Monday, December 7, 2009

Hot New Westside Listing!




2910 N Mountain Creek Way, Tucson, Arizona 85745

$199,900 MLS#20934400

This move-in-ready Silver Creek Subdivision contemporary home has many wonderful features:

*Four bedrooms *Two baths *High ceilings *Neutral colored tile *New carpet in bedrooms *Freshly painted walls *New artistic tiled shower in master *Split bedroom floor plan *Large great room *Breakfast bar *Dining area *Lots of storage in the home as well as in the 2 car garage *Beautiful landscaped yard *Tile roof *Mountain views *Priced below December 1, 2009 appraisal

For more information on this home or Tucson real estate, contact Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-990-8477 or nellisja@aol.com

November 2009 Tucson Housing Report

As we get closer to the end of 2009, we can see the positive effects of the tax credit. Home sales volume is up 35.34% over last year. New listings are down 3.16% over last year and down 23.63% over last month. Active listings continue to drop over last year by 20.59% but are up 2.21% over last month.

The extension of the First-Time Home Buyer tax credit should help continue to push the market forward. As you know, Congress has passed new legislation to extend the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit of up to $8,000 to first-time home buyers and up to $6,500 credit to current home owners until April 30, 2010. (See below for more information)

Another positive note is mortgage rates are continuing to fall. According to a survey by Freddie Mac, rates decreased to 4.71%, the lowest since the survey began in 1971. This should continue to help home sales.

While the holiday season is typically slower the numbers show a steady pace. We look forward to seeing the year-end statistics and summary next month.

For more information about the current Tucson Real Estate Market, contact Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-990-8477 or nellisja@aol.com

Monday, November 30, 2009

New Adoption Center for the Humane Society of Southern Arizona in Tucson

On November 20th I was honored to share a very special day for the animals of Southern Arizona, the Ribbon Cutting Ceremony of the Humane Society of Southern Arizona Adoption Center at Park Place Mall.












This mall adoption site will be a wonderful alternative to “Puppy-Mill” pet stores that are normally found in shopping malls. It will also give homeless dogs and cats more exposure since many people can’t bring themselves to visit the shelter because they view it as a sad place. The Park Place Adoption Center is a happy place, painted with bright happy colors and fun accessories for the pets and humans. If you are not in need for a new furry family member you can still support the Center by going there to purchase collars, leashes, toys, cleaning products, and other pet related items.


































The comfortable Kitty-condo-displays can accommodate 17 cats and kittens and there is a doggie enclosure at the front window for dogs and puppies.
























The Humane Society of Southern Arizona has been helping homeless pets since 1936! We are very fortunate to have such a devoted organization giving voice to those that can’t speak.

I am excited about what this new adoption site can do to lessen the number of homeless pets in the Tucson and Southern Arizona community. I hope you will support it too.

Important to know:
Humane Society of Southern Arizona Adoption Center
Park Place Mall
Southeast Corner near Sears
Hours: 10:00-7:00 M, W, Th, Fr
9:00-6:00 Sat
Noon-5:00 Sun
Closed on Tuesday

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

POSITIVE SIGN: HOME SALES INVENTORIES FALL TO UNDER 6 MONTHS’ SUPPLY
By Joe Pangburn, Inside Tucson Business
Published on Tuesday, August 04, 2009

In what may be one of the most positive signs yet that the Tucson residential real estate market is poised for recovery, Long Realty Research Center data shows inventories of homes priced under $250,000 have fallen below six months’ worth.

“Months of inventory is the best matrix to look at when you’re trying to see the temperature of a specific area or price point,” said Kevin Kaplan, vice president of marketing and technology. “Obviously it is the lower price points that are bringing in buyers from foreclosures and sellers lowering the asking price on their homes.”

Nevertheless, he said, a healthy and balanced market is considered to have around six months of inventory at a given time. The market as a whole has around 5.7 months of inventory on sale, down from the 8.4 months at this time a year ago, according to Long’s data.

The fastest movers are homes priced under $175,000 where there is 3.6 months of inventory based on June’s sales levels. Homes priced from $175,000 to $249,999 have 5.4 months of inventory.

Above the $300,000 price point, the inventory numbers climb. There’s a 7.5-month supply of homes in the $300,000 to $400,000 range, 11 months supply of homes priced $400,000 to $500,000, a 17.2-month inventory of homes in the $500,000 to $749,999 range; and two years’ supply of homes priced $750,000 to $999,999.

Kaplan said Tucson is experiencing a significant increase in buyer activity, with new properties under contract in June up 57 percent over June 2008.

“We’ve really gotten to a more balanced healthy level with active to sold,” Kaplan said. “Some markets even look a little overheated. It will take another few months to see if there gets to be an equilibrium and prices come up some to curb the high demand.”

