Tuesday, December 12, 2006

4 Exotic Mortgages Growing in Popularity

While the 30-year, fixed rate mortgage is still the most popular for prime borrowers, many are exploring a host of other possibilities. Some of the slightly more exotic are:

  • 2/28 and 3/27 ARMS. The rate is fixed for two years and then adjusts higher each remaining year based on an underlying interest rate index. Subprime loan rates vary more than prime rates but most are now near 8 percent.
  • Interest-only loans. Mortgages that allow the home buyer to pay only the interest on a loan, typically for a period of three to 10 years before the principal is amortized. The loan may cut monthly payments on a $200,000 loan by almost $200 a month based on current interest rates.
  • 80/20 loans. Two mortgages in one loan that finances 80 percent of the house and another "piggyback" loan that covers up to 20 percent, depending on the down payment. A new tax law recently passed that gives a deduction for mortgage insurance makes this less attractive.
  • Payment-option ARM. Mortgages that give the home buyer a variety of payment options each month. They've been a lightning rod for criticism because they allow the home buyer to raise the balance of their loan — called negative amortization — by skipping payments of principal and part of the interest for a limited time.

Source: Reuters, Al Yoon

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Affordable Housing

Where is the affordable housing in the United States?

The recently released National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index says that Indianapolis, Indiana has earned "...the title of most affordable major U.S. housing market in the third quarter of 2006...just under 86 percent of homes sold in the third quarter were affordable to families earning the median household income of $65,100.

The median sales price of all homes sold in the metro area during that time was $122,000 – up slightly from $120,000 in the previous quarter." And, the lease affordable?

Welcome to California! The report says that "...Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, Calif. ... was the nation’s least affordable major housing market for an eighth consecutive quarter. There, only 1.8 percent of new and existing homes sold during the third quarter were affordable to those earning the area’s median family income of $56,200. The median sales price of all homes sold in the area during the period was $523,000."

Housing's Current Star: The Rental Market

Sales of condos might be off, but the market for rental apartments “remains solidly in the expansion phase of the real estate cycle,” according to a survey of apartment market conditions published by the National Multi Housing Council, an association representing the interest of large apartment firms in the United States.

The quarterly survey showed improving supply-to-demand ratios, with 55 percent of senior executives of apartment-related firms reporting tighter conditions. Rising, too, in most markets, according to the survey, are occupancy rates and rents.The most recent Multifamily Stock Index released by National Association of Home Builders also set an all time high. The MFSI, which tracks the stocks of 24 publicly traded firms including 20 Real Estate Investment Trusts principally involved in owning, developing, and managing multifamily housing, showed a year-over-year gain of 30 percent.

Looking ahead, the demand for apartments should remain strong as long as employment keeps rising, says Mark Obrinsky, NMHC’s chief economist. Additionally, he says, “Although the slowdown in the condo market has had some impact on the investment demand for apartment properties, in every other respect the apartment industry seems to be firing on all cylinders.”

Motivations to RentCost, maintenance-free living, and flexibility were cited by current renters as the most common reasons for renting rather than owning, according to a recent survey conducted by Apartments.com. More than 23 percent of current renters surveyed said they chose to rent for financial decisions. Nineteen percent indicated that relocation flexibility and the lack of a long-term commitment was the primary reason.For those who choose to rent, apartment selection hinges on specific available amenities and community features according to the Apartments.com survey.

Most desirable are:

In-unit washers and dryers
Air conditioning
Acceptance of pets
Ample parking

Friday, November 17, 2006

Free annual credit report

Just a reminder that you are entitled to receive a free annual credit report. And, there's only one site that you should be using: www.annualcreditreport.com

You can get a FREE Credit Report! That's right. Under the federal Fair Credit Report Act (FCRA), each of us can request one free copy of our credit report every 12 months. The program started in the western states in December 1, 2004, and is being phased in over nine months throughout the United States to all Americans.

I think you should get a copy of your credit report and review it for accuracy. Inaccurate information could effect you in may ways, including your ability to obtain a loan for your home purchase, and will help you guard against identity theft.

To order you free credit report, the three nationwide consumer reporting companies (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) have set up one website, tollfree telephone number and mailing address for you to use. The toll free number is 1-877-322-8228 and the website is www.annualcreditreport.com. You can also complete the Annual Credit Report Request Form (available at www.ftc.gov/credit) and send it to: Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O. Box 105281, Altanta, Georgia 30348-5281.

Be Careful! Do Not Be Tricked Into Using Other Companies Or Services!

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Why list in the winter?


  • "In good winter weather people are still shopping for homes and those looking are more serious buyers."
  • "Fewer homes are listed in the wintertime so there is less competition for your home."
    "Many corporate transfers happen at the beginning of the calendar year and your home can be marketed to this niche."
  • "While your home is decorated for the holidays its festive look may entice someone to make an offer."
  • "You will be ahead of the spring influx of listings."

Before you offer your home for sale, ask David For A FREE Copy of

"11 Deadly Mistakes Sellers Make When Selling Their Home"

This list was complied by industry insiders and it might surprise you - even shock you. But it is information you Must have before you offer your home for sale. We will be happy to mail or fax it to you at no charge or obligation.

Call David Rigney at 1-800-731-1162 ext 4409 or e-mail at david.rigney@remax.net

Housing Market Expected to 'Coast' into 2007 with Modest Price Gains

Following a correction in home sales and prices in 2006, existing-home sales are expected to "coast" at roughly the same level next year, although there will be some additional decline in the new-home market, according to a forecast released Saturday at the National Association of Realtors(R) Conference & Expo in New Orleans.

Overall home price gains will be modest, said David Lereah, NAR's chief economist, and sellers are adjusting to the market transition. "Home sellers are becoming realistic about current market conditions and are now offering more competitive pricing, in addition to some incentives or concessions -- especially to help first-time buyers," he said.

"Given the huge gains in home values during the housing boom, and this year's rise in housing inventory, overall price gains this year and next will be modest," Lereah said. Even with temporary declines in some months, the national median existing- home price should increase 1.9 percent for all of 2006 to $223,700, then another 1.7 percent next year to $227,500. The median new-home price is expected to drop 1.1 percent to $238,400 this year before rising 1.3 percent in 2007 to $241,400.

The unemployment rate for 2006 is likely to average 4.6 percent, edging-up to 4.7 percent next year. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, is forecast at 3.4 percent this year and 2.3 percent in 2007, while growth in the U.S. gross domestic product is expected to be 3.3 percent in 2006 and 2.7 percent next year. Inflation-adjusted disposable personal income should grow 3.3 percent this year and 3.5 percent in 2007.

Rates Fall and Mortgage Applications Rise

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) has released its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending November 10. The week was a shortened one in observance of Veteran’s Day. The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, was 647.5, an increase of 4.3 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from 620.9 one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 7.6 percent compared with the previous week and was down 0.1 percent compared with the same week one year earlier.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 6.15 percent from 6.24 percent, with points decreasing to 0.98 from 1.08 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio loans. The 30-year rate is at its lowest since January 2006.

The average contract interest rate for 15-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 5.85 percent from 5.96 percent, with points increasing to 1.00 from 0.97 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans.

The average contract interest rate for one-year ARMs decreased to 5.87 percent from 5.89, with points decreasing to 0.78 from 0.8 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

THE BEST TIME TO BUY IS NOW

MORTGAGE INTEREST RATES ARE CLOSE TO 40-YEAR LOWS.
  • The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage
    rate remains near 40-year lows. Currently
    at 6.4%, this is more than an entire percentage
    point below 2000 levels.
  • Low interest rates allow a substantially
    larger population of Americans to own
    their own homes.
  • n For example, with a $250,000 mortgage,
    a rise in interest rates from 6.5% to 7.5%
    means an additional $2000 in annual
    payments. This may boost currently
    available homes out of financial reach for
    potential buyers. Today’s low rates offer
    a unique opportunity for buyers.


INVENTORY IS ONCE AGAIN ON THE DECLINE.

  • In recent months, there has been a record inventory of nearly four million homes on the market. However, total housing inventory levels fell 2.4% at the end of September to 3.75 million existing homes available for sale. As inventory continues to decline, the selection of homes will once again become limited. For prospective buyers, there may never be a better time to buy a home than right now.
  • Taking advantage of the variety of homes available on the market today allows buyers the unique opportunity to find the home of their dreams.
  • Expanded selection combined with low interest rates offer buyers an opportunity that may never be available again in their lifetime.


REAL ESTATE REMAINS THE BEST INVESTMENT AVAILABLE.

  • The average home purchased five years ago has appreciated 49%.
    Even with the recent 2.2% decline in the median home price, this
    still equates to a more than 45% return on investment for the average
    homeowner. Media reports of a vast market decline are deceiving,
    and consumers will benefit from purchasing a home now before
    prices begin to rise once again.
  • According to Forbes magazine (using U.S. Department of Housing and
    Urban Development statistics), U.S. real estate sale prices increased
    more than 56% from the beginning of 1999 to the end of 2004.
    The S&P 500 index dipped nearly 6% during that same period.
  • While year-to-year fluctuations are normal, real estate remains one
    of the best performing and consistent long-term investments.
    Median existing U.S. home sale prices have increased on average
    6.5% each year from 1972 through 2005, and 88.5% over the last
    10 years combined. For consumers looking for long-term and
    stable growth rates, real estate is still their number one choice.

