More Buyers Turn to ARMs for Lower Borrowing Costs | #ARMsPopularAgain #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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More Buyers Turn to ARMs for Lower Borrowing Costs | Realtor Magazine

Rising interest rates are prompting more home buyers to turn to adjustable-rate mortgages—which come with potential financial risks. Though these mortgages typically come with lower interest rates initially, they reset to market rates after five or seven years, potentially shocking borrowers with much higher costs.

Adjustable Rate Mortgage

The percentage of borrowers with ARMs rose to 8.2 percent in October, up from 7.2 percent in September, according to Ellie Mae’s newly released Origination Insight Report. “As interest rates continue to rise, the percentage of adjustable-rate mortgages is increasing, as home buyers are looking to take advantage of the best rates from their lenders,” says Jonathan Corr, president and CEO of Ellie Mae, a cloud-based platform for the mortgage finance industry. Freddie Mac reported last week that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.81 percent compared to a 4.09 percent national average for 5-year ARMs.

Ellie Mae’s report also showed that the time to close on all loans is on the rise: 45 days in October, up from 44 days in September. Broken out, the time to close on a purchase loan rose to 46 days, while the time to close on a refinance loan increased to 43 days.

Also, the report showed that FICO scores of applicants averaged 727 in October. “FICO scores remain the highest we’ve seen in 2018, indicating that lenders are not yet loosening credit availability to attract the shrinking refinance market,” Corr says. “We’ll continue to watch this trend into the winter months.”

 

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Buyers Pounce on Stabilizing Mortgage Rates | #InterestRatesStable #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Buyers Pounce on Stabilizing Mortgage Rates | Realtor Magazine

Mortgage rates for 30, 15, ARM. Full information at http://www.freddiemac.com/pmms/

Mortgage rates mostly held steady this week—and homebuyers responded by rushing to lock in rates. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.81 percent, Freddie Mac reports.

“Mortgage rates stabilized the last couple of months as interest rate-sensitive sectors, such as new auto and home sales, have clearly softened the outlook for the economy,” says Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist. “Homebuyers pounced on the stability in rates as purchase mortgage applications increased, which indicates that despite higher mortgage rates this year, there are buyers on the fence waiting for the right time to buy.”

Freddie Mac reports the following national averages with mortgage rates for the week ending Nov. 29:

·       30-year fixed-rate mortgages: averaged 4.81 percent, with an average 0.5 point, unchanged from last week. Last year at this time, 30-year rates averaged 3.90 percent.

·       15-year fixed-rate mortgages: averaged 4.25 percent, with an average 0.4 point, rising from last week’s 4.24 percent average. A year ago, 15-year rates averaged 3.30 percent.

·       5-year hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs): averaged 4.12 percent, with an average 0.3 point, increasing from last week’s 4.09 percent average. A year ago, 5-year ARMs averaged 3.32 percent.

 

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Keeping a Listing Tidy While Pets Live in It | #SellingAHomeWithPets #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Keeping a Listing Tidy While Pets Live in It | Realtor Magazine

Making sure a listing is clean when the owners have a dog or cat can be tough. Pets can leave behind messes, scratch marks, fur, dander, and odors. Home improvement website HouseLogic offers some of the following tips on how to tidy a house with pets while it’s on the market:

Steam clean all fabrics.

Steam clean carpets, rugs, upholstered furniture, and the drapes. “Job number one is to take care of [the soft surfaces in your house],” Melissa Maker, owner of a Toronto cleaning service, told HouseLogic. “They hold odors and hair like nothing else.”

Groom.

Have the pet professionally groomed to remove more hair and dander. Be sure to brush the pet regularly—outside is preferable—to get most hair on the brush and not on your sofa or rugs.

Clean tile grout.

Tile is resistant to dog stains, but the grout isn’t. Steam clean grout to lift out stains and odors. A pro can chip away the old to put in the new.