The higher demand Kaplan is referring to is mostly centralized in the southwest, southeast and central/east area of the region.

A data analysis of the first half of the year show homes listed in zip codes 85706, 85756, 85710, 85711, 85730, 85741, 85746, 85747 and 85757 have the highest percentage sales to total active listings, according to data from Tucson Association of Realtors.

The top three zip codes with the highest percentage of listings sold are 85757 on the southwest side at 40.2 percent (31 sold of 77 active listings), 85711 in midtown generally between Alvernon Way and Wilmot Road at 36 percent (48 sold of 133 active), and 85746 on the southwest side at 31.2 percent (59 sold of 189 active).
Those same zip codes also have some of the lowest numbers for inventory — just 2.4 months supply in 85757, three months in 85711 and 3.3 months in 85746, according to Long’s data.

Southeast side zip code 85706 also has a low inventory supply of 2.8 months, though percentage of homes (88 of 292 active listings) meant percentage of sales was just over 30 percent.

“That south side of town has had a bit more of a price decline and probably has a higher foreclosure mix,” Kaplan said. “We’ve seen huge increases in sales units there.”

Louis Parrish, associate broker with Keller Williams Tucson Territory Realty, agrees.

“You would probably find that the higher percentage groups are also areas that have had the highest percentage of depreciation, highest rates of foreclosure and highest rates of short sale listings. When those neighborhoods are totally stabilized, the rest of our markets’ current stabilization trends should accelerate.”


For more information on the Tucson Housing Market, call Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-990-8477 or visit www.tucsonhouses4you.com

Pending Home Sales Up

Pending Home Sales up for Fifth Consecutive Month

RISMEDIA, August 5, 2009-Pending home sales are up for the fifth consecutive month, the first time in six years for such a streak, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in June, rose 3.6% to 94.6 from an upwardly revised reading of 91.3 in May, and is 6.7% above June 2008 when it was 88.7. The last time there were five consecutive monthly gains was in July 2003.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said a combination of positive market factors is fueling the gains. “Historically low mortgage interest rates, affordable home prices and large selection are encouraging buyers who’ve been on the sidelines. Activity has been consistently much stronger for lower priced homes,” he said. ”Because it may take as long as two months to close on a home after signing a contract, first-time buyers must act fairly soon to take advantage of the $8,000 tax credit because they must close on the sale by November 30.”

The Pending Home Sales Index in the Northeast rose 0.4% to 81.2 in June and is 5.8% above a year ago. In the Midwest the index increased 0.8% to 89.9 and is 11.6% above June 2008. The index in the South jumped 7.1% to 100.7 in June and is 8.9% higher than a year ago. In the West the index rose 2.9% to 100.4 but is 0.2% below June 2008.
NAR President Charles McMillan, a broker with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Dallas-Fort Worth, is hopeful that a recently elevated level of contract cancellations will ease. “Last month, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae clarified that appraisals should be done by professionals with clear local expertise,” he said. “This should mitigate the situation of many valuations done by out-of-area appraisers coming in below the price negotiated between buyers and sellers. Hopefully, in the months ahead, we’ll see an even closer relationship between contract activity and closed transactions.” McMillan said NAR is continuing to press the appraisal issue. “We have asked Congress and the Federal Housing Finance Agency to immediately implement an 18-month moratorium on the new appraisal rules to further address unintended consequences of the new guidelines,” he said.

NAR’s Housing Affordability Index (HAI) remains very favorable. The affordability index stood at 159.2 in July, down from record peaks in recent months but it remains 36.6 percentage points above a year ago. Under these conditions the typical family would devote 15.7% of gross income to mortgage principal and interest, well below the standard allowance of 25%. 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.

“A monthly rise in home prices and somewhat higher mortgage interest rates led to a modest decline in affordability in June, but it was still the sixth highest index on record dating back to 1970,” Yun said. “Because housing is so affordable in today’s market, job security and the first-time buyer tax credit are bigger factors in influencing home sales.”

A median-income family, earning $60,700, could afford a home costing $289,100 in June with a 20% downpayment, assuming 25% 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% of what a median-income family can afford. The affordable price was much higher than the median existing single-family home price in June, which was $181,600.

Yun expects existing-home sales to gradually rise over the balance of the year, with conditions varying around the country. “It appears home sales are on a sounder footing and inventory is gradually being absorbed.”


Call Julie Nellis, Long Realty, for more information on the real estate market in Tucson, Arizona, 520-990-8477 or visit www.tucsonhouses4you.com

Lower Appraisals

Are Tighter Appraisals Hurting Home Sales?

RISMEDIA, June 22, 2009-(MCT)-Less than a week after putting his newly renovated house in Idylwood, Texas, on the market, Derrick DeCristofaro accepted a full-price offer of $242,900 on the 1940 bungalow.