IAR "watch list" for the fall Veto Session

One week after the election, the Illinois General Assembly begins its annual fall session, Nov. 14-16 and 28-30. The legislature will consider gubernatorial vetoes of legislation from the spring session as well as unresolved and new issues such as whether residential electric rates will be allowed to increase, an increase in the state’s minimum wage and a statewide smoking ban.

  • Override of HB 5377 Rent Control/Mobile Homes
  • Legislation to extend the Cook County Assessment Cap
  • Rewrite of the Appraiser License Law
  • Homeowners Associations (SB 2772)
  • Condominium Advisory Council (HB 5334 and SB 1216)
  • Mobile Home Park Water Supply Systems and Hydrants (HB 4342)

SLOWER THAN EXPECTED ECONOMIC GROWTH PUSHES MORTGAGE RATES LOWER, REVERSING TREND OF THE LAST TWO WEEKS

McLean, VA – Freddie Mac (NYSE:FRE) today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®) in which the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 6.31 percent with an average 0.4 point for the week ending November 2, 2006, down from last week when it averaged 6.40 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 6.31 percent.

The 15-year FRM this week averaged 6.02 percent with an average 0.4 point, down from last week when it averaged 6.10 percent. A year ago, the 15-year FRM averaged 5.85 percent.

Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) averaged 6.05 percent this week, with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 6.14 percent. A year ago, the five-year ARM averaged 5.76 percent.

One-year Treasury-indexed ARMs averaged 5.53 percent this week with an average 0.6 point, down from last week when it averaged 5.60 percent. At this time last year, the one-year ARM averaged 5.09 percent.
(Average commitment rates should be reported along with average fees and points to reflect the total cost of obtaining the mortgage.)

"Lower than expected third quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) figures helped to put a damper on rising rates this week," said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist. "With mortgage rates down this week, we may see a spurt of refinancing by those who want to get out of ARMs that are scheduled to reset in the next year while interest rates are still comparatively low.
"We are also seeing a higher number of homeowners who are taking cash out of their homes for home improvement or other needs rather than opting for a prime rate home equity loan now that the prime rate is over 8 percent."Freddie Mac is a stockholder-owned company established by Congress in 1970 to support homeownership and rental housing. Freddie Mac fulfills its mission by purchasing residential mortgages and mortgage-related securities, which it finances primarily by issuing mortgage-related securities and debt instruments in the capital markets. Over the years, Freddie Mac has made home possible for one in six homebuyers and more than four million renters in America. -->
Freddie Mac is a stockholder-owned company established by Congress in 1970 to support homeownership and rental housing. Freddie Mac fulfills its mission by purchasing residential mortgages and mortgage-related securities, which it finances primarily by issuing mortgage-related securities and debt instruments in the capital markets. Over the years, Freddie Mac has made home possible for one in six homebuyers and more than four million renters in America.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

September Existing-Home Sales Ease, Setting State for Stable Market

2006—Existing-home sales eased last month, as did the number of homes available for sale – indicating the housing market is stabilizing, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Total existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – dipped 1.9% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 6.18 million units in September from a level of 6.30 million in August, and were 14.2% below the 7.20 million-unit pace in September 2005, which was the third strongest month on record. David Lereah, NAR’s chief economist, said stabilizing sales should build confidence in the housing market. “Considering that existing-home sales are based on closed transactions, this is a lagging indicator and the worst is behind us as far as a market correction – this is likely the trough for sales,” said Lereah. “When consumers recognize that home sales are stabilizing, we’ll see the buyers who’ve been on the sidelines get back into the market, and sales will be at more normal levels in the wake of the unsustainable boom that we saw last year.” He noted sales already are improving in some areas. Total housing inventory levels fell 2.4% at the end of September to 3.75 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 7.3-month supply at the current sales pace. NAR president Thomas M. Stevens from Vienna, Virginia, said the industry is encouraged that the number of homes on the market is starting to decline. “It appears we have passed a cyclical peak in terms of the number of homes on the market,” said Stevens, senior vice president of NRT Inc. “The good news is that fewer new listings are coming online. A stable sales pace is expected to draw down the number of listings to a supply balance that will support positive price growth within a few months. Taking the long view is always the best way to approach housing decisions, and right now, buyers are in a very favorable market.” With the market in transition, the national median existing-home price for all housing types was $220,000 in September, which is 2.2% below September 2005 when the median was $225,000. The median is a typical market price where half of the homes sold for more and half sold for less. According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage was 6.40% in September, down from 6.52% in August; the rate was 5.77% in September 2005. Single-family home sales slipped 1.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.42 million in September from a pace of 5.51 million August, and were 13.8% below the 6.29 million-unit level in September 2005, which was the second highest month on record. The median existing single-family home price was $219,800 in September, down 2.5% from a year earlier. Existing condominium and cooperative housing sales fell 3.2% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 763,000 units in September from 788,000 in August, and were 16.0% less than the 908,000-unit pace in September 2005. The median existing condo price3 was $219,800 in September, which is 2.8% lower than a year ago. Regionally, existing-home sales in the South rose 0.4% to an annual sales rate of 2.52 million in September, but were 9.0% below September 2005. The median price in the South was $184,000, down 1.6% from a year ago. Existing-home sales in the Midwest eased 2.8% in September to a level of 1.39 million, and were 13.7% lower than a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was $169,000, which is 2.3% below September 2005. In the West, existing-home sales declined 3.1% to an annual pace of 1.25 million in September, and were 23.8% lower than a year earlier. The median price in the West was $332,000, down 4.3% from September 2005. Existing-home sales in the Northeast fell 3.7%to a level of 1.03 million in September, and were 13.4% below September 2005. The median existing-home price in the Northeast was $259,000, down 5.1% from a year earlier.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Mortgage rates down again!

According to Bankrate.com, "The benchmark 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage fell 1 basis point to 6.44 percent ... One year ago, the mortgage index was 5.76 percent, and four weeks ago, it was 6.51 percent. The 30-year benchmark has fallen in nine of the past 11 weeks. It was 6.93 percent June 28..."

To read more: September 13, 2006 interest rate report

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Condo sellers feeling the market change

Supplies are up, prices are down, more units expected to hit the market over the next two years.

From Kiplingers.com: Goodbye Condo Mania

More Real Estate Reality

By James R. Hagerty and Ruth Simon From The Wall Street Journal Online

As the housing market cools, Americans are confronting a problem that was easy to ignore during the boom: inflated appraisals of home values.

