For 2010 in the city of Chicago, @properties had more agents than any other firm who completed at least one million-dollar transaction. I am very proud to be one of those agents. Here are the stats, this is for the city only:
@properties = 80
Prudential= 74
B&W = 56
CB = 55
K&S = 55
Jameson = 23
Dreamtown = 17
What this means is that @properties has the largest internal network of luxury sales agents, so we will get your home in front of more agents working with more million-dollar buyers than any other brokerage firm. The reason we do so well in the luxury market is because we have the best high-end marketing, exposure and agents.
Showing posts with label Chicago Real Estate Market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Real Estate Market. Show all posts
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Saturday, February 5, 2011
@properties' Market Reports
Stay Informed In 2011
With @properties' Market Reports
With record low interest rates and record high affordability, 2010 was a banner year for just about anyone who bought a home. The favorable buying conditions were reflected in overall sales numbers for 2010, which showed slight improvement versus 2009. Total sales volume was up and market times were down for @properties' principal market areas of the city and North Shore (see charts below).
Heading into 2011, buyers are still in the driver's seat but will want to keep an eye on interest rates, which are expected to top 5% before long. Locking in a rate below 5% on a 15- or 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, or below 4% on an ARM, is a phenomenal opportunity given current home prices. For sellers, getting the job done in 2011 will once again require an in-depth understanding of hyper-local market conditions and price trends, as well as a comprehensive sales and marketing plan.
A great way to keep tabs on the market in 2011 is with @properties' Market Reports. The reports instantly generate real time market stats for almost every neighborhood and village in the Chicagoland area. You can drill down to view market stats for specific housing types and sizes, and observe trends over 3, 6 or 12 months. While on the site, search Chicagoland's most complete property database, and sign up to receive New Listing alerts and Status Updates for properties you want to track.
If you're considering a real estate transaction, now is the perfect time for us to sit down and discuss potential buying or selling strategies. Contact me at your earliest convenience, and please keep me in mind if you know of someone who is looking to buy or sell property this year.
City of Chicago Market Comparison: 2010 vs. 2009 Totals
City of Chicago Total $ Volume Days on Market Average Sales Price
2010 $5,619,459,483.00 150 $284,948.00
2009 $5,587,165,396.00 156 $279,904.00
2010 vs. 2009 $32,294,087.00 -6 $5,044.00
% Comparison 0.6% -3.8% 1.8%
North Shore Market Comparison: 2010 vs. 2009 Totals
North Shore Total $ Volume Days on Market Average Sales Price
2010 $1,502,902,690.00 196 $656,576.00
2009 $1,183,205,540.00 207 $655,516.00
2010 vs. 2009 $319,697,150.00 -11 $1,060.00
% Comparison 27.0% -5.3% 0.2%
Source: Broker Metrics. Data supplied through MRED LLC, based on closed transactions for detached and attached single-family homes and parking. North Shore includes Evanston, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Glencoe, Highland Park, Lake Forest and Lake Bluff. 1/1/10 - 12/31/10 vs. 1/1/09 - 12/31/09.
With @properties' Market Reports
With record low interest rates and record high affordability, 2010 was a banner year for just about anyone who bought a home. The favorable buying conditions were reflected in overall sales numbers for 2010, which showed slight improvement versus 2009. Total sales volume was up and market times were down for @properties' principal market areas of the city and North Shore (see charts below).
Heading into 2011, buyers are still in the driver's seat but will want to keep an eye on interest rates, which are expected to top 5% before long. Locking in a rate below 5% on a 15- or 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, or below 4% on an ARM, is a phenomenal opportunity given current home prices. For sellers, getting the job done in 2011 will once again require an in-depth understanding of hyper-local market conditions and price trends, as well as a comprehensive sales and marketing plan.
A great way to keep tabs on the market in 2011 is with @properties' Market Reports. The reports instantly generate real time market stats for almost every neighborhood and village in the Chicagoland area. You can drill down to view market stats for specific housing types and sizes, and observe trends over 3, 6 or 12 months. While on the site, search Chicagoland's most complete property database, and sign up to receive New Listing alerts and Status Updates for properties you want to track.
If you're considering a real estate transaction, now is the perfect time for us to sit down and discuss potential buying or selling strategies. Contact me at your earliest convenience, and please keep me in mind if you know of someone who is looking to buy or sell property this year.
City of Chicago Market Comparison: 2010 vs. 2009 Totals
City of Chicago Total $ Volume Days on Market Average Sales Price
2010 $5,619,459,483.00 150 $284,948.00
2009 $5,587,165,396.00 156 $279,904.00
2010 vs. 2009 $32,294,087.00 -6 $5,044.00
% Comparison 0.6% -3.8% 1.8%
North Shore Market Comparison: 2010 vs. 2009 Totals
North Shore Total $ Volume Days on Market Average Sales Price
2010 $1,502,902,690.00 196 $656,576.00
2009 $1,183,205,540.00 207 $655,516.00
2010 vs. 2009 $319,697,150.00 -11 $1,060.00
% Comparison 27.0% -5.3% 0.2%
Source: Broker Metrics. Data supplied through MRED LLC, based on closed transactions for detached and attached single-family homes and parking. North Shore includes Evanston, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Glencoe, Highland Park, Lake Forest and Lake Bluff. 1/1/10 - 12/31/10 vs. 1/1/09 - 12/31/09.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
When Home Prices Will Head Up
Property values are still drifting down, but look for relief at the end of 2011.