But the appraisal on the 1,780-square-foot home came in at just $206,000. The buyer couldn’t come up with enough cash to make up the difference and DeCristofaro wasn’t willing to drop the price, so the deal fell through.

On top of already sluggish home sales, are appraisals becoming the newest threat to the local housing market?

Real estate experts said sales are collapsing because appraisers are being more conservative and valuing homes for less than what buyers have agreed to pay. Some owners can’t refinance because appraisers say their homes are worth less than they had counted on.

In DeCristofaro’s case, the low appraisal affected the would-be buyer’s ability to get a mortgage for the contracted price.

“Their lender naturally wouldn’t approve that,” DeCristofaro said.

His house is under contract again to a backup buyer, but because of new rules regulating appraisals, and a more conservative lending environment in general, DeCristofaro is worried about the new sale closing as well.

“It’s shocking. If we just pulled a buyer out of thin air, it would be a different story, but we had multiple offers coming in. It seems strange the lenders wouldn’t support that,” said DeCristofaro, an interior designer who is an investor in the home, which has two other owners.

Real estate broker Robert Searcy has seen a number of sales fall through because of low appraisals.

And that has the potential to hurt property values, too, he said.

“The biggest challenge isn’t the economy, or buyers who can’t qualify for loans. It’s appraisers coming in with ridiculously low appraisals,” said Searcy, who is listing DeCristofaro’s house.

Part of what’s at issue is a new rule that went into effect May 1 prohibiting loan officers, mortgage brokers and real estate agents from selecting appraisers.

New rules for lenders

The rule falls under the new Home Valuation Code of Conduct, the result of an agreement between Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the New York state attorney general to enhance the independence and accuracy of the appraisal process. It applies to lenders that sell single-family mortgage loans to the government-sponsored enterprises.

The rule was meant to prevent inflated appraisals like those that proliferated during the housing boom.

Houston appraiser Chris Catechis said there were a couple of times in recent years when he felt pressure from mortgage brokers to “hit a value” on a property. If it didn’t, they threatened to take their business elsewhere, which is what he said he advised them to do.While the appraiser, a partner in Catechis, Campbell & Associates, understands why the new rules were implemented, it has cost him business.

Lenders are now using more appraisal management companies when they select appraisers. These companies often charge a fee to the lender and pay an outside appraiser like Catechis a portion of that fee.

Unfamiliar with the area

One of the unintended consequences of this system, however, is the chance that a management company will hire an appraiser who isn’t familiar with the neighborhood where the house is being evaluated, said Catechis.

“When you have appraisers coming from different parts of town and not knowing areas, they aren’t doing justice to the people that are trying to refinance or sell,” Catechis said. “It really skews the whole appraisal process.”

The appraisal business, in general, has become more difficult in today’s residential real estate market because there are fewer sales — many of which are foreclosures.

Some OK with caution

Catechis said he’s now often required to get two comparable sales that took place within the past 90 days. If there are none, he’ll have to look at similar subdivisions nearby.“There’s a lot more detail involved in an appraisal for a lesser price,” he said.

Not everyone is as concerned about appraisers taking a more cautious tack.
David Zugheri, of Envoy Mortgage in Houston, said he hasn’t seen a high percentage of homes for sale not appraising.

While the industry is more conservative, “if the value is less than the sales price there’s a strong case that the value really is less than the sales price,” he said.


For more information on what your home's value is in today's market, call Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-990-8377 today, or visit www.tucsonhouses4you.com

Friday, July 17, 2009

Change in Law Limiting Protection of the Arizona Anti-Deficiency Statute

If you are considering letting your property go to foreclosure, read on to learn about the new law that can affect your pocket book. On July 10, 2009, the Governor of Arizona signed into law (effective September 30, 2009) a significant amendment to Arizona's anti-deficiency statutes. This new law decreases the protection to Arizona homeowners after they lose their home to foreclosure. The anti-deficiency statutes had not been amended since 1990.

The Arizona anti-deficiency statutes (primarily A.R.S. §33-814(G)) generally protect most homeowners from being sued after foreclosure by their lender for any unpaid balance of the loan, i.e., deficiency, if the home was "utilized" as a "dwelling." The Arizona courts have ruled that even vacation homes rented out by investors for only a few weeks of the year were being "utilized" as a "dwelling."

The new law states that homes must be utilized as a dwelling "by the trustor [borrower] under the deed of trust for at least six consecutive months...." (Emphasis added.) Therefore, occupancy of the home for at least six consecutive months prior to the foreclosure is now required.

You may want to consider other alternatives than foreclosure, such as short sale or loan modification.

For more information about Tucson's Foreclosures contact Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-990-8477, email nellisja@aol.com website www.tucsonhouses4you.com

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Buying a Short Sale in Tucson, Arizona

BUYING A SHORT SALE


Are you looking to buy a new home? Are you thinking that now’s a great time to find bargains? Well, it is a great time to buy but before you make an offer on a home you need to know more about the seller’s situation.