Critics inside and outside the appraisal business have long warned that many appraisals are unrealistically high. That's partly because generous appraisals help loan officers and mortgage brokers, who often choose the appraiser, complete more deals. If a home is appraised at less than the buyer offered, the deal is likely to fall through.
Inflated appraisals didn't matter much when home prices were rising at double-digit rates, since market values would quickly catch up. Now, however, prices are leveling off in many places and falling in some. Some homeowners are finding that the market value is below what past appraisals led them to believe.
For sellers, that can mean being forced to drop their asking prices. Some people hoping to refinance, meanwhile, may be unable to lock in new loan terms because they have less equity in their homes than they thought. Lenders and mortgage investors, too, could take a hit if it turns out the collateral backing their loan is worth less than expected.
Most homeowners have enough equity in their homes so they don't need to worry much about whether past appraisals were realistic. But dubious appraisals are a risk for the hundreds of thousands of people who in the past few years have bought homes with little or no down payment, or used almost all of their home equity to finance home improvements or other types of spending. That has left these people with little financial cushion to deal with rising interest rates.
"Now it's pay-the-piper time for people, and they're finding out they don't have the value in the house they thought they had," says John Taylor, president of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a Washington-based nonprofit that supports low-income housing.
Karen Ammon, who works for an auto-parts marketing company in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., bought her home in 2002 for $141,000. A year later, a lender encouraged her to refinance into a larger loan that would let her pay off credit-card debt. The appraiser chosen by the lender had great news: Her house was now valued at $175,000. She had room to raise her total mortgage borrowings to $165,000.
Now monthly payments on the adjustable-rate loan she received in 2003 are rising in line with the general level of interest rates. So Ms. Ammon wants to refinance into a fixed-rate loan. But when she tried to refinance, she couldn't do so because several appraisers valued her home at around $148,000 -- or about $15,000 less than she owes in mortgage debt.
Appraisals are only opinions, and appraisers often disagree on the value of a home. But wide discrepancies can mean that at least one of the estimates was unrealistic. No one can say how many appraisals are unreliable. Still, Iowa Assistant Attorney General Patrick Madigan, who coordinates with law-enforcement officials from other states on mortgage-related issues, believes the deliberate inflation of appraisals is "widespread" among loans to subprime borrowers, or those with flawed credit histories. Jacquie Doty, an executive at Freddie Mac, a big provider of funding for home mortgages, predicts that inflated appraisals will lead to more foreclosures.
In the 1980s, inflated appraisals were one factor in the loan losses that sank many savings-and-loan institutions that were holding collateral worth less than they believed. Today, most loans are sold to investors and risks are more spread out, making it less likely that poor appraisals would cause lenders to collapse. But many people in the real-estate industry believe the appraisal system is overdue for reform, and investors who buy loans are asking tougher questions about appraisal procedures.
Complicating matters for homeowners is the weakening housing market. In October, when Melinda and Steve Welch refinanced the loan on their four-bedroom home in Centreville, Va., the property was appraised at $682,000. Later they cut the price to $595,000, and recently accepted a bid around that level.
Built-In Conflict
The appraisal system has a built-in conflict of interest. Appraisers often are hired by loan officers or mortgage brokers, whose compensation depends on how many loans go through. Appraisers, dependent on loan officers for their livelihoods, say they often feel pressure to come up with a number that will allow a home purchase or refinancing to proceed.
Eric Randle, an appraiser in the Los Angeles area, says he frequently receives faxes from loan officers asking whether he could appraise a specified home at a certain level. The implication is that an assignment will be forthcoming only if he's willing to hit the desired number. Mr. Randle says he declines to work on those terms.
One of Mr. Randle's appraiser friends recently received a fax from Eric J. Roberts, a mortgage loan officer in Bakersfield, Calif., for Pinnacle Financial Corp. The scrawled fax message listed an address in Los Angeles and said, "I need 2 get to 750K for this Appraisal. If not please provide a value range or call me."
Mr. Roberts declined to comment. Doug Long, chief executive officer of Orlando, Fla.-based Pinnacle, said he didn't think Mr. Roberts did anything wrong but added, "The wording could have been better."
Consumers often play along with dubious appraisals. Danny Wiley, an appraiser in Nashville who is a member of the national Appraisal Standards Board, in May was asked by a lender to appraise a condo in Spring Hill, Tenn. The buyer had offered to pay $139,000, but the contract required the seller to pay $10,000 toward the buyer's closing costs. In effect, Mr. Wiley says, the price had been inflated by $10,000 to allow the seller to provide money to help the buyer cover closing costs.
Mr. Wiley estimated the value at $129,000, the same price at which numerous identical units in the same complex had recently been sold. That should have killed the deal. But Mr. Wiley says the sale later went through, apparently after the lender found another appraiser willing to value the condo at $139,000. Mr. Wiley declines to identify the parties involved in the transaction, citing client confidentiality.
Federal law governing appraisals dates to 1989, when Congress passed legislation aimed at preventing a recurrence of the savings-and-loan crisis. That law leaves licensing and regulation mainly to the states, but many of them don't provide much funding for oversight.
T.J. McCarthy, chairman of the Illinois Real Estate Appraisal Licensing Board, says the state's appraisal regulatory agency is "severely understaffed." As a result, he says, the backlog of unresolved complaints is so large that rogue appraisers sometimes can retain their licenses for years while awaiting regulatory action. The Texas agency responsible for monitoring appraisers has just three investigators, all part-time, and is so stretched that staff members answer the phone only in the afternoon. As part of a broader push to improve legislation of mortgage lending, Congress is discussing provisions that would tighten regulation of appraisers.
Some lenders use appraisal-management companies to create a Chinese wall between the appraiser and the loan officers. But appraisers say these companies often choose the cheapest and fastest appraiser rather than the most qualified. "You get someone who is not intimately familiar with the local marketplace because they are willing to do it for less," says Jeffrey Jackson, chairman of the appraisal firm Mitchell, Maxwell & Jackson in New York.

Rise of Mortgage Brokers
Another problem is that -- unlike in the 1980s, when current mortgage law was enacted -- around half of all mortgage loans are made through brokers rather than directly by closely regulated lenders. Mortgage brokers are lightly regulated in most states, and appraisers say brokers often apply pressure. Joseph Falk, chairman of the legislative committee of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, says brokers shouldn't pressure appraisers to distort value estimates. But he advises appraisers to create and enforce their own ethical standards.
Lenders often play down the issue. Tim Doyle, an official of the Mortgage Bankers Association, says he sees no "broad" problem with inflated appraisals, outside of criminal rings engaged in fraudulent mortgage deals. Even though mortgage lenders typically sell loans to investors shortly after making them, the lenders have an incentive to ensure those loans are backed by property valued at least as much as the loan balance, Mr. Doyle says. Investors can force the lenders to buy back a loan if it goes into default and the appraisal was fraudulent, he says.
Even when all parties want an honest appraisal, that can be hard to achieve. In making their value estimates, appraisers rely heavily on "comps," or prices paid recently for similar homes nearby. But those prices may be misleading. For instance, builders of new homes sometimes include in the sale prices such items as landscaping or contributions toward loan fees or settlement costs. Such "concessions" are rarely broken out in the sale price listed in public records, though. So the resulting inflated price can become a misleading "comp" for nearby homes.

Interest Rates at 4-month Low

Bankrate.com reports that "The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell 12 basis points to 6.65 percent ... One year ago, the mortgage index was 5.91 percent. Four weeks ago, it was 6.91 percent, and it was 6.89 percent two weeks ago."

To read more: Interest rates at 4-month low

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Illinois floodplain maps are now updated.

Illinois' paper floodplain maps, used for regulatory and flood insurance purposes as well as identifying sensitive riparian corridors, are called Flood Insurance Rate Maps, or FIRMs.

These FIRMS have recently been updated using the latest geographic information system (GIS) technology. Find the maps at www.illinoisfloodmaps.org.

Illinois REALTORS triumph on eminent domain!

IAR members can be proud of a major legislative achievement: true reform of Illinois' eminent domain laws to protect private property owners.

An IAR-led coalition helped shape the bill and move it through the Illinois General Assembly. Governor Blagojevich signed the Eminent Domain Act into law on July 28 citing IAR as a key proponent of the bill.

Said IAR President Stan Sieron: "This new law strengthens existing Illinois protections for private property owners while still allowing the government to redevelop truly blighted property. It also ensures that property owners are fairly and fully compensated for their land and relocation expenses."

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Bad Appraisals Lead to Big Problems Later

Daily Real Estate News July 26, 2006Bad Appraisals Lead to Big Problems LaterThere are concerns that many of the mortgages originated in recent years involved inflated appraisals, leaving homeowners owing more than their property may be worth. These owners could encounter problems of they seek to refinance adjustable-rate loans to avoid higher monthly payments.

Meanwhile, sellers might have to slash their asking prices, and lenders could post substantial losses if borrowers are forced into foreclosure. Much of the problem stems from conflicts of interest, as appraisers are hired by loan officers and mortgage brokers, and appraisers depend on them for repeat business.

These loan officers and mortgage brokers are compensated only for completed transactions, prompting some to pressure appraisers to achieve a particular valuation that will allow a transaction to go through.

Research indicates that brokers orchestrate 50 percent of mortgages, and they are not governed as strictly as lenders at the state level. Inflated appraisals also result from the inclusion of comparative home sales data in the valuations, as it is virtually impossible for appraisers to know if such things as landscaping and closing-cost assistance are included in new-home prices. As a result of these concerns, Congress is considering increasing regulation of appraisers.

FULL COMMENTARY IN USA TODAY, JULY 26

In commentary published Wednesday in USA Today, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® President Thomas M. Stevens illustrates the ultra-competitive nature of the real estate business and says the Internet has boosted demand for real estate professionals.

We Compete, Clients Benefit

America’s real estate industry is one of the most competitive business environments in the world, characterized by low barriers to entry, intense personal client service and performance-based compensation.

There are approximately 2.6 million real estate licensees in the United States — one for every 83 adults. Nearly 1.3 million of these are REALTORS® who agree to abide by a strict code of ethics. Virtually every business model is represented in our membership, and we believe in the power of the marketplace to drive innovation and foster change.

Firms and agents fiercely compete with each other for listings and sales on the basis of service, reputation and price. New business models, such as limited service firms and Internet-based brokerages, as well as traditional firms and discount models, offer consumers a range of options to work with professionals in residential real estate rarely seen in other professional services. Brokerages and the nation’s 900-plus REALTOR®-owned and operated multiple listing services have invested billions to make their listing information data freely available online to the public, a decision that has fostered innovation and made real estate one of the biggest commercial uses of the Internet.

Increased consumer access to real estate information online is redefining how consumers engage real estate services and may be contributing to the growth of real estate markets and a high level of competition. Potential sellers are more knowledgeable about property values, alternatives, and service options. Better informed consumers demand more of their real estate agents and other service providers. More choices and new ways of doing business are paying off for consumers.

On a national basis, competition and greater efficiency resulting from innovation have paid off for consumers; on a national basis, the average commission has declined 16 percent since 1991.

The fact is that unlike other businesses, where the Internet has diminished the role of the professional, the opposite is occurring in real estate. More families than ever are turning to real estate professionals to help them buy or sell a home.

Tom Stevens is President of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

Pending Home Sales Indicate Stabilizing Market

The National Association of Realtors® (NAR) reports that "The index of pending home sales, a leading gauge for the housing sector, rose slightly in May ... up 1.3 percent to a level of 113.4 from an index of 111.9 in April, but was 10.1 percent lower than May 2005."

The Pending Home Sales Index,* based on contracts signed in May, was

To read more: Pending Home Sales

National Association of Realtors expects home sales to stabilize

The National Association of Realtors is forecasting "Existing-home sales are expected to decline 6.7 percent to 6.60 million in 2006 from 7.08 million last year...The national median existing-home price for all housing types is expected to rise 5.3 percent to $231,300 in 2006. With more construction in lower cost regions as well as price incentives that are helping to clear unsold inventory, the median new-home price should increase 1.0 percent this year to $243,300."

Homes sales expected to stabilize

Mortgage Applications UP!

