Washington, DC Homes along the Red Line

Homes, Townhomes, Condos, Co-ops along the Red Line - Mary Lowry Smith
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Mary Lowry Smith

  • And they all don't do short sales well either

    Here's an interesting article that was recently in the Washington Post.

    For far too many homeowners, help still not on the way.  by Robert McCartney

    When I read this article, I thought of short sale buyers who wait months and get very little information from lenders trying to decide whether to approve the short sale or not.  Over the past 6-1/2 months, one lender has assigned four different negotiators to a short sale file while the property owners and my very qualified buyers wait for approval.

    Would it help if there were guidelines specifying a minimum number of employees necessary to address a specific number of distressed property files?  Would this improve efficiency and increase the number of short sale contracts that go to settlement? (Only 25% of all short sale contracts go to settlement.)

  • Tips for a Greener LIfestyle

    It seems like everyone is working to get into a greener lifestyle.  Here in D.C., we're remembering to take our own bags when we go shopping. Effective January 1st of this year, shoppers who forget to take their own bags will be charged 5 cents/bag. A portion of this fee will be used to reduce pollution in the Anacostia River.

    If you'd like to read more tips for living a greener lifestyle,

    CLICK HERE to read Coldwell Banker's Go Green newsletter

     

     

     

  • No More Short Sale Blues?

    If you're interested in buying a property sold as a short sale, sunnier skies may be ahead.  If you're new to short sales, you may not realize that anything would be an improvement over the existing process.  As a Realtor® representing buyers in short sales, I find one of the mot frustrating things is my dependence on the listing agent for information on how the lender approval is progressing. If I'm working with an agent who not only responds to my status inquiries, but also provides updated information, my buyers are more likely to stay with the contract.  However, I've also worked with agents who give me inaccurate information - if any information at all.  My buyers in this situation become impatient and are more likely to withdraw their offer at some point.

    Some banks/lenders are better than others and each one has its own requirements to fulfill before issuing written approval.  Effective December 28th, the U.S. Treasury's new guidelines will require all lenders to adhere to the same requirements.  Here are some of the highlights:

    • Mortgage servicers have 10 days to approve or disapprove a request for short sale, and when done, the transaction must fully release the borrower from the debt. 
    • Mortgage servicing companies will be prohibited from reducing real estate commissions on the sale, a practice that has dissuaded many agents from taking short sale listings.
    • The guidance caps the aggregate proceeds to subordinate lien holders at $3000.

    The largest second-lien holders are Bank of America, Wells Fargo & Co., JP Morgan Chase & Co and Citigroup, Inc.

    Read the entire article:
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20091130/bs_nm/us_treasury_shortsales

     

  • DID YOU KNOW...?

    about these interesting statistics comparing October 2008 to October 2009 for some of our metropolitan markets?

    Single-Family Detached Home Inventory:

    Washington, DC       -16.3%
    Arlington Cty            -28.5%
    Fairfax Cty               -44.0%
    Montgomery Cty       -45.7%
    Prince George's Cty  -43.3%
    Loudoun Cty             -44.4%

    % of Original List Price to Final Sales Price:

    Washington DC        94.6%  +  .4%
    Arlington Cty            96.4%  +1.3%
    Fairfax Cty.              97.5%  +4.5%
    Montgomery Cty.      94.4%  +4.2%
    Prince George's Cty  90.7%  +1.8%
    Loudoun Cty.            97.5%  +1.9%

    Median Sales Price:

    Washington DC         - 3.3%
    Arlington Cty.            - 9.4%
    Fairfax Cty.              +   .9%
    Montgomery Cty.      -  9.4%
    Prince George's Cty. -17.3%  
    Loudoun Cty.            + 8.9%
     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Red Line news: Development planned for Brookland/Catholic University

    Abdo Development, the company that helped revive Logan Circle and H Street NE in the District, hopes to restore the economic vibrancy of another part of the city by building a mixture of stores, housing and restaurants directly across from Catholic University in Brookland.The plan calls for building 825 residential units and 85,000 square feet of retail on nine acres of university-owned land along Michigan Avenue and Monroe Street. The planning includes a public square and clock tower that would be similar to piazzas in Europe with cobblestones, cafes and restaurants; an arts walk that would provide artists' work space; an arts building that would offer room for recitals and artists' demonstrations; and a college main street that would be filled with eclectic mom-and-pop shops. What exciting news for this beautiful neighborhood! 

