January 31, 2010

Rules to cool real estate market (People's Daily)

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&$ &$Few people are able to afford a visit to housing agencies as the city’s property prices continue to soar. Wang Jing&$ &$ City mulls over regulations to curb investment on property amid soaring prices. Beijing is set to launch specific regulations on the real estate sector just days before Spring Festival, aimed at curbing investment-led demand in the housing market and addressing imbalance … View full post on Yahoo! News Search Results for real estate

Founders of Home Buyer Tax Credit Website Launch Campaign to End ‘Marriage Penalty’ in Home Buyer Tax Credit

Filed under: Home Buying — admin @ 11:17 pm

RISMEDIA, January 28, 2010—The Home Buyer Tax Credit is a great program providing a tremendous stimulus for the real estate industry, but the impact of the tax credit is going to be

undermined by the restrictive way that the IRS is interpreting the credit for married couples, according to Joseph Rand, one of the founders of Homebuyertaxcredit.com.

In the guidelines of the Home Buyer Tax Credit, the IRS has inadvertently created a “marriage penalty” by requiring that both spouses must have the same exact ownership history in order to claim the credit, which treats married couples differently from unmarried couples. Joseph Rand and the co-founders of Homebuyertaxcredit.com, Greg Rand and Matt Rand, have launched a campaign urging members of Congress to amend the legislation and eliminate this penalty.

“The Home Buyer Tax Credit is designed to incentivize home purchases this year, and it should have a significant impact,” said Joseph Rand. “But the impact is going to be undermined because thousands of married couples will not be eligible due to a very restrictive reading of the legislation by the IRS. The IRS will only allow married couples to claim the credit if both spouses qualify for the same type of credit in their own right, even if the couple would get a tax credit if they were unmarried. Married couples are tested together, and must both be eligible. This is not the case for unmarried couples, who are tested individually such that if one does not qualify, the other can still get a credit.”

Essentially, the only types of married couples who would be eligible to claim the credit would be married couples in which both spouses are qualifying first-time home buyers, or married couples in which both spouses have owned and lived in the same home for at least five consecutive years out of the last eight.

Greg Rand said that this issue was likely an oversight, and the IRS probably did not intend to exact a marriage penalty that undermines such an important economic recovery program. “Clearly, Congress did not intend to render millions of American married couples ineligible for any type of tax credit, even in cases where both spouses would qualify on their own and in cases where unmarried couples are eligible to claim tax credits,” said Greg Rand. “Marriage is the cornerstone of our society.”

Matt Rand suggested that Congress needs to take immediate action steps to correct this unintentional penalty. “To fix this, either Congress needs to revise the legislation or the IRS has to revise its treatment of married couples to allow for eligibility for a tax credit where both spouses would qualify for a tax credit in their own right if they were single or unmarried partners buying together,” said Matt Rand. “If the IRS is not able to revise its interpretation of the law, Congress should explicitly amend the law to fix the marriage penalty by allowing for equitable treatment of married and unmarried couples.”

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The Rands are hoping to draw enough attention to the cause so that Congress will be prompted to act quickly. In addition to the campaign on Homebuyertaxcredit.com, a Facebook cause has also been created to bring awareness to the public and urge them to take action. The Rands encourage any married couples who are being affected by the Home Buyer Tax Credit’s restrictive marriage guidelines to go to www.homebuyertaxcredit.com and submit their story.

For more information, visit www.Homebuyertaxcredit.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

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January 30, 2010

Bank keeps real estate on ice (Vietnam Net)

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VietNamNet Bridge – The real estate market will remain stagnant if the State Bank maintains its tight monetary policy through the first half of this year, experts warn. View full post on Yahoo! News Search Results for real estate

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Economy Forces Changes in Thinking about Retirement Homes

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RISMEDIA, January 30, 2010—(MCT)—If your idea of a dream retirement home is a luxury contemporary overlooking a championship golf course in the desert, you better be prepared for some mighty small block parties: When it comes to retirement living, golf courses are out.

And Arizona and Florida aren’t the only retirement-relocation hot spots these days. In fact, North and South Carolina now top the preferences of baby boomers who will be retiring in the next decade, according to a survey to be released from home builder Del Webb. “How times have changed

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when it comes to the golf course,” said Paul Cardis, chief executive of AVID Ratings Co., a survey research firm. His recommendation to builders: Eliminate it. Bike paths and walking trails are the new greens and fairways.