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reports that for the week ending July 7, "The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, was 566.8, an increase of 1.0 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from 561.0 one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 29.1 percent compared with the previous week and was down 36.3 percent compared with the same week one year earlier."

Of the mortgage activity, refinances and adjustable rate mortgage activity were down slightly.

To read more: July 12, 2006 Mortgage Survey

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

America's Best Places to Live 2006

MONEY magazine has named Fort Collins, Colo., the Best Place to Live in America.

The magazine released its annual Best Places list yesterday. Fort Collins was followed by (2) Naperville, Ill., (3) Sugar Land, Texas, (4) Columbia/Ellicott City, Md., (5) Cary, N.C., (6) Overland Park, Kans., (7) Scottsdale, Ariz., (8) Boise, Idaho, (9) Fairfield, Conn., (10) Eden Prairie, Minn. Profiles of the top 10 and a full winner's list appear in MONEY's August issue, on sale July 24, and visitors to MONEY's Web site, CNNMoney.com, can pore over the numbers on more than 700 places considered for this year's list.

Best Places To Live In Illinois - http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bplive/2006/states/IL.html

Best Places To Live In Wisconsin - http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bplive/2006/states/WI.html

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

NAR: Home Sales Expected to Stabilize

Home sales are projected to ease modestly but should stay within a relatively narrow range during the balance of the year, according to the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.

“The major housing indicators have been moving up and down within a reasonable range, which means the market should even-out just below present levels,” says David Lereah, NAR’s chief economist. “At the same time, housing inventory levels are balanced in much of the country, so overall price appreciation will be at a normal rate. We should see home sales rise and fall month to month, but don’t look for any big shifts one way or the other.”

Existing-home sales are expected to decline 6.7 percent to 6.6 million in 2006 from 7.08 million last year. That would still be the third-highest level on record. New-home sales should fall 12.8 percent this year to 1.12 million from 1.28 million in 2005. Housing starts are forecast to decline 6.8 percent to 1.93 million this year from 2.07 million in 2005.

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is likely to reach 7 percent by the end of the year. “The uptick in interest rates has been slowing home sales,” Lereah says. “We remain concerned about the potential impact of higher interest rates in some of the more expensive areas of the country.”

NAR President Thomas M. Stevens from Vienna, Va., says consumers who have been on the sidelines should feel more confident about the market normalization. “When it comes to big ticket purchases, buyers are more comfortable in a stabilizing environment,” says Stevens, senior vice president of NRT Inc. “At the same time, home sellers in most areas understand that the period of abnormal price growth is over, and they have become more realistic about the current market. This is helping to ease the pressure on home prices in some areas.”

The national median existing-home price for all housing types is expected to rise 5.3 percent to $231,300 in 2006. With more construction in lower cost regions as well as price incentives that are helping to clear unsold inventory, the median new-home price should increase 1 percent this year to $243,300.

The unemployment rate is projected to average 4.7 percent in 2006, while inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, is forecast at 3.4 percent. Growth in the U.S. gross domestic product is expected to be 3.4 percent this year, and inflation-adjusted disposable personal income is likely to grow 3.1 percent.

Home Appraisals Worth the Read in Tight Market

American Society of Appraisers reports many don’t understand how home appraisals can help them.

It is no secret that the housing market is in a state of flux. Houses are staying on the market longer, mortgage interest rates are rising, and house prices are falling in some areas. It is now more important than ever for Realtors to help sellers to understand what their house is worth in this fluctuating market. The American Society of Appraisers (ASA) recommends that sellers fully understand the appraisal process and how it can help them make decisions about the home.

“Many home buyers and home sellers don’t know much about what goes into an appraisal or how a value opinion is developed,” says ASA real estate property appraiser Mike Evans, a Fellow of the American Society of Appraisers. “Homeowners don’t know that the appraisal report can be helpful to them in the future.”

ASA offers advice to homeowners to educate them about what is in an appraisal report, why everyone should request a copy, and how it can help in the future.

Know what types of information the appraisal report includes. The report includes details about the house, side-by-side comparisons of similar properties, an evaluation of the real estate market in the area, notations of major problems with the property that will affect its value, an estimate of the expected time it will take to sell the property, description of the area, and the neighborhood, etc. Reading the appraisal report will teach homebuyers important things about their property and how it fits into the market. Learn how an appraisal report is developed. Appraisals are opinions of value. Residential real estate appraisals use a Comparison Method, which compares your home to similar homes that have sold to come up with an opinion of value. A residential appraisal gives summarized and concise information about your house and is not the same as a home inspection.

Request a copy of the appraisal. When you bought your house, you paid for an appraisal. If you didn’t request a copy of the appraisal at the time, go back and request it from your lender now. It is your right under federal law to obtain a copy of the appraisal report. Make sure you get one from your lender.

Before you think about selling, review the appraisal report wiith a Realtor, that was created when you bought your house. Look for things in the appraisal report that had a negative adjustment. You may want to look at updating or remodeling those areas. Examples of areas that might have caused a negative adjustment are: having less than the typical number of baths for houses of a similar size; kitchens and baths that are outdated; or a one-car garage or no garage in a neighborhood of two- and three-car garages.

That will help you price it and help ensure that the house will appraise for your asking price. Many sellers are shocked when their house appraises below the asking price and, either their deal falls through, or they have to reduce their asking price.

Let me know if I can Help in the process of Selling Your Home - 1-800-731-1162 Ext.0

Thanks, Dave Rigney - Now With RE/MAX Properties Northwest.

Saturday, July 01, 2006

NAR Calls for Affordable Natural Disaster Insurance

Recent natural disasters have raised concerns that the cost of home ownership can easily spiral out of reach for the average consumer during times of catastrophe if homeowners' insurance isn’t made affordable, the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® said today in written testimony to the House Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity.

“Options for obtaining and maintaining coverage for natural disasters are dwindling,” said Thomas M. Stevens of Vienna, Va., president of NAR. “America’s hard-working families deserve a comprehensive federal natural disaster policy that makes natural disaster insurance available and affordable and reduces the circumstances under which insurance companies cancel these insurance policies.”

Recent research conducted by NAR in the state of Florida concluded that the lack of affordable or available homeowners’ insurance contributed to a slowdown in Florida real estate markets, which can contribute to a slowdown in overall economic activity in the region.

“When buyers and sellers in high-risk states cannot obtain or retain homeowners insurance, which is necessary for a mortgage, it can slow home sales in those areas,” said Stevens. “A strong housing market is the foundation of a healthy economy, and as a nation, we must safeguard the vitality of the residential and commercial real estate markets.”

As Congress addresses the need for a comprehensive natural disaster insurance policy, NAR stands ready to assist in formulating solutions to this problem. “If the ‘big one’ hits, and people are not insured, then the American taxpayer will pay the price,” said Stevens.

—NAR

Builders Can't Force You to Use Their Lender

New-home buyers: Don’t forget that your builder can't require you to use their preferred lender. When a builder tries to persuade a buyer to use an affiliated mortgage lender by offering incentives or even threatening to withhold incentives, the right response for the buyer is to slow down and investigate carefully.

Federal real estate settlement rules require that these incentives be legitimate and not built into the price of the house or the cost of the loan.The Federal Trade Commission goes still further, saying, “The sale of one product on the condition that a customer purchase a second product, which the customer may not want or can buy elsewhere at a lower price, is a tie-in.

Requirements like these are illegal if they harm competition."So the bottom line is that builders can entice, wheedle and woo buyers with great deals, but they can’t threaten them, and if buyers do feel threatened, they should first stand their ground, then complain to the builder and to state and federal consumer affairs officials.

Source: Washington Post Writers Group, Kenneth R. Harney

Friday, June 30, 2006

30-year mortgage rate nears 7 percent

By Holden Lewis • Bankrate.com


Money costs a lot more today than it did just three months ago. The average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is flirting with 7 percent and is almost half of a percentage point higher than it was at the end of March.

The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 10 basis points to 6.93 percent, according to the Bankrate.com national survey of large lenders. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage point. The mortgages in this week's survey had an average total of 0.34 discount and origination points. One year ago, the mortgage index was 5.61 percent; four weeks ago, it was 6.72 percent. The last time the mortgage index was higher was April 18, 2002, when it was 6.96 percent.

The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 12 basis points to 6.57 percent. The 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage rose 10 basis points to 6.59 percent.

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Mortgage Rates Hit 4-Year High

Refinancing's share of all loan applications slipped to 35.5 percent last week from 35.7 percent the previous week, and was down 43 percent from the same time last year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

The MBA says its Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, last week declined 0.8 percent to 567.6.The average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage jumped to 6.73 percent, the highest it’s since May 2002. The average rate for a 15-year, fixed-rate mortgage increased to 6.37 percent and a one-year ARM increased to 6.22 percent.

REALTOR® Magazine Online

Monday, June 19, 2006

Annual Harvard Study Reports Sharp Drop Unlikely for Real Estate Market

Harvard Releases the 2006 State of the Nation’s Housing Report

With interest rates rising and speculative demand cooling, the housing boom is coming under pressure, finds this year’s State of the Nation’s Housing report.

As long as the economy continues to create jobs and builders trim production to match slowing demand, house prices will keep climbing and the housing sector will likely achieve a soft landing. Although house price growth will likely moderate in many areas, sharp drops in house prices are unlikely anytime soon. Major house price declines seldom occur in the absence of severe overbuilding, major job loss, or a combination of heavy overbuilding and modest job loss. Fortunately, these preconditions are nowhere in evidence across the nation’s metropolitan areas.

