Posts Tagged ‘Mortgage’

Existing Home Sales Show Uptrend

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

    Existing-home sales continued on an uptrend in December, rising for three consecutive months and remaining above a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

The latest monthly data shows total existing-home sales1 rose 5.0 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.61 million in December from a downwardly revised 4.39 million in November, and are 3.6 percent higher than the 4.45 million-unit level in December 2010. The estimates are based on completed transactions from multiple listing services that include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said these are early signs of what may be a sustained recovery. “The pattern of home sales in recent months demonstrates a market in recovery,” he said. “Record low mortgage interest rates, job growth and bargain home prices are giving more consumers the confidence they need to enter the market.”

For all of 2011, existing-home sales rose 1.7 percent to 4.26 million from 4.19 million in 2010.

According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage fell to another record low of 3.96 percent in December from 3.99 percent in November; the rate was 4.71 percent in December 2010; recordkeeping began in 1971.

NAR President Moe Veissi, broker-owner of Veissi & Associates Inc., in Miami, said more buyers are expected to take advantage of market conditions this year. “The American dream of homeownership is alive and well. We have a large pent-up demand, and household formation is likely to return to normal as the job market steadily improves,” he said. “More buyers coming into the market mean additional benefits for the overall economy. When people buy homes, they stimulate a lot of related goods and services.”

Total housing inventory at the end of December dropped 9.2 percent to 2.38 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 6.2-month supply2 at the current sales pace, down from a 7.2-month supply in November.

Available inventory has trended down since setting a record of 4.04 million in July 2007, and is at the lowest level since March 2005 when there were 2.30 million homes on the market.

“The inventory supply suggests many markets will see prices stabilize or grow moderately in the near future,” Yun said.

Foreclosures3 sold for an average discount of 22 percent in December, up from 20 percent a year ago, while short sales closed 13 percent below market value compared with a 16 percent discount in December 2010.

The national median existing-home price4 for all housing types was $164,500 in December, which is 2.5 percent below December 2010. Distressed homes – foreclosures and short sales – accounted for 32 percent of sales in December (19 percent were foreclosures and 13 percent were short sales), up from 29 percent in November; they were 36 percent in December 2010.

All-cash sales accounted for 31 percent of purchases in December, up from 28 percent in November and 29 percent in December 2010. Investors account for the bulk of cash transactions.

Investors purchased 21 percent of homes in December, up from 19 percent in November and 20 percent in December 2010. First-time buyers fell to 31 percent of transactions in December from 35 percent in November; they were 33 percent in December 2010.

Contract failures were reported by 33 percent of NAR members in December, unchanged from November; they were 9 percent in December 2010. Although closed sales are holding up better than this finding would suggest, contract cancellations are caused largely by declined mortgage applications and failures in loan underwriting from appraised values coming in below the negotiated price.

Single-family home sales increased 4.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.11 million in December from 3.93 million in November, and are 4.3 percent higher than the 3.94 million-unit pace a year ago. The median existing single-family home price was $165,100 in December, which is 2.5 percent below December 2010.

In the South, existing-home sales increased 2.9 percent to an annual level of 1.76 million in December and are 3.5 percent above a year ago. The median price in the South was $146,900, down 1.1 percent from December 2010.

Blanchard & Calhoun would like to thank The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” for this article. NAR is America’s largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

For all your housing needs Blanchard and Calhoun Real Estate is your one stop shop

Some real estate agents faring well in Augusta

Monday, October 10th, 2011

Augusta bucks state trend of fewer agents

Augusta Chronicle

Staff Writer

P.J. Furno didn’t let the slow housing market stop him from becoming a real estate agent.

  • Drew Williams looks at the backyard of a home with agent Lee Kitchen. The Augusta area has about as many agents as it did when the recession started.   Jackie Ricciardi/Staff
Jackie Ricciardi/Staff
Drew Williams looks at the backyard of a home with agent Lee Kitchen. The Augusta area has about as many agents as it did when the recession started.