Blame it all on the economy. The recession has taken its toll not only on nest eggs but also on the traditional concept of a retirement home. That’s the message that attendees at the International Builders Show received in a number of presentations and seminars.

Downsizing is a trend that is taking hold among all housing consumers, but it is particularly evident among the 55-plus crowd that includes the older baby boomers. And that downsizing includes housing aspirations in retirement. While “warmer climate” was the reigning factor in choosing where to retire in the first boomer survey Del Webb conducted in 1996, today “cost of living” is the most important consideration on where to locate. Although Florida, Arizona and California remain Top 10 retirement destinations, the trend is giving other states a chance to draw even more retirees.

Despite the broadening of potential destinations, baby boomers’ desire to move in retirement has remained relatively stable over the years. Between 30-40% plan to move to a new home in retirement, about the same as in 1996, and half of those plan on moving to a new state.

What older buyers want in homes
What kind of houses will be in demand among those 55 and older? According to a consumer survey conducted by the National Association of Home Builders, the most important design features that 55-plus buyers want in their homes center on the practical:

-Washers and dryers in their units
-Storage space
-Windows that open easily

-Garage-door openers
-Easy-to-use thermostats
-First-floor master bedrooms
-Private patios

-Porches
-Attached garages
-Bigger bathrooms

A lot of the more popular features in new homes these days don’t appeal all that much to older buyers:
-Island work areas
-Separate showers

-Private toilet compartments
-Sun rooms
-Woodburning fireplaces
-Exercise rooms

But a number of items that home buyers don’t find to be of much interest are much more popular with older buyers:
-Bathroom aids such as grab bars
-Kitchen aids
-Light home-repair services

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-Outdoor maintenance services

-An entrance without steps
-Accessible public transportation
-Wider doorways
-Nonslip flooring

Among technology features, older home buyers tend to act like younger buyers when it comes to the basics: Both groups have a preference for security systems, energy management, structured wiring and lighting controls. But older buyers had little use for home theaters, distributed audio or home automation, more-expensive items that younger buyers do like. “These older buyers are frugal, probably on a fixed income and so expensive tech items are not that big on their lists,” said Rose Quint, the NAHB assistant vice president for survey research.

The emphasis on services related to home and community is an important one that cuts across many age groups, said John Migliaccio, director of research at MetLife’s Mature Market Institute, which surveys consumers and builders on retirement issues. “Very telling is that the younger group of mature consumers reported enthusiastically that they want services like home maintenance and repair as part of their next home purchase, along with services usually connected to older householders, such as housekeeping, onsite health care and transportation,” he said.

According to Migliaccio, all of those items were ranked higher than the desire for social activities by this group—a surprise given that social activities and amenities have been thought to be valued highly by this group. He said the data support an emerging trend among builders to look for ways to partner with providers of such services to the residents of their active adult/lifestyle communities.

Migliaccio also predicted that universal design—which includes features such as wider hallways, lever-handled doors, roll-in showers and no-stair entries—will catch on as baby boomers watch their own parents age. “The boomers are going to see their own parents age without it and they won’t like what they see,” he said.

The 55-plus age group represents 38% of all U.S. households and is projected to rise every year to be almost 45% of households by 2019. And that group has high homeownership rates: while the U.S. as a whole has about a 67% ownership rate, those 55 to 74 own homes at an 80% clip. “Most buyers in this market are looking for an easy-living lifestyle. They would like easy access to services that will free up their time from maintenance both inside and outside their homes,” said Mike McGowan, a 50-plus builder from Binghamton, N.Y. and chairman of the National Association of Home Builder’s 50-Plus Housing Council. “This data tells builders that the homes they build for older active adults will remain attractive to the consumers who will be entering that market for the foreseeable future.”

(c) 2010, MarketWatch.com Inc.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

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January 29, 2010

Former Beverly Hills appraiser sentenced in real estate fraud ring (Los Angeles Times)

Filed under: real estate — admin @ 10:19 pm

Lila Rizk is ordered to serve three years in federal prison and to pay restitution to lenders that together lost $50 million on loans in the scheme. A former Beverly Hills real estate appraiser was sentenced to three years in federal prison Friday for her role in a multimillion-dollar real estate fraud ring. View full post on Yahoo! News Search Results for real estate

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Some Housing Markets Hot Again, According to ZipRealty Q4 2009 ‘Home Hunter Report’

Filed under: Home Buying — admin @ 10:05 pm

RISMEDIA, January 29, 2010—While some of the “hottest” real estate markets in the country- those where homes are selling most above their list prices- continue to be distressed areas dominated by heavily discounted prices, Q4 2009 revealed some notable exceptions. In two higher priced zip codes in California’s Berkeley and the Los Angeles suburb of Tarzana, and three zip codes in the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area not dominated by distressed listings, homes sold on average well above asking price in Q4, according to ZipRealty’s quarterly Home Hunter Report.

