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Posts Tagged “homes”

1363 McDaniels

4 bed Cape Cod on wonderful lot in East Highland Pk with long side drive, 2 car detached garage, finished lower level, and more. Come and see today!  Buyer responsible for any/all compliances, taxes, room count, escrows, etc if required. All inspections/systems tests are at buyers expense. Offers require pre-approval & EM due in certified funds at acceptance. Addendum required after seller accepts offer. Cash deals require proof of funds. Seller addendum required before submitting offer. Cash deals require proof of funds.  View the many pictures we have to offer at www.illinoisforeclosuredeals.com and call today to schedule a viewing of this property at 847-967-0022. This property is exclusively represented by The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty.

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By Dan Levy

June 30 (Bloomberg) — Homes in the foreclosure process sold at an average 27 percent discount in the first quarter as almost a third of all U.S. transactions involved properties in some stage of mortgage distress, according to RealtyTrac Inc.

A total of 232,959 homes sold in the period had received a default or auction notice or were seized by banks, RealtyTrac said in a report today. That’s down 14 percent from the fourth quarter and 33 percent from the peak a year earlier, the company said. The average price of a distressed property was $171,971, according to the Irvine, California-based data seller.

“The discount will probably stay between 25 percent and 30 percent as lenders carefully manage the number of new foreclosure actions in order to avoid flooding the market,” Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac’s senior vice president for marketing, said in an interview.

“We’re clearly creating more properties that will be sold at distressed prices than the market is absorbing,” Sharga said. There were more than 250,000 new bank seizures in the first quarter.

The discount reflects the average sales price of homes in the foreclosure process compared with the average sales price of properties not in distress. About 31 percent of all U.S. sales in the quarter were of homes in some stage of foreclosure, RealtyTrac said.

Rising Seizures

Home foreclosures set a record for the second straight month in May, with increases in every state, as lenders stepped up property seizures, RealtyTrac said earlier this month. Bank repossessions climbed 44 percent from a year earlier and will probably set a record in the second quarter, the company said.

Distressed sales totaled more than 1.2 million last year, a 25 percent increase from 2008 and a more than four-fold rise from 2007, according to RealtyTrac.

Such transactions accounted for 29 percent of all sales last year, up from 23 percent in 2008 and 6 percent in 2007. The average foreclosure discount was 25 percent in 2009, 22 percent in 2008 and 26 percent in 2007.

A “normal” market would show foreclosures accounting for less than 2 percent of sales, Sharga said.

Bank-owned properties sold for an average 34 percent discount in the first quarter, up from 32 percent both in the previous quarter and a year earlier. Such properties accounted for 19 percent of all U.S. home sales, up from almost 16 percent in the fourth quarter and down from 21 percent in the first quarter of 2009, RealtyTrac data show.

Short Sales

Properties in default or scheduled for auction sold for an average discount of almost 15 percent, up from almost 14 percent in the previous quarter and down from 16 percent a year earlier. These homes are often sold in short sales, where lenders accept less than the outstanding loan amount for the property, RealtyTrac said. Sales of properties either in default or headed for auction accounted for 12 percent of all sales.

The average price was $154,740 for bank-owned properties and $199,950 for homes in default or scheduled for auction, RealtyTrac said.

“The competing forces will be bank-owned properties and short sales,” Sharga said. “The more short sales, the lower the average discount is likely to be.”

Nevada had the highest proportion of distressed sales of any U.S. state, with 64 percent of all transactions involving properties in mortgage distress.

California ranked second, with such sales accounting for 51 percent of all sales and Arizona was third at 50 percent.

Discounts on distressed homes were highest in Ohio, Kentucky and Illinois, where they sold for an average of at least 39 percent less than non-foreclosures.

RealtyTrac sells default data from more than 2,200 counties representing 90 percent of the U.S. population.

–Editors: Daniel Taub, Sharon L. Lynch

Businessweek.com

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Commentary

The housing sector continues to show signs of recovery. Together the tax credit (which expired at the end of April), the more upbeat consumer confidence, and favorable market conditions all contributed to bolstering April’s sales activity – with existing home sales increasing for the second straight month.

The return of buyer confidence with much of the home price correction believed to be over, encouraging economic developments and historically low mortgage rates, will provide the stepping stone for further market stabilization.

Meanwhile, stagnant job growth and elevated levels of foreclosure continue to be cause for concern. The government is now taking proactive steps to restructure the mortgage industry with risk-management measures seen by experts as a “huge cut in red tape” that would ultimately benefit consumers.

The Housing Market

Existing Home Sales

Existing home sales strengthened in April to 5.77 million, up 8.7% from March and 22.8%from last April. This is the tenth consecutive month of year-over-year increases.

According to Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, although part of the uptick was expected from the tax credit, there’s also been a return of buyer confidence, for those who remained on the sideline last year. The return of confidence is a result of stabilized prices, an improved economy, and continued advantageous interest rates.

In March, 49% of sales were from first-time buyers.

