Showing posts with label seattle realtor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seattle realtor. Show all posts
Friday, February 26, 2016
Friday, February 19, 2016
King County’s housing
market hit two milestones in December: The median single-family home price set
a new high, $508,000, topping the $481,000 peak reached in July 2007 before
prices began their long slide.
And the number of active
listings of houses and condominiums — just 2,196 — hit the lowest monthly level
since at least 1993, according to data from the Northwest Multiple Listing
Service.
For sellers, it’s a
dream. For buyers, it’s a nightmare. And for sellers who want to buy their next
home, it’s complicated.
The desperation for
listings is so great that it’s encouraging some to go off the beaten path to
get deals.
Affordability under
pressure
For example, Faira, a new
Kirkland technology firm started by former eBay and Microsoft veterans, is free
for sellers and charges buyers only a 0.5 percent fee. Its chief executive even
penned a sincere offer to Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff to help sell his Madison Park
home.
Mike Chaffee, a John L.
Scott broker in Issaquah, uses the personal touch. At homes not on the market,
he drops off a handwritten solicitation with a photo of his buyer and $5
Starbucks gift card. The kicker: The whole transaction costs the seller half
the typical 6 percent commission.
Such off-market home
sales represent a shadow inventory: Chaffee says one-third of the roughly 60
homes he helped sell last year were not listed on the MLS. He guesses that
about 10 percent of homes sold by other agents are off-market deals.
“I just sold a
1,600-square-foot house in Kirkland on a 6,000-square-foot lot built in 1940,
for $940,000,” Chaffee said. “A little cottage house! It says to me there’s no
inventory in really desirable areas. Some people are just fed up of waiting so
long, they’re OK with paying a little bit more.”
Or a lot more. Last
year’s bidding wars resulted in homes in popular neighborhoods selling for
premiums that shocked even brokers. There was a three-bedroom home in north
Ballard that sold for $640 a square foot. A Montlake house listed
for $880,000 sold for $1.6 million.
November’s $11.2 million
sale of a Hunts Point waterfront mansion appeared to be the highest price among
homes sold in King County last year. According to media reports, the
buyer was a senior Microsoft executive who helped lead its cloud platform.
Surrounding counties also
saw robust gains: The median price in Snohomish County was $358,000, up 8
percent; in Pierce County, $252,500, up 11 percent; and in Kitsap, $269,950, up
15 percent.
Location, location
Across the region,
however, there continue to be large discrepancies in home prices and market
dynamics.
On the Eastside, the most
expensive submarket in King County, the median price of single-family homes
sold in December was $675,000, up a relatively small 6 percent over the year.
In Seattle, the median
price rose 20 percent over the year to $600,000. North King County saw its
median price jump 25 percent over the year to $480,000.
Location:
Seattle, WA, USA
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Seattle is The Fourth Best Real Estate Market In The Country For 2016
Seattle's supercharged
market for everything from skyscrapers to single-family houses is expected to
keep booming next year, even with higher interest rates.
Metro Seattle ranks fourth nationally as the
hottest market to watch for 2016, according to the influential Emerging Trends in Real Estate survey
by theUrban Land Institute.
This marks a rise from No. 8 in last year’s
report. Emerging Trends has proved to be a good barometer of Seattle’s
real-estate prospects.
“The Seattle market has become so popular
with domestic and global investors that in interviews it is not unusual
for it to be added to the list of top six markets,” the report states.
Among our strengths is a diverse industry base and growth in so-called TAMI
sectors (technology, advertising, media and information).
“One interviewee noted that Seattle is one of
those markets where the growth has been strong enough, long enough, that the
only potential risk is being able to sustain its current pace,” according to
the report.
The outlook for every real-estate sector in
Seattle except hotels is strong. Hotels come off “good,” but not as robust as
other sectors. Population growth and constraints on supply make Seattle
inviting for single-family house construction.
Seattle also benefits from its appeal to
millennials, as well as being an “18-hour city,” vibrant live-work-play urban
areas that are attracting more people and investment, doing better
economically, than sprawly places lacking an energetic center.
Nationally, real estate is expected to
continue growing, even with interest rates going up. Foreign investment remains
strong. The report’s top three are Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin and Charlotte.
Seattle is followed by Atlanta, Denver, Nashville, San Francisco, Portland and
Los Angeles to round out the top 10 best markets.
For the full article click here http://www.seattletimes.com/business/economy/a-hot-2016-for-seattle-real-estate-jon-talton/
For the full article click here http://www.seattletimes.com/business/economy/a-hot-2016-for-seattle-real-estate-jon-talton/
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Thinking About Buying A House? Use This Advice
Buying real estate is something you don't want to take lightly. When you make your purchase you feel comfortable about it, you want to make sure you have as much information about real estate so. This article is here so you can learn some tips that can help you with buying real estate.
