Top Posts and News of the week

I wanted to start something new this week and that is to share some of the top blog posts on other blogs I have read as well as some of the top Real Estate News that I have for the week.

Top News Stories I have browsed this week

Freddie Mac Posts $25.3B Loss in Third Quarter

Mortgage rates down for 2nd week

85,000 homes lost in October

JPMorgan expands rescue plan

HUD: New RESPA rule out this week

Inside Real Estate- covers three spots that show signs of life

Top Blogs I have read this week

JP Moses has a great blog that I read frequently at reitips.com/

I like John Adams too - he has some great info at www.money99.com/

Real Estate Mentoring had a nice post this week on Improving Yourself as an Investor and Business Person

Invesmint.com provided a great post - Real Estate Investing for Newbies

I hope you found these links helpful.  If you have any other news stories or blogs that you have read and find useful please feel free to post them here.

Have a Wonderful Week-end
Stefanie

Fannie Mae To Open Satellite Offices To Liquidate Bank-Owned Properties : Strategies of the Condo Vultures®

I came across this blog post this morning and wanted to share it with you.

It looks like Fannie Mae is working on liquidating some of the Bank-Owned Properties that it has at this time.

It looks like Fannie Mae is getting ready to clean out some of the inventory so that it can prepare for the next wave of foreclosures.

Fannie Mae To Open Satellite Offices To Liquidate Bank-Owned Properties : Strategies of the Condo Vultures®

FM

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Some Positve News for the market

I wanted to share a bit of positive news today for the market.

Unfortunately, over the last several months there has been a lot of doom and gloom over the housing market, unemployment, business conditions and other economic issues. 

So — today it is time for some positive news:

U.S. Consumer Confidence Improves to 51.9 in July

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How the housing rescue bill can help you - Jul. 23, 2008

I am sure by how you have heard that there is a mortgage bill on the table to help deal with what is being called the foreclosure crisis.  I have seen a lot of speculation on what will be included in this bill and when I first heard about it I had some serious concerns on what message this would send to the homeowners that weren’t in trouble - would they feel slighted, etc.

Today I came across this article on CNN that did a pretty good job of overviewing the bill on the table.  I still have mixed feelings on if it will have an impact or not, but I believe it is structured properly so that homeowners that have kept current on the mortgage don’t feel slighted.

How the housing rescue bill can help you - Jul. 23, 2008

I would love to hear your thoughts

Stefanie

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Where is the Market Really At

This week I have been monitoring a lot of threads on where the market really is and trying to get a pulse on the best strategy to use right now.

In a lot of markets I see that now is the perfect time to buy and hold and reap some cash flow if you can.  In fact I have a two contacts that over the perfect turn key products for this:

On in the Denver Market - buy at 80-85% fully rebhabbed, rented and cash flowing

Another in some other markets - buy for $5,000 down - they will rehab, rent and then refinance you into an 80% loan and handle the property management on a rehabbed and cash flowing property.

What I have found though is that the information in the market goes back and forth on if now is the time to buy or is it the time to shy away.  Here are a few of the stories and other blog posts  I have found on this:

Real Estate’s Perfect Storm - Are you Ready ???

Feds Come out of Comma and Say Mortgage Crisis Worse Than They Thought

Are Renters Doubling Up To Prepare For an Economic Down Turn ?

Foreclosure filings surged 53 percent in June

Six Months, 343,000 Lost homes

Fannie Ups Investment in Multi-Family

Where are Home Prices Headed NextT

Top 10 Highest Rental Markets in 2nd Quarter, 2008

Real Estate: Flip or Rent?

As you can see there is a mix of both negative and  positive comments on the market.  We have personally tempered our activities, but not stopped all together.  We believe the market will improve, when is the question and if it will decrease more is a factor as well.

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This will help you move those fix-n-flips to first time home buyers

The government temporarily suspended a 5-year rule that required you to hold title to a property for 90 days before it could be resold using a government loan (FHA). This is a result of all of the foreclosed properties out there.

Here is the article:

Government suspends property-flipping rule - Jun. 13, 2008

What isn’t 100% clear is if this applies to properties that are acquired via a short sale too or just those that have been foreclosed on and therefore are bank owned. I am hoping it is both.

If this is both - this is wonderful for investors and will allow you to find, fix and flip these homes to first time home buyers with an FHA loan.

Happy Investing

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Some Market news for you

Not a lot to report - but wanted to share some market news I came across

Housing slump rivals deepest slowdowns in 60-plus years: Report - MarketWatch

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America’s Riskiest Real Estate Markets

I hope you are having a wonderful Friday. 

I wanted to take a minute to share an article I found in Forbes that list the riskiest real estate markets.  In reading this I gathered some beware points, but I also had a sense of potential opportunity.

