Shopping for Your Home

Showing posts with label california housing market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label california housing market. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2009

WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR?



Since my last posting more good news has transpired, yes we are on the


ROAD TO RECOVERY!


Moody's Economy.com cheif economist guru, Mark Zandi, says these increasing home sales and gains in the stock market are promising signs that the worst is over! However he also warns that, "Confidence is a very fickle thing. It can go from abject pessimism that prevades now to a more balanced view now of the world rather quickly." (wow that's like quoting from a speedsheet)Some of the hardest hit markets, Florida's Gulf Coast, Cali's Inland Empire and Las Vegas, just to name a few, experienced an 80% jump in home sales. Experts say foreclosures, low interest rates and that $8000 Obama tax credit are helping first time buyers and investors.



So to all you first time buyers, LET'S GET GOING!!!


To all you homeowners sitting on that equity, MAKE YOUR MONEY WORK FOR YOU, become that investor that makes a mil

And to all you investors that are doing the do KUDOS!!!



See you around the neighborhood!
RealEstatewithRuben@gmail.com

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Why Buy a Home in Today's Market?



Buying a home in today’s market may be challenging, particularly for those with credit problems or little saved to put toward a down payment. But there are many factors impacting the current housing market that make buying a home today a viable option.


Here are five reasons for buying a home today:


1 Interest rates on long-term, fixed, and adjustable mortgages are at historically low levels. The rate on a 30-year, fixed mortgage is hovering just below 6 percent, while, by comparison, interest rates were hitting 8 percent and higher during the last market downturn in the late 1990s, and were between 10 and 12 percent at the height of the last housing boom in the 1980s. Lower interest rates make it easier to qualify for a loan, and your monthly payments are more affordable.


2 No one can put a price on the intrinsic value of homeownership. Home prices also reflect financial worth and, the good news is, across California the median sales price for a single-family home has been consistently rising for several decades. In short, housing remains a solid, long-term financial investment. While the pace of home appreciation has slowed over the last year, historical data suggest home prices will continue to appreciate over time. The projected median home price for a single-family home in California in 2008, for example, is $553,000. By comparison, the median price in 2000 was $241,350; $193,770 in 1990, and $99,550 in 1980. (source: C.A.R.)


3 The length of time a home remains on the market before it is sold has increased from
roughly two weeks in 2004 to between eight and nine weeks in 2007. According to the
unsold inventory index provided by the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, it would take 16.3 months to sell all the homes on the market at the current sales pace, compared with 6.4 months in 2006. With more homes on the market for longer periods of time, you have more choices when it comes to selecting a home today.


4 The multiple-offer frenzy that dominated the latest housing boom has subsided, and there is
less pressure on today’s home buyers to outbid one another. REALTORS® in California reported that in 2007 only 28 percent of homes sold had multiple offers, compared with 57 percent in 2004. (source: C.A.R.)


5 The credit industry crisis that has made securing a home loan difficult for many has led to
heightened scrutiny of mortgage lenders. As a result, state and federal agencies have created
protections for home buyers that were not in place a year ago. The U.S. Federal Reserve, for example, has proposed a plan to require lenders to confirm a borrower’s ability to afford a mortgage before making a loan and establishing guidelines for explaining subprime loan terms in order to better educate buyers. Many new public education and awareness campaigns, such as Freddie Mac’s “Don’t Borrow Trouble®” campaign, have been developed to help you achieve the dream of homeownership without the financial risks that led so many borrowers into trouble in recent years.
http://www.yourpieceofcalifornia.com/



Need I say more.... This is the time to buy folks, so let's get the ball rolling. I have just been certified as a DOWN PAYMENT ASSISTANCE SPECIALIST and know many programs that you may qualify for that work with low interest FHA loans. Interest rates ARE going up, so don't miss the boat!!!



See you around the neighborhood!

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

First-time buyers find silver lining in foreclosure cloud



More than one-third of Los Angeles County families could afford to buy an entry-level home in the first quarter - 66 percent more than a year earlier - thanks to an epidemic of foreclosures that depressed prices, a trade group said Tuesday.


During the first three months of 2008, 35 percent of county households could afford to buy their first home, the California Association of Realtors said. That compares with 21 percent a year earlier and 28 percent during the last quarter of 2007.


The latest figures are the highest since the association began tracking housing affordability in 2003 - another hopeful sign for Southern California's troubled real-estate market, analysts say.


"I would personally wait a year, but if you are a buyer, this would be a good time to buy a home," said Dennis Torres, director of real estate operations for Pepperdine University's Graziadio School of Business and Management.


Tuesday's report came a day after Data Quick Information Systems reported that house and condo sales were 22 percent higher in April than in March. Most of the sales were in areas hard hit by foreclosures, with homes less than $500,000 accounting for 66 percent of sales.


Torres predicted that prices will continue to fall, putting houses within reach of more potential buyers but also causing anguish for homeowners watching their equity evaporate.


He cautioned, however, that worries about inflation could result in higher interest rates that would again put a drag on affordability.


"We haven't been visited by our old friend rapid inflation, but he's out there and coming to dinner," Torres said.


The association's First-time Buyer Housing Affordability Index reflects the percentage of households that can afford to buy an entry-level home - one priced at 85percent of the median price in their area.


That factored out to a $390,450 home in Los Angeles County in the first quarter. A family would have had to earn $74,320 a year to qualify for it.


A year earlier, before the credit crisis took hold and the real-estate market tumbled, an entry-level home would have cost $496,120. That meant the qualifying income level was $100,000 then.


The index assumes a 10 percent down payment and an interest rate of 5.65 percent.


The association index also demonstrates how the current market conditions vary from community to community.


For example, affordability ranged from a high of 64 percent in the High Desert, which includes the Antelope Valley, to a low of 29 percent in Monterey.


"Essentially we're working our way out of the downturn and coming back up," said Leslie Appleton-Young, vice president and chief economist of the Los Angeles-based association.


"The moderate to low part of the market - under $500,000 - is where you are seeing the activity. People are responding to lower prices," she said.


And mortgage rates are helping, too. The rate for a 30-year fixed-rate loan averaged 5.65 percent in this year's first quarter, compared with 6.3 percent a year earlier.


The association report also showed that:


The monthly mortgage payment for an entry-level home in Los Angeles County, including taxes and insurance, was $2,480.


Statewide, 44 percent of households could afford an entry-level home in the first quarter, compared with 33 percent during the last quarter of 2007. The increase was attributed to a 1percentage-point decrease in interest rates and a 14.3 percent drop in the entry-level median home price.


Statewide, the minimum household income needed to buy an entry-level home costing $356,350 was $67,830. The monthly payment would be $2,260.


In Ventura County, 43 percent of households earned the $86,400 a year needed to buy an entry-level home costing $453,890. The monthly mortgage payment would be $2,880.


In the Inland Empire, hard hit by foreclosures and price declines, 57 percent of households earned the $46,450 needed to buy an entry-level house costing $244,000. The payment would be $1,550.


Appleton-Young expects affordability to continue improving as more foreclosed homes come on the market and drive prices down further.


And that's good news for someone looking for a first home.


"I think they are going to make a dent in the supply. Is it going to evaporate overnight? Absolutely not. It will be a slow workout," she said. "We're still into the wave of foreclosures."


By Gregory J. Wilcox, Staff Writer
greg.wilcox@dailynews.com 818-713-3743


Ok first timers, what are you waiting for? Don't miss out on an excellent opportunity.
Start looking NOW!
Call me and I will help you get started!


See you around the neighborhood!