If you are looking at buying a home and fixing it up to make some quick cash, you should first invest in some literature on the process and different books about how you can increase the value of your home. This will help you make the most out of your investment.
Do not hesitate to ask a real estate agent or another real estate investor if you are unsure whether or not a property value is fair or not. Never make a purchase without obtaining the fair market value that a property is worth. This will keep you from overspending on a home.
A great tip to use when buying real estate is to thoroughly vet your real estate agent. You can not just trust anyone to do a good job for you. Make sure that you check out this person's references, previous properties he or she has sold, and even speaking with those in charge to see how this individual performs overall.
Take your time to search and evaluate, do not just jump on the first thing you see. Many new home buyers make the mistake of buying the first thing they see and end up in a world of regret. You need to do careful research, and make sure that it is the property for you.
To help you get buy real estate effectively, make sure you are aware of the closing costs before you purchase your property. Sometimes, closing costs can be extremely expensive and will add a considerable portion to the cost of your property. Receiving an estimate on closing costs from your real estate agent will help make you better informed on this issue.
This is what is meant by the phrase, buy low sell high. In just about any market conditions, you will be able to re-sell for closer to the full market value, and this approach is much less risky than buying at market value and waiting for the market to go up.
When buying a home try to buy one that has enough space if your thinking about making additions in the future. You may only need one bedroom now, but you might want to buy a home with more so that you will have room for guests and/or new additions to the family.
Make sure you digested all of the information you have just learned about buying real estate. The only way this information is going to be of use to you, is if you apply the information you just learned. If you need to, come back and visit this article from time to time, to make sure that you remember the key points it presents, about buying real estate.
You want to make sure you have as much information about real estate so when you make your purchase you feel comfortable about it. If you are unsure whether or not a property value is fair or not, do not hesitate to ask a real estate agent or another real estate investor. A great tip to use when buying real estate is to thoroughly vet your real estate agent. To help you get buy real estate effectively, make sure you are aware of the closing costs before you purchase your property. Make sure you digested all of the information you have just learned about buying real estate.
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Open up Seattle’s single-family zoning to those who aren’t rich
This is a great article that explains the Housing Affordability and Livability Advisory (HALA) Committee
The recommendations reflect a range of housing types that actually already pepper our single-family neighborhoods.
IN 1993, when I was 28 and my second child had just been born, I rented a two-bedroom house in the Central District near where I grew up. I paid $800 a month.
That’s how my Seattle housing story begins, and it’s typical of my generation. In that house, I started the venture I still run, which now employs 14 people. In time, I was able to buy a house in Ballard that has somehow appreciated to a shocking $700,000.
The housing stories of young people nowadays are radically different. My friend Travana, who grew up in the CD a generation after me, cuts hair downtown and commutes by bus from a row house in Everett. That’s the closest family-sized place she, her husband and their baby girl can afford. She hopes to start a business as a clothing designer soon, if she can get ahead of her bills. My friend Meaghan, a new mom, may move to Renton to find an affordable two-bedroom place. Her husband is starting a new career and Seattle’s rents are crushing their finances. Travana and Meaghan are among the lucky ones — they have jobs and supportive families. Thousands of members of our community sleep under bridges or in cars each night, pushed there in part by our city’s white-hot real-estate market.
Housing affordability has become the defining challenge of Seattle’s growth. For the past 10 months, I’ve served on the Housing Affordability and Livability Advisory (HALA) Committee. Mayor Ed Murray asked us for a plan to turn Seattle back into an affordable city.
First, the purpose of changing single-family zoning is to welcome families who aren’t rich. It’s to enable the Travanas and Meaghans to live in these neighborhoods, too, renting and perhaps buying someday, and contributing their talents to our city along the way. The point of affordable housing is not the housing; it’s the people who will live in it.Of all the recommendations in HALA’s 65-point plan, the most controversial part concerns the city’s single-family neighborhoods. It deserves explanation.
Second, HALA had no choice but to recommend changes to single-family zoning. Affordability demands the reforms. Almost two-thirds of Seattle’s zoned land is currently reserved for detached houses. Seattle cannot accommodate the tens of thousands of people who are moving to our community without many of them landing in the single-family zones. Already, growth has made these neighborhoods exclusive to the point of exclusion — intensifying scarcity means only people with money or people from families with money can buy there now. Even small houses in popular neighborhoods start above a half-million dollars. Seattle is well down the path to Silicon Valley’s $1 million entry price for homeownership.