These are just some of the highlights revealed by ZipRealty’s recently released report which identifies where home sellers are fetching the highest offers compared to their asking prices among 33 markets the brokerage serves.

Highlights from the ZipRealty Q4 2009 Home Hunter Report, which also identifies which cities nationwide are most highly searched online, include:

-Phoenix was 2009’s most popular city in the country for online home hunters, according to the volume of the total number of home searches on www.ZipRealty.com throughout the year.

-Homes in Berkeley’s 94703 zip code sold for an average of 107.86% of list price in Q4. The average home sale price for the zip code was $538,626 for the same period. Homes in the Tarzana district of Los Angeles’ 91356 zip code sold for an average of 107.30% of list price in Q4, with an average sale price of $653,722 for the same period. In Q3 2009, homes in the Tarzana zip code had commanded only 93.55% of list price.

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-Texas claimed three of the country’s “hottest” markets in Q4 for the first time. Homes in Fort Worth’s 76135 zip code sold for an average of 134.65% of asking price in Q4, while homes in the upscale Dallas bedroom community of Rowlett (75089) commanded on average 110.81% of asking price. Zip code 76001 in Arlington, Fort Worth’s largest suburb, also entered the top ten list this quarter.

-All of the five remaining cities on the Top 10 “Hottest Markets” list are also located in California, including: Sacramento (95832); San Lorenzo (94580); Oakland (94621); Palmdale (93591); and San Bernardino (92405).

On the cold end of the spectrum, Florida zip codes continue to dominate those areas selling at a discount, where sellers are accepting on average 70 to 85 cents on the dollar. Florida zip codes selling most below asking price based on sales-to-list price ratio include: Deland (32720); Orlando (32827); Largo (33773); Delray Beach (33483); Naples (34102); Miami’s Coral Gables (33134); and Boca Raton (33496). Zip codes 75203 in Dallas, 19132 in Philadelphia and 60022 in Glencoe, Ill., join the Florida zip codes as the country’s coldest.

“For more than a year now we’ve been seeing distressed areas with heavily discounted properties dominate the ‘hot’ markets where homes fetch more than the asking price, and it’s a great sign that we’re now starting to see higher-priced areas going over asking price, too,” said Leslie Tyler, vice president and chief home hunter for ZipRealty. “These hot micro-markets across California and Dallas-Fort Worth point to the continued stabilization happening in different areas nationwide.”

Phoenix Dominates Nation’s Most Popular Cities for Home Hunters in 2009
According to ZipRealty, the Phoenix area was by far the most popular for homebuyers in all of 2009, according to the volume of the total number of home searches on www.ZipRealty.com throughout the year. Areas where home prices have dropped significantly since 2007, including Phoenix, Southern Florida and Las Vegas, generated the most home hunter interest throughout the year. The most popular cities for home searches in all of 2009 were:

1. Phoenix
2. Scottsdale (Phoenix metro)
3. Orlando

4. Summerlin (Las Vegas community)
5. Chandler (Phoenix metro)
6. Mesa (Phoenix metro)
7. Gilbert (Phoenix metro)
8. Henderson – Green Valley (Las Vegas metro)
9. Atlanta
10. Kissimmee (Orlando metro)

“We’ve seen incredible buyer interest throughout 2009 in homes perceived as bargains in the Phoenix area from across the country, and even from ’snow-birds’ looking for winter retreats from Canada,” Tyler explained. “Meanwhile, buyers and sellers in Southern Florida still seem to be waiting for the bottom of the market.”

For more information, visit www.ziprealty.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

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January 28, 2010

Fund Managers Eyeing Modest Real Estate Gains (Investor's Business Daily via Yahoo! News)

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Mutual funds specializing in real estate outgained the S&P 500 index by 7 percentage points last year. This year, gains look tougher to get. View full post on Yahoo! News Search Results for real estate

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4 Major U.S. Demographic Waves to Watch in New Decade

Filed under: Home Buying — admin @ 9:31 pm

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RISMEDIA, January 29, 2010—As the U.S. economy recovers, emerging trends in demographics and consumer behavior will become major drivers of new housing opportunities, resulting in a residential market vastly different from the one that existed prior to the recession, according to Housing in America: The Next Decade, a new research paper authored by John K. McIlwain, senior resident fellow, Urban Land Institute/J. Ronald Terwilliger Chair for Housing.