If a home is being sold for below what the current seller owes on the property, and the seller does not have other funds to make up the difference at closing, the sale is considered a short sale. Many more home owners are finding themselves in this situation due to a number of factors, including job losses, aggressive borrowing against their home in the days of easy credit, and declining home values in a slower real estate market.

A short sale is different from a foreclosure, which is when the seller’s lender has taken title of the home and is selling it directly. Homeowners often try to accomplish a short sale in order to avoid foreclosure. But a short sale holds many potential pitfalls for buyers. Know the risks before you pursue a short-sale purchase.

YOU ARE A GOOD CANDIDATE FOR A SHORT-SALE PURCHASE IF:
· YOU’RE VERY PATIENT. Even after you come to agreement with the seller to buy a short-sale property, the seller’s lender (or lenders, if there is more than one mortgage) has to approve the sale before you can close. When there is only one mortgage, short-sale experts say lender approval typically takes about two months (longer with Bank of American and Chase). If there is more than one mortgage with different lenders, it can take four months or longer for the lenders to approve the sale.
· YOUR FINANCING IS IN ORDER. Lenders like cash offers. But even if you can’t pay all cash for a short-sale property, it’s important to show you are well qualified and your financing is set. If you’re preapproved, have a large down payment, and can close at any time, your offer will be viewed more favorably than that of a buyer whose financing is less secure.
· YOU DON’T HAVE ANY CONTINGENCIES. If you have a home to sell before you can close on the purchase of the short-sale property, or you need to be in your new home by a certain time, a short sale may not be for you. Lenders like no-contingency offers and flexible closing terms.

IF YOU’RE SERIOUS ABOUT PURCHASING A SHORT-SALE PROPERTY, IT’S IMPORTANT FOR YOU TO HAVE A QUALIFIED REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL.
· You may have a close friend or relative in real estate, but if that person doesn’t know anything about short sales, working with him or her may hurt your chances of a successful closing. Interview a few practitioners and ask them how many short-sales they have done and, of those, how many have successfully closed. A qualified real estate profession will be able to show you short-sale homes, help negotiate the purchase when you find the property you want to buy, and smooth communication.
· A good real estate professional will have a pre-lim title search done to see all the liens attached to the property. If there are multiple lien holders, it’s much tougher to get the short sale contract to the closing table. Any of the lien holders could put a kink in the process even after you’ve waited for months for lender approval.

SOME OF THE OTHER RISKS FACED BY BUYERS OF SHORT-SALE PROPERTIES INCLUDE:
· POTENTIAL FOR REJECTION. Lenders want to minimize their losses as much as possible. If you make an offer tremendously lower than the fair market value of the home, chances are that your offer will be rejected and you’ll have wasted months. Or the lender could make a counteroffer.
· BAD TERMS. Even when a lender approves a short-sale, it could require that the sellers sign a promissory note to repay the deficient amount of the loan, which may not be acceptable to some financially desperate sellers. In that case, the sellers may refuse to go through with the short-sale. Lenders also can change any of the terms of the contract that you’ve already negotiated, which may not be agreeable to you.
· NO REPAIRS OR REPAIR CREDITS. You will most likely be asked to take the property “As Is”. Lenders are already taking a loss on the property and may not agree to requests for repair credits.

The risks of a short sale are considerable. But if you have the time, patience, and iron will to see it through, a short sale can be a win-win for you and the sellers.

For more information or assistance with buying or selling short sales in the Tucson, Arizona area, contact Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-990-8477 or nellisja@aol.com

www.tucsonhouses4you.com

info from National Association of Realtors

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Buy Now Or Wait? Home Buyer Tax Credit

Buy Now or Wait?
The $7,500 First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit¹
for homes purchased April 9, 2008 - June 30, 2009

What is the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit?
The Tax Credit is part of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, signed into
law on July 30, 2008. The intent of the tax credit is two fold:
• To provide a financial resource for home buyers in the year that they purchase a home
• To provide a stimulus to the housing market and the economy, helping to stabilize home
prices and increase home sales

The law provides a tax credit equal to ten percent of the qualified home
purchase price. The credit is capped at $7,500.
The credit is essentially an interest-free loan. Home buyers are required to repay the
credit to the government, without interest, over 15 years in equal installments or when
they sell the house.

Who is Eligible?²
• First-time home buyers, defined as a buyer who has not owned a principal
residence in the previous three years
• U.S. citizens who file tax returns
• Eligible properties include any single family home that will be used as a principal
residence (including condos and co-ops).
• To qualify, buyers must close on the sale of the home between April 9, 2008 and
June 30, 2009.

