longer be yours.
- Picture yourself handing over the keys and envelopes containing appliance warranties to the new owners!
- Say goodbye to every room.
- Don’t look backwards — look toward the future.
- De-Personalize.
Pack up those personal photographs and family heirlooms. Buyers can’t see past personal artifacts, and you don’t want them to be distracted. You want buyers to imagine their own photos on the walls, and they can’t do that if yours are there! You don’t want to make any buyer ask, ”I wonder what kind of people live in this home?” You want buyers to say, “I can see myself living here.” - De-Clutter!
People collect an amazing quantity of junk. Consider this: if you haven’t used it in over a year, you probably don’t need it.- If you don’t need it, why not donate it or throw it away?
- Remove all books from bookcases.
- Pack up those knickknacks.
- Clean off everything on kitchen counters.
- Put essential items used daily in a small box that can be stored in a closet when not in use.
- Think of this process as a head-start on the packing you will eventually need to do anyway.
- Rearrange Bedroom Closets and Kitchen Cabinets.
Buyers love to snoop and will open closet and cabinet doors. Think of the message it sends if items fall out! Now imagine what a buyer believes about you if she sees everything organized. It says you probably take good care of the rest of the house as well. This means:- Alphabetize spice jars.
- Neatly stack dishes.
- Turn coffee cup handles facing the same way.
- Hang shirts together, buttoned and facing the same direction.
- Line up shoes.
- Rent a Storage Unit.
Almost every home shows better with less furniture. Remove pieces of furniture that block or hamper paths and walkways and put them in storage. Since your bookcases are now empty, store them. Remove extra leaves from your dining room table to make the room appear larger. Leave just enough furniture in each room to showcase the room’s purpose and plenty of room to move around. You don’t want buyers scratching their heads and saying, ”What is this room used for?” - Remove/Replace Favorite Items.
If you want to take window coverings, built-in appliances or fixtures with you, remove them now. If the chandelier in the dining room once belonged to your great grandmother, take it down. If a buyer never sees it, she won’t want it. Once you tell a buyer she can’t have an item, she will covet it, and it could blow your deal. Pack those items and replace them, if necessary. - Make Minor Repairs.
- Replace cracked floor or counter tiles.
- Patch holes in walls.
- Fix leaky faucets.
- Fix doors that don’t close properly and kitchen drawers that jam.
- Consider painting your walls neutral colors, especially if you have grown accustomed to purple or pink walls.
(Don’t give buyers any reason to remember your home as “the house with the orange bathroom.”) - Replace burned-out light bulbs.
- If you’ve considered replacing a worn bedspread, do so now!
- Make the House Sparkle!
- Wash windows inside and out.
- Rent a pressure washer and spray down sidewalks and exterior.
- Clean out cobwebs.
- Re-caulk tubs, showers and sinks.
- Polish chrome faucets and mirrors.
- Clean out the refrigerator.
- Vacuum daily.
- Wax floors.
- Dust furniture, ceiling fan blades and light fixtures.
- Bleach dingy grout.
- Replace worn rugs.
- Hang up fresh towels.
- Bathroom towels look great fastened with ribbon and bows.
- Clean and air out any musty smelling areas. Odors are a no-no.
- Scrutinize.
- Go outside and open your front door. Stand there. Do you want to go inside? Does the house welcome you?
- Linger in the doorway of every single room and imagine how your house will look to a buyer.
- Examine carefully how furniture is arranged and move pieces around until it makes sense.
- Make sure window coverings hang level.
- Tune in to the room’s statement and its emotional pull. Does it have impact and pizzazz?
- Does it look like nobody lives in this house? You’re almost finished.
- Check Curb Appeal.
If a buyer won’t get out of her agent’s car because she doesn’t like the exterior of your home, you’ll never get her inside.- Keep the sidewalks cleared.
- Mow the lawn.
- Paint faded window trim.
- Plant yellow flowers or group flower pots together. Yellow evokes a buying emotion. Marigolds are inexpensive.
- Trim your bushes.
- Make sure visitors can clearly read your house number.
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Tags: Air freshener, Buyer, Coronado Real Estate, curb appeal, de clutter, home, Home improvement, Home staging, House, La jolla real estate, Real Estate, repairs, San Diego, Seller, Selling home
Categories : Agent Info, SELLERS