By Pat Mertz Esswein, Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, January 2011
The lowest mortgage interest rates in almost 60 years, plus affordable homes in cities where buyers had been priced out for years, should be turning the housing market around. But the market also labors under some heavy burdens: a glut of foreclosures that are dragging down home prices, high unemployment and tight credit. Sales fell off a cliff after the home-buyer tax credit expired. And “foreclosure-gate” -- legal squabbling about the process used to repossess many homes -- postponed the sale of many foreclosed properties and struck yet another body blow to confidence in the housing market.
For the four years beginning with the downturn in mid 2006, the median price of an existing home nationwide fell by 27%, or 7.7% annualized, according to Fiserv Case- Shiller, a home-price research firm. (At the worst of the decline, a year ago, prices had fallen 30%.) The median home now sells for $177,000, a bit more than what it would have fetched in 2003.
Among the cities that Fiserv tracks, Merced, Cal., fared worst, with a 68% plunge in its median home price in the four years since the peak, followed closely by Modesto, Salinas and Stockton, Cal.; Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.; and Detroit. Prices rose in just 12 cities -- in upstate New York, Tennessee and Pennsylvania -- that missed the boom and plugged along at their usual slow pace of appreciation.
Stuck Underwater
The home-price plunge has left 23% of mortgage borrowers (out of 53.5 million) underwater -- that is, they owe more on their mortgage than the market value of their home. Unless they can ante up the difference -- an average of $75,000, according to CoreLogic, which analyzes mortgage data -- they can’t sell and they can’t move. Their choices? Stick it out, ask the lender for permission to sell for less than they owe (a short sale), or default.
In Norwood, Mass., south of Boston, Al and Shannon Becker wish they could buy a bigger home, but they’re underwater by about $50,000. But the couple have a plan. They bought their 1910 farmhouse, with three bedrooms and two baths, for $389,000 in 2005. By 2006, the property appraised for $423,000 and the couple refinanced, taking cash out for home improvements. Now it’s worth $350,000. Still, they can afford to move -- and could come up with the cash to pay off the mortgage. Instead, they are paying an extra $500 a month on the second mortgage they took out when they purchased the house and anticipate the day when debt pay-down and home-price growth will converge. Walk away? No. “That would be un-American, and my parents would kill me,” says Al.
The price gains that would put the Beckers and the millions of homeowners like them in the black have been tantalizingly out of reach, though glimmers of hope exist. Median home prices rose by 3.6% during the year ended June 30. Many California cities saw double-digit increases. Prices rose by at least 5% in many cities in California’s beleaguered Central Valley and Inland Empire (such as Riverside-San Bernardino), a few cities in Florida, and in Phoenix, Washington, D.C., and Minneapolis-St. Paul.
David Stiff, chief economist at Fiserv Case-Shiller, says those price increases, artificially propelled by the home-buyer tax credit, weren’t sustainable. The tax credit expired on April 30. By June, sales had begun to slide, and in July they tanked. In late summer, sales of existing homes (including single-family houses, townhouses, condos and co-ops) began to climb again, but in the National Association of Realtors’ most recent report, they were still 19% below a year ago. The lower the price tier, the greater the decline in sales, which reflected the pullback of first-time home buyers.
Although this recovery may seem unendurably long, Stiff says that five to seven years is historically a “pretty standard time frame” for prices to stabilize after a large correction. But in the past, some regions suffered longer than others. For example, Dallas home prices took 12 years to recover after they fell from their peak in mid 1986. This time around, however, the downturn hit more areas because the mortgage-credit bubble was so widespread.
The Foreclosure Factor
Now, short sales and foreclosures are the driving force behind continued price declines. Throughout 2010, they accounted for about one-third of home sales, with an average price discount of 26%, according to RealtyTrac. Everyone agrees that more such sales are on the way, but estimates vary.
Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi says the foreclosure pipeline holds about four million loans that are delinquent by 90 days or more -- or headed that way -- and he thinks half of those will end up for sale. He thinks that delinquency rates have peaked and that foreclosures will peak in 2011. He reckons that, given current supply and demand, it will take two years to work through the excess inventory (which is concentrated in Florida, the Atlanta area, Arizona, Nevada, California’s Central Valley, the Rust Belt and a few other spots in the Midwest). The longer it takes to put to rest the foreclosure-processing issue raised in October, the greater the backlog of properties -- and the more they will suppress prices when they hit the market. But Zandi says foreclosure-gate will be resolved within a few months, not a few quarters. Even so, foreclosure moratoriums have ensnared plenty of bargain hunters, including Kerry Deland of St. Cloud, Fla. Deland moved to St. Cloud, near Orlando, in 2005. A kindergarten teacher, Deland quickly figured out that she couldn’t afford to buy a home -- especially one with enough land for her horse -- on her salary.
A friend tipped her off to a property that appeared destined for foreclosure -- a 5-acre spread with a three-bedroom, two-bath house that would have sold for $300,000 in 2005. Deland watched and waited. In July, the foreclosing lender listed the property for $114,000. Deland made two offers. The first time she lost out to a higher bidder, whose deal fell through. In late August, she made a winning bid of $111,900. Closing was scheduled for early November, but in October Deland learned that the seller, Fannie Mae, had imposed a foreclosure moratorium. Fortunately, it offered to extend Deland’s contract until December 5. “I’ve waited this long,” she says. “I can wait some more.”