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Real estate agent P.J. Furno of Keller Williams Realty decided to enter the real estate business two years ago in spite of the declining housing market. "I figured ... why not get in now and make a name for myself now," he said.   JACKIE RICCIARDI/STAFF

JACKIE RICCIARDI/STAFF
Real estate agent P.J. Furno of Keller Williams Realty decided to enter the real estate business two years ago in spite of the declining housing market. “I figured … why not get in now and make a name for myself now,” he said.

He entered the profession two years ago after graduating from Augusta State University. He sold his first house a few months later.

“I had not just one, but two, under contract to close in the first two months of getting my license. It actually took me by surprise because I wrote the contract after only showing them a few houses. I remember thinking, ‘Wow, is it really this easy to sell a house?’ ” Furno said.

Since then, business has been going well for the 24-year-old agent at Keller Williams Realty. Always drawn to real estate, Furno saw the down housing market as an opportunity.

“I started my real estate career at the lowest of the low. I got in it when everybody else was getting out. I figured everyone is leaving … why not get in now and make a name for myself now, so when the market turns around, I’m already a household name,” Furno said.

Currently, there are 1,200 to 1,300 licensed residential and commercial real estate agents in the Augusta area, said Lula V. Kanardy, the president of the Greater Augusta Association of Realtors. Going back to the beginning of the recession, the total number of agents for the area is down only slightly, she said.

“Agents are getting out, but more agents are coming in. We’re doing pretty good,” Kanardy said.

The number of real estate professionals in Georgia and South Carolina, however, is dwindling.

In South Carolina, there are 41,929 real estate licensees for fiscal year 2010 to 2011, according to the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation’s annual report. That is down from the 46,897 licensees of three years ago. As of Oct. 1, there were 89,702 real estate licensees in Georgia, said Bill Rogers, a commissioner with the Georgia Real Estate Commission and Appraisers Board. Of these agents, 76 percent are active and the other 24 percent are inactive.

“Our numbers have dropped off tremendously. In 2008, we had about 105,000 real estate licensees. In the last 18 months, we’ve lost 7,800 licensees. So overall, they’re decreasing,” Rogers said.

Year-to-date, Augusta’s agents have sold 3,650 homes, slightly less than the 3,689 homes sold from January to September in 2010, a year strengthened by the new homebuyer tax credit. But they are 124 homes ahead of the recessionary year of 2008, according to association data.

The real estate market was once more robust. There were 5,657 homes sold in 2007 and 6,379 sold in 2006.

This year has been Keller Williams’ best year since 2007, said Mark Jacobs, a broker associate with Keller Williams Realty and the president/owner of Mark Jacobs and Associates. Since then, business for his companies has increased by 45 percent, he said.

“We’ve had to adapt to the market. It was a little down last year, and I think part of that was figuring out where the market was,” Jacobs said. “We now know what the buyers and sellers are looking for in this market, and we’ve tailored our message to meet the needs of the current market.”

Business has also been better for Blanchard and Calhoun Real Estate Co. this year compared to last year, said Executive Vice President Tom Blanchard. The company isn’t doing as well as it was prior to the recession, which ended two years ago, and it has seen a slight decrease in the number of agents, he said.

“In my opinion, we’re doing a very good job in the real estate market as it is today. Obviously, the market is tougher than it’s ever been historically, but our company seems to be doing fairly well,” Blanchard said.

Jeff Keller, the owner of Century 21 Jeff Keller Realty, said the first-time homebuyer market has been good, but overall, business is slow.

“Our problem is that it’s harder for people to get qualified for loans, which makes it hard to sell the existing properties. Until they do something about the job situation and credit, it’s going to be down,” Keller said. “In the past, people bought because they wanted bigger, finer houses. The people buying today are buying for necessity in our market. We’ve had people have to leave the business because they couldn’t generate enough sales to justify staying in.”

Furno said that Keller Williams Realty’s agents have 10 closings lined up this month.

“We’re doing great. Basically, that comes from the amount of work we do and the amount of technology involved in our business,” Furno said.

Keller Williams Realty has multiple Web sites and tracks leads from Craigslist and Facebook.