Even with higher interest rates and home prices crimping affordability, the lure of house price appreciation continues to draw homebuyers to the market. While the national homeownership rate edged down a tenth of a percent in 2005, it increased in the West and Northeast where house price growth was the strongest. In fact, about 1 million homeowners were added nationally last year. Mortgage innovations such as low-downpayment, hybrid-adjustable, and interest-only loans helped blunt the impact of higher home prices and interest rates.

"While homeowners with annually adjusting mortgage rates are facing interest increases this year, including those with expiring teaser discounts, only about one in 10 homeowners face higher mortgage payments this year” remarks Nicolas P. Retsinas, director of Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. Fully eight in 10 owners has no mortgage or a fixed-rate mortgage, and most owners with adjustable loans have an initial fixed-rate period of three or more years. Similarly, most interest-only loans extend for at least five years, leaving ample time to move, refinance, or incomes to grow before principal payments start coming due.

Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies is the nation’s leading center for information and research on housing in the United States. Established in 1959, the Joint Center is a collaborative unit affiliated with the Harvard Design School and the Kennedy School of Government. The Director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies is Nicolas P. Retsinas. The Center’s research and additional information about its programs and activities are available at www.jchs.harvard.edu.

Friday, June 16, 2006

School’s out and the livin’ is easy—this summer, make travel a family affair

School’s out and the livin’ is easy—According to the travel editors at VacationIdea.com, picking the right vacation will allow you to bond with your kids, explore new places and who knows…maybe even relax! Here are some of their top suggestions:

Go Western Dude ranches in the United States and Canada offer many programs that children can enjoy, such as horseback riding, river rafting, fishing, swimming and wildlife watching. In the evenings, join a cookout while your kids roast marshmallows over a campfire. There are numerous ranches to choose from based on vacation activities and prices. You can find information about western ranches at the Dude Ranchers’ Association Web site at www.duderanch.org. This association only accepts ranches that pass its two-year screening process. You can look up ranches by state, read about activities offered at each ranch and compare prices. You can order a free dude ranch directory by calling (307) 587-2339. Another Web site you can use is www.ranchweb.com. This Web site lists ranches in the United States and Canada. It lets you find ranches that offer kid’s programs, luxury accommodations, golf, fishing and other activities.

Spout off Some of the best summer whale watching destinations are: Cape Cod, California Coast, Baja California and Vancouver Island. Many tour operators offer boat tours that last several hours during which you will have a chance to spot whales. Choose a boat tour that provides a whale specialist to tell you more about whales and answer your questions.

History lessons Whether you like camping or day trips, take a look at the National Park Service Web site to find parks near you. The Web site lets you search for parks by activity interests and location. You can also browse interactive maps of all U.S. states, view photo galleries of individual parks and find detailed information about getting there.

For family vacationers, it usually makes sense to purchase a National Parks Pass for $50. The pass will admit you and any accompanying passengers in a private vehicle. You can call (888) GO-PARKS or order the Pass online at the National Park Service Web site.

Bright lights According to the Travel Industry Association of America (TIA), travelers’ interest in visiting large cities is down 4% from last summer. This means that you should be able to find better hotel rates and fewer crowds. Large cities like New York or Washington, D.C. offer many museums, theater performances and famous sights. In New York, see a Broadway show, visit the Central Park Zoo and tour the American Museum of Natural History. For more information about visiting New York City and to browse summer savings’ packages, see www.nycvisit.com.

Source: VacationIdea.com.

Bankrate: Inflation News Pushes Mortgage Rates Higher

Average 30-year fixed rate mortgage inched higher from 6.69 percent to 6.71 percent

Fixed mortgage rates increased following the release of the May Consumer Price Index, which showed inflation still lurks. The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage inched higher from 6.69 percent to 6.71 percent, according to Bankrate.com's weekly national survey of large lenders. The 30-year fixed rate mortgages in this week's survey had an average of 0.35 discount and origination points.

The average 15-year fixed rate mortgage popular for refinancing rose to 6.36 percent. On larger loans, the average jumbo 30-year fixed rate nosed upward to 6.88 percent from 6.86 percent. Adjustable rate mortgages were mixed. The average 5/1 adjustable rate mortgage dipped to 6.31 percent, and the average one-year ARM climbed to 5.94 percent. Mortgage rates have bobbed up and down over the past month, moving only slightly from one week to the next. Even a higher-than-expected increase in consumer prices barely caused a ripple in mortgage rates. The latest inflation news assures a rate hike at the Federal Open Market Committee's next meeting June 28-29. While short-term interest rates continue to rise, longer term instruments are showing little reaction. Mortgage rates are closely related to yields on long-term government bonds.

Fixed mortgage rates are considerably higher than one year ago. This time last year, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 5.73 percent, meaning that the monthly payment on a loan of $165,000 was $960.80. With the average 30-year fixed rate now 6.71 percent, the same loan originated today would carry a payment of $1,065.80. Fixed mortgage rates remain an attractive refinancing alternative for adjustable rate borrowers facing sharp payment adjustments.

SURVEY RESULTS

30-year fixed: 6.71% -- up from 6.69% last week (avg. points: 0.35)

15-year fixed: 6.36% -- up from 6.31% last week (avg. points: 0.33)

5/1 ARM: 6.31% -- down from 6.32% last week (avg. points: 0.33)

Bankrate's national weekly mortgage survey is conducted each Wednesday from data provided by the top 10 banks and thrifts in the top 10 markets.

Check The Current Rates or Get Mortgage Help On My Web Site At: www.davidrigney.com

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Housing Bubble About to Bust? Consumers Say NO in ING DIRECT National Survey

Most consumers are confident about real estate prices, not concerned about mortgage rate increases

RISMEDIA, June 6, 2006—While talk of a housing bubble triggered by higher interest rates is a topic of discussion and much news coverage, most consumer are confident about real estate prices and don't seem concerned by some increases in mortgage rates. Three quarters of the respondents said that they had very little concern about the prospective value of their homes.

Respondents to ING DIRECT's fourth annual homeowners' study foresee continued increases in home mortgage rates in the year ahead but are not overly concerned.

Seventy-one percent of those polled expect rates to increase, while 21 percent think they will remain the same, according to the national study conducted by Synovate, the global research firm.

On average, homeowners who have owned a home for at least three years feel that new mortgage interest rates will increase 1.6 percentage points over the next 12 months, with 50 percent expecting an increase between one and two percentage points. Sixteen percent anticipate a jump between three and four percentage points.

ING DIRECT found that the majority (85 percent) of those who own a home believe that their home increased in value during the last three years. While homeowners felt their home has increased in value by approximately 6% over the past 12 months, they only expect their home's value to increase by about 4% in the next 12 months. Homeowners in New England and Pacific states are the most likely to cite increases, while those in South Central states are the most likely to say their home's value did not change.

And of those who have owned a home for at least three years, 74 percent said they were not very concerned that there might be a downturn in the housing market in the next year, which would lower the value of their home.

Only 9 percent of those who experienced an increase in their home's value during the past three years say that the increase has allowed them to spend more than they earn annually. On the other hand, nearly two-thirds believe a 10% decrease in home value would have no impact on day-to-day spending.

Homeowners are most likely to consider their home to be an investment or a place to live when they retire. One in four think of their home as a source of extra income to draw from when cash is needed. This is reinforced by the ING DIRECT finding that only 8 percent of homeowners say they refinanced in the past three years and received cash back.

"We've long viewed buying a home as the most important long-term investment a person can make and that a home is the largest savings account one will ever have," says Arkadi Kuhlmann, president and CEO of ING DIRECT. "It is encouraging that most people do not consider the equity in their residences as piggy banks to be tapped for spending on vacations or furniture."

The survey also looked at the borrowing experience and reinforces the need for lenders to be transparent in the total cost of a mortgage. Respondents who report that closing costs were higher than they originally expected say the closing costs they paid on their current mortgage were almost $600 more than anticipated.

"It is important for borrowers to be educated and know the total cost of their mortgage, including any fees or closing costs," Kuhlmann added. "But it's really up to the industry to improve the mortgage experience by offering simple, straightforward products

In order to make your mortgage offer more transparent, Brian Levitan at Midwest Equity Financial Services can help you in the experience. Call Brian at 630-649-2150.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask me.
Thanks, Dave 1-800-731-1162 or www.davidrigney.com

Saturday, May 27, 2006

National Association of Realtors® presents housing forecast

The National Association of Realtors® is predicting that 2006 will be the third best year on record for the housing market. Also being predicted for 2006 is a 30-year fixed rate mortgage level of 7% by summer, and a decline in the number of existing-home sales, new-home sales and housing starts.

To read more: May 2006 housing forecast

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

It's a buyer's market

By Mary UmbergerTribune staff reporterPublished May 7, 2006

In the housing market, this is what "normal" feels like:Homes sell in months, not hours. Prospective buyers actually browse. They drift back for a second look at a place weeks later, confident that it still will be available. They want the price cut. And they get it.It's been a long time--at least five years--since the Chicago area's real estate market worked this way.But many agents say the buying frenzy is now over, and "normal" has returned. Prices this year will appreciate less rapidly, and in many cases houses won't sell themselves before a sign has even gone into the ground.That means it's time for a seller attitude adjustment, real estate agents say.

