Category Archives: Bedford

Singapore Home Prices Climb to Record as Loan Curbs Imposed | Bedford NY Homes

Singapore home prices climbed to a record in the second quarter as gains in suburban housing values accelerated, prompting the government to implement new measures on property loans.

The island-state’s private residential property price index rose 1 percent to 215.4 points in the three months ended June 30, extending a 0.6 percent increase in the first quarter, according to revised figures released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority today. The pace of gains in prices in the suburbs more than doubled from the previous three months.

Traffic travels along the Benjamin Sheares Bridge, past a condominium development, in Singapore. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg

Record home prices amid low interest rates raised concerns of a housing bubble and prompted the government to widen a four-year campaign to curb speculation in Asia’s second-most expensive housing market. Singapore on June 28 unveiled new rules governing how financial institutions grant property loans to individuals.

Apartment prices fell 0.2 percent in prime districts in the second quarter, compared with a 0.6 percent gain in the previous three months. Those in the suburbs climbed 3.8 percent, compared with the 1.4 percent increase in the previous quarter, according to today’s government data.

Suburban Demand

Suburban demand was boosted by Singaporeans upgrading from living in apartments built by the state to private condominiums. About 82 percent of Singaporeans reside in government-built units, according to Housing Development Board’s website.

CapitaLand Ltd. (CAPL) may alter the size of its apartments as it seeks to improve affordability to combat government measures, Lim Ming Yan, president and chief executive officer at Singapore’s biggest developer, said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Singapore yesterday.

“We want the right sizing, put in the right layout, so our users will find it a lot more user-friendly and at the same time something they can afford,” Lim said.

Singapore is Asia’s most-expensive housing market after Hong Kong, according to a Knight Frank LLP and Citi Private Bank report released last year that compared 63 locations globally. Hong Kong homes cost an average $28,300 per square meter in 2011 compared to Singaporewhere an apartment would cost $25,600 per square meter, the report showed.

 

Singapore Home Prices Climb to Record as Loan Curbs Imposed – Bloomberg.

Outdoor Shakespeare Festival In Mount Kisco Starts Friday | Bedford Real Estate

You can spend a mid-summer’s evening watching Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Westmoreland Sanctuary this weekend.

The 60-minute, family-friendly adaptation will be performed four times: Friday, July 26 at 6:30pm; Saturday July 27 at 2:00pm and 6:30pm;  and Sunday July 27 at 1:00pm.

The grounds will open 90 minutes ahead of the performances for picnicking.  The evening performances will end with a marshmallow roast around a campfire.

Tickets are $17.50 for Westmoreland Sanctuary members and $20 for non-members.  Contact Michele Miller at MMiller@WestmorelandSanctuary.org for more information.

 

Outdoor Shakespeare Festival In Mount Kisco Starts Friday | The Bedford Daily Voice.

Give unrealistic sellers the ‘shock treatment’ | Bedford NY Homes

There’s an old saying that it’s best to be the first born, second spouse and the third listing agent. So whose fault is it when a property doesn’t sell?

There are thousands of reasons that cause listings to expire. An agent may do everything possible and the property still doesn’t sell due to lack of activity in that price range or location. Other times, the listing agent didn’t market the property adequately, or conditions under the seller’s control prevented the sale. In almost every case, however, the reason most properties do not sell is the price.

A major misconception

Many people, including a large number of real estate professionals, fail to realize that it is the buyers (and sometimes the appraisers) who determine the selling price, not the sellers or agents.

The stock market provides a good analogy for understanding this situation. Assume that an investor paid $100 for a share of IBM stock. Today that stock is trading at $60 a share. If the investor insists on getting $100 a share, he will have to wait to sell until the market conditions improve. Otherwise, if he must sell now he will need to reduce his price to $60 a share.

The same is true for the real estate market. If someone paid $225,000 for a home and today similar homes are selling for $180,000, the owner has the same choices as the investor in the example above: sell at today’s prices or wait for the market to improve.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/07/22/give-unrealistic-sellers-the-shock-treatment/#sthash.IKPvdyVR.dpuf

 

Give unrealistic sellers the ‘shock treatment’ | Inman News.

Investors racing rising home prices for profits | Bedford NY Real Estate

House flippers are racing against rising prices to make fast profits.

In the first half of this year, 9% of the single-family homes that sold were resold again within six months — meaning “flipped,” according to market researcher RealtyTrac.

But some markets are already seeing flippers recede following sharp gains in home prices. Flipping declined in the first half of this year vs. last in 32 of 100 markets, including in cities that have seen rapid price gains, such as Las Vegas, Phoenix, Atlanta and San Jose, RealtyTrac says.

Meanwhile, flipping is increasing in markets with more muted home price gains, including New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago and in several Florida cities.

Palm Coast, Fla., led the way, where 37% of single-family home sales were flipped in the first half of this year. Omaha followed at 32% and Daytona Beach, Fla., at 16%.

“The flippers try to catch the wave at the bottom,” says Daren Blomquist, RealtyTrac vice president. About 8% of sold single-family homes were flipped last year, he says.

Flippers — who take advantage of rising prices to turn quick profits — were partially blamed for inflating the housing bubble before the market crashed in 2006. That could happen again in some markets, says John Burns, CEO of John Burns Real Estate Consulting.