A Glass Half-Full
The worst-case scenario for home prices? Slow economic growth and high unemployment drive up the foreclosure numbers, which push down home prices. Consumers refrain from spending, further dampening economic growth and job creation. Demand for homes decreases because would-be buyers either don’t have a job or don’t have confidence that they’ll still have one in months to come. Confident buyers hold off because they expect further price declines.
But Zandi thinks the job market will begin to turn around by mid to late 2011. And the Federal Reserve will ensure that mortgages stay dirt-cheap at least until employment picks up again. Zandi says that the best reason for a bit of optimism is this: With few exceptions, the market is fairly valued based on the relationship of home prices to income and apartment rents. Some markets have actually become undervalued, which will attract more buyers and investors.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Michelle Meyer says that to frame the housing outlook in a more optimistic light, “everything has to go as planned.”To buoy consumer confidence and put home sales on a strong, upward trajectory, job growth will have to be considerable and the unemployment rate clearly receding. Meyer agrees that we could see that begin to occur in the second half of 2011, but, she says, “it will be a slow process.” Fiserv expects the housing market to finally hit bottom in mid 2011, with another 7% decline in the U.S. median home price for the year ending June 30, 2011. The firm’s forecasting model says that prices are 90% of the way back to being in line with household incomes. Stiff says that the housing market is now “bouncing along the bottom,” with buyers and sellers creating price volatility as they try to match bid and ask prices. The firm predicts that in many cities, prices will begin to tick upward again in 2012.
By Pat Mertz Esswein, Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, January 2011
The lowest mortgage interest rates in almost 60 years, plus affordable homes in cities where buyers had been priced out for years, should be turning the housing market around. But the market also labors under some heavy burdens: a glut of foreclosures that are dragging down home prices, high unemployment and tight credit. Sales fell off a cliff after the home-buyer tax credit expired. And “foreclosure-gate” -- legal squabbling about the process used to repossess many homes -- postponed the sale of many foreclosed properties and struck yet another body blow to confidence in the housing market.
For the four years beginning with the downturn in mid 2006, the median price of an existing home nationwide fell by 27%, or 7.7% annualized, according to Fiserv Case- Shiller, a home-price research firm. (At the worst of the decline, a year ago, prices had fallen 30%.) The median home now sells for $177,000, a bit more than what it would have fetched in 2003.
Among the cities that Fiserv tracks, Merced, Cal., fared worst, with a 68% plunge in its median home price in the four years since the peak, followed closely by Modesto, Salinas and Stockton, Cal.; Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.; and Detroit. Prices rose in just 12 cities -- in upstate New York, Tennessee and Pennsylvania -- that missed the boom and plugged along at their usual slow pace of appreciation.
Stuck Underwater
The home-price plunge has left 23% of mortgage borrowers (out of 53.5 million) underwater -- that is, they owe more on their mortgage than the market value of their home. Unless they can ante up the difference -- an average of $75,000, according to CoreLogic, which analyzes mortgage data -- they can’t sell and they can’t move. Their choices? Stick it out, ask the lender for permission to sell for less than they owe (a short sale), or default.
In Norwood, Mass., south of Boston, Al and Shannon Becker wish they could buy a bigger home, but they’re underwater by about $50,000. But the couple have a plan. They bought their 1910 farmhouse, with three bedrooms and two baths, for $389,000 in 2005. By 2006, the property appraised for $423,000 and the couple refinanced, taking cash out for home improvements. Now it’s worth $350,000. Still, they can afford to move -- and could come up with the cash to pay off the mortgage. Instead, they are paying an extra $500 a month on the second mortgage they took out when they purchased the house and anticipate the day when debt pay-down and home-price growth will converge. Walk away? No. “That would be un-American, and my parents would kill me,” says Al.
The price gains that would put the Beckers and the millions of homeowners like them in the black have been tantalizingly out of reach, though glimmers of hope exist. Median home prices rose by 3.6% during the year ended June 30. Many California cities saw double-digit increases. Prices rose by at least 5% in many cities in California’s beleaguered Central Valley and Inland Empire (such as Riverside-San Bernardino), a few cities in Florida, and in Phoenix, Washington, D.C., and Minneapolis-St. Paul.
David Stiff, chief economist at Fiserv Case-Shiller, says those price increases, artificially propelled by the home-buyer tax credit, weren’t sustainable. The tax credit expired on April 30. By June, sales had begun to slide, and in July they tanked. In late summer, sales of existing homes (including single-family houses, townhouses, condos and co-ops) began to climb again, but in the National Association of Realtors’ most recent report, they were still 19% below a year ago. The lower the price tier, the greater the decline in sales, which reflected the pullback of first-time home buyers.
Although this recovery may seem unendurably long, Stiff says that five to seven years is historically a “pretty standard time frame” for prices to stabilize after a large correction. But in the past, some regions suffered longer than others. For example, Dallas home prices took 12 years to recover after they fell from their peak in mid 1986. This time around, however, the downturn hit more areas because the mortgage-credit bubble was so widespread.
