Saturday, July 17, 2010

JULY 2010 Housing Trends Newsletter by Dan Crispino

Housing Trends eNewsletter is also filled with local and national real estate sales and price activity provided by MLSs and the National Association of Realtors, U.S. Census Bureau key market indicators, housing market video reports, blogs, real estate glossary, maps, mortgage rates and calculators, consumer articles, and information on 50,000 neighborhoods.

http://dancrispino.housingtrendsenewsletter.com

Please enjoy and let me know your thoughts.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Just Listed - 4 BR Waterfront Weston Home

Check Out This View!!!






I just listed a gorgeous 4 BR / 2.5 Bath / 2CG home in the gated community of North Lake in Weston.



This well maintained home is located on a premium lakefront lot with long and wide views which can be enjoyed from the inside and outside both. Eastern rear exposure means comfortable afternoons and evenings on your large screened patio. Perfect for BBQ, entertaining and plenty of room to add a pool plus accordion shutters on all windows. A desirable floor plan with all ceramic tile downstairs, newer A/C unit, & much more. Within walking distance to Eagle Point Elementary. Located in 24hr guard gated community with a community pool .

The great news is it is not a short sale or REO! Why get frustrated with the banks waiting endlessly for a short sale approval that never comes? This home is ready for a new owner...don't miss your opportunity! Call Dan today at 954-237-0403 or 954-993-3331.

Here is a link to the listing on Realtor.com for more photos and details:

http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/810-Falling-Water-Rd_Weston_FL_33326_1119897456

Monday, May 24, 2010

Housing Market Recovering as Sales, Prices Rise in April

Home sales and prices increased last month in South Florida as the housing market continues to stabilize following a steady, four-year decline.
Broward County had 766 sales of existing homes in April, up 11 percent from 690 a year ago, the Florida Realtors trade group said Monday. Palm Beach County had 918 homes trade hands, a 35 percent increase from 681 last April.
Broward’s median price of $204,300 rose 7 percent from $191,300 a year earlier. Palm Beach County’s median rose 2 percent to $239,100.
Even existing condominium prices show signs of rebounding. Palm Beach County’s median condo price of $102,000 increased 4 percent from last April. Broward’s median condo price of $79,300 was down 1 percent from a year ago.
Much of the activity is the result of two federal tax credits. To qualify for the $8,000 and $6,500, buyers had to sign contracts by April 30, but they don’t have to close until June 30.
With the incentive gone, some analysts expect sales to decline gradually over the next few months. That also could hurt prices.
Still, Mike Larson, a housing analyst with Weiss Research in Jupiter, doesn’t forecast a major decline in sales because affordability will keep buyers interested. He expects a steady, if stagnant, recovery.
“For a market that’s already gotten killed, I don’t think there’s some new huge plague out there,” Larson said.

from South Florida Sun-Sentinel - May 24, 2010

Friday, February 12, 2010

First-time Buyers and Existing Homeowners Reap Tax Credit Benefits







Broward County Pending Sales

In Broward County pending home sales increased 8.0 percent, from 6,898 to 7,447 in January. Pending sales of condominiums in Broward County rose 9.4 percent from 3,780 to 4,137. Pending sales of single-family homes rose 6.2 percent in January from the previous month, from 3,118 to 3,310.
In the last 10 months Broward pending sales of single-family homes rose 31 percent, while pending sales of condominiums increased 80 percent. The total number of pending sales increased 54.4 percent from March 2009 to January 2010.
"The tax credit that was extended through April 30, 2010 and expanded to existing homeowners who have lived in their principal residence for five consecutive years in the past eight years is clearly impacting pending and closed sales in the South Florida market and is expected to further boost sales in the coming months," said Oliver Ruiz, RAMB Residential President.
A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing. Increased pending sales are an indication of increased future sales.