Think about making a mere profit rather than a killing."I tell sellers, this is not the market we used to have," said Gold Coast agent Jeri Dry. "I tell them to be prepared for a six- to nine-month marketing time, and that's if they're priced correctly."It could be a year," Dry said. "Lots of condos have been on the market for 300 days."Agents see no catastrophic shift from the housing boom times, with homes languishing and prices in decline. The volume of sales appears to be running on a par with last year's record numbers, and there are still towns and neighborhoods where sales continue to clip along.What has changed in terms of verifiable statistics is that the inventory of homes on the market has surged, even for the traditional spring selling season. Faced with so much competition, many sellers are being counseled to settle in for a longer wait, and think hard about their asking prices. The North Shore homes in the $2million to $4 million range, which already had been selling slowly in 2005, are getting even less attention now.

Chicago-area market took on about 97,000 new listings of single-family homes and condos, up from 83,000 new listings in the year-earlier period, according to the Multiple Listing Service of Northern Illinois.It is too early in the season for statistics on market times and selling prices to indicate the phenomenon of a return to "normal," but interviews with a dozen agencies reveal a clear change in tempo and expectations.A leading concern, they say, is that while the number of homes on the market is higher, the pace of sales has not changed, resulting in a bigger pool of available stock. That translates into an advantage for buyers."I'm worried about selling," said Chip Wagner, whose home in Naperville went on the market about two weeks ago. Wagner pays more attention to the market than the average consumer because he is an appraiser whose firm compiles studies of home sales throughout Chicago. He said Naperville is a prime example of the market shift."There are 30 percent more listings this year than there were at the same time last year, and 20 percent fewer homes under contract," Wagner said. "I'm at a price that we consider to be strong here. But there haven't been many lookers."His Naperville firm, the Headrick-Wagner Appraisal Group, says Chicago-area homes are piling up. In 2004 there was typically a 2.9 months' supply of single-family homes for sale, meaning that if no others were to come on the market the supply would be exhausted in about three months.

In 2005 that number averaged 3.7 months. At the end of March it hit 4.2. Headrick-Wagner interprets inventory above four months as a so-called buyer's market.Put another way, Wagner says that about 2 percent more single-family homes were under contract April 1 than one year earlier. Yet Chicagoland's single-family inventory is 30 percent higher than last year.

Such numbers do not mean that the Chicago market is in any kind of bubble trouble or that the average seller is on the verge of losing money, said David Lereah, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, which reported that the nation had a 5.5-month supply of existing homes in March."We've been running under four [months' supply] for the last year or more," Lereah said. "Now we're starting to see supply come up. I regard the danger zone--make that the `yellow flag zone,' where I start to be concerned--at above six months' supply."Whatever he calls the zone, Chicago isn't in it, he said.Last year's 8 percent price appreciation here probably will evolve into 3 percent this year, said Downers Grove agent John Veneris, former president of the Illinois Association of Realtors. "At the end of the year we'll see that prices have leveled out, but they won't drop."The change in market tempo is clearly tied to rising interest rates; the average 30-year rate is up a full percent over last year.But some industry analysts see other factors at play.Analysts say that some buyers have gotten skittish--they've heard the word "bubble" so many times that they are holding back, waiting to see what happens. At some point enough people start to think things are slowing down that they behave differently, creating the self-fulfilling prophecy of a slower market.Real estate experts also surmise that when interest rates were at their lows, some people might have been enticed to buy when they might have otherwise remained renters for a time. Thus the market was dipping into its pool of future buyers, resulting in a bit of a slowdown now.Then there are the investors, who in the past couple of years have been credited with a stealth influence on the market, pushing prices higher.

Some analysts credit them with one-quarter to one-third of all home purchases in 2004 and 2005. That market also may be cooling."The rehabbers we had a year or two ago, they all picked up and moved on," said Oak Park agent Donna Karpavicius. "Things changed in a big hurry."Another reason that some properties are on the market longer is that the housing construction boom, particularly in the city, created a taste for new or totally renovated properties."They don't want to do much work," agent Dry said of today's home buyers. "They want to move in, hang up their clothes, and that's it."And so, some sellers in the "fixer" category, which these days is very broadly defined, may get surprisingly low offers, agents say."This is a year when I've had more low-ball offers--people coming in $60,000 to $80,000 below asking prices," said Karpavicius, who recently took over another agent's languishing "needs work" listing of a home in Riverside.She immediately got the price reduced to $429,900 from $489,500 but has received little response, other than a couple of too-low offers around $350,000.Karpavicius and other agents said they are encountering price expectations that defy local statistical norms."There's a type of seller who expects they'll be able to finance their 2-year-old daughter's Yale education on the sale of their two-bedroom, two-bath," said North Side agent Lino Darchun. " They don't understand the concept of `comps,'" or market analyses of comparable previous sales.Mike Malloy took a long, hard look at the "comps" last weekend when he met with Downers Grove agent Veneris to discuss putting his Woodridge home on the market."If this were last year at this time, I'd be telling him to go $10,000 higher," said Veneris.Malloy, who with his wife, Maureen, wants to move to Beverly in order to be closer to family, said he is philosophical about the $10,000 difference that a year can make. He's not greedy, he said.He paid $199,000 in the heat of the boom; the home had been on the market just one day when he bought it in 2003. He figures he'll do well if it sells anywhere near his $274,000 asking price."I've only been here three years, so either way, that's a lot of money," he said.

Realtors® Promote Competitiveness of Title Insurance Industry

Realtors® have a particular interest in ensuring competitiveness in the title industry as title insurance plays an important role in the real estate transaction, the president of the National Association of Realtors®, Thomas M. Stevens testified today at a hearing before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity.

Real estate professionals assist in nearly all aspects of the home purchase transaction by serving as a valuable source of information and offering their expertise to both first-time and experienced home buyers. When real estate agents, for example, recommend a title company, they know their reputation and livelihood is on the line. Experience, trust, reliability and a commitment to providing quality service are critical to the recommendation. “Realtors® will recommend the provider that they believe will offer the best experience for their client,” said Stevens in regards to choosing a title insurance company.

“The Realtors®’ goal is to build a customer for life and their reputation rests on making the transaction a smooth one rather than protecting an affiliate business arrangement.”“There is no do-it-yourself way to issue title insurance,” said Stevens. “Purchasing a home requires weeks, if not one or two months, of work and there is tremendous liability at stake for all parties.”

Because of the nature of real estate transactions, NAR is committed to promoting competitiveness in any and all sectors of the real estate services industry.Stevens said, “NAR takes seriously any perception that illegal kickback schemes may occur in the real estate transaction. Real estate professionals want to see rogue companies or individuals who engage in unethical practices removed from the marketplace quickly.”NAR pledges to work with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on educating Realtors® on how to recognize a sham mortgage or title company. NAR encourages competition in real estate services, and ethical standards, by providing ongoing educational resources to its members through a comprehensive Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act awareness campaign, online seminars, training sessions at meetings, and the Realtors Code of Ethics training.

REALTORS® Bringing Homes, Help and Hope to New Orleans and the Gulf Coast

Some 30,000 Realtors® will bring hands-on help to clean up damaged neighborhoods, build 54 new Habitat for Humanity homes, and bring $34 million in badly needed revenue and fresh hope for a brighter future to New Orleans and the Gulf Coast when they convene in the Crescent City, November 10-13.The National Association of Realtors® announced today that it has formed a new partnership with Habitat for Humanity International to encourage each of the nation’s 54 state and territorial Realtor® associations to sponsor and build a new Habitat home in the Gulf Coast region. As part of its ongoing collaborative efforts with Habitat for Humanity to make homeownership a reality in partnership with families in need, NAR and its members have built a Habitat for Humanity house in each of the past five years in the city hosting its annual conference. This year, because of the hurricanes that hit the coastal region and the devastation they left behind, the NAR leadership has decided to increase the build to 54 homes. Realtors® will build the homes.Other opportunities are being developed for Realtors® to help restore the New Orleans area during the convention. These include bringing a school and other public buildings in need of repair back to life, as well as painting, repairing, and restoring community facilities.“Realtors® care about communities and homes. We can set no better example to the nation than by leaving New Orleans and the Gulf Coast better places than they were when we came. NAR’s New Orleans convention will be unlike any other Realtor® convention ever held,” said NAR President Tom Stevens of Vienna, Va.Despite the damage wrought by Hurricane Katrina, NAR’s leaders announced last December that the association will stand by its commitment to the beleaguered city and hold its annual REALTORS® Conference & Expo in New Orleans as originally scheduled. NAR’s convention is expected to bring as much as $35 million-$40 million in convention revenues. As many as 30,000 Realtors® and exhibitors are expected to attend, making the NAR convention the largest such event scheduled to take place in New Orleans this year.The NAR convention is called “NARdi Gras, a Celebration of REALTORS® coming together to REnew, REconnect, and REenergize their careers and the city of New Orleans.” The meeting will feature more than 200 conference sessions, more than 600 exhibitors, and thousands of real estate professionals from the United States and 60 nations.

Realtors®’ support for rebuilding the Gulf Coast began hours after Katrina made landfall. Last year thousands of Realtors® and Realtor® organizations across the country contributed more than $4.6 million to help victims of the Gulf Coast hurricanes. Funds were distributed directly to hurricane victims by the Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi Realtor® associations. Every penny raised went directly to victims in need.