The Foreclosure Factor
Now, short sales and foreclosures are the driving force behind continued price declines. Throughout 2010, they accounted for about one-third of home sales, with an average price discount of 26%, according to RealtyTrac. Everyone agrees that more such sales are on the way, but estimates vary.
Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi says the foreclosure pipeline holds about four million loans that are delinquent by 90 days or more -- or headed that way -- and he thinks half of those will end up for sale. He thinks that delinquency rates have peaked and that foreclosures will peak in 2011. He reckons that, given current supply and demand, it will take two years to work through the excess inventory (which is concentrated in Florida, the Atlanta area, Arizona, Nevada, California’s Central Valley, the Rust Belt and a few other spots in the Midwest). The longer it takes to put to rest the foreclosure-processing issue raised in October, the greater the backlog of properties -- and the more they will suppress prices when they hit the market. But Zandi says foreclosure-gate will be resolved within a few months, not a few quarters. Even so, foreclosure moratoriums have ensnared plenty of bargain hunters, including Kerry Deland of St. Cloud, Fla. Deland moved to St. Cloud, near Orlando, in 2005. A kindergarten teacher, Deland quickly figured out that she couldn’t afford to buy a home -- especially one with enough land for her horse -- on her salary.
A friend tipped her off to a property that appeared destined for foreclosure -- a 5-acre spread with a three-bedroom, two-bath house that would have sold for $300,000 in 2005. Deland watched and waited. In July, the foreclosing lender listed the property for $114,000. Deland made two offers. The first time she lost out to a higher bidder, whose deal fell through. In late August, she made a winning bid of $111,900. Closing was scheduled for early November, but in October Deland learned that the seller, Fannie Mae, had imposed a foreclosure moratorium. Fortunately, it offered to extend Deland’s contract until December 5. “I’ve waited this long,” she says. “I can wait some more.”
A Glass Half-Full
The worst-case scenario for home prices? Slow economic growth and high unemployment drive up the foreclosure numbers, which push down home prices. Consumers refrain from spending, further dampening economic growth and job creation. Demand for homes decreases because would-be buyers either don’t have a job or don’t have confidence that they’ll still have one in months to come. Confident buyers hold off because they expect further price declines.
But Zandi thinks the job market will begin to turn around by mid to late 2011. And the Federal Reserve will ensure that mortgages stay dirt-cheap at least until employment picks up again. Zandi says that the best reason for a bit of optimism is this: With few exceptions, the market is fairly valued based on the relationship of home prices to income and apartment rents. Some markets have actually become undervalued, which will attract more buyers and investors.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Michelle Meyer says that to frame the housing outlook in a more optimistic light, “everything has to go as planned.”To buoy consumer confidence and put home sales on a strong, upward trajectory, job growth will have to be considerable and the unemployment rate clearly receding. Meyer agrees that we could see that begin to occur in the second half of 2011, but, she says, “it will be a slow process.” Fiserv expects the housing market to finally hit bottom in mid 2011, with another 7% decline in the U.S. median home price for the year ending June 30, 2011. The firm’s forecasting model says that prices are 90% of the way back to being in line with household incomes. Stiff says that the housing market is now “bouncing along the bottom,” with buyers and sellers creating price volatility as they try to match bid and ask prices. The firm predicts that in many cities, prices will begin to tick upward again in 2012.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
5 Reasons You Should Use a Real Estate Professional
Should you spend the money on a real estate commission or save that money by selling your home by yourself? That is a question many home sellers ask themselves. Today, we want to discuss why it is crucial to have a true professional guiding you through the minefield of challenges that exist in the current real estate market.
The housing market today is more challenging than it has ever been and seems to be becoming more difficult each day. What impact will foreclosures have on prices? Which loan products that were available just last month are no longer available? How do you convince perspective purchasers to pull the trigger on an offer when everyone is telling them that they should see another 100 houses before they make a decision? These are tough questions for a trained, experienced professional. The lay person would find it almost impossible to keep abreast of this rapidly evolving industry.
Here are five important reasons to use a real estate professional:
1. Pricing Is Difficult
Just a few years ago, you didn’t have to worry about overpricing your home. If it was too high, all you needed to do was wait as historic appreciation was taking place. The situation is quite different today. With experts calling for another drop in home values, overpricing your property will cost you time. In this market, time costs you money. A professional real estate agent will discuss how increasing inventory could dramatically impact the value of your property in the months to come. They will help you set the right price in today’s market.
2. Negotiating Ability Is Crucial
Buyers today have an almost unlimited supply of homes from which to choose. They realize that puts them in a great negotiating position. Most buyers are now being represented by an agent. Sellers need to also be represented by a professional expert trained to negotiate real estate contracts.
3. Mortgaging Is Key to the Deal
The biggest impact of the housing market collapse is that lending standards are much stricter today than they were a few short years ago. Rules are constantly changing. Even FHA has gone through a guidelines overhaul in the last several months. You need a real estate expert who has teamed up with a knowledgeable mortgage professional to make sure that the buyer in the deal is in fact capable of obtaining a mortgage. Losing time with an unqualified buyer costs you money in a market where prices are falling.