Purchase an air purifier.

Add an air purifier tower with a HEPA filter. It’ll pull hair and dander from the air before it reaches your HVAC.

Use enzymatic cleaners.

“Enzymatic cleaners are made of beneficial bacteria that eat stains and odors,” HouseLogic reports. They’re made to tackle a specific type of stain. Apply them liberally to stains, regardless of how old the stain is.

Use charcoal to absorb odors.

Charcoal can pull out moisture and odors from the air. Hide small bags around or hang it in places your pet spends time in the most often. HouseLogic recommends purchasing charcoal bags that aren’t presoaked.

 

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Scammers Target Elderly for Their Homes | #BeCarefulOfScammers #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Scammers Target Elderly for Their Homes | Realtor Magazine

Seniors are being targeted in a new real estate scam that tries to get them to sign over their home for far below market value.

Mary Ann Welch, 70, shared with Capital Public Radio how she received a letter in her mailbox that offered to buy her Sunnyvale, Calif., home for $750,000. The letter included paperwork for her to sign and consent to sell. Welch had not put the house up for rent or for sale. The two-bedroom home is within walking distance of Apple, Google, and LinkedIn, and is valued at more than $1.5 million.

Elderly homeowners real estate scam

“I saw the contract for me to sign and I was furious,” Welch told Capital Public Radio. “If I had Alzheimer’s or if I was demented at all, I would have signed it thinking I would get all this money. … If they’re doing it to me, they’re going to be doing it to others.”

Cherie Bourlard, Santa Clara County’s deputy district attorney, says they’ve seen an uptick in cases that involve direct solicitations to elderly homeowners that contain offers well below market value for their home.

Housing markets where prices have risen quickly may be most prime for the scam. Homeowners may “have no idea of the value of the homes they’re sitting on,” Bourlard says. “They remember buying their home for $40,000 but in these crazy upswings of market value, they have no idea their property might be worth $800,000, $1 million, $2 million.”

The scams targeting the elderly may not be voidable either for those who sign. “They might not clearly understand what they’re doing,” Bourlard says. “But they have enough [mental] capacity to where the transaction is not voidable. Studies show as we age, we become less savvy in financial transactions.”

Duane Shewaga, Santa Clara County real estate fraud coordinator, says that scammers are trolling public property records looking for elderly homeowners who have very low assessed values.

Some scammers will even go door to door, warns San Diego County prosecutor Valerie Tanney. “I’ve had numerous cases where they approach and befriend people and use religion and the trusting nature of people at churches to victimize,” Tanney told Capital Public Radio.

Tanney urges seniors who receive such solicitations to report any real estate fraud to the police and district attorneys’ offices. Also, seniors should not sign any paperwork without first consulting a real estate agent, lawyer, or financial planner.

 

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Seller Tips – How to Price Your Home | #HomePricingTips #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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How Much is My House Worth? | How to Price Your Home

Home pricing is more of a science than an art, but many homeowners price with their heartstrings instead of cold, hard data. 

Smart sellers know that crunching the numbers is always the better route to an accurate home price. Here’s how they do it.

 

#1 They Avoid Overpricing

Homeowners often think that it’s OK to overprice at first, because — who knows? — maybe you’ll just get what you’re asking for. Although you can certainly lower an inflated price later, you’ll sacrifice a lot in the process.

Just ask Candace Talmadge. She originally listed her Lancaster, Texas, home for $129,000, but “eventually had to accept the market reality” and chop $4,000 off the price.

The home’s location proved challenging: Buyers were either turned off by the area — a lower-income neighborhood south of Dallas — or unable to afford the home. 

“Sellers have to keep in mind the location,” says Talmadge. “Who are going to be the likely buyers?”

The most obvious pitfall: A house that remains on the market for months can prevent you from moving into your dream home. Already purchased that next home? You might saddle yourself with two mortgages.