    (from a 10/7/09 Washington Post article by Ovetta Wiggins)

  • Crunch time for the $8000 1st-time Buyer Credit: Can you get it done?

    Unless Congress extends it, the $8000 1st-time Home Buyer credit is set to expire on Nov. 30th.  This means you must close - not just be under contract- on your new home by this date.  Here are some suggested benchmarks to ensure that your deal closes in time if you start looking now:

    - Allow up to 4 weeks for house-hunting including a couple of days for negotiation and counter-offers.

    - Shoot to be under contract by Oct. 15th.  Although home inspections can be done within a few days, appraisals can take 2 weeks or longer depending on an appraiser's backlog.

    - The best times to close are Nov. 2-6 & Nov. 9-13.  New mortgage-disclosure rules can delay closings by several days if the loan terms change including any increase in the down payment due to low appraisals.

    -Crunch time: Nov. 16-20 & Nov. 23 & 24.  Very few, if any, closings are likely to be scheduled Nov. 25-29. Remember that title companies will be very busy in November and there are only so many time slots available.

    -Last Day to close is Monday, Nov. 30th!

     

    from a Washington Post article by Elizabeth Razzi

     

     

     

     

  • D.C. Ranked #4 for Cities with the Best Higher Education

    We may not be ranted as high as Boston, San Francisco or New York, but higher than any other U.S. city. The D.C. Metro area was recently ranked the fourth-best in the country for higher education.   Also noted was that the D.C. area is home to over 140,000 college students.  Not only do they bring vibrancy and life to our city, but many will benefit from the many employment opportunities and stay to call our nation's capitol home. Read the whole story at the Washington Post.
  • NAR Reports 2nd Quarter Sales of Existing Homes*

    The National Association of Realtors' (NAR) reported sales of existing homes as of the end of July:


    District of Columbia +18.8% from last Quarter
                                  + 5.6% compared to last year

    Maryland     +15.2% from last Quarter
                      +  4.4% compared to last year


    Virginia       -  .7% from last Quarter
                      -1.4% compared to last year

    Nationally      +3.8 from last Quarter
                         -2.9% compared to last year

     

    * Single-family, Condos, Co-ops

  • Metrorail Stations to get Cell Service

    Metrorail will launch wireless service for Verizon, Sprint, Nextel, AT&T  and T-Mobile customers on October 16th at 20 of its busiest underground stations.  Here they are (alphabetical order):

    Ballston-MU                        
    Bethesda
    Columbia Hts.
    Crystal City
    Dupont Circle
    Farragut North
    Farragut West
    Federal Center SW
    Foggy Bottom-GWU
    Friendship Hts.
    Gallery Place-Chinatown
    Judiciary Sq.
    L'Enfant Plaza
    McPherson Sq.
    Metro Ctr.
    Pentagon
    Pentagon City
    Rosslyn
    Smithsonian
    Union Station

     

                                       

     


  • Buyers, Sellers Rank Real Estate Companies

    Coldwell Banker scored highest on the customer-service rankings among home sellers, and Keller Williams ranked first among home buyers in the annual J.D Power and Associates 2009 Home Buyer/Seller study.

    The study measures customer satisfaction with the largest national real estate companies. The most significant factor is the buyer/seller experience with the practitioner. Other factors include overall experience with the office and satisfaction with special services offered, like referrals to inspectors and lawyers. Home sellers also rate marketing.

    Among the related findings:

    • Home sellers report that, on average, 3.2 open houses were conducted for their property in 2009, compared with 4.5 in 2008.
    • Approximately 64 percent of home sellers used a Web site listing to market their home in 2009, up from 61 percent in 2008.