4. Your Family’s Safety
We have always found it puzzling that the same person that will lock every door and window and set the alarm today will then allow total strangers into their house tomorrow. The real estate industry trains its practitioners to take steps to protect themselves and their clients. Take advantage of putting a person between you and the person calling on an ad or yard sign.
5. You Probably Have More Important Things to Do
Selling a home could turn into a full time job. Learning the necessary disclosures, coordinating the dates of your closings, dealing with a challenge regarding your appraisal and re-negotiating the offer after an engineer’s report are just a few of the concerns you may face. You would probably be better off spending that time with the items important to you and your family and leaving the challenges to your agent.
Bottom Line
To make sure the sale of your home is handled professionally – hire a trained professional. In the long run, you will wind-up with more money in your pocket and have fewer challenges with the move.
The housing market today is more challenging than it has ever been and seems to be becoming more difficult each day. What impact will foreclosures have on prices? Which loan products that were available just last month are no longer available? How do you convince perspective purchasers to pull the trigger on an offer when everyone is telling them that they should see another 100 houses before they make a decision? These are tough questions for a trained, experienced professional. The lay person would find it almost impossible to keep abreast of this rapidly evolving industry.
Here are five important reasons to use a real estate professional:
1. Pricing Is Difficult
Just a few years ago, you didn’t have to worry about overpricing your home. If it was too high, all you needed to do was wait as historic appreciation was taking place. The situation is quite different today. With experts calling for another drop in home values, overpricing your property will cost you time. In this market, time costs you money. A professional real estate agent will discuss how increasing inventory could dramatically impact the value of your property in the months to come. They will help you set the right price in today’s market.
2. Negotiating Ability Is Crucial
Buyers today have an almost unlimited supply of homes from which to choose. They realize that puts them in a great negotiating position. Most buyers are now being represented by an agent. Sellers need to also be represented by a professional expert trained to negotiate real estate contracts.
3. Mortgaging Is Key to the Deal
The biggest impact of the housing market collapse is that lending standards are much stricter today than they were a few short years ago. Rules are constantly changing. Even FHA has gone through a guidelines overhaul in the last several months. You need a real estate expert who has teamed up with a knowledgeable mortgage professional to make sure that the buyer in the deal is in fact capable of obtaining a mortgage. Losing time with an unqualified buyer costs you money in a market where prices are falling.
4. Your Family’s Safety
We have always found it puzzling that the same person that will lock every door and window and set the alarm today will then allow total strangers into their house tomorrow. The real estate industry trains its practitioners to take steps to protect themselves and their clients. Take advantage of putting a person between you and the person calling on an ad or yard sign.
5. You Probably Have More Important Things to Do
Selling a home could turn into a full time job. Learning the necessary disclosures, coordinating the dates of your closings, dealing with a challenge regarding your appraisal and re-negotiating the offer after an engineer’s report are just a few of the concerns you may face. You would probably be better off spending that time with the items important to you and your family and leaving the challenges to your agent.
Bottom Line
To make sure the sale of your home is handled professionally – hire a trained professional. In the long run, you will wind-up with more money in your pocket and have fewer challenges with the move.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Should You Buy or Rent?
Renting may be smarter if home prices in your area will fall further.
By Pat Mertz Esswein, Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, April 2010
If you're a renter, you may be champing at the bit to buy a house after watching prices fall for four years. Is it time to jump? It may well be, especially if you want to capture the home buyer's tax credit (you'll need to have a contract by April 30 and close by June 30). But before you leap, you need to go beyond calculating the impact on your monthly budget and figure out how much home-price froth is left in your local housing market.
Encouraging signs. A key number to consider when switching from renter to homeowner is the price-rent ratio. This figure compares a city's median home price with its median annual rent. At the housing market's peak in 2005, the national median home price had inflated to nearly 21 times the median annual rent. By the third quarter of 2009, however, the ratio had deflated to 15, returning to the historical norm, according to Hessam Nadji, managing director of Marcus & Millichap, a commercial real estate brokerage company in Encino, Cal.
If the price-rent ratio where you're looking to buy is 18 or higher, your market may still be in the bubble zone, with a greater probability that home prices will fall after you buy. That could put you underwater -- meaning your home would be worth less than what you owe on the mortgage. If the ratio has fallen below 15, there's less chance that home prices will sink.
The table on Rent or Buy below shows the ten cities in which home prices are least likely to drop further, as well as those most likely to fall further, based on price-rent ratios. We also show the gap between median monthly apartment rents and median monthly mortgage payments. Five years ago, the difference between monthly mortgage payments and rent was $745 nationally; by the end of 2009, it was just $181.
To get a rough estimate of your local price-rent ratio, divide the average list price of several homes that meet your criteria by the average annual rent of several rental units with the same number of bedrooms and comparable amenities.
Weighing the decision. A year ago, the price-rent ratio in Phoenix was 14 -- down from almost 19 a year earlier. Home prices had fallen by half, and mortgage rates were at historic lows. Financial planner Brendan McNamar decided it was finally time for him to buy. He had rented since moving to the city in 2006, just after the housing bubble peaked, and was sitting on a nice nest egg from a home he had sold in 2004.
