Friday, May 25, 2012

Just Sold in Lake Mary

Lovely 4 Bedroom 2 Bath Home with Pool. Wood, Carpet & Tiled flooring throughout. New Paint and Carpet. Covered Patio. Two Car Garage. Fenced Back yard. 

Lake Mary 4 Bedroom Pool Home - Sold $197,700



listing courtesy of Sand Dollar Realty Group

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

New Listing in Chuluota....6 Bedrooms and just under 4,000 s.f.!

Zero Down Financing Available with USDA Financing! This beautiful and spacious 6 bedroom home has a wonderful open floor plan...2 giant master bedrooms....one upstairs and one down!

Open House
Saturday, May 26th
1 - 4 p.m.


$325,000



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Thursday, May 10, 2012

Florida in top five for home price appreciation....ticking up!

Tighter housing inventories are starting to lift home prices, says Anand Nallathambi, CoreLogic’s CEO.

CoreLogic’s latest home price index, which includes distressed sales, shows a slight month-over-month nationwide increase of 0.6 percent in home prices from February to March. But some markets are seeing much more of a price boost this spring, including Florida, which ranked No. 5 overall for home price increases.

“This spring, the housing market is responding to an improving balance between real estate supply and demand, which is causing stabilization in house prices,” says Mark Fleming, CoreLogic’s chief economist. “Although this has been the case in each of the last two years, the difference this year is that stabilization is occurring without the support of tax credits and in spite of a declining share of REO sales.”

States with highest appreciation

According to CoreLogic, the following states had the highest appreciation in March (this includes distressed sales):

• Wyoming: +5.9%
• West Virginia: +5.3%
• Arizona: +5.1%
• North Dakota: +4.7%
Florida: +4.5%

States with biggest depreciation

Meanwhile, the states with the greatest depreciation, when also figuring in distressed sales, are:

• Delaware: -10.6%
• Illinois: -8.3%
• Alabama: -8%
• Georgia: -7.3%
• Nevada: -5.8%

Source: Melissa Dittmann Tracey, Realtor® Magazine Daily News

© 2012 Florida Realtors®


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Monday, May 7, 2012

Is housing as cheap as it’ll ever get?

Homebuyers who want a bargain may want to act now because the housing market is in the midst of a turnaround, economists say.



Home prices have fallen and mortgage rates are hovering near record lows, pushing home affordability for the average family to record highs. Meanwhile, rents have been on the rise, making owning a home cheaper than renting in most areas of the country, according to recent surveys.

But the housing deals aren’t expected to stick around much longer.

An improving job market, a decrease in the number of homeowners falling behind on their mortgage, and an anticipated improvement in access to mortgages is expected to help home prices start bouncing back by next year, economists say.

Investors eyeing profits in rentals also have been snapping up bank-owned properties, which Clear Capital’s Alex Villacorte attributes as helping to lead to an increase in prices on foreclosed properties. This “could have a significant impact on the market overall in terms of providing a rising floor to home values,” Villacorte told CNNMoney.

Some areas are already seeing prices rise. In Phoenix, housing prices have already increased 8.4 percent during the three months ending April 30, and Miami saw prices bump up 4.6 percent quarter over quarter, according to Clear Capital data.

“Stuff I was selling six months ago for $60,000 to $80,000 is now $90,000 to $110,000,” Tanya Marchiol, founder of Team Investments in Phoenix, told CNNMoney.

Loan rates, demand predictions

Buyers may want to act more quickly because mortgage rates are expected to tick up slightly by the end of the year. The increase is being sparked by greater demand, says Doug Lebda, CEO of LendingTree. He predicts 30-year fixed-rate mortgages will inch up to 4.5 percent by the end of the year, which is still low, however, by historical standards.

The Mortgage Bankers Association is also predicting a big leap in mortgage loans next year. For this year, MBA estimates that buyers will take out loans totaling about $415 billion, but by 2013 that number is expected to nearly double to $706 billion.

Source: “Buying a Home Won’t get Much Cheaper,” CNNMoney (May 3, 2012) and “Time To Trade The Lease For A Mortgage?” NPR (May 1, 2012)

© Copyright 2012 INFORMATION, INC. Bethesda, MD


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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Is Florida’s shadow inventory a rebound threat?

The term “shadow inventory” hangs over the real estate market, suggesting a thinly veiled catastrophe seen through the mist, just as the passengers of the Titanic watched an iceberg draw closer. However, a white paper written by Florida Realtors Chief Economist Dr. John Tuccillo finds the fear of a shadow inventory overrated.


“The fear … is that the inventory of delinquent and foreclosed loans (will be released onto) an already weakened market,” says Tuccillo. “(But) the reality, even in Florida where distressed properties make up a significant portion of the market, appears to be different.”

Tuccillo says lenders have no reason to flood the real estate market with more homes if doing so would drive prices down and impact the lender’s profit. While some observers worry that lenders were holding back on purpose, Tuccillo says that’s not so – that the large number of distressed properties on hold was “largely the result of confusion over the rules of the game, and thus missteps by the lenders.”

In conducting an analysis, Florida Realtors Research looked at data from MLSs around the state and data provided by CoreLogic, a statistical analysis company.

“We looked at the recent history of distressed property listings and transactions relative to normal market data, as well as estimates for the shadow inventory, and came to some conclusions about the likely course (for the) future,” says Tuccillo.

Conclusions

• Florida remains one of the nation’s hardest hit states for distressed property sales.

• Distressed property sales and listings have declined since late 2010, except for single-family-home short sales.

• Average prices for distressed and normal property sales have been stabilizing.

• In general, Realtors and lenders have learned how to cope with distressed properties in a way that stabilizes the market.

• Florida’s highest percentage of distressed property (compared to total listings) occurs in the I-4 corridor and Southeast Florida; the lowest percentages occur in Northwest Florida.

• Currently, Florida’s shadow inventory was 550,000 units at the end of 2011, a decline of about 9 percent from its peak in the first quarter of 2010.

• Currently, the flow of new seriously delinquent (90 days or more) loans moving into the shadow inventory is offset by the roughly equal flow of distressed sales (short sales and REOs).

• The number of foreclosures and REOs was significantly lower in February of 2012 than one year earlier, suggesting slower shadow inventory growth.

Tuccillo predicts that distressed properties will be a significant feature of the Florida real estate market over the next ten years, but it will be considered just one property type a buyer can consider – one that has its own unique sales techniques and documentation.

© 2012 Florida Realtors®

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www.LakeMaryRealEstateSales.com

Latest 2012 Economic and Housing Outlook

The housing market forecast has been upgraded based on a rise in pending contracts and continued moderate economic expansion.

Click her for the latest 2012 Economic and Housing Outlook from NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun.   Latest 2012 Economic and Housing Outlook


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