Friday, July 31, 2009

HOMES IN ESCROW JULY 20 - JULY 31

The Following Homes in 90210 (Beverly Hills) and 90402 (Santa Monica) Opened Escrow between July 20th and July 31st!!! Congratulations to all these Buyers & Sellers!

424 Robert Lane, Beverly Hills, 17 Days On The Market, Listed At $ 7,900,000
2801 Hutton Dr., Beverly Hills, 14 Days On The Market, Listed At $ 1,799,000
620 22nd St, Santa Monica, 52 Days On The Market, Listed At $ 1,799,000
1360 Monte Placentia Wy, Beverly Hills, 165 Days On The Market, Listed At $ 699,000
The housing market has picked up since April and this trend seems to be continuing. Homes are selling but only if they are not over-priced so proper pricing that will later be supported by an appraisal is key to selling.
If you have any questions, please give me a call or send me an email.

Appearing On FOX BUSINESS CHANNEL Tomorrow Morning

I will be getting up early tomorrow morning, Saturday, to do a national TV show on Fox Business called "Your Questions Your Money". I will be a part of a panel answering, LIVE, viewer questions for one hour related to housing. All the fun begins bright and early at 7 am PST or 10 am EST!

Have a nice weekend,
Connie

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Connie Speaks With Neil Cavuto On Fox News

FOX NEWS CHANNEL
Connie appeared with famed host NEIL CAVUTO on "Your World Cavuto" on the FOX NEWS CHANNEL to discuss another month of rising NEW HOME SALES and what this means for the national housing market. Original Air Date: July 27, 2009
click on link to view: Your World Fox News July 27 09







Thursday, July 23, 2009

Existing-Home Sales Up Again

Washington, July 23, 2009

Existing-home sales rose for the third consecutive month with inventory easing and home prices declining less sharply in June, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

Existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – increased 3.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 4.89 million units in June from a downwardly revised pace of 4.72 million in May, but are 0.2 percent lower than the 4.90 million-unit level in June 2008.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, is hopeful about the gain. “The increase in existing-home sales occurred in all major regions of the country,” he said. “We expect a gradual uptrend in sales to continue due to tax credit incentives and historically high affordability conditions. Despite the rise in closed transactions, many Realtors® are reporting lost sales as a result of new appraisal standards that went into effect May 1 of this year.”

A June survey of NAR members shows 37 percent experienced at least one lost sale as a result of the new Home Valuation Code of Conduct, with seven out of 10 reporting an increased use of out-of-area appraisers. Seventy percent of NAR appraiser members said consumers were paying higher fees, while 85 percent report a perceived reduction in appraisal quality.
“Clearly the process needs to be revised, but the most logical approach is to use appraisers with local expertise, industry designations and access to local data, who make a physical examination of the property and use apples-to-apples comparisons with nearby home sales,” Yun said. “In many cases, normal homes are being compared with distressed homes sold at a discount, which often are in subpar condition – this is causing real harm to both buyers and sellers.”

According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage rose to 5.42 percent in June from 4.86 percent in May; the rate was 6.32 percent in June 2008. Mortgage interest rates have trended lower in recent weeks.

Total housing inventory at the end of June fell 0.7 percent to 3.82 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 9.4-month supply at the current sales pace, down from a 9.8-month supply in May. Raw inventory totals are 14.9 percent below a year ago.
“This is another hopeful sign – if we can keep the volume of sales above the level of new inventory, prices could stabilize in many areas around the end of the year,” Yun said.

An NAR practitioner survey in June showed first-time buyers accounted for 29 percent of transactions, unchanged from May, and that the number of buyers looking at homes is up nearly 12 percentage points from June 2008.

The national median existing-home price3 for all housing types was $181,800 in June, which is 15.4 percent below June 2008. Distressed properties, which accounted for 31 percent of sales in June, continue to downwardly distort the median price because they generally sell at a discount relative to traditional homes.

Single-family home sales rose 2.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.32 million in June from a level of 4.22 million in May, and are 0.2 percent higher than the 4.31 million-unit pace a year ago. The median existing single-family home price was $181,600 in June, which is 15.0 percent below June 2008.

Regionally, existing-home sales in the Northeast rose 2.5 percent to an annual pace of 820,000 in June, but are 4.7 percent below a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $249,400, down 5.9 percent from June 2008.

Existing-home sales in the Midwest increased 0.9 percent in June to a level of 1.10 million but are 1.8 percent lower than June 2008. The median price in the Midwest was $157,000, which is 9.1 percent below a year ago.

In the South, existing-home sales rose 4.0 percent to an annual pace of 1.81 million in June but are 3.7 percent below a year ago. The median price in the South was $163,200, down 11.9 percent from June 2008.

Existing-home sales in the West improved by 6.4 percent to an annual rate of 1.16 million in June, and are 11.5 percent higher than June 2008. The median price in the West was $214,800, which is 24.9 percent below a year ago.