McNamar shopped for a long time, made offers on several houses and eventually bought a ten-year-old, four-bedroom, three-bathroom short sale listed for $219,000. (In a short sale, the sellers get permission from the lender to sell for less than the mortgage amount.) The house had sold for $355,000 in 2007. McNamar offered the full price, which the bank eventually accepted after 90 days. He put down 20% and took out a 30-year mortgage with a low fixed rate of 5.25%. He pays $1,176 a month (including taxes and insurance), which is more than twice his former monthly rent of $550. But because he hadn't owned a home in the past three years, he was able to snag the $8,000 first-time home buyer's tax credit.
From an investment perspective, McNamar wanted a house that would allow him to break even or earn a profit if he sold in three years. But given that prices have fallen even further in Phoenix since last spring -- the price-rent ratio is a rough guide, not an infallible one -- he reckons that his break-even point now may be four years away. But it's not a big financial setback to him because he has no plans to move.
Good deals for renters. Renting can be a smart strategy while waiting for this choppy housing market to settle down. Consider Jeremy Portnoff and his wife, Heather, of Edison, N.J. By mid 2009, the median home price in Edison had fallen a healthy 19%, to $317,000, from the market's peak in mid 2006.
The Portnoffs had their heart set on a home with three or four bedrooms to accommodate the family they hope to have, plus an office for Jeremy. The house they could afford was a starter home, probably a small townhouse -- which, on an after-tax basis, they figured would cost them about the same as renting.
But the Portnoffs also figured that if they sold it in three years, real estate commissions would consume any gains they could reasonably expect. Plus, Jeremy believed that the price of their ideal home in that area would continue to decline.
So they took a pass on buying and got a great deal on renting a two-bedroom townhome -- $1,550 a month, $300 less than when they looked at the same development three years before. The couple prudently plan to continue to pay down debt and save for a larger down payment on their next home.
In some markets, rental prices have dropped as supply has increased. By the end of 2009, the vacancy rate nationally had grown to 8.2%, a 30-year high, according to Nadji, of Marcus & Millichap. Meanwhile, rents had fallen 5.8% from the year before.
Markets with the highest vacancy rates include Jacksonville, Fla. (forecast at 14% in 2010), Atlanta, Houston, Las Vegas, Orlando, Phoenix, Tampa and Tucson. Renters in such markets can afford to shop around and negotiate hard. A building's leasing manager may be willing to lower the rent to attract or keep your business.
Nadji expects the vacancy rate nationally to tighten up a bit (to 7.8%) by year-end and start a rapid recovery beginning in 2011, with very strong rent growth between 2011 and 2015. Demographics (five million people will enter the peak renter age range of 20 to 34 over the next decade) and plummeting construction starts in 2009 and 2010 drive his forecast.
Not all cities have an excess of rental units, though. In some large cities, such as New York, downtown Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., vacancy rates have remained tight -- and home prices have remained stubbornly high.
By Pat Mertz Esswein, Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, April 2010
If you're a renter, you may be champing at the bit to buy a house after watching prices fall for four years. Is it time to jump? It may well be, especially if you want to capture the home buyer's tax credit (you'll need to have a contract by April 30 and close by June 30). But before you leap, you need to go beyond calculating the impact on your monthly budget and figure out how much home-price froth is left in your local housing market.
Encouraging signs. A key number to consider when switching from renter to homeowner is the price-rent ratio. This figure compares a city's median home price with its median annual rent. At the housing market's peak in 2005, the national median home price had inflated to nearly 21 times the median annual rent. By the third quarter of 2009, however, the ratio had deflated to 15, returning to the historical norm, according to Hessam Nadji, managing director of Marcus & Millichap, a commercial real estate brokerage company in Encino, Cal.
If the price-rent ratio where you're looking to buy is 18 or higher, your market may still be in the bubble zone, with a greater probability that home prices will fall after you buy. That could put you underwater -- meaning your home would be worth less than what you owe on the mortgage. If the ratio has fallen below 15, there's less chance that home prices will sink.
The table on Rent or Buy below shows the ten cities in which home prices are least likely to drop further, as well as those most likely to fall further, based on price-rent ratios. We also show the gap between median monthly apartment rents and median monthly mortgage payments. Five years ago, the difference between monthly mortgage payments and rent was $745 nationally; by the end of 2009, it was just $181.
To get a rough estimate of your local price-rent ratio, divide the average list price of several homes that meet your criteria by the average annual rent of several rental units with the same number of bedrooms and comparable amenities.
Weighing the decision. A year ago, the price-rent ratio in Phoenix was 14 -- down from almost 19 a year earlier. Home prices had fallen by half, and mortgage rates were at historic lows. Financial planner Brendan McNamar decided it was finally time for him to buy. He had rented since moving to the city in 2006, just after the housing bubble peaked, and was sitting on a nice nest egg from a home he had sold in 2004.
McNamar shopped for a long time, made offers on several houses and eventually bought a ten-year-old, four-bedroom, three-bathroom short sale listed for $219,000. (In a short sale, the sellers get permission from the lender to sell for less than the mortgage amount.) The house had sold for $355,000 in 2007. McNamar offered the full price, which the bank eventually accepted after 90 days. He put down 20% and took out a 30-year mortgage with a low fixed rate of 5.25%. He pays $1,176 a month (including taxes and insurance), which is more than twice his former monthly rent of $550. But because he hadn't owned a home in the past three years, he was able to snag the $8,000 first-time home buyer's tax credit.