Third, HALA’s recommendations for bigger buildings in single-family areas are limited and fiddle around the edges, literally. HALA recommends an upzone to just 6 percent of the single-family zones. This 6 percent sits inside or adjacent to the city’s designated growth hubs, urban villages, or alongside arterial strips already lined with big buildings.
Fourth, HALA recommends more flexibility, but not bigger buildings, on the other 94 percent of the city’s single-family zones. These areas would stay under existing rules for building sizes: same height limits, same restrictions on total square footage, same setbacks. What would change is that city codes would allow more options in dividing up the allowable square footage. We recommend more in-law apartments, backyard cottages, cottage clusters, miniature duplexes and triplexes, courtyard housing, row houses, town houses, and stacked flats. We also recommended allowing separate ownership of these dwellings so that more people can afford to buy homes.
These suggestions reflect the range of housing types that actually already pepper our single-family neighborhoods, left over from before current restrictions. My friends Chris and Mary live in Wallingford on a neighborhood greenway. The three-story home they have restored themselves is surrounded by gardens and a chicken coop. It’s divided into three flats and they live on the top floor. My friends Valerie and Brian live in a classic old Capitol Hill house with a downstairs in-law apartment, which they rent to a single mom. Two doors up from my friends Pete and Christine, in a single-family zone in Ballard, is a triplex — two up, one down — built decades ago. My friend Rick lives near Green Lake and can point to the converted corner stores with apartments up top that are sprinkled through his neighborhood.
HALA means to say, in short: more like that! Neighborhoods would feel the same — the same tree cover and lawns, porches and rain gardens, chicken coops and tiny lending libraries — but with more people like Travana and Meaghan and their husbands and children. More people like my own children, now in their 20s, who I hope could live in their hometown someday and possibly own homes. And more people like 28-year-old me.
Alan Durning is executive director of the Seattle-based policy research center Sightline Institute and author of “Unlocking Home: Three Keys to Affordable Communities.” He lives in a single-family zone in Ballard.
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Friday, June 19, 2015
What are Bank Foreclosures and Why are they Important?
These days, one of the easiest ways to save money on real estate is to buy bank owned foreclosures. Bank home foreclosures are a unique form of repo homes for sale in cities across the country including New York, Los Angeles, Miami and more. They are available to the public through auctions as a result of the previous owner's inability to keep up with payments on a mortgage loan. In order to collect the money owed, lending banks will repossess and sell the property and use the sale proceeds as a means of settling the debt.
The interesting aspect of bank foreclosures for sale to potential buyers is that repossessed properties like bank foreclosed homes often sell for much less in this scenario than they ever would on the open market. Since lenders only need to collect a portion of a loan to settle most debt, buying real estate bank foreclosures often means buying property for savings that can range up to 50 % off market value. So whether you're searching for land in Seattle or an apartment in Chicago, you can find it for a great price!
Save Money Buying Repossessed Homes
No matter what you are looking for, you can find it through the property repossessions market for an incredible bargain. There are all sorts of different distressed properties out there; the bank foreclosure process is not unique to any particular type of home! Once you start exploring the market for bank owned properties, you'll find that there are apartments, condos, houses and even commercial seized properties and foreclosed land available. And best of all, any of these kinds of property can be purchased for discounted prices at sales in San Diego, Dallas, Seattle, Indianapolis and beyond!
Just as the repo homes market is not limited to one type of property, neither is it limited only to bank repos! There are many different lenders and mortgage institutions out there that sell foreclosed properties, and it's important to know about all of them in case you decide to take an alternate route to buying bank homes for sale.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are also two incredible sources for finding cheap houses, as they are responsible for thousands of mortgages provided in every state. There really are a lot of options available when it comes to buying homes repossessed by lenders, and some of the best advice a buyer can receive is to explore them all before deciding on the best for your needs.
Investing in Foreclosed Properties
When you choose to invest in bank foreclosures homes or any other kind of REO property, it always helps to have some guidance and assistance, and that's exactly what BankForeclosuresSale.com aims to provide. We'll teach you the ins and outs of buying bank repossessed homes and more for the best deals possible, so you can maximize the value of your investment.
Finding Foreclosure Listings
BankForeclosuresSale.com is one of the most effective services for finding the best bank repo homes in cities like Seattle, San Francisco, Baltimore, and anywhere else where property is in demand. Whether you're looking for places designed for single families or multi families, our database of over 500,000 listings nationwide is the place to find what you need. You can also specially target your search to view property lists for the kinds of sales you want, like those for bank foreclosures for sale or anything else under the sun. We can help make your search for a discount on a property investment painless and truly effective.