    Here are the home buyer rankings on a 1,000-point scale. (The home buyer average score was 791.)
    • Keller Williams, 806
    • Coldwell Banker, 801
    • RE/MAX, 798
    • Century 21, 795
    • Prudential, 781
    • ERA, 744
    • GMAC, 731

    Here are the home seller rankings on a 1,000-point scale. (The home seller average score was 786.)
    • Coldwell Banker, 815
    • Keller Williams, 801
    • RE/MAX, 784
    • Century 21, 770
    • Prudential, 753

     

  • Best Cities for Finding Opportunity

    Where are the best cities to live in the United States if you want to work hard and get ahead?

    Forbes magazine examined the nation’s 40 largest metropolitan statistical areas and based on the number of Forbes' 400 best big companies and 200 best small companies that are headquartered in each, it identified what it considered places with the most opportunity.

    The magazine says it took this route because the best big companies provide opportunities for those who seek to be employees, and the rate of success of small businesses indicates how the area treats entrepreneurs.

    Here are the top 10:

    1. Houston
    2. Dallas
    3. Minneapolis
    4. Pittsburgh
    5. Boston
    6. Washington, D.C.
    7. Austin
    8. St. Louis
    9. Kansas City, Mo.
    10. New York

    Source: Forbes, Lauren Sherman (06/19/2009)
  • Top Rising, Falling Housing Markets

    When the recovery in housing finally comes, some housing markets will rebound sooner than others. Real estate forecasting service Local Market Monitor, which covers the nation’s 300 largest markets, has identified 13 markets where it predicts home prices will rise in the coming months and 11 markets where it expects home prices will continue to decline significantly.

    To make these picks, Local Market Monitor uses a proprietary formula. Here are the 13 markets where it expects prices to rise:
    1. Baton Rouge, La.
    2. Buffalo-Niagara Falls
    3. Dallas-Plano-Irving
    4. Fort Worth-Arlington
    5. Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown
    6. Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, Ark.
    7. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas
    8. Oklahoma City
    9. Rochester, N.Y.
    10. San Antonio
    11. Syracuse, N.Y.
    12. Tulsa
    13. Wichita, Kan.

    Here are the 11 markets where it believes home prices will continue to decline:
    1. Bakersfield, Calif.
    2. Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach-Deerfield Beach, Fla.
    3. Fresno, Calif.
    4. Las Vegas-Paradise
    5. Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall
    6. Orlando-Kissimmee
    7. Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, Calif.
    8. Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale
    9. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif.
    10. Stockton, Calif.
    11. West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Boynton Beach, Fla.

    Source: Local Market Monitor (06/23/2009)
  • For Rent: the stuff that we rarely use

    A number of Web sites have spring up encouraging people to look around their homes for things they can do away with temporarily - for a fee.  Conversely, people can rent items they only need once or twice.  Here are some of the peer-to-peer renting sites:

    Zilok.com - 100,000 items for rent including drills, infant car seats, camping gear & digital cameras 

    rent-instead.com - offering a variety of electronics, books, clothing etc. 

    Chegg.com - text books for rent

    BabyPlays.com - parents can rent toys 

    **This is from an intersting Washington Post article by Nancy Trejos. 

     

     

     

  • Pending Home Sales Up for Three Months in a Row

    Record low mortgage interest rates boosted pending home sales for the third consecutive month, with some benefit now from the first-time buyer tax credit, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

    Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said buyers are responding to very favorable market conditions. “Housing affordability conditions have been at historic highs, but now the $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit is beginning to impact the market,” he said. “Since first-time buyers must finalize their purchase by November 30 to get the credit, we expect greater activity in the months ahead, and that should spark more sales by repeat buyers.”

    The Pending Home Sales Index in the Northeast shot up 32.6 percent to 78.9 in April and is 0.8 percent above a year ago. In the Midwest the index rose 9.8 percent to 90.4 and is 11.1 percent above April 2008. The index in the South slipped 0.2 percent to 93.0 in April but is 3.5 percent higher than a year ago. In the West the index rose 1.8 percent to 94.8 but is 2.9 percent below April 2008.