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

Thursday, May 04, 2006

More than just a storage area for cars and junk, a showcase garage can help you sell your listing faster and for a higher price.

For many home owners, the garage is the place where you store all the stuff you don't know what to do with, and if you're lucky, the car may fit in there, too.
But as the price of real estate has risen, the room that's often the most neglected and underutilized in the house also has grown in value. Savvy real estate professionals and sellers are now staging the garage along with the rest of the house, and getting higher returns for the effort.In some cases, a home owner's special interest may drive the use of the garage. Gardeners may have special bins built for soil and fertilizer. Golfers may install customized cabinets for their golf clubs. Exercise enthusiasts may outfit the space with workout equipment.Regardless of what the space is primarily used for, practitioners say spectacular garages make listings stand out and sell faster.

A Selling Advantage

A house in Midlothian, Ill., with an amazing garage that sold $2,000 over the asking price within two days of being listed.”It was a house where the wife had wanted a new kitchen, but the husband had won out and built a three-and-a-half-car garage instead,” the garage was heated and had cable TV/VCR, a phone, track lighting, a refrigerator (for beer when friends came over), a loft area for extra storage, and organizational shelving for tools.”At the closing, the buyer husband was talking to the seller husband and said he'd been looking for some place to tinker with his car,” Gage says. “He also had a boat and wanted to be able to have ‘the guys’ over. So what sold the house was the garage.”Men, however, are not the only ones who are attracted to great-looking garages.“We thought it would be a male-intensive market, but we were wrong,” says Marc Shuman, president of GarageTek, a Long Island, N.Y.-based franchise business that sells garage-furnishing systems in 48 domestic markets, Canada, and the United Kingdom. Shuman and partner Skip Barrett launched the company in 2001.“Our systems create a clean, safe, and functional environment in the garage,” Shuman says. “Once the garage becomes clean, it becomes a family room and appeals to women in particular.”Bill West, CRS®, broker-associate and owner of The Group Inc. Real Estate in Fort Collins, Colo., and author of Your Garagenous Zone: Innovative Ideas for the Garage, recently listed a development called Storybook Patio Homes, which offers a finished garage.“The garages have epoxy-coated floors, a wall organizer, pantry-style cabinets, a workbench, track lighting, and they’re fairly insulated,” West says. “[The finished garages] added $4,300 to the list price, and home buyers can incorporate that into their mortgage. The garage is becoming a multi-purpose room, and the trend is becoming more real.”

Basic Fix-Ups

Even if your new listing doesn’t have one of these showcase garages, there are some basic things the sellers can do to make the space more appealing to potential buyers.

Arndt offers these tips to increase the appeal of the garage:
De-clutter the garage just as you would the rest of the house, clearing out whatever the sellers don't need. Get everything off the floor with overhead storage racks that can hang from the ceiling. Use a wall system on which sellers can hang items.Barry Izsak, author of Organize Your Garage in No Time and president of the National Association of Professional Organizers, offers these organizing suggestions:

Take an inventory. Decide what you want to or need to put in the garage, such as sporting goods, tools, or craft supplies.
Sort like things together. You shouldn’t have piles of tools, collectibles, or childhood memorabilia in a number of places around the garage. Keeping similar items in one place makes the space look much more organized.
Reuse instead of buying. If you don't want to purchase an expensive garage organizing system, you can use an old chest of drawers, book cases, desks, or shelving units from the house for a new purpose in the garage.Staging TipsJay Behm, a designer of custom homes and garages in Williamsburg, Va., says garages have gotten larger as vehicles have become bigger in recent years. Buyers now want garages with 9-foot-wide doors and 9-foot ceilings inside to accommodate racks placed atop sport utility vehicles.

Behm says the following will add to the value of any garage:
Garage door openers. Many potential buyers consider this a priority and a necessity.
Lighting and electrical systems. More and more garages are being wired for heating and air conditioning to make the room accessible year-round.
Second stories. Many people are adding second stories to their garages for extra storage space or use as a rental apartment or in-law unit.
A good fit. Most home owners have plain garage doors that don't match their Colonial- or Victorian-style homes, says Behm. Simply giving the garage roof a slope that's similar to the house's roof will make a big difference.

Learn More:
National Association of Professional Organizers Lists information on how to find a professional organizer in your area.
GarageTek Lists products and services from GarageTek.
The Complete Garage Lists products and services for The Complete Garage LLC.GarageZ.comGives virtual tours of remodeled garages and information from Your Garagenous Zone: Innovative Ideas for the Garage.
Behm DesignShows garage plans by Behm Design.

Monday, May 01, 2006

Forbes Ranks Most-Expensive ZIP Codes

The list of the 500 most expensive ZIP codes compiled by Forbes.com is based on the highest median home prices in the country.The ZIP code 11962 topped the list, as the median price in Sagaponack, N.Y. — located in the Hamptons — reached $2.8 million in 2005.

More than 50 percent of the 500 priciest ZIP codes were in California, and 20 percent were in New York. The remainder were mainly in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Arizona, Maryland, and Florida.

A few of the upscale ZIP codes belong to urban areas; but most are on the coast or in the mountains, with breathtaking views, spacious estates, country clubs, golf courses, and other luxury amenities.

The Most-Expensive Zip Codes in IL. - http://images.forbes.com/lists/2006/7/IL_Rank_1.html


Source: MSNBC, Sara Clemence (04/24/06)

Tax 101 for Home Flippers

Near the top of the list of pitfalls for anyone who wants to make money flipping houses is failure to understand and plan for the tax consequences.

The current law allows a seller to keep, tax-free, gains of up to $250,000 (or $500,000 for married couples filing jointly) on the sale of a primary residence if the seller has lived in it for 24 of the previous 60 months.

For investment homes — and those in which the owner did not live for at least two of the previous five years — the Internal Revenue Service assigns taxes according to the length of time it was owned before a sale. Profits from homes owned for one year or more are taxed as capital gains, at the current rate of 15 percent, plus state taxes. Profits from homes owned for less than one year are taxed the same as regular income, according to the bracket in which the seller falls, anywhere from 25 percent to 35 percent.

The savvier approach, of a home sale into another investment property of roughly equal value, a procedure known as a like-kind or 1031 exchange. IRS rules give investors 45 days from the time they sell a property to identify the exchange property and 180 days to make the exchange. Investors can't receive any cash from the sale, so all money must be held by qualified intermediaries, such as a title company.

What home flippers hope to avoid is being labeled a "trader business" by the IRS. Those are investors whom the IRS identifies as making their living off the buying and selling of homes. In that case, flippers will not only have to pay the higher income tax rates, but they also will have to pay 15.3 percent in self-employment taxes.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to call or email me.
Thank you, Dave
847-732-7436 or www.davidrigney.com

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Another rise in interest rates!

At nearly a 4 year high, mortgage interest rates reflect the state of the economy. "The last time the 30-year fixed was higher was the week of June 26, 2002, when the benchmark rate weighed in at 6.57 percent. About a year after that, it bottomed out at 5.28 percent. It then took almost three years for the 30-year fixed to regain that one-year plunge," according to Bankrate.com.As many have predicted, interest rates on loans are going up, and up. Will we see 7% soon?"The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 5 basis points to 6.56 percent...One year ago, the mortgage index was 5.95 percent; four weeks ago, it was 6.43 percent," reports Bankrate.com.

To read more: Bankrate.com 4-13-06 interest rate report

Living Near the Airport Can Be a Headache

The Denver International Airport is developing a home buyer's guide to educate those who consider moving into the area about the various issues associated with living near an airport.Buyers of homes near the airport also must sign a contract that includes a legal disclosure, and some sales include easements regarding overhead traffic.

The guide, which will be available in the fall, explains various issues to buyers who must sign a contract, including:

Visual intrusion. People who live near airports will see huge planes flying only a few hundred feet overhead.
Noise. Jet engines are becoming quieter, but planes still make noise.
Flight patterns. Once they reach proper altitude, departing airplanes can follow any path the pilots choose. As a result, noise disturbances can vary on any given day.
Safety. Nearly 70 percent of all airplane accidents occur on takeoff and landing.

Source: Denver Post, Aldo Svaldi (04/16/2006)

Friday, April 14, 2006

8 must-ask mortgage and refi questions

Whether you're buying a house or refinancing, there is more to a mortgage than the rate. Here are eight questions to ask while mortgage shopping. You'll have to ask yourself some of these questions; others can only be answered by mortgage professionals and insurers.

1. How long do I plan to stay in the house?That's often a hard question to answer. Try anyway because a lot of your decisions depend on the answer.
"I always say, 'What's the game plan? How long do you plan to be in the property?'"
The answer affects whether you would be better off paying points to lower your rate, whether you should get a fixed-rate or adjustable-rate loan, whether you should accept a prepayment penalty. If you're thinking of refinancing, the answer helps you decide whether you should refinance at all.
If you have no idea how long you'll live in the house, keep in mind that homeowners stay in one residence for a median duration of 8.2 years, according to 1998 U.S. Census data. In other words, half of homeowners move within 8.2 years. The other half, naturally, stay in their homes longer. Do you feel "average"? If so, maybe it means you'll stay home for about eight years or so.
(FYI, with renters, the median stay in one residence is 2.1 years.)