“You lose a lot of time and money if you don’t price it right,” says Norma Newgent, an agent with Area Pro Realty in Tampa, Fla.

And worse: Continually lowering the price could turn off potential buyers who might start wondering just what is wrong with your home.

“Buyers are smart and educated,” says Lisa Hjorten of Marketplace Sotheby’s International Realty in Redmond, Wash. “You’re probably going to lose them.”

#2 They Don’t Expect Dollar-for-Dollar Returns

It’s easy for homeowners to stumble into two common traps:

1.                  Conflating actual value with sentimental value — how much they assume their home’s worth because they lived there and loved the time they spent there.

2.                  Assuming renovations should result in a dollar-for-dollar increase in the selling price — or more.

“Many homeowners think, ‘Of course my home is worth a bazillion dollars,’” says Newgent. If they put in a few thousand dollars worth of new flooring, for example, they might overestimate the upgrade’s impact on the home’s value into the tens of thousands.

Talmadge’s Texas home came with a built-in renovation trap: It was already the nicest home in the area, making it harder to sell. Major additions had inflated the square footage — and the price, according to one appraiser — without accounting for the surrounding neighborhood. That created a disconnect for buyers: Wealthier ones who might be interested in the upgraded home disliked the neighborhood, and less affluent buyers couldn’t afford the asking price.

“Don’t buy the nicest home on the block” is common real estate advice for this reason.

That’s not to say that renovations aren’t worth it. You want to enjoy your home while you’re in it, right? Smart renovations make your home more comfortable and functional but should typically reflect the neighborhood. A REALTOR® can help you understand what certain upgrades can recoup when you sell and which appeal to buyers.

Another culprit for many a mispriced home is online tools, like Zillow’s “Zestimate,” that prescribe an estimated market value based on local data.

The estimate is often wildly inaccurate. A Virginia-area real estate company, McEnearney & Associates, has compared actual sold prices with predicted online estimates for several hundred homes in the area for the past few years and concluded the predictions failed half of the time.

#3 They Use Comparable Sales (also Known as “Comps”)

The best pricing strategy? Consult a real estate agent, who will use something called comps (also known as “comparable sales”) to determine the appropriate listing price. They’re not just looking at your neighbors; they’re seeking out near-identical homes with similar floor plans, square footage, and amenities that sold in the last few months.

Once they’ve assembled a list of similar homes (and the real prices buyers paid), they can make an accurate estimate of what you can expect to receive for your home. If a three-bedroom bungalow with granite countertops and a walk-out basement down the block sold for $359,000, expecting more from your own three-bedroom bungalow with granite countertops and a walk-out basement is a pipe dream.

After crunching the data, they’ll work with you to determine a fair price that’ll entice buyers. The number might be less than you hope and expect, but listing your home correctly — not idealistically — is a sure way to avoid the aches and pains of a long, drawn-out listing that just won’t sell.

#4 They Adjust the Price When Needed

Once your home is on the market, you’ll start accumulating another set of data that will serve as the ultimate price test: how buyers react.

Agent Hjorten says there’s an easy way to tell if you’ve priced too high: “If we have no showings, it’s way too high. Lots of showings and no offer means you’ve marketed well — but it’s overpriced once people get inside.”

Talmadge didn’t struggle with showings. She says a number of people were interested in the home, but not enough at the price. In the end, Talmadge sold her home for $125,000, with a $5,000 seller’s assist, a discount on the cost of the home applied directly to closing costs.

“It all boils down to location, location, location. In [another] neighborhood, our house might well have sold for well over $130,000,” Talmadge says.

When it comes to finding a buyer, pricing your home according to data — and the right data, at that — is crucial to making the sale.

 

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Buyers May Find Relief in Cooling Housing Market | #BuyersRelief #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Buyers May Find Relief in Cooling Housing Market | Realtor Magazine

 

 

Happy couple in the garden of their country house

© Westend61/Getty Images

 

The housing market is showing several signs of slowing, providing a much-needed break for potential buyers who have been waiting to jump into the market. Existing-home sales were 2.4 percent lower in the third quarter than a year ago, and the drop comes at a time when many areas are starting to see an uptick in new listings.