Income Limits
• The full $7,500 credit is available for individuals with modified adjusted gross
income (per IRS definition) of no more than $75,000 ($150,000 for couples filing jointly).
• A partial credit is available for individuals with modified adjusted gross income between
$75,000 and $95,000 (between $150,000 and $170,000 for couples filing jointly).

Is the Tax Credit “Refundable?”
• Yes. The credit reduces the income tax liability for the year of purchase.
• The credit can be claimed even if the taxpayer has little or no federal income tax
liability to offset. Typically this involves the government sending the taxpayer a check
for a portion or even all of the amount of the refundable tax credit.

Payback Provisions
• Home buyers claiming a $7,500 credit would repay the credit at $500 per year via
their tax returns. They do not have to begin repayments until two years after the credit
was claimed.
• If the home owner sells the home, the remaining credit would be due from the
profit of the home sale.
• If there is insufficient profit from the sale, the remaining credit payback would be forgiven.

Contact Julie Nellis, Long Realty, to assist you with your Tucson Real Estate needs. www.tucsonhouses4you.com or 520-918-3843

World's Safest Banks

Global Finance Names The World’s Safest Banks
New York, 4 September 2008-

Global Finance magazine has released its annual ranking of the
World’s Safest Banks, which will be featured in the special October issue alongside several of the magazine’s renowned Best Bank awards.

The World’s Safest Banks were selected through a comparison of the long-term credit ratings and total assets of the 300 largest banks around the world. Ratings from Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch were used.

This is the 16th year that Global Finance has published its list of the world’s largest banks ranked by their creditworthiness. The 10 banks at the top of the list are designated as the “World’s Safest Banks”.

These banks will be honored at an awards ceremony to be held in Washington D.C. on October 13th to coincide with the World Bank/IMF annual meeting.

“These banks have demonstrated an appropriately prudent approach to risk in
providing international financial services,” says Global Finance publisher, Joseph D. Giarraputo. “More than ever customers are viewing strong
credit quality as an important feature of the banks with which they do business.”

WORLD’S SAFEST BANKS
Groupe Caisse des Dépôts (CDC) France
Bank Nederlandse Gemeenten (BNG) Netherlands
Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank Germany
Rabobank Netherlands
Landeskreditbank Baden-Wuerttemberg-Förderbank Germany
Lloyds TSB United Kingdom
BNP Paribas France
Dexia Belgium
NRW Bank Germany
WELLS FARGO (Long Mortgage loans funded & Backed by Wells Fargo) UNITED STATES

Contact Julie Nellis, Long Realty, for your Tucson area real estate needs. www.tucsonhouses4you.com or 520-918-3843

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Searching for homes on the Internet

This is an article with sound advice for internet home searching. I hope you find it helpful. Julie

5 top blunders of Internet home buying
Here's some advice to help you avoid the common pitfalls of online real-estate searching.
By U.S. News & World Report

While the painful real-estate swoon appears likely to extend well into 2009 — at least — the number of Americans using the Internet to find the home of their dreams is poised to keep on climbing.

According to the 2008 National Association of Realtors Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 87% of homebuyers used the Internet to search for homes last year. That's up steadily from 84% in 2007 and 80% in 2006.

But despite its mounting popularity, the Internet home-buying process can present a host of pitfalls. To help make your online real-estate searching more effective, here's a look at the top five Internet home-buying blunders and what you can do to avoid them.

1. Assuming you can do it all yourself
The Internet allows users to handle for themselves many of the tasks that could once only be performed by real-estate agents. The NAR profile, for example, found that the number of homebuyers who first learned of their homes on the Internet has been rising in recent years, to 32% in 2008, up from a tiny 2% in 1997. Accordingly, the number of homebuyers who first learned of their homes through agents has been declining, to 34% in 2008, down from 50% in 1997.

But although the Internet can provide heaps of helpful tips and research, it would be a mistake to assume that the Web is all you need to buy a house — unless you are an experienced real-estate investor. Purchasing real estate can be extremely complicated from a legal standpoint, and it's easy to make a mistake if you don't have an expert advising you. And when it comes to something as expensive as real estate, those mistakes could cost you thousands of dollars.

"Doing all the paperwork yourself is a huge mistake," says Joshua Dorkin, chief executive officer of BiggerPockets.com, a real-estate networking and information site. "There are so many things you can miss on a contract."

2. Looking too narrowly
The sheer amount of information about the real-estate market online can be overwhelming. As a result, buyers can be tempted to stick to just one or two popular real-estate search engines, such as Realtor.com, for their research. The problem with doing that, however, is that you're missing out on the biggest advantages that the Internet offers. [Realtor.com is a partner of MSN Real Estate.]

First, you're closing yourself off to a smaller cross section of the homes that are out there. "A lot of the sites aren't comprehensive and don't have all of the new listings," says Pat Kitano, a co-founder of Domus Consulting Group, which works with real-estate brokerage firms on technology marketing strategies.