From an investment perspective, McNamar wanted a house that would allow him to break even or earn a profit if he sold in three years. But given that prices have fallen even further in Phoenix since last spring -- the price-rent ratio is a rough guide, not an infallible one -- he reckons that his break-even point now may be four years away. But it's not a big financial setback to him because he has no plans to move.
Good deals for renters. Renting can be a smart strategy while waiting for this choppy housing market to settle down. Consider Jeremy Portnoff and his wife, Heather, of Edison, N.J. By mid 2009, the median home price in Edison had fallen a healthy 19%, to $317,000, from the market's peak in mid 2006.
The Portnoffs had their heart set on a home with three or four bedrooms to accommodate the family they hope to have, plus an office for Jeremy. The house they could afford was a starter home, probably a small townhouse -- which, on an after-tax basis, they figured would cost them about the same as renting.
But the Portnoffs also figured that if they sold it in three years, real estate commissions would consume any gains they could reasonably expect. Plus, Jeremy believed that the price of their ideal home in that area would continue to decline.
So they took a pass on buying and got a great deal on renting a two-bedroom townhome -- $1,550 a month, $300 less than when they looked at the same development three years before. The couple prudently plan to continue to pay down debt and save for a larger down payment on their next home.
In some markets, rental prices have dropped as supply has increased. By the end of 2009, the vacancy rate nationally had grown to 8.2%, a 30-year high, according to Nadji, of Marcus & Millichap. Meanwhile, rents had fallen 5.8% from the year before.
Markets with the highest vacancy rates include Jacksonville, Fla. (forecast at 14% in 2010), Atlanta, Houston, Las Vegas, Orlando, Phoenix, Tampa and Tucson. Renters in such markets can afford to shop around and negotiate hard. A building's leasing manager may be willing to lower the rent to attract or keep your business.
Nadji expects the vacancy rate nationally to tighten up a bit (to 7.8%) by year-end and start a rapid recovery beginning in 2011, with very strong rent growth between 2011 and 2015. Demographics (five million people will enter the peak renter age range of 20 to 34 over the next decade) and plummeting construction starts in 2009 and 2010 drive his forecast.
Not all cities have an excess of rental units, though. In some large cities, such as New York, downtown Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., vacancy rates have remained tight -- and home prices have remained stubbornly high.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Chicago's Temperate Spring
Chicago's Temperate Spring
(the weather's not bad either)
A real spring. It's a rarity in Chicago. We're talking flowers, warm weather and picture perfect Opening Days on both sides of town. Spring 2010 not only arrived with great weather; it revealed a fair real estate market as well.
A sampling of data from nearly 40 Chicago neighborhoods and North Shore communities shows a market that is vastly improved from last year. At properties analyzed inventory, sales and market times from the first quarter of 2009 vs. the first quarter of 2010. Year-over-year sales activity was up significantly from Hyde Park to Lake Forest and inventory levels and market times came down as buyers and sellers moved closer on price in a number of submarkets.
Closed sales were up 100% or more in several areas, including Lincoln Park, Rogers Park and the Loop in the city, and Highland Park, Kenilworth, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest and Northbrook on the North Shore – an encouraging sign heading into the peak spring market. A nearly universal increase in homes under contract seems to confirm the notion that the market is gaining traction.
Still, with predictions and postulations filling the spring air like milkweed, the next couple of months will be an important measure of the local market. Fortunately, it's easy to stay informed with At properties' Market Reports. Just log on and choose a neighborhood or town from the interactive map. Then view the latest market data. Of course, numbers alone don't account for all of the factors affecting real estate in your neighborhood. For that, there's nothing like a knowledgeable REALTOR®.
Spring in Chicago can be unpredictable, but at least this spring's real estate market is looking a little more temperate. So, if you or someone you know is thinking about buying or selling a home in the coming months, please contact me. And remember, I always appreciate your referrals.
Dave Straub 773.255.3180
(the weather's not bad either)
A real spring. It's a rarity in Chicago. We're talking flowers, warm weather and picture perfect Opening Days on both sides of town. Spring 2010 not only arrived with great weather; it revealed a fair real estate market as well.
A sampling of data from nearly 40 Chicago neighborhoods and North Shore communities shows a market that is vastly improved from last year. At properties analyzed inventory, sales and market times from the first quarter of 2009 vs. the first quarter of 2010. Year-over-year sales activity was up significantly from Hyde Park to Lake Forest and inventory levels and market times came down as buyers and sellers moved closer on price in a number of submarkets.
Closed sales were up 100% or more in several areas, including Lincoln Park, Rogers Park and the Loop in the city, and Highland Park, Kenilworth, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest and Northbrook on the North Shore – an encouraging sign heading into the peak spring market. A nearly universal increase in homes under contract seems to confirm the notion that the market is gaining traction.
Still, with predictions and postulations filling the spring air like milkweed, the next couple of months will be an important measure of the local market. Fortunately, it's easy to stay informed with At properties' Market Reports. Just log on and choose a neighborhood or town from the interactive map. Then view the latest market data. Of course, numbers alone don't account for all of the factors affecting real estate in your neighborhood. For that, there's nothing like a knowledgeable REALTOR®.
Spring in Chicago can be unpredictable, but at least this spring's real estate market is looking a little more temperate. So, if you or someone you know is thinking about buying or selling a home in the coming months, please contact me. And remember, I always appreciate your referrals.