 

Housing Trends
America’s Riskiest Real Estate Markets
Matt Woolsey, 03.31.08, 10:30 AM ET

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In Pictures: America’s Riskiest Real Estate Markets


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There’s roulette and there’s skydiving. Then there’s investing in Detroit and Cleveland real estate.

That’s especially risky because those markets are in freefall. Lenders have fled, foreclosures are on the rise, homes aren’t selling and local economies have stalled.

Given the state of the country’s housing market, it wasn’t hard to find others like them. To do so, Forbes.com looked at the country’s 40 largest metros and combined data on foreclosures, from RealtyTrac, a foreclosure listing service; job growth from the Bureau of Labor Statistics; transaction volume data from Radar Logic, a New York real estate research firm; and vacancy and current inventory rates from the U.S. Census Bureau and ZipRealty, an aggregator of multiple listing service data.

In Pictures: America’s Riskiest Real Estate Markets

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The riskiest were those that had the highest foreclosure rates, slow job growth (or job loss) and a rash of listed homes. By these measures, Orlando has everything working against it. Other spots, Denver, for example, exhibit negative characteristics like foreclosures, lending problems and vacancies, but are adding jobs, a sign that the local economy can better handle these difficulties.

Risky Business
Before "write-down" entered the national lexicon, the biggest risk facing real estate markets was the prevalence of subprime loans and adjustable rate mortgages. Last year, before the shoe-drop of the credit crunch and the dropping value of banks’ loans and debt, we identified ARM-heavy Miami, Fla., Orlando, Fla., and Sacramento, Calif., as the markets most at risk of further fall.

Subprime still matters, as do the concentration of adjustable rate mortgages. Transaction volume, however, especially over the next 12 months is becoming an increasingly important gauge of a market’s health. This month the National Association of Realtors reported that sales volume of existing homes was up 2.9%, the first such month-to-month rise since July.

In cities like San Diego, one of five major metros where transactions rose, that’s good news, assuming it’s sustained. What makes transaction volume a good indicator is that it shows how easy it is for people to get loans and how much confidence there is in the market. If mortgages are available and buyers have some faith in the value of the home, they’re more likely to buy.

San Diego’s present conditions suggest that over the next half-year, prices may start to rise. That’s because "there’s usually a three- to six-month lag between when transactions go up and prices go up," says Jonathan Miller, president of Miller Samuel, a Manhattan real estate appraisal firm.

Another good sign for the coming year? Increased credit availability.

We took into account increased Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (GSE) loan limits. The new legislation will open up credit in markets such as Sacramento and San Diego by boosting the GSE loan limit by 125% of the median price. That’s a huge deal for San Diego, where 18% of the market will see improved lending conditions, based on projections by Radar Logic, a New York-based real estate research firm.

Not as fortunate are hard-hit foreclosure markets such as Denver, which saw 50,000 foreclosure filings last year, according to RealtyTrac, which comes out to a 2.6% foreclosure rate, ninth in the nation behind the likes of Las Vegas and Detroit. Here, GSE loan limits won’t change to boost liquidity, though at the beginning of this year the local economy had added jobs at a rate of 2%, which is triple the national average, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The availability of jobs gets at the critical question of how much money is available within a market. A market with money on the sidelines has better recovery prospects because it means potential buyers are out there. A market without economic activity to generate buyers is simply sinking.

"People aren’t pulling the trigger right now," says Steve Cesinger, vice-chairman at Dewberry Holdings, an Atlanta-based real estate investment group. "But it’s a big difference if they’re not pulling the trigger because the prices haven’t declined enough or because they’re waiting to catch the bottom."

 

College Towns are a smart place to invest

I wanted to share this article taken from BusinessWeek with you. 

As the investing game as we know it is changing some it is very beneficial to look at different different strategies on how you invest and where.

Looking at College towns is a good idea because students will need housing.

College Towns: A Smart Play in Real Estate

Tempe,  Ariz., home to Arizona State University.
Tempe, Ariz., home to Arizona State University.

 

By Prashant Gopal
Provided by

One year ago, Jeff Shea began buying up rental properties around the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, from which he had only recently graduated with a business major. Shea, 23, who lives in Chicago, owns three rental homes near campus, including a four-bedroom house he bought for $138,000 and rents to four students for $1,800 a month.

"It’s the best time ever to buy houses," Shea said. "The rent is inflated because so many people go to school here."

Flags fly in College Park, Martland

Smart Buys In College Towns

Shea said he’d be happy if Champaign-Urbana prices took a dive so that he could buy even more. But college towns have remained relatively stable in this slumping real estate cycle. Students, university employees, and faculty keep apartments filled and form a steady stream of home buyers. And retirees and professionals flock to college towns because they’re attracted to the lifestyle and cultural activities.

Recession-Resistant Markets

Enrollments-especially at large public universities-are growing as more children of baby boomers (so-called echo boomers) graduate from high school. At cash-strapped public universities, dorm beds are limited and students are often forced to find private housing after freshman year, says Michael Zaransky, author of Profit by Investing in Student Housing (Kaplan Publishing 2006) and co-CEO of Northbrook (Ill.)-based Prime Property Investors, which invests in student housing.