The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.2 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Dangerously Delaying the Inevitable- By Morgan Housel July 2, 2009


"The Obama administration relaxed the requirements for government-backed mortgage modifications yesterday(July 1, 2009). The program, a $75 billion assistance plan announced earlier this year, originally allowed homeowners with loan-to-value ratios up to 105% qualify for refinancing, provided the loan is backed by Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) or Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE). That limit has now been upped to 125%."

"The original mortgage modification program was failing to help as many people as Washington wanted. And focusing on housing makes sense from a recovery standpoint. This mess started in housing, and it'll surely end there."

"As Warren Buffett recently noted, fix housing and "the world will change in a big way."
But -- and this is a very significant but -- past evidence of the effectiveness of mortgage modifications is really, really atrocious. A recent report by the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Comptroller of the Currency detailing the amount of redefaults, or troubled loans that find their way back into default after modification, shows just what I'm talkin' about."

"Of the modified loans 30 or more days delinquent, here's what it found:
Modification Date (2008)
1. Three Months After Modification
2. Six Months After Modification
3. Nine Months After Modification
4. 12 Months After Modification

Source: Comptroller of the Currency, Office of Thrift Supervision, June 2009.
One year out, over 60% of modified mortgages end up where they started … in default. What's really amazing is how quickly things reverted: Just 90 days after modification, almost half of mortgages were back in default. That's utterly pathetic. Rising joblessness is the most obvious answer to why so many modifications fail. But that alone hardly accounts for the ungodly redefault rate. When unemployment goes up a few percentage points while redefaults hit 60%, something else is surely at play. And it is One of the big factors fueling redefaults is just what the Obama administration seems to be pooh-poohing: underwater homeowners."

"When your house is worth less than your mortgage, there's a huge incentive to give up and walk away even if you can make your monthly payments. The logic here is simple: The beauty of homeownership is based on a saying that goes something like "with every mortgage payment, you'll own a little bit more of your house." But when you're underwater, the only thing you "own" is the liability. Monthly payments decrease your debt, but you still don't own one inch of the house. The bank does. Taking away this fundamental sense of ownership zaps the incentive to keep making payments. The sensible thing to do, many find, is to stop paying and walk away."

"This is suicide on your credit rating and a nightmare for housing-heavy banks like Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), but the pros often outweigh the cons. When the job market is this tight, becoming mobile again is worth its weight in gold. When it comes down to it, high monthly payments aren't what are pushing many homeowners into default. It's the fact that their mortgage balances are so high that it doesn't make sense to keep making payments."

Moving on Now back to our Office of Thrift Supervision report. In the first quarter, a scant 1.8% of modifications actually reduced mortgage principal -- the kind of alteration that entices underwater homeowners to keep making payments. Most were interest rate reductions, or capitalizations of missed payments and fees. The latter is literally just taking debt you owed yesterday and tacking it on to what you'll owe tomorrow. Sober people think this is an effective way to solve an excessive debt problem. Honestly."

"And that's why the redefault rate is so high: Underwater homeowners are still highly incentivized to default, even with reduced monthly payments. And as home prices fall, their ranks are growing by the day. Modifications in their current form are, more often than not, just delaying the inevitable."

Monday, July 20, 2009

Pending Home Sales from July 1-July 20 in Beverly Hills 90210 and Santa Monica 90402

Pending Home Sales For Beverly Hills 90210:

1. Hartford Way Listed At $ 7,800,000
2. 1916 San Ysidro Dr. Listed At $ 1,039,000
3. 10001 Westwanda Listed At $ 399,000

Pending Home Sales For Santa Monica 90402:

1. 311 10th St Listed At $ 3,895,000
2. 523 14th St Listed At $ 2,969,000
3. 227 Alta Ave. Listed At $ 2,795,000
4. 636 16th St Listed At $ 1,991,000
5. 653 Kingman Ave Listed At $ 1,695,000

Friday, July 17, 2009

National Housing News

Lower rates sent applications to refinance mortgages shooting up 17.7 percent the week ending July 10, but requests for purchase loans were down 9.4 percent, the Mortgage Bankers Association said in releasing the results of its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey. July 15, 2009

A record 1.5 million properties were in the foreclosure process – default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions – during the first six months of 2009, according to a report by RealyTrac. CNN: 1.5 million homes in foreclosure in '09 By Les Christie07/16/2009A

Thursday, July 16, 2009

The White House Has A New Idea For Housing- like it?

CLICK TO VIEW CLIP: If You Can't Pay the Mortgage, Pay Rent?

Connie on Fox Business July 15, 2009 to discuss with Liz and David if mortgage defaulters should be allowed to rent their homes. Below are some points that were discussed on that segment.

This could be a bad idea for the following reasons:

1. The Banks will need to manage this and it will cost them time and money to manage.

2. They will add property management to their growing list of tasks? This is not what they specialize in doing and they have their hands full with short-sales, REO's etc.