In a presentation of the research to Urban Land Institute (ULI) trustees during the Institute’s Midwinter Meeting in Washington, McIlwain discussed the implications of the rising numbers of foreclosures, re-establishing a private-market residential finance system, as well as shifts in housing demand triggered by baby boomers, their children, and by immigrant households. “The old ‘normal’ will not return,” McIlwain predicted. “Over time, a new mode of metropolitan development will emerge, presenting opportunities and stiff challenges. Those who fail to understand these new trends will find themselves building what is no longer in demand.”

Despite the housing stabilization that has begun in the nation’s strongest employment markets, overall home prices will likely decline an additional 10% this year, contributing to what is already an unprecedented number of foreclosures and ‘underwater’ mortgages (loan amounts that are higher than the current value of the homes), McIlwain said. The growing number of consumers who are choosing to walk away from those mortgages suggests a fundamental change from the long-held notion of homeownership as the ultimate American Dream, he explained. This disillusionment over homeownership as a way to build wealth could persist for decades to come, as those entering the housing market will be more apt to rent longer, and to place more emphasis on buying for shelter rather than investment purposes.

Two key predictions from Housing in America for the decade ahead: home appreciation will slow considerably, to about 1-2% annually; and the current U.S. homeownership rate, now at 67% (a decline from the record high of 69% at the height of the housing boom) will fall further, to about 62%.

According to McIlwain, the lasting stability of the U.S. housing market depends on how, and when, the private home mortgage finance system is revived and how such a system might be structured. The federal government now supplies virtually all new mortgage funds through mortgage purchases or securitization. Reducing this massive support, he said, will entail revamping or replacing mortgage suppliers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and tightening risk requirements for mortgage issuers to restore investor confidence in mortgage-backed securities. “Re-establishing a robust private mortgage market will require both strong market fundamentals and a reformed mortgage securitization structure that eliminates past abuses,” McIlwain said. Such reform will influence the flow of capital, affecting the volume of debt, its cost and to whom it will be available, he noted. While reform efforts are still sketchy, the end result “will have a fundamental impact on housing markets for years to come.”

The report cites 4 major U.S. demographic waves to watch in the new decade:

-Aging baby boomers (55 to 64 years old)- Although they are nearing retirement age, many will keep working out of necessity or by choice. Some will be forced to stay in their suburban homes until values recover. Those who are able to move will not choose traditional retirement locations or senior housing, opting instead for more mixed-age living environments that cater to their active lifestyles. Suburban town centers with a walkable urban “feel” will appeal to this group.

-Younger baby boomers (46 to 54 years old), now in or entering their prime earning years- This group will also face a tough time selling suburban homes, hampering the ability of these boomers to move. Because the recession has left many younger boomers with flat incomes and less home equity, their ability to purchase second homes will be greatly diminished, curbing prospects in general for the second home market. However, like their older counterparts, they will be drawn to more connected, compactly designed communities when they are able to switch houses.

-Generation Y- This tech-savvy generation has a population of about 86 million, more than the baby boomers. Gen Yers place high value on community; on places (either virtual or actual) to gather and share information, ideas and opinions. As they enter the housing market, they will be far less interested in homeownership than their parents were when they were young adults. (The recession, said McIlwain, has “tempered the interest of Gen Yers in buying their own homes and they will be renters by necessity or choice for years ahead”). Despite having small incomes, Gen Y will gravitate toward walkable, close-in communities, choosing isolated housing on outer edges only as a last resort because it is the most affordable. Green, “net zero” homes powered exclusively by alternative energy will have strong appeal to this group.

-Immigrants- Already 40 million strong, the total population of legal and illegal immigrants in the U.S. has an even greater impact when the children and grandchildren are included as a factor. The tendency of immigrants to cluster, and to live in multi-generational households, suggests that they would prefer larger homes if they could afford them and if the homes were in neighborhoods with a strong sense of community.