Home prices in many markets are no longer rising by double digits—or even single digits—annually. But with a strong economy and low unemployment, the housing dip is more of a rebalancing of the market than a sign of a downturn, housing analysts say.

Sellers are realizing there is a slowdown and are starting to cut their prices to better compete. Nearly 29 percent of listings in major markets during the month ending Oct. 14 saw price reductions, according to the real estate brokerage Redfin. “The cycle has moved from seller-advantage to at least mildly buyer-advantage in many parts of the United States,” writes Kenneth Harney, a nationally syndicated real estate columnist. “If you’re a buyer, take your time. But keep in mind: If you shop diligently, this fall could be a smart time to catch a deal—a marked-down price on the house you really want.”

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More Homeowners Add ADUs, Other Improvements | #MoreADUs #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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More Homeowners Add ADUs, Other Improvements | Realtor Magazine

Homeowners appear to be spending more on property improvements while waiting for the right time to sell. In October, expenditures on existing homes, including renovations, additions, and alterations, rose 2.9 percent year over year, according to a new report from BuildFax, a firm that provides property condition and history data.

 

Modern pendant light with vintage light bulb

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Home prices are outpacing wage growth significantly, and along with rising mortgage rates, more homeowners are feeling stuck in place. “As a result, homeowners, unable to re-enter the housing market, are reinvesting in their existing properties,” says BuildFax CEO Holly Tachovsky. “Homeowners may feel unprepared to enter the housing market, but they are making larger investments in the health of their existing property.”

Home maintenance activity may signal the most active housing markets, according to BuildFax. Minnesota has seen some of the most significant maintenance activity over the past year, leading the nation in per capita maintenance volume since 2013. New listings in Minnesota have also fallen the past three years. But the average sales price of properties has risen more than 5 percent annually in that time, the report notes.

Some homeowners are adding accessory dwelling units, also known as granny flats—which are small living spaces designed to house a family member or renter. California has seen the most growth in ADU construction and maintenance. ADUs in the state have grown by nearly 54 percent so far in 2018 compared to a year ago. Oregon and Washington are also seeing a large uptick of ADUs.

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Study: Homeownership Delay Hurts Financial Health | #PurchaseHomeSooner #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Study: Homeownership Delay Hurts Financial Health | Realtor Magazine

Millennials who put off homeownership may be severely curtailing their ability to build wealth over their lifetimes, warns a new report from the Urban Institute. Buying a home at an early age offers a “big bang for their housing buck,” concludes the report’s authors, Hyun Choi and Laurie Goodman.

A tiny businessman loses a large pink piggy bank to a giant robotic hand.

© Gearstd – iStock/Getty Images Plus

 

Researchers tracked individuals since 1968 to identify those who reached age 60 between 2003 and 2015 and how homeownership has affected their finances. Of those now in their early 60s, individuals who had purchased their first home between the ages of 25 and 34 had a median housing wealth of $150,000, while those who waited to buy until they were between 35 and 44 had $72,000 less. Those individuals who did not buy until 45 or older had median wealth of at least $100,000 less than those who purchased between the ages of 25 to 34, according to the study.

Those who purchased their home at the youngest ages—before 25—had the second largest amount of equity, at a median of $130,000, according to the study. Researchers said they likely didn’t have the most equity due to their younger age and because they had lower incomes and less education at that point in their lives. But those who purchased at younger ages still tended to have the largest returns on their initial investment, the report showed.

The differences in housing wealth among the age groups is due to home appreciation and paying down their mortgage debt, the researchers note.