About RAMB
The Realtor Association of Greater Miami and the Beaches was chartered by the National Association of Realtors in 1920 and is celebrating its 90th year of service to Realtors, the buying and selling public, and the communities in South Florida. Comprised of three organizations (the Residential Realtor Association of Greater Miami and the Beaches, the Realtors Commercial Alliance and the International Council of Greater Miami and the Beaches), RAMB represents over 12,000 real estate professionals in all aspects of real estate sales, marketing, and brokerage. RAMB´s official Web site is http://www.miamire.com/.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

South Florida home sales up as prices stabilize

BY INA PAIVA CORDLE
icordle@MiamiHerald.com
Yadir Enriquez has been trying to buy a house for a year, but each time he made an offer, other buyers beat him to the deal.
This time, his contract was accepted: He'll pay $220,000 for a four-bedroom Kendall home that sold three years ago for $350,000, then fell into foreclosure. Still, he figures he's spending $50,000 more than he would have a year ago.
Enriquez and his family are joining the tide of South Florida home buyers rushing to close a deal, as home sales soar and prices begin to stabilize.
Existing home sales jumped 45 percent in Miami-Dade and 24 percent in Broward in December, compared to the same month of 2008, according to housing data released Monday by Florida Realtors, the industry's association. Median prices fell just 5 percent in Miami-Dade and 2 percent in Broward in the year-to-year comparison.
``We're definitely seeing more interest and more activity,'' said Frank Kowalski, president of Metro Dade Realty in Miami. ``The home-buyer credit has done a lot to stimulate that.''
Realtors say more buyers are perusing property, and some believe prices have stopped their freefall. In some pockets in The Roads section of Miami, Coral Gables, Plantation, Coral Springs and Weston, Realtors say they are even starting to inch up. Enriquez's purchase means he, his wife, toddler and baby will double their current living space. ``I'm happy, because compared to the condo that I have, it is much better,'' said Enriquez, 32, a CVS store manager.
It's more proof that when the price is right, consumers buy.
``For 16 months now, we have seen that we have had existing homes sales increase compared to the same month the previous year,'' said Marla Martin, spokeswoman for Florida Realtors. ``That's a good thing. It means people are buying and finding prices attractive.''
Compared to November, single-family home sales in December rose 37 percent in Miami-Dade and 10 percent in Broward.
Still, median home prices continued to fall, dropping 10 percent in Miami-Dade and 17 percent in Broward compared to November. The figures include only those homes sold by real estate agents.
Condominium sales skyrocketed in December, compared to the same month of 2008 -- up 68 percent in Miami-Dade to 766 and 59 percent in Broward to 949. At the same time, median prices fell: down 16 percent in Miami-Dade and down 17 percent in Broward.
The pace of condo sales in December compared to November showed more modest gains: up 26 percent in Miami-Dade and up 5 percent in Broward, while median prices fell just 1 percent in Miami-Dade and 28 percent in Broward.
Nationwide, the picture is different. Home sales fell in December, after a surge from September through November, as first-time buyers rushed to complete sales before the original November deadline for the home-buyer tax credit. However, prices rose from December 2008 and annual sales improved in 2009, according to figures released Monday by the National Association of Realtors.
NAR's latest industry outlook predicts the housing recovery will gain momentum in the second half of 2010.
``It will be at least early spring before we see notable gains in sales activity as home buyers respond to the recently extended and expanded tax credit,'' said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun.
Qualified buyers who have signed a contract to buy a primary residence by April 30 have until June 30 to close the purchase to be eligible for the federal tax credit of up to $8,000 for first-time buyers and $6,500 for repeat buyers.
Market observers hope that will help South Florida's real estate market, which has suffered from weak sales and receding prices for about three years. Short sales and foreclosures have pushed down prices as owners, banks and other sellers have scrambled to unload property.
During the last quarter of 2009, foreclosures and short sales represented 60 percent of all sales in Miami-Dade and 50 percent in Broward, said David Dabby, president of the Dabby Group in Coral Gables.
``In a normal market, it is less than 10 percent; that's an unprecedented problem. The highest it has ever been before for residential homes, in the last 50 years, is 15 percent,'' Dabby said. ``That is the crux of the whole problem: there is such an unprecedented supply of foreclosures that have to be disposed of before the market can return to normal.''
Still, Realtors are hopeful the market is regaining a modicum of health.
``Buyers still are trying to low-ball offers, but the sellers are less agreeable to that in today's market, because they see that the prices in their neighborhoods are starting to stabilize, and we're putting the deals together at higher prices,'' said Jan Herard, broker associate for Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate in Broward County. ``In neighborhoods with good schools, the prices are going up.''