Don't assume that because a house is on one real-estate Web site, it is on all of them, says Greg Healy, vice president of operations at ForSaleByOwner.com. "It's still very fragmented," he says. Healy recommends using several Web sites to get a more complete picture.

Second, you miss all the breaking, up-to-the-minute information on the housing market that can make you a smarter consumer. Blogs have become a popular resource for real-estate agents and others to post information as it happens. "If consumers are interested in a local area, they should find local real-estate bloggers who know this breaking information," Kitano says.

3. Ignoring the independents
One area that major real-estate search engines often overlook is the market for homes sold by the owners. "A lot of people forget to think how many homes are sold without agents," Healy says. The current estimate is that 20% to 25% of homes are listed by owner, he says.

Your dream house could easily fall into that 20% to 25%. So how do you bring homes sold independently into your online searches? "Craigslist is one of the best resources," Dorkin says.

4. Falling for fake listings
Remember, the Internet is a giant playground for scammers, and unfortunately they have penetrated the world of online home buying as well. Combine big dollars for online advertising and a lot of people searching for homes, and the result is a proliferation of fake home listings. There are a number of red flags to look out for.

"If there are no photos [of the house], that's a big warning sign. That's just people trying to collect page views," Healy says.

But even if the listing has photos, it's not guaranteed to be legitimate. Legitimate Web sites will put watermarks on their home photos to brand those photos as their own. If a home's photos have several different watermarks on it, then you can guess you are looking at the work of a scammer.

5. Putting too much stock in home-valuation Web sites
Sites such as Zillow.com and Cyberhomes.com have changed the way people buy homes by putting pricing information at buyers' fingertips. But they're not infallible.

Don't assume to know what the value of a home should be based on what these sites tell you about the neighborhood. There are many elements of a home's value that home-valuation sites cannot incorporate.

"Take their values with a grain of salt," Dorkin says. He recommends using this information merely as a range. Conduct other research to narrow that range. For example, walkscore.com can tell you the number of amenities within walking distance of a location — those are some of the factors that can raise or lower the value of a home.

By Matthew Bandyk, U.S. News & World Report

If you are seriously looking for the home of your dreams, call Julie Nellis, Long Realty, 520-918-3843 to end your search!

It Is a Great Time to Buy Tucson Real Estate

Out of the 8,541 current active residential listings, 333 of them are Short Sales and 87 are Bank Owned or Foreclosure.

If you are interested in looking for a great buy, now is the time to buy Tucson real estate! Interest rates are at all time lows and the average sale price is down.

The Tucson MLS statistics for December 2008 shows the average sale price at $200,000.

In March 2006, when the average sales price in MLS was $281,000 and interest rates were 6.25% the monthly PI payment on a $281,000 loan would have been $1,730. Today with the average sales price of $200,000 and rates at 4.75% the monthly PI payment on $200,000 is $1,043. That's $687, a 40% difference!

As you can see......IT IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY REAL ESTATE IN TUCSON!

Call Julie Nellis with Long Realty, 520-918-3843 today to purchase your piece of sunny Tucson.
This is a great article, by Barry Habib, that I wanted to share with you that may help you to understand the current market situation and why we are there.

The ‘Mark to Market’ Accounting Rule:
What it is and why it is important to you now!
Barry Habib
Chairman of the Board, Mortgage Success Source

The financial crisis we are in today was not caused by mortgages or housing, although they were both catalysts. The real reason was an accounting rule called "Mark to Market" (also known as FASB 157).

Few people have a strong grasp of this rule, and even those who do have a tough time explaining it on air due to time restrictions. So let’s take a few minutes to break it down, so you can have the inside track on this very important concept and understand why it represents some great opportunities.

Why does ‘Mark to Market’ exist?
Let’s go back to the stock market crash, which occurred between 2000 and 2002. With the S&P down 49% and the NASDAQ down 71%, many people lost much of their life savings and they were very angry.

Companies like Enron and Arthur Andersen were able to find ways to make their books looks more attractive, which was reflected in an artificially inflated stock price.

Both the public and Congress had a call for more transparency in business and hastened the passage of “Mark to Market” accounting.

This is the notion that all assets should be valued as if they were sold on a daily basis. Under the letter of the law, failure to do this conservatively can now result in jail time.

So what’s the problem?
Before we get into what this means for banks, let me make a quick analogy using a scenario that should make perfect sense to you and your clients.

Let’s imagine that you own a house in a neighborhood where all of the houses are priced at around $300,000. Unfortunately, your neighbor, who owns his home free and clear, falls ill and needs emergency cash quickly. Because he is under duress, he must sell the home for $200,000 in order to get the cash he needs right away, even though the home is worth considerably more.