Dave Straub 773.255.3180
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
@properties Is #1
@properties Is #1
2009 was a challenging year for businesses across the globe. Some companies took it sitting down. Not @properties. We invested in new marketing and technology, opened new offices, and expanded programs to serve you better. The result: Our independent locally-owned company is stronger today than ever before. In fact, @properties far and away leads the Chicago market in more key categories than any other real estate company. And that means more resources, better service and ultimately better results for you.
@properties is clearly #1.
2009 Market Performance #1 in Market Share (City): 12.4%
#3 in Market Share (Northern Illinois Region): 4.4%
#1 Increase in Market Share (City): 28.0%
#1 Increase in Market Share (Northern Illinois Region): 18.8%
#2 Increase in Market Share (North Shore): 68.6%
#1 New Construction Market Share (City): 16.5%
#1 Buyer's Representative (City): 12.0%
#1 Seller's Representative (City): 12.9%
#1 Average Market Time (Northern Illinois Region): 147 Days
#1 Selling Price to Original Listing Price (Northern Illinois Region): 93.8%
For more information on @properties' services or your local market area, please contact me. I'm here to help.
Source: MRED, LLC, 1/1/09-12/31/09. Based on top 10 companies per category. Market share figures are based on sales volume.
2009 was a challenging year for businesses across the globe. Some companies took it sitting down. Not @properties. We invested in new marketing and technology, opened new offices, and expanded programs to serve you better. The result: Our independent locally-owned company is stronger today than ever before. In fact, @properties far and away leads the Chicago market in more key categories than any other real estate company. And that means more resources, better service and ultimately better results for you.
@properties is clearly #1.
2009 Market Performance #1 in Market Share (City): 12.4%
#3 in Market Share (Northern Illinois Region): 4.4%
#1 Increase in Market Share (City): 28.0%
#1 Increase in Market Share (Northern Illinois Region): 18.8%
#2 Increase in Market Share (North Shore): 68.6%
#1 New Construction Market Share (City): 16.5%
#1 Buyer's Representative (City): 12.0%
#1 Seller's Representative (City): 12.9%
#1 Average Market Time (Northern Illinois Region): 147 Days
#1 Selling Price to Original Listing Price (Northern Illinois Region): 93.8%
For more information on @properties' services or your local market area, please contact me. I'm here to help.
Source: MRED, LLC, 1/1/09-12/31/09. Based on top 10 companies per category. Market share figures are based on sales volume.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Window of Opportunity is Wide Open in the Real Estate Market
Experts across the nation all agree that home prices are becoming more attractive than they have been in recent history. Thanks to incredibly low interest rates, new accessibility to home loans, and a thriving market inventory, buyers and sellers are in a prime position to make the market work for them. As home prices begin to stabilize, buyers and sellers have good reason to look forward to the summer 2009 market.
Given the historically low interest rates, buyers are in a prime position to purchase their new home. If interest rates were to climb, even 1/4% over the next year, buyers would miss out on an additional $12,000 in savings over the life of a 30-year fixed loan. A savings like this is the equivalent of an FHA down payment on a $250,000 condo in the Chicago-area neighborhoods. With opportunities like these buyers can utilize their capital more effectively by creating greater long-term investments. Thanks to recent price adjustments we are urging our buyers to take advantage of these incredible opportunities.
Sellers can also benefit from the market's recent adjustments. As buyers gain access to home loans and low interest rates, many are eager to purchase their long awaited dream home. Thanks to the buyer's new purchasing power, sellers can look forward to the upcoming summer market. Sellers should experience shorter market times and expedited closing transactions.
With the summer market upon us, we at @properties are urging our buyers and sellers to take full advantage of this window of opportunity. Thanks to our innovative marketing techniques, and my expertise as a Real Estate consultant I am confident that I can suit all of your needs.
If you have any questions regarding market conditions, or want to set up an appointment feel free to contact me at anytime. I look forward to working with you.
(@properties June 2009 Newsletter)
Dave Straub @properties 773.255.3180
Given the historically low interest rates, buyers are in a prime position to purchase their new home. If interest rates were to climb, even 1/4% over the next year, buyers would miss out on an additional $12,000 in savings over the life of a 30-year fixed loan. A savings like this is the equivalent of an FHA down payment on a $250,000 condo in the Chicago-area neighborhoods. With opportunities like these buyers can utilize their capital more effectively by creating greater long-term investments. Thanks to recent price adjustments we are urging our buyers to take advantage of these incredible opportunities.
Sellers can also benefit from the market's recent adjustments. As buyers gain access to home loans and low interest rates, many are eager to purchase their long awaited dream home. Thanks to the buyer's new purchasing power, sellers can look forward to the upcoming summer market. Sellers should experience shorter market times and expedited closing transactions.
With the summer market upon us, we at @properties are urging our buyers and sellers to take full advantage of this window of opportunity. Thanks to our innovative marketing techniques, and my expertise as a Real Estate consultant I am confident that I can suit all of your needs.
If you have any questions regarding market conditions, or want to set up an appointment feel free to contact me at anytime. I look forward to working with you.
(@properties June 2009 Newsletter)
Dave Straub @properties 773.255.3180
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)