2. How much are the costs of getting the loan?When you apply for a loan, you'll get a federally mandated document called the Good Faith Estimate of closing costs. It estimates how much the lender will charge you for origination and discount fees, an appraisal, a credit report, document preparation, title insurance, a pest inspection and myriad other costs. Compare good faith estimates and especially take note of the line that reads "Estimated cash at closing." That's an educated guess of how much you'll have to pay out of your checkbook to get the loan.

3. How long will it take to break even?If you're buying a home, how long will it take to break even if you pay discount points to get a lower rate? If you're refinancing, how long will it take to recoup the closing costs from your monthly savings?
In either case, all you have to do is divide the upfront cost (of discount points if you're buying a house and of all the closing costs if you're refinancing) by the monthly savings you would get. That tells you how many months it will take to break even. If it's going to take five years to break even but you expect to stay in the house four more years, it's probably not worth it.

4. What makes me feel comfortable? insist on paying zero discount points, while others want to pay a lot of points to get absolutely the lowest interest rate, "even if it takes four or five years to break even."
there often is no right or wrong answer when people ask whether they should pay discount points or choose a 15-year or 30-year mortgage. "There's not just an objective, dollars-and-cents number," "There's also the psychological factor: What are you going to feel comfortable with?"
Some homeowners would rather refinance once and never have to bother with refinancing again, so they pay a lot of points for a rock-bottom rate. As a bonus, they have something to boast about at cocktail parties. Other clients simply want the lowest possible payments, so they snag an interest-only, five-year ARM. All understand what they're getting into and have found their comfort zones.

5. How long should I lock?This will depend on how busy the lenders and mortgage servicers are -- the busier the offices, the longer the wait to close. If you want to lock a rate, follow the broker's or lender's advice on how long you should lock. You might be told to lock for 45 days or even longer. For more information on rate locks, read my column "Rate lock anxiety."

6. Will I be able to make the payments when I include all the monthly mortgage expenses?Principal and interest are only part of your monthly payment. Add in private mortgage insurance, association fees, property taxes and homeowner insurance and your range of affordable homes will narrow -- to the ones you will actually be able to afford.
In addition, you'll need a savings cushion. Many people don't find room in their budget to save up for the inevitable roof repairs, furnace replacement and painting. Then they step on the debt treadmill to pay for those things.
Experts often recommend that couples qualify for a mortgage based on one partner's income. That lets them escape a common dilemma today, in which the income from one spouse vanishes, leaving them one paycheck away from financial disaster.

7. Is my credit good enough to get that attractive rate?The advertised rate isn't necessarily the rate you'll get. If your credit history is merely OK instead of excellent, you'll be quoted a higher rate than your chum with flawless credit. To be more specific, if you have been more than 30 days late with your mortgage payment anytime in the last couple of years, you are unlikely to get the best rate. Ditto if you've been more than 30 days late three or four times in the last couple of years on other types of debt, such as credit cards and auto loans.
People with less-than-perfect credit won't be turned away. They'll just have to pay a higher rate.
Before applying for a mortgage, check your credit reports to make sure they're accurate.

8. Can I get homeowner insurance?This question is especially important in states susceptible to hurricanes such as Florida, Texas and other Gulf Coast states. Mold problems, hurricanes, sinkholes and tornadoes are big reasons why these states pay some of the highest premiums in the nation. Texans are charged the most, according to the latest annual homeowners insurance report from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Homeowners in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Florida pay the next highest premiums.
Some insurers have pulled out of states and refuse to write new homeowner policies. If you're buying a house with a history of insurance claims for water damage or mold, you might have trouble finding a company that will insure it. Shop for insurance long before the closing date.

Need additional help contact Brian Levitan at 630-649-2150 from Midwest Equity Financial Services.

10 Questions to Ask Your Lender

What are the most popular mortgage loans?
What are the differant types of mortgages availaible?
Are any of your rates, terms, fees, and closing costs negotiable?
Will I have to buy private mortgage insurance?
If so how much will it cost and how long will it be required?
Who will service the loan?
Your bank or another company?
What escrow requirements do you have?
How long is your loan lock-in period?
How long will the loan approval process take?
How long will it take to close?
Are there any penalties for prepaying the loan?

If you need to talk to a Lender, Brian Levitan from Midwest Equity Financial Services can help. His Direct Line: 630-649-2150 or Email: irefiem@ameritech.net

Rules for Buying, Selling in Uncertain Markets

There's no way to predict with accuracy whether home prices will rise or fall in over the next year. But there are some general rules you can follow to make sure that your housing decisions are smart ones. BusinessWeek magazine analyzed the behavior of buyers and sellers in the current housing market and recommends a few ways to traverse the rapids.

Before buying or selling, assess what houses are really worth in the area.
Don’t be foolishly loss averse. Some people who bought high and are seeking to avoid selling low gamble recklessly that the market will rebound and bail them out, but dallying often worsens the problem. The solution: Cut your asking price and make the sale.

It's human nature to think you know what you're doing. Reality, however, is often unkind. Whether you're a buyer or a seller, make a plan that accounts for worst-case scenarios.
Sellers' thinking tends to be six months behind the market. So when prices are rising, they set theirs too low, and when prices are falling, they set theirs too high. So assess where the market is headed, not where it was.

If you need help, please do not hesitate to call me.
David Rigney
847.732.7436
david.rigney@remax.net

Monday, April 03, 2006

Home Sellers: Overpricing Was Biggest Mistake They Made When Listing Homes

Overpricing is the number one mistake home sellers said they made when listing their homes, according to a new national e-mail survey conducted by HouseHunt, Inc. The margin was nearly three-to-one over the second choice.

Survey respondents said their next biggest mistake was “dealing with the same real estate agent who represented the buyer,” thereby setting up a possible conflict of interest and possibly a perception that the buyer was getting a better deal.

Third biggest mistake was “failure to disclose known defects or problems.”

Virtually tied for fourth place were: “under pricing their properties” and “not utilizing Internet technology or a Realtor to market their properties.” “With the rapid price appreciation we’ve seen in many housing markets across the country, it’s not surprising that home seller expectations sometimes outran market reality,” said Michael Bearden, president and CEO of HouseHunt, Inc.

It is surprise over the negative response to agents representing both the buyer and the seller: “Usually it boils down to good communication with the consumer. The agent who communicates effectively and stays in touch throughout the transaction usually has a positive experience with both the buyer and the seller.

Please, let me know if I can help - rigneyrealty@comcast.net
or 1-800-731-1162 ext.0

Thanks, Dave

Movement for Mandated CO Detectors

Massachusetts has become the latest state after Vermont and Connecticut to require carbon monoxide detectors in homes. The trend is expected to spread to all 50 states, says Doug Troutman, government relations counsel for the National Electrical Manufacturers Association.

Although the movement to require detectors began about five years ago, it really didn’t gain momentum until the last three years. Currently, nine states require carbon monoxide detectors in all homes, and a number of others, such as Connecticut, require carbon monoxide detection equipment in newly constructed single-family homes and in multifamily units.“We’re beginning to see an increasing number of states and municipalities introducing similar legislation,” says Debbie Hanson, director of External Affairs for First Alert, a manufacturer of detection equipment.

The Massachusetts law is named in memory of a 7-year-old girl who died in January 2005 as a result of carbon monoxide buildup that occurred when snow drifts blocked the heating vent in her house. In Massachusetts alone, there are 3,000 reported cases of carbon monoxide poisoning each year, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says carbon monoxide gas kills more than 500 people in the country annually.The Massachusetts Association of REALTORS® was very much in support of the measure, although they wanted to ensure that compliance wouldn’t place an undue burden on home owners.

Although, Smoke Detectors and Carbon Monoxide Detectors Both Save Lives.

Did you check your Batteries for both detectors when you turned your clocks ahead??

Fair Housing Month: NAR Showcases Action

In recognition of April as Fair Housing Month, the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® is promoting activities, courses and initiatives for its 1.2 million members that inform real estate professionals about requirements, rights, and responsibilities under fair housing laws.

These programs help REALTORS® receive the latest training and in-depth knowledge necessary to better serve families at all income levels get into homes. As champions of homeownership, NAR undertakes a major mission of educating its members by offering a comprehensive training program on diversity, an orientation program on fair housing laws and regulations, and a grant program that works to extend the benefits of homeownership to more Americans. As representatives of both buyers and sellers, Realtors® hold the key to promoting inclusive, diverse communities,said 2006 NAR President Thomas M. Stevens, senior vice president of NRT Inc., from Vienna, Va.

Fair housing is fundamental, and this program is effective and beneficial for Realtors. NAR has developed an award-winning program called At Home with Diversity. Since 1999, more than 18,000 REALTORS® and association executives have completed the program which aims to train real estate professionals to work effectively with diversity in today market.

NAR encourages ongoing education by waiving the course fee for sponsors of the At Home with Diversity program during the month of April. More than 30 courses are being offered throughout the month in 11 states.

NAR also provides financial resources to local and state REALTOR® associations for programs and activities that seek to increase an understanding of diversity within the association, among its members and as leaders in building strong communities. Local and state associations can qualify for a grant of up to $3,000.NAR provides its members the tools necessary to be informed of pertinent laws. One resource is a fair housing orientation program interactive DVD or VHS which focuses on timely topics, introduces viewers to fair housing laws and presents situations where fair housingadditionalns cadditionalr.

For additional info. please Email me: rigneyrealty@comcast.net
-- NAR