Once you find properties you are interested in it is the perfect time to contact a real estate agent at Homes and Equity Real Estate to help you research more information about the property and eventually inspect and handle the paperwork in the purchase of the property or properties you would like to purchase.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Thursday, March 12, 2015
The Benefits Of A Low Fee Broker
The benefits of a low fee
broker for people selling their homes are well-known -- namely, lower
commissions. But there are clear benefits for agents as well.
Potential for more business
Though you may be getting lower commissions for each sale when you work for a low fee broker such as Homes and Equity Real Estate Group, you have the potential to get more clients because many people who sell Bellevue real estate want to keep as much of their sale price as possible.
Less work
Low-fee brokers are able to accept lower commissions because they keep their costs lower by offering fewer services to those selling Bellevue real estate. People who use low fee brokers to sell their homes may be responsible for more of the marketing and may even have to do their own showings. This requires less work of the agents, which allows them to spend more time drumming up business or doing other things.
Lower costs
Because the low fee brokerage keeps its costs low, that cost savings gets passed on to the agent. Depending on the brokerage, agents may be responsible for some or all of their own costs when marketing Bellevue real estate, so the less they have to do, the less they will spend. Also, doing fewer showings or open houses can cut down on gas costs and staging expenses.
Lower expectations
People trying to sell a home can have unreasonable expectations of their agent, but those using a low fee broker such as Homes and Equity Real Estate Group may have a more reasonable view of the process. This can make trying to sell that particular piece of Bellevue real estate less stressful.
Overall, while commissions may be lower, there are other definite advantages to working for a low fee real estate broker, and it's something agents may want to consider.
Potential for more business
Though you may be getting lower commissions for each sale when you work for a low fee broker such as Homes and Equity Real Estate Group, you have the potential to get more clients because many people who sell Bellevue real estate want to keep as much of their sale price as possible.
Less work
Low-fee brokers are able to accept lower commissions because they keep their costs lower by offering fewer services to those selling Bellevue real estate. People who use low fee brokers to sell their homes may be responsible for more of the marketing and may even have to do their own showings. This requires less work of the agents, which allows them to spend more time drumming up business or doing other things.
Lower costs
Because the low fee brokerage keeps its costs low, that cost savings gets passed on to the agent. Depending on the brokerage, agents may be responsible for some or all of their own costs when marketing Bellevue real estate, so the less they have to do, the less they will spend. Also, doing fewer showings or open houses can cut down on gas costs and staging expenses.
Lower expectations
People trying to sell a home can have unreasonable expectations of their agent, but those using a low fee broker such as Homes and Equity Real Estate Group may have a more reasonable view of the process. This can make trying to sell that particular piece of Bellevue real estate less stressful.
Overall, while commissions may be lower, there are other definite advantages to working for a low fee real estate broker, and it's something agents may want to consider.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Explaining The Affordability Struggle for First-Time-Home-Buyers
In the latest edition of CoreLogic's Market Pulse the company's senior economist Mark Fleming provides adifferent take on housing affordability which he says economists are predicting will experience a "shock" in 2014. There is a degree of uniformity in their predictions, he says, that rising rates, increasing house prices and stagnant incomes will soon herald the demise of the era of affordable housing.
While Fleming does not argue with the basic premise he disagrees with the view that that news is "shocking." "As I often point out with most housing statistics today," he says, "it is less important to focus on the fact that housing affordability is declining, but rather where it stands relative to historically normal levels." But beyond the historical, Fleming also argues that affordability is actually proceeding along two different tracks, one for existing homeowners and another for those looking to buy their first home.
Using the same methodology as the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) and assuming a 20 percent downpayment and a 25-percent qualifying ratio Fleming constructed his own affordability index. Using this he says national affordability was down 17 percent from the previous October and 22 percent from its peak in January 2013. These declines are the result of an 11 percent appreciation in the CoreLogic Home Price Index (HPI) and a 100 basis point rise in interest rates. Yet CoreLogic's affordability measure is 35 percent higherthan in 2000 when mortgage interest rates were 8 percent and home prices were rising more modestly. So Fleming says, though clearly less accessible than a year ago, housing remains affordable in the current market."
But that analysis misses an important point. While affordability can vary by market is also varies dramatically depending on whether you are a homeowner or not because homeowners capture price increases in the form of equity. Thus affordability for the first time buyer is a measure of his income, the interest rates, and the price of homes; a homeowner's affordability level is functionally unchanged by increases in the latter.