Now would this mean that your home is now worth the same $200,000 that your neighbor sold his for? Of course not, because you are not forced to sell under duress. It just means that your new neighbor got a great deal.

However, if you were a publicly traded company and had to abide by Mark to Market account rules, you and the rest of your neighbors would now have to say, by law, that your home was worth only $200,000 – not the $300,000 you would get for it if you actually sold. So what's the big deal? Read on.

So how does this principle apply to banks?
Let's say we decide to start a bank . . . call it XYZ Bank. We raise $2 Million to open our doors. Remember that our capital account is $2 Million. Banks make money by taking in deposits and paying low rates of interest to those depositors (maybe throw in a toaster too). We then take that money and make loans with it at higher rates. We keep the difference.

So, we turn that money into $30 Million worth of loans. This puts our ratio of loans to capital (our Capital Ratio) at 15:1 ($15 Million in Loans to $1 Million in Capital). This level is acceptable, as long as we can shoulder some losses and recover.

Because we are very conservative here at XYZ Bank, the loans we make require a minimum down payment of 30%, a credit score of 800 or better (that’s nearly an 850 which is perfect), proof of income and assets, a reserve of at least two years of mortgage payments (normal is two months) and income requirements that only allow 10% of monthly income to cover all expenses (normal is 40%).

We do this and our loans perform perfectly. We make lots of money. Nobody is paying late and our clients are sending us holiday cards. They love us . . . it's a party. You and I are celebrating as we see our stock price soar.

But real estate values decline and, even though all of our loans are paying perfectly, we must re-assess the loan portfolio to account for the decline in real estate values, which leaves us with less of an equity cushion. We had a minimum 30% down payment, which means the loans were 70% of the value of our assets – until we account for the decline in the market. Now, our position goes from 70% to 90%. That's riskier and, therefore, worth less than when our loans had a 70% safety position.

Our accountants tell us that we must “Mark to Market” or risk jail. They say our value is now reduced by $1 Million. Whoa!

We must take (or write down) this loss against our capital account. It is a paper loss - we don't write a check, we have no late payers, no defaults, no bad business decisions. Still, we must reflect this $1 Million paper loss in our Capital Account, which drops from a $2 Million to $1 Million in value.

Here’s where things get problematic.
At this level, with $30 Million in loans outstanding, we now have a capital ratio of 30:1. At this level of leverage, alarms begin to sound.

Our ratios are out of the safe zone; we could go under with just a few losses, deposits are in jeopardy. Hello FDIC examiner, we are on the watch list, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is asking questions and our stock starts to tumble. The business networks are showing coverage of our now troubled bank. We are in big trouble.

The problem, we are "over leveraged". The solution? We have to “de-lever” . . . and do so quickly. But there are only two ways to do that, and one of them isn’t really an option.

The first way is to raise capital, but that’s not going to happen when our ratios are out of whack and we are in serious trouble as well as on the FDIC watch list. It is unlikely that anyone will be willing to invest cash in XYZ Bank.

The other option is that we can sell assets, like the outstanding loans, which are increasing our capital ratio. Like your neighbor, who owned his home outright but needed cash for medical bills, we are now under duress. The paper we are holding has a lot of value, but we have to sell it quickly and, because of that, cheaply. So, we offload the loans at a loss, which exacerbates the problem because those losses further reduce our capital account.

Very quickly, like a flushing toilet, things start to spiral – we are going down.

The problem multiplies
The problem doesn’t stop there. The fire sale we just had on our loans makes things worse – even for the banks that bought them up and thought they were getting a great deal.
Under Mark to Market, the loans we just sold must be included in the comparables that other financial institutions use to value their assets. This is how the problem spread and got so bad so fast. Other good institutions, with good loans, have to mark down. Just like us, they become over-leveraged. It’s a chain reaction, all triggered by a well intentioned, but over-reaching accounting rule.

Financial institutions fold, sell, or freeze. Credit - the life blood of our economy - is cut off at the source. Because of a lack of available credit, home sales and refinances crawl, auto sales drop and jobs are lost. Additionally, the economy enters a recession.

During the last recession in 2001, the economy recovered relatively quickly thanks to $3 Trillion worth of home equity withdrawals. But, more restrictive programs, a lack of available credit, and lower home values will make it difficult for us to use home equity to help pull us out of a recession this time around.

Fixing the problem
The Federal Reserve has passed a rescue plan, which, over time, will provide some level of help. Some banks will get money to infuse into their capital accounts. Others can sell some assets to the government in an effort to “de-lever”.

But, the big thing that is not talked about, not well understood, is the part of the rescue plan that traces this financial crisis back to the source.

The US Congress has given the SEC its blessing to modify “Mark to Market” accounting. And by January 2, SEC Chairman, Chris Cox has to get back to Congress with ideas, if any, on how to fix Mark to Market accounting.