    NAR President Charles McMillan, a broker with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Dallas-Fort Worth, said there are numerous buyer assistance programs around the country. “Some states are offering bridge loans that allow first-time buyers to use the tax credit for downpayment and closing costs, but there are many other local government and nonprofit programs available to buyers, depending on location,” he said.

    “Just last week, HUD announced that qualifying buyers can use the tax credit for closing costs on FHA loans, to buy down the interest rate or make a larger downpayment. Buyers who are wondering about their options should contact a Realtor®, who can advise consumers on the housing assistance programs and resources available in a given area.”

    NAR’s Housing Affordability Index2 is in record territory. The affordability index rose to 174.8 in April from an upwardly revised 171.9 in March, and was the second highest monthly reading on record after peaking at 176.9 in January of this year. The HAI is a broad measure of housing affordability using consistent values and assumptions over time, which examines the relationship between home prices, mortgage interest rates and family income; tracking began in 1970.

    A median-income family, earning $60,900, could afford a home costing $296,800 in April with a 20 percent downpayment, assuming 25 percent of gross income is devoted to mortgage principal and interest. Affordability conditions for first-time buyers with the same income and small downpayments are roughly 80 percent of that amount. The affordable price was well above the median existing single-family home price in April, which was $169,800.

    Yun cautions that the reporting sample for pending home sales is smaller than that of existing-home sales, so it is subject to greater variability. “In addition, the relationship between contracts on pending home sales and closings on existing-home sales is taking longer than in the past for several reasons,” he said. “Mortgage processing time has increased, it is taking many months to close on those homes requiring short sales with lender approval, and some sales are falling through at the last moment.”

    The total number of existing-home sales is expected to improve but with dramatic local market variation in the timing of recovery. “The market has already bottomed in some areas, but this is an unusual housing cycle with some areas improving rapidly while others languish or decline,” Yun said.

    The Pending Home Sales Index is a leading indicator for the housing sector, based on pending sales of existing homes. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing.

    The index is based on a large national sample, typically representing about 20 percent of transactions for existing-home sales. In developing the model for the index, it was demonstrated that the level of monthly sales-contract activity from 2001 through 2004 parallels the level of closed existing-home sales in the following two months. There is a closer relationship between annual index changes (from the same month a year earlier) and year-ago changes in sales performance than with month-to-month comparisons.

    An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined as well as the first of five consecutive record years for existing-home sales.

    2The Housing Affordability Index is a relative index where a value of 100 means that a family with the median income has exactly enough income to qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced existing single-family home, taking into account the relationship between median home price, average effective interest rate for loans closed on existing homes, and median family income. The higher the index, the better housing affordability is for buyers.

    The calculation assumes a downpayment of 20 percent and a qualifying ratio of 25 percent of gross income for mortgage principle and interest payments. The index is a general gauge with conditions varying widely around the country. Affordability conditions are lower for first-time buyers with smaller downpayments and less income.

    Monthly publication of the index began in 1981 with annual data calculated back to 1970.

    Existing-home sales for May will be released June 23; the next Pending Home Sales Index will be on July 1.

     

  • NY Times Article Points Borrowers Seeking Loan Modification to New Website

    FICO, formerly known as the Fair Isaac Corporation, which developed the most widely used scores for assessing credit risk, unveiled a Web site this month — MortgageReliefOnline.com — to help these homeowners.

    The new site walks borrowers through a questionnaire about their income, mortgage debt and home value, and asks for contact information.

    FICO takes that information and pairs it with data regularly received from the credit bureaus about the borrower’s credit and spending history, among other things. The company’s technology then helps determine whether the borrower qualifies for a loan modification. If so, an owner can get further assistance, free of charge, through Money Management International, a nonprofit credit-counseling organization based in Houston.

    By Bob Tedeschi
    Published: April 24, 2009

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