Median Home Price

The median price for an existing home was $173,100 in April, up 2.1% from a year ago and 4% from March. Distressed homes, accounting for a third of last month’s sales, continued skewing prices downward slightly as they typically are discounted 15% compared to typical home sales. Overall, prices this past year showed increased stability over the previous year.

Inventory

Total housing inventory rose slightly to 4.04 million in March, representing slightly less than an eight-and-a-half month supply of sales (if homes continue to sell at the current pace consistently and no new homes come on the market). Compared to the previous year, there are now 3% more homes on the market. Although this is the first rise in twenty consecutive months of decline when compared to the previous year, NAR’s chief economist believes this increase can be attributed to the summer selling season and that home prices are back on track.

Mortgage Rates

Mortgage rates dipped back below 5% this month due largely in part to the European debt crisis. As confidence in the value of the Euro eroded, more investors chose the U.S. dollar instead. With more demand for dollars, the cost of debt (interest rate) dropped. This event has also shown the global recovery is not free-and-clear of roadblocks to complete recovery. However, experts still anticipate rates will increase to between 6% and 6.5% by the end of the year. As the recovery gains increasing traction, the Federal Reserve will need to increase rates to prevent inflation.

Affordability

Affordability remains advantageous, supported by some of the lowest mortgage rates in decades as well as less expensive home prices. The home price-to-income ratio continues to remain well below the historical average of 25%. The ratio now stands at 14.9%.

Sources: National Association of Realtors, Freddie Mac

Government Action

FHA Turns to Lenders to Monitor Brokers

As the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the government agency that insures home loans, saw its market share rise to about one-third of the mortgage market last year, up from 2% in 2006, the number of brokers seeking to arrange FHA-backed loans has mushroomed to 9,043 at the end of 2009 from 5,759 just two years earlier.

The agency, finding itself inadequately equipped to monitor its brokers, is shifting the responsibility to its lenders.

The FHA expects the new policies to result in better risk management, and the cut in red tape should produce better rates for consumers.

As of May 20, the FHA no longer certifies mortgage brokers or tracks the performance of brokers’ loans. Instead, lenders are now required to sponsor brokers and assume responsibility for loans they originate, including losses from fraud or mistakes in underwriting. In addition to revamping broker insight, the agency also beefed up oversight of its lenders by increasing net-worth requirements to $1 million from $250,000. The change is in effect for one year for existing lenders.

Source: WSJ.com

Topics For Buyers & Sellers

Myths about Distressed Properties – Debunked!

Distressed properties – foreclosures and short sales alike – represent potentially great value for prospective buyers. However, common misconceptions about the time and money investment involved with buying such properties may keep many from inquiring further into this market. KW Research survey findings, taken from more than 2,500 KW associate respondents who have worked with distressed properties, can help steer clear of concerns as you make your way to homeownership.

Buyer Concern Research Found

It’s going to take forever to find
one I want.

3 out of 5 REO buyers and 1 in every 2 short sale buyers spent less than one month searching for a home before writing an offer.
How many offers do I have to write before one gets accepted? 10? 20?

7 out of 10 distressed property buyers wrote three or fewer offers before one was accepted.

I know I am getting a good deal but will the cost of repairs eat up the savings?

Half of REO buyers and almost one-third of short sale buyers spent less than $5,000 in repairs.

Brought to you by

The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty

www.helenoliveri.com

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iPhone

Introducing The Helen Oliveri Team iPhone App!

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Features:

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Requirements:

Compatible with iPhone and iPod Touch.
Requires iPhone OS 3.0 or later

Download App Here

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Distressed properties may not be driving the spring home-selling market, but they can be considered a co-pilot.

Sales of existing homes in Chicago recorded their sixth consecutive month of year-over-year improvement in February, the first month of what is traditionally the start of the buying season. But for every 10 single-family homes and condominiums sold within the city last month, four were distressed properties.

Foreclosures, once dismissed as unseemly, are increasingly in upscale neighborhoods and in move-in condition, and their bargain-priced sales are causing a ripple throughout the market.

In the past six months, the median sales price in Chicago has plummeted 21.6 percent, to $176,500 in February from $225,000 in September, according to data from the Illinois Association of Realtors. For the Chicago area as a whole, the median sales price has dropped 17 percent, to $165,000 in last month from $199,000 in September.

Meanwhile, the Illinois Association of Realtors reported Monday that February sales of existing single-family homes and condos in the Chicago area rose 32 percent last month compared with the same month a year ago. It was the eighth consecutive month of year-over-year sales-volume improvement. Compared with a year ago, the median price fell 10.3 percent.

Within Chicago, sales posted a 41.5 percent increase in February over the year-ago period, representing a sixth consecutive month of year-over-year gains. Sales of Chicago condos rose 44 percent. The February median price for the city as a whole was down 19.3 percent year over year, and down 10.7 percent for condos.

The growing disconnect between sales volume and price is a concern for homeowners looking to list their home for sale this spring, real estate agents say.

Read full story…

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