"It’s a resilient market and seems to be fairly recession-proof," Zaransky says.

BusinessWeek.com worked with OnBoard, a local real estate information specialist, to find out how college towns are doing in this slumping housing market. We selected towns with long-established, first-rate colleges and found that 17 of 25 college towns outperformed their respective states in terms of home price appreciation last year. Four towns performed as well, and only four towns underperformed.

In Palo Alto, Calif., which is home to portions of Stanford University, median home prices increased 15% in 2007 compared with 2006, according to OnBoard. (Overall real estate prices in California dropped 9%.) The area benefits not only from the university but also from its proximity to Silicon Valley. Similarly, Austin, Tex., home of the University of Texas, saw a 6% price increase in 2007, while home prices in the rest of the state remained flat.

But not all college markets have weathered the housing slump as well. Williamsburg, Va., the home of the College of William & Mary, which has restrictions that limit off-campus rentals, saw a 16% annual home price drop in 2007. Virginia’s overall median home prices fell just 3%.

Not Just for Students

Zaransky says the houses located just steps from campus are seeing the most appreciation because that’s where students typically want to live. But other areas of college towns also benefit from local academic institutions.

Sandy Wentworth, a Realtor with Jones Group Realtors in Amherst, Mass., says retirees-especially former academics-like the Amherst area, which is home to four liberal arts colleges and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. "They want access to the culture and all the great libraries," Wentworth says.

Mark Waldhoff, a Realtor with Keller Williams Realty in Champaign, Ill., says the market around campus is stable in part because the university brings buyers and renters to town from more affluent urban communities. "It brings well-paying jobs into the community and brings a lot of diversity," he says. "Professors are often surprised about what the average sales price is here compared to the community they came from. You can buy a single-family home for $155,000 to $160,000."

For those parents of college students who can afford it, buying a house close to campus often makes good financial sense because their children need a place to live for four years, after which the property can be sold or turned into a rental home.

But Zaransky says parents should try to take their children out of the equation when deciding whether to buy. It’s generally good to buy in college towns with low-cost real estate, rising enrollments, and a shortage of dorm beds, he says. And it’s best to look outside of large, expensive cities where colleges have less influence on the housing market.

Risks for Investors

But like any real estate investment, buying in a college town comes with risks, particularly for investors. Think Animal House. Students are known to drink, punch holes through windows, spill beer on carpets, or just not be very responsible. Of course, it’s possible to protect your investment by requiring tenants to provide security deposits and parental guarantees.

And though the pool of tenants in a university town is large, it’s harder to find renters after the semester begins; the risk is that an apartment could go empty for a few months-though there’s always summer school.

A larger risk is that the subprime mortgage crisis could spread and the economy could fall into a deep recession. In that situation, home prices in college towns might not drop as much as other places, investors say.

In Austin, home prices near campus are already so high that investors can’t necessarily expect to cover a mortgage with rental income unless they come up with a significant down payment, says Jay Carter, a Realtor with Livinginaustin.com. But buying a home can still make a good investment in terms of appreciation.

Carter says enrollment is growing, but there’s a risk that the credit crunch could spread to the student loan market, pushing up interest rates and making college more expensive. "The area around the University of Texas campus is tighter than ever, and demand will always be there no matter what the economy is doing," he says. "UT students are competing [for apartments] with a large number of non-UT students who just want to live in that area of town. There’s a huge urban boom in Austin."

A Tight Market

Home prices next to the University of Florida campus in Gainesville have been strong despite Florida’s real estate downturn, says Dave Ferro, a Realtor with Bosshardt Realty Services. Foreclosures are more common farther away from campus, he says, but finding a good investment property close to campus is difficult because sellers are few and prices are relatively high.

"When the market is hot, it’s difficult to buy a property that you can break even on in terms of renting," Ferro says. "Things have changed a little bit, but properties around campus are like waterfront."

If you want to invest in college towns but don’t want to get involved with buying real estate, Zaransky suggests buying shares of real estate investment trusts. REITS that invest in student housing include American Campus Communities, Education Realty Trust and GMH Communities )

Prashant Gopal writes about real estate for BusinessWeek.com in New York.

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Where is the best place to buy foreclosed property ???

With all of the news of foreclosures and how it is impacting the country I know a lot of investors are holding off in purchasing.  This need not be the case though.  There are a lot of locations where it is now time to buy. 

Some of the top cities that are being listed by Forbes are:

Charlotte, N.C., Raleigh, N.C., Oklahoma City, San Antonio, and Albuquerque, N.M.

Here is a link to the complete list of locations named by Forbes:

Complete List: Best Places To Buy Foreclosed Homes

If you wish to read the complete article you can go to:

The Best Place to Buy Foreclosed Homes

 

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