Friday, December 4, 2009

Mortgage rates hit rock bottom

Mortgage interest rates have dropped to an all-time low, which experts say could cheer the depressed South Florida housing market.The average for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell to 4.71, Freddie Mac, the federally run mortgage finance company, reported Thursday. That's the lowest recorded since Freddie Mac first started weekly mortgage rate surveys in 1971. Rates dropped 0.07 percent since last week.For prospective homebuyers, "The sharp drop in home prices, tax credits and now record low mortgage rates put a lot of affordability in your quarter," said Greg McBride, a senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com in North Palm Beach.But low rates won't cure all of the housing market's ills. The rates won't resolve the extremely low prices home sellers are getting, as they put their homes on a market crowded with foreclosures and short sales. And they can't counteract the impact of high unemployment, which economists say is a primary reason people are losing their homes.Low rates may also be out of reach for borrowers who are deeply underwater – meaning they owe more on the mortgage than the home is worth. Only those who are slightly underwater can qualify to refinance a home loan and take advantage of lower rates. About half of South Florida's homeowners are underwater to some degree, according to statistics from First American Core Logic, a real estate analysis firm.Still, the ray of hope provided by low mortgage rates is the possibility they'll hasten the market's recovery, which is still at least a year away, according to Moody's Economy.com."If mortgage rates remain this low for an extended period of time it could speed up the degree to which we work off excess [housing] inventory," said economist Chris Lafakis who tracks Florida's economy at Moody's Economy.com.The Moody's Economy.com forecast calls for Florida home prices statewide to fall throughout 2010, for a total decline next year of 21 percent, before stabilizing in 2011. Some areas will be hit even harder. For Miami, Moody's foresees a price decline next year of 28 percent and stability to come six months afterward, in mid-2011.The bright spot in the housing picture is that homes with these low price tags are selling. In Fort Lauderdale, the number of units sold has been higher than last year for nine straight months, said Richard Barkette, chief executive officer of the Realtor Association of Greater Fort Lauderdale. The Realtor Association of Palm Beach said that the number of condos sold in November was 21 percent higher than the year before and single family home sales were up 44 percent from November, 2008.
By Harriet Johnson Brackey South Florida Sun-Sentinel
6:37 p.m. EST, December 3, 2009

Friday, October 9, 2009

Homebuyers Pay Closer to Listing Price in August, but Are Still Negotiating Thousands in Discounts

RISMEDIA, October 9, 2009—Home buyers in much of the U.S. are still paying thousands of dollars below the home’s asking price, but had slightly less negotiating power in August 2009 than they did in July, according to the August Zillow Real Estate Market Reports. Buyers paid a median $6,525, or 3% less than the last listing price on homes bought in August, down from $7,018, or 3.3%, less for homes bought in July. Negotiating power peaked in January 2009, when buyers were paying 4.5% less than last listing price, a median of $10,096. Meanwhile, sellers continue to cut prices on unsold homes. One quarter (24.7%) of all homes listed for sale on Zillow had at least one listing price reduction as of Oct. 1, 2009. The median U.S. price reduction was 6.6% off the original listing price.Read more: http://rismedia.com/2009-10-08/u-s-homebuyers-pay-closer-to-listing-price-in-august-but-are-still-negotiating-thousands-in-discounts/#ixzz0TRSM3oQI
For more information, visit www.Zillow.com