It won't be eliminated, as we will not want to go back to the Enron days. But he is likely to adjust the Mark to Market provisions.

Here’s one potential solution - even rental or commercial real estate properties can be valued two ways:
1. The comparable sales method, which determines the value based on what other assets have sold for, which is the way Mark to Market work currently.
2. A cash flow method, which values the property based upon cash coming in.

If we see Mark to Market modified to use cash flow to value assets, without requiring a large percentage discounting mechanism - wow! What a shot in the arm that would be. We’d likely see the stock market rally, with financial stocks leading the uphill charge.

Consider that, in today’s market, fund managers are holding 27% of their assets in cash, compared with just 3% they held in cash when the stock market peaked in October of 2007. That means there is a lot of money on the sidelines that can push stock prices higher. Additionally, think about the redemptions from hedge funds that eventually need to be put back to work. That’s another reason to be optimistic about stocks in the first quarter of 2009 – provided that Chairman
Cox modifies Mark to Market accounting in a meaningful way. And a good stock market helps individuals feel better about purchasing homes. Additionally, stronger balance sheets for financial institutions will allow them to lend more money.

The bottom line
With some potentially very good news around the corner, there might be reason for optimism as we head into 2009.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

December 2008 Tucson Market Report

"AFFORDABLE" IS RETURNING TO THE TUCSON HOUSING
MARKET....according to the Tucson Association of Realtors Multiple Listing
December 2008 Statistical Report. In comparing December 2008 stats with the
past data we find: * The Median Sales Price of $167,900 is the lowest Median
since August 2004; *The December Average Sales Price of $200,055
is the lowest Average since February 2004; *The December 31, 2008 Listing
Inventory Count of 7,627 was the lowest since March 2006; *The December 2008 New Listings entering the market were the least since February 2005.

Arizona's foreclosures slowed in November and December as we saw Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac suspend foreclosure proceedings and evictions from single family homes. This suspension has been extended through the end of January to allow homeowners facing foreclosure to stay in their homes as they work with mortgage servicers under the Streamlined Modification Program. I have been assisting Fannie Mae also in developing a Short Sale "preapproval" program focused on those listings that may qualify for a short sale. This program is initially being tested in Phoenix and Orlando, where the foreclosure threat is much worse than Tucson. Many are predicting that Tucson's real estate market will show improvement in 2009!!

Home Sales Volume: Declined 19.93% from $193,643,336 in Dec. '07 to $155,042,902 in Dec. '08

Home Sales Units: Increased 2.92% from 753 in Dec. '07 to 775 in Dec. '08.

Average Sales Price (all res. types):
Decreased 22.21% from $257,162 in Dec. '07 to $200,055 in Dec.. '08

Median Sales Price (price at which half the homes were sold above and half below):
Decreased 20.05% from $210,000 in Dec. '07 to $167,900 in Dec. '08

Pending Contracts (New Sales Opening Escrow in Month):
Decreased 23.40% from 799 Units in Dec. '07 to 612 Units in Dec. '08

Active Listing Inventory:
Declined 12.41% from 8,708 in Dec. '07 to7,627 in Dec. '08

New Listings: Declined 5.6% from 1,590 in Dec. '07 to 1,501 in Dec. '08

Home Buyer Tax Credit

Home Buyer Tax Credit: How It Works?
By Dale Martin

CAMDEN AND ROCKLAND (Dec 29): First-time homebuyers in 2008 can take an income-tax credit on their purchase, thanks to passage in Congress earlier this year of the first-time home buyer tax credit.

The definition of first-time homebuyer is generous. To get the credit, the homebuyer cannot have owned a home in the previous three years. The home must be a principal residence and purchased between April 9, 2008 and July 1, 2009.

The credit is equal to 10 percent of the purchase price, up to $7,500. Single taxpayers with modified adjusted gross income up to $75,000 and couples with MAGI up to $150,000 will qualify for full credit. Singles with MAGI up to $95,000 and couples with MAGI up to $170,000 will get a reduced amount. Those with higher incomes don’t qualify.

If the amount of tax a homebuyer owes is less than the amount of the credit, they get to keep the difference in the form of an IRS refund.

The homebuyer must begin to repay the credit in two years in increments of about $500 a year over a 15-year period for those who received the full credit

Homebuyers who sell their home before the credit is repaid must pay off the loan with any profits. If they sell the home at a loss, the loan is forgiven.

[Editor's Note: The credit is set to expire in mid-2009, although industry groups, including the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, are encouraging Congress to extend it. NAR is also encouraging Congress to make the credit available to all buyers and to eliminate the repayment requirement. More detail on how the credit works is available from NAR on REALTOR.org.]

Source: Chicago Tribune, Mary Umberger (12/28/2008)