“If you don’t change with the times, as far as technology is concerned, you’re going to get left behind. People want information now, and they want you to get back to them immediately. We get back to them in 15 minutes,” Furno said.

Winner of the 2011 Georgia Family Businesses of the Year Award

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:  Thomas M. Blanchard, Jr.

706-650-6000

tblanchardjr@blanchardandcalhoun.com

 AUGUSTA, GA-  The Blanchard and Calhoun Family of Businesses is proud to announce it has been selected as a winner for the 2011 Georgia Family Businesses of the Year Award.  This is a prestigious award presented each year to family businesses in Georgia from the Cox Family Enterprise Center and Georgia Trend Magazine.  Blanchard and Calhoun is the recipient for the medium business category- 50-250 employees. 

 “We are honored to have received this award and take pride in our business and its accomplishments.”  , says Thomas M. Blanchard, Jr “We are in our fourth generation of family working in our business- which is unique in our world today.”  “Blanchard and Calhoun strives for its employees, agents, and clients to be treated like ‘family.’  We are in a people-centric business and therefore our real assets are our employees and the level of service we deliver.” Says Thomas Blanchard, III.

 Blanchard and Calhoun will receive its award in Atlanta on November 29th, 2011. As a winner, Blanchard and Calhoun will be featured in the October issue of Georgia Trend magazine.

 Blanchard and Calhoun’s Family of Businesses has served the CSRA’s Real Estate, Insurance, and Mortgage since its founding in 1919. Blanchard and Calhoun Real Estate Company services the CSRA with residential and commercial real estate, property management, and relocation.  Blanchard and Calhoun Insurance Agency, Inc. is the area’s largest local independent insurance agency, offering all lines of personal, commercial, health, life, and benefit insurance.  Augusta Mortgage Company, a full service mortgage company, is the area’s oldest locally owned independent mortgage lender. For more information on Blanchard and Calhoun, log onto www.blanchardandcalhoun.com

Pending Home Sales Index Report

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Pending Home sales index shows the south increasing but the rest of the country seeing mixed results. National Association of Realtors tracks the index, a forward looking indicator based on contract signings not actual closings.
The Index declined 1.2% in August but rose 7.7% compared to August 2010. The South increased 2.6% in August and was 7.6% higher than August 2010. Augusta Georgia Real Estate fared much better with an 18.8% increase over July and an 18.5% increase over August 2010. July’s pending numbers were lower than expected, which cause the large increase in August. The pending home sale numbers in Augusta are still well below where we need them.
What needs to happen? Lawrence Yun chief economist for NAR writes “ We continue to see a pattern in which financially qualified home buyers, willing to stay well within their means, are being denied credit-a factor in elevated contract failures” “The unnecessary restrictive mortgage underwriting standards are attenuating the housing recovery and are a risk factor to the overall economy”
Mr Yun has valid points and we agree polices have to change to give this housing recovery real momentum.

Staging Your Home For Sale

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011

 All Sellers want a quick sale and top dollar for their home. One of the best ways to achieve both goals is through “home staging” – displaying your home to look it’s best. Here are some helpful home staging tips:

  • Less is more – no mess, clutter or personal items anywhere. Keep kitchen counters as bare as possible.
  • Remove everything from the exterior of the refrigerator.
  • Keep cupboards and cabinets organized and neat.
  • Keep floors vacuumed, swept, mopped and waxed.
  • Steam clean or replace carpets.
  • Place only a few key pieces of furniture in each room – this makes the room appear larger and helps the buyers imagine their own furnishings in the room.
  • Open all curtains and blinds, and make sure that windows and sill are clean.
  • Remove fixtures that you will be taking with you and install inexpensive replacements.
  • Make repairs to cracks in tiles and sinks, flooring, walls, and ceilings; re-caulk bathroom tubs and showers.
  • Maintain the yard for “curb appeal.” Mow the lawn, trim bushes and plant some yellow flowers (a color that inspires buying).

 

*This article appears in the March 2011 Between Friends Newsletter provided by Old Republic Home Warranty.