3. Historically speaking, a large percent of those that default on a loan re-default. If this is so, the banks could be dealing with many that stop paying rent. Resolving this could cost time and money.

4. This doesn't send a good message to responsible borrowers. And what are the consequences for renters that stop paying?

5. Before trying an idea like this we should further explore increasing demand amongst those that truly can afford to own a home. There is a lot of money on the sidelines just waiting for the right opportunity. (the tax credit is working so more tax credits with higher limits are needed for first-time buyers, a capital gains exemption for investors for a limited amount of time should also be considered, etc.) These incentives do not need a lot of management and oversight so they are also cost efficient.

6. There are benefits with this plan IF the renter is responsible and taking care of the property. It would be good for the bank who owns that asset and it would be good for the neighborhood not to have a vacant home. Nevertheless, the troubles caused by those that DO NOT live up to their commitments may far outweigh these benefits.

What do you think?

Saturday, July 11, 2009

WHAT ABOUT MORE TAX INCENTIVES FOR HOUSING

HERE'S SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT:

For the money we gave to GM we could have given 3.3 MILLION HOME BUYERS a tax credit of 15,000!! This would have gone a long way to stabilizing housing. As Warren Buffet said...we must fix housing to turn this economy around.

For the past year, I have strongly suggested more TAX INCENTIVES for home buyers. Historically, sales/price discounts have worked and businesses that are offering good deals are finding buyers today! It is working in retail. People are seeing deals with restaurants, hotels and clothing stores and people are being lured towards those businesses because they see a DEAL.

This is why, more incentives for first-time home buyers AND ALL HOME BUYERS is a very good idea. Some suggestions:

A. For a limited time, give investors a CAPITAL GAINS HOLIDAY if they purchase a home today. It will cost taxpayers nothing now, it will stimulate the economy, increase demand and get us closer to stabilizing housing. The government will not receive much revenue from capital gains for a few years anyway but investors will see the benefit and respond. We still have lots of money sitting on the sidelines waiting for the right opportunity!

B. Extend the tax credit to first-time home buyers through next year, increase the amount to
$ 15,000 and offer it to buyers of all homes or offer it to first-time buyers only and a capital gains holiday to all other buyers of homes (of course set an upper price limit)

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Santa Monica 90402 Homes Pending or With Accepted Offers

HAPPY 4TH OF JULY !!!!

According to the Multiple Listing Service the following homes are PENDING or have ACCEPTED OFFERS to purchase but are looking for backup offers. Data from period June 1, 2009 - July 1, 2009 in Santa Monica 90402(Single Family Residence):

PENDING SALES:
1. 315 Palisades Listed At: 5,299,000
2. 310 22nd St Listed At: 4,495,000
3. 403 20th St Listed At: 3,195,000
4. 634 23rd St Listed At: 2,750,000
5. 633 11th St Listed At: 2,299,000

ACCEPTED OFFERS BUT STILL LOOKING FOR BACKUP OFFERS:
1. 133 17th St Listed At: 3,695,000
2. 457 24th St Listed At: 2,495,000

For updates on this neighborhood continue to visit my website/blog.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Beverly Hills 90210 Homes Pending or With Accepted Offers

According to the Multiple Listing Service the following homes are PENDING or have ACCEPTED OFFERS to purchase but looking for backup offers. Data from period June 1, 2009 - July 1, 2009 in Beverly Hills 90210 (Beverly Hills & BHPO):

ACCEPTED OFFERS BUT STILL LOOKING FOR BACKUP OFFERS:
1. 1357 Schuyler Rd Listed At 2,495,000
2. 9712 Heather Rd Listed At 3,299,000
3. 3335 Clerendon Rd Listed At 4,795,000
4. 1435 Loma Vista Dr Listed At 5,999,000
5. 527 N Hillcrest Rd Listed At 3,950,000
6. 2100 N Beverly Dr Listed At 3,995,000
7. 9788 Oak Pass Rd Listed At 1,649,000
8. 9834 San Cir Listed At 1,499,000
9. 2985 Hutton Dr Listed At 2,649,000
10.2075 N Beverly Dr Listed At 2,495,000
11.515 N Alpine Dr Listed At 3,195,000

PENDING SALES:
1. 9486 Rembert Ln Listed At 2,950,000
2. 475 Castle Pl Listed At 4,975,000
3. 9476 Hidden Valley Listed At 1,200,000
4. 126 N Maple Dr Listed At 1,795,000

Pending Home Sales For May 2009

May Pending Home Sales Are UP 5.7 percent from May 2008- Nationally

Data On Regions Across the Country:
West: UP 2.2 percent
Northeast: UP 3.1 percent
South: DOWN 1.7 percent
Midwest: DOWN 1.3 percent

May Pending Home Sales Are UP 0.1 percent from April 2009-Nationally

This is the fourth consecutive month pending home sales are UP but actual existing home closings were only up 2 months and this may be due to delays in obtaining loans and because some buyers are having more difficulty obtaining loans because of new appraisal standards.