Half of the older adults in the study’s sample bought their first home between ages 25 and 34; 27 percent purchased their first home before age 25. That is much higher than today’s generation: In 2016, 37 percent of those between the ages of 25 and 34 owned a home, as did 13 percent between ages 18 and 24.

The delay in homeownership for millennials could have long-term economic consequences. Equity is usually the largest single source of personal wealth. “While people make the choice to own or rent that suits them at a given point, maybe more young adults should take into account the long-term consequences of renting when homeownership is an option,” the researchers note in the report.

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Report: Architectural Design Aids Obesity | #InterestingThoughts #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Report: Architectural Design Aids Obesity | Realtor Magazine

The architectural design of buildings may be partially to blame for aiding the epidemic of obesity in America, suggests a new report from the nonprofit Trust of America’s Health. While much emphasis has been placed on enhancing outdoor spaces such as bike lanes and sidewalks, the report notes, planners and builders have been less focused on improving building interiors to enhance health.

 

Mature overweight man sitting in armchair

© Michael Greenberg – DigitalVision/Getty Images

 

Research finds “a link between built environments—all the human-made physical aspects of a community—and both physical activity and obesity,” according to the Trust’s report. The nonprofit is urging architects to be more mindful of how the design of interior spaces can increase physical activity, especially because research indicates the average person spends about 90 percent of their time indoors. Today, nearly 40 percent of Americans are obese, including 18.5 percent of children under the age of 18, the report notes.

Some cities have adopted measures to make stairways a more prominent design feature in homes in order to fight obesity. New York, for example, has adopted “active design guidelines” urging the need for prominent placement of stairs, ramps, and other elements to increase physical activity. The guidelines also downplay elevators and escalators as options for movement indoors.

The Trust also notes that highly visible, centrally located staircases that are enhanced by artwork or light exposure could urge more people to take the stairs instead of riding in the elevator in commercial buildings. “It is imperative that architects find ways to include exercise as part of one’s everyday experience within public as well as private buildings,” an article in Architect Magazine notes. “After all, fitness should not be an exceptional activity but a common one made irresistible by design.”

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Inflated Appraisals May Force FHA to Raise Borrowing Costs | FHA&ReverseMortgage #TalkToYourAgent #SiliconValleyAgent #YajneshRai #YourAgentMatters #01924991

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Inflated Appraisals May Force FHA to Raise Borrowing Costs | Realtor Magazine

Inflated home appraisals are partly responsible for what the Federal Housing Administration expects to be a $14.4 billion loss in mortgage insurance over the next few years—a cost that likely will be passed on to borrowers, according to an agency analysis. If the losses continue, the FHA may be forced to raise insurance premiums on its mortgages, The Wall Street Journal reports. The FHA insures about 11 percent of single-family residential mortgage debt.

 

Doctor holding stethoscope to model house.

© Peter Dazeley – DigitalVision/Getty Images

 

The issue of inflated appraisals first surfaced in the reverse mortgage market. Homeowners use reverse mortgages to borrow against the value of their homes, and their lenders are repaid when the properties sell. But an inflated appraisal could result in the lender not recouping the entire value of the loan. In that case, the FHA is responsible for coming up with the difference.

Brian Montgomery, head of the FHA, says a review of 134,000 mortgages insured by the agency found that at least 37 percent of the properties were overvalued by 3 percent or more. Reverse mortgages make up about 6 percent of the FHA’s insurance portfolio.

The FHA says it has initiated a new process in which all appraisals submitted under its reverse mortgage program must be reviewed before lenders can close on a loan. Under this new process, the FHA will order a second appraisal if it believes a home has been overvalued.

Inflated appraisals were blamed for the housing bubble a decade ago. They decreased in frequency in subsequent years, but now they’re resurfacing as home prices skyrocket, housing officials say. “Appraisers seeking future business have little incentive in jeopardizing a loan closing by underestimating the collateral value,” according to a 2017 study by housing officials. That study prompted the FHA to do further investigation into the issue.

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