The chart, which is based on a 5 percent downpayment, shows that during the period of 2003 to 2007, declining interest rates improved affordability for existing homeowners but that advantage for first time buyers was more than offset by rising home prices and housing reached its least-affordable level in 2006. Then in 2007 the recession took hold, interest rates began their fall to historic levels, and home prices also declined dramatically, costing existing homeowners their equity but improving affordability for first-time homeowners, putting the two groups on near equal footing by the end of 2010.
Fleming said that homeowners have disproportionately lost affordability again over the last two years; down 17 percent for that group compared to 6 percent for existing homeowners. And while first time buyers will still find affordability 35 percent higher than in the early 2000s, affordability for existing homeowners is almost 100 percent above the average back then as modest income gains have compounded and rates are still extremely low.
Context and ownership clearly matter Fleming says. "Will a further rate rise and increasing prices in 2014 eventually make housing unaffordable? That will depend, but one thing is clear: First-time homebuyers will be more significantly impacted."
for more info : http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/02202014_home_affordability.asp
Using the same methodology as the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) and assuming a 20 percent downpayment and a 25-percent qualifying ratio Fleming constructed his own affordability index. Using this he says national affordability was down 17 percent from the previous October and 22 percent from its peak in January 2013. These declines are the result of an 11 percent appreciation in the CoreLogic Home Price Index (HPI) and a 100 basis point rise in interest rates. Yet CoreLogic's affordability measure is 35 percent higherthan in 2000 when mortgage interest rates were 8 percent and home prices were rising more modestly. So Fleming says, though clearly less accessible than a year ago, housing remains affordable in the current market."
But that analysis misses an important point. While affordability can vary by market is also varies dramatically depending on whether you are a homeowner or not because homeowners capture price increases in the form of equity. Thus affordability for the first time buyer is a measure of his income, the interest rates, and the price of homes; a homeowner's affordability level is functionally unchanged by increases in the latter.
The chart, which is based on a 5 percent downpayment, shows that during the period of 2003 to 2007, declining interest rates improved affordability for existing homeowners but that advantage for first time buyers was more than offset by rising home prices and housing reached its least-affordable level in 2006. Then in 2007 the recession took hold, interest rates began their fall to historic levels, and home prices also declined dramatically, costing existing homeowners their equity but improving affordability for first-time homeowners, putting the two groups on near equal footing by the end of 2010.
Fleming said that homeowners have disproportionately lost affordability again over the last two years; down 17 percent for that group compared to 6 percent for existing homeowners. And while first time buyers will still find affordability 35 percent higher than in the early 2000s, affordability for existing homeowners is almost 100 percent above the average back then as modest income gains have compounded and rates are still extremely low.
Context and ownership clearly matter Fleming says. "Will a further rate rise and increasing prices in 2014 eventually make housing unaffordable? That will depend, but one thing is clear: First-time homebuyers will be more significantly impacted."
for more info : http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/02202014_home_affordability.asp
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Friday, December 20, 2013
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Become A Real Estate Professional
Real Estate training is vital for the
individuals who need to turn into an excellent Real Estate professional. It
helps them to study all about Real Estate. The Real Estate business requires
some opportunity, some fundamental information of the business and expertise to
perform all transactions. The Real Estate business will be one of the great opportunities
for a determined individual. The Real Estate business allows every one of them
the ability to accomplish their objectives.
Licensing is the fundamental necessity to turn
into a Real Estate agent. Indeed, it is a fundamental thing to lead the Real
Estate business. Real Estate on the Internet is the best choice to join the Real
Estate business. A few states give internet instructional classes that will
help you to finish prelicense prerequisites. When joining Real Estate you may
as well fulfill some prelicense necessities. They should be of no less than 19
years, be supervised while taking a delegated exam, have secondary school
certificate or some comparable to it, pass a state exam, have finished a
slightest sanction course.
Usually Real Estate class gives a few
guidelines to comprehend some Real Estate fundamentals. They can effortlessly
research possession exchange, Real Estate law and math with the assistance of Real
Estate training. They are taught how to arrange Real Estate transactions
throughout their course. Real Estate preparation empowers them to comprehend
the tips and traps of the Real Estate contracts. Individuals who need to go
along with some state sanction courses might as well have get their license.
Anybody might be a fruitful Real Estate Broker
in the wake of finishing Real Estate preparation. They can run a fruitful
business just assuming that they have incredible expert propensities, great
salesmanship and the eagerness to study more about Real Estate. Real Estate
business requires an extraordinary work ethic.
Individuals can research Real Estate business
with some identified books. They can additionally go along with some online
courses that give data through the Internet. These days numerous individuals
are profiting in the Real Estate business. Real Estate brokers ought to be
benevolent, educated, productive and additionally reliable. They need the
expertise how to acquire more clients.
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