All of these groups have some characteristics that reflect a desire to live in more pedestrian-friendly, transit-oriented, mixed-use environments that de-emphasize auto dependency, whether the location is urban or suburban, McIlwain noted. Among the majors factors driving urbanization: 1) growth of two-person households and single households without children (among both baby boomers and Generation Y); 2) a halt to baby boomer migration to the suburbs; 3) the likelihood of Generation Y to rent rather than own; and 4) public policies encouraging compact development.

Economic and land constraints make it impossible for urban infill development to accommodate all the housing demand represented by all the demographic groups, McIlwain said. As a result, suburban development “must adapt or it will be obsolete,” he concluded. “The suburban century is over. This is the urban century.”

For more information, visit www.uli.org.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

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January 27, 2010

New Orleans woman, real estate agent sentenced in Road Home scam (New Orleans Times-Picayune)

Filed under: real estate — admin @ 9:03 pm

A New Orleans woman who conspired with a real estate closing agent to steal grants from elderly Road Home recipients were sentenced in federal court Wednesday. View full post on Yahoo! News Search Results for real estate

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Home Sizes Fall as Builders, Buyers Embrace Economic Reality

Filed under: Home Buying — admin @ 8:53 pm

RISMEDIA, January 28, 2010—(MCT)—New-home buyers responded to the tough times in 2009 by opting for smaller houses, driving down the average size of a house built in the United States for the first time in 27 years.

Data recently released by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) found the average size of a new home that was completed in 2009 fell to 2,480 square feet from 2,520 square feet in 2008. The last time the average completed-home size fell by a statistically significant amount was 1982.

“You’ve heard the mantra ‘downsize me’ and ’small is the new big?’ Well, last year was definitely a downer,” said Carol Lavender, president of Lavender Design Group, a residential design firm in San Antonio, Texas.

Homeowners surveyed by Better Homes and Gardens magazine said downsizing was becoming a bigger priority: 36% said in November 2009 that they expected their next home to be “somewhat smaller” or “much smaller” than their current home versus 32% who said that in 2008. “Not surprisingly, we see a ‘cents and sensibility’ approach when it comes to buying or improving a home, with practicality and price being the top priorities,” said Eliot Nusbaum, the magazine’s executive editor of home design.

While the small-house movement in the United States has been gaining steam for a number of years, the recession has accelerated it and home builders have responded.

“The era of easy money is over. You really have to think before you go out and decide you need that five-bedroom, five-bath home,” said Rose Quint, the NAHB’s assistant vice president for survey research. “Couple that with the energy cost concerns of consumers today and I think we will continue this trend. Houses will not shrink drastically, but they will shrink.”

Although actual square footage of homes didn’t fall until 2009, the percent of homes with four or more bedrooms in them has been falling since 2007, NAHB data show. And in 2009, the number of homes with three or more bathrooms fell for the first time since 1992.

Two other trends in home construction are contributing to the declining square footages: The prominence of first-time buyers in the housing market and the increasing number of households with members 55 and older who are buying homes.

First-time buyers, driven into the market in good part by the availability of an $8,000 tax credit, are more likely to compromise on home size in exchange for a lower price. And the 55-plus crowd tends to purchase single-story homes, which generally are smaller because of the land costs that favor the more-efficient two-story plans.

“Barely over half of new homes today are built with two stories or more,” Quint said. Two-story homes peaked at about 55% of the market in 2006. For 2010, home builders say they will focus on lower-priced models and smaller homes. More than 95% of builders surveyed by NAHB in January said that was the way they saw their business evolving this year.

The penchant for smaller homes will necessitate some design changes. Builders, attempting to respond to those consumer demands as well as hold the line on prices, told the NAHB surveyors that they were most likely to include these features as standard in their houses this year:

-Walk-in closets in the master bedroom.
-Laundry rooms.
-Insulated front doors.
-Great rooms.
-Energy-efficient windows.
-Linen closets.
-Programmable thermostats.
-Energy-efficient appliances and lighting.
-Separate shower and tub in master bathrooms.

-Nine-foot ceilings on the first floor.

Among the things that builders said they were least likely to add to houses in 2010:

-Outdoor kitchens.
-Outdoor fireplaces.
-Sunrooms.
-Butler’s pantries.
-Media rooms.
-Desks in kitchens.
-Two-story foyers.
-Eight foot ceilings on the first floor.

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-Multiple shower heads in the master bath.

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-Smaller kitchens.

“You can see that builders are concentrating heavily on energy-saving features,” Quint said. “But a lot of the luxury items are on the chopping block or on hold as builders try to lower costs.”

(c) 2010, MarketWatch.com Inc.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

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