He hopes that rising interest rates will cool price gains and flipper interest. The average 30-year fixed rate was 4.37% this week, up from 3.5% a year ago, Freddie Mac says.

On the other hand, flippers often pay cash for homes that are in such bad shape that banks won’t lend on them, says Mark Goldman, real estate expert at San Diego State University. He’s invested in three flips this year.

Flippers don’t inflate home prices, he says, they “improve housing inventory.”

Strong price gains in San Diego, combined with tight inventories, have made flipping less profitable, Goldman says. Instead of the 20% profits seen two years ago, 10% is now more the norm, he estimates.

 

Investors racing rising home prices for profits.

U.S. housing outlook still promising despite rise in rates: Citigroup economist | Bedford Real Estate

U.S. housing sector fundamentals remain favorable despite the recent rise in interest rates and the sharp drop in housing starts in June, says Citigroup economist Peter D’Antonio.

Housing starts fell 9.9 percent to a ten-month low of 836,000 units in June.

But the decline was almost all in the volatile multi-family sector, D’Antonio notes. Single-family starts remained in a range just below 600,000, while multi-family fell 26 percent to 245,000.

Multi-family starts have been an important growth sector in housing in the past year, but month-to-month changes in multi-family starts – noted for their volatility – are meaningless. Multi-family housing starts rose 21 percent in March, fell 32 percent in April, rose 28 percent in May, then fell 26 percent in June.

Even with the rate increase, houses remain extremely affordable.

The typical household still can afford about 70 percent more than the median house. The (NAHB) housing market index for July reported another big rise in buyer traffic and sales, indicating builder optimism and continued solid demand for new homes.

 

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, in what was likely his last monetary policy testimony to Congress this week, largely agreed:

Housing has contributed significantly to recent gains in economic activity. Home sales, house prices, and residential construction have moved up over the past year, supported by low mortgage rates and improved confidence in both the housing market and the economy. Rising housing construction and home sales are adding to job growth, and substantial increases in home prices are bolstering household finances and consumer spending while reducing the number of homeowners with underwater mortgages.

Housing activity and prices seem likely to continue to recover, notwithstanding the recent increases in mortgage rates, but it will be important to monitor developments in this sector carefully.

 

 

U.S. housing outlook still promising despite rise in rates: Citigroup economist | MacroScope.

Cleveland Fed Study: Negative Equity Doesn’t Lock in Jobseekers | Bedford Real Estate

Are underwater homes deterring unemployed people from moving to get new jobs? Not according to a new study from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, which finds that homeowners will relocate for a job, even if they will lose money on the sale of their home.

 

The study found that “the lock-in effect,” a term coined to help explain why joblessness persisted so stubbornly during the recovery’s first fitful years, is really a myth.

 

After the financial crisis, the number of homeowners who relocated from one state to another declined. At the same time, the number of homeowners who were underwater, i.e., owed more than their house was worth, increased. Some studies suggested that the decline in mobility rates was caused by homeowners being locked in to their underwater homes, contributing to higher unemployment rates.

 

However, the data used in those earlier studies had many limitations. Using anonymous data from two major credit bureaus, a team of researchers, including the Cleveland Fed’s Yuliya Demyanyk, were able to obtain information about the mortgage debt of tens of millions of individuals. Their study found compelling evidence that equity in a home is not a crucial part of the decision to relocate for a job. In fact, underwater homeowners are probably more likely to move than borrowers with equity in their homes.

 

Says Demyanyk, “If an unemployed homeowner with negative equity is able to find a job in another region, he or she is likely to accept the job because the benefits of earning a higher income outweigh the costs associated with selling an underwater home.”

 

One story that made the media rounds during the recession and early recovery claimed that under­water homes – when people owe more than the property’s value – were deterring unemployed people from moving to get new jobs. People with negative equity could sell only at a loss, an option so unattractive that they refused to pull up stakes in search of work.

 

“If a hypothetical unemployed, underwater homeowner gets a job offer, he is going to take it,” Demyanyk said.

 

The study was twofold. First, the researchers looked at credit-report data. The reports gave them enough longitudinal information about borrowers to infer whether they moved to new regions and whether falling home prices limited mobility – particularly for people with negative home equity.

 

Next, the researchers designed a theoretical model to replicate the experience of real-world homeowners. It churned out results suggesting that the findings – that underwater homeowners weren’t reluctant to move – were plausible. Key to the model is the idea that people would rather move to get a steady paycheck than stay in an underwater home in a place with no job prospects.

 

This paper is not the first to debunk the lock-in-effect story. Others, including work by the San Francisco Fed, have likewise found little evidence that people didn’t move during the recession because of the condition of their mortgages.

 

More plausible is that Americans faced almost uniformly dismal employment options across the country – opportunities to move for good jobs were few and far between.

 

An implication for national policy­makers is that job creation efforts need not focus on the regions hit hardest by the housing bust. Consider that at the end of 2009, the under­water problem was concentrated in four “sand” states – Arizona, Florida, California, and Nevada – and in Michigan, all with negative equity rates topping 35 percent of total mortgages. If national policymakers thought only about creating jobs in those states out of fear that negative-equity borrowers wouldn’t move to other states for employment, they might be missing an opportunity to lift employment more broadly.

 

 

RealEstateEconomyWatch.com » Cleveland Fed Study: Negative Equity Doesn’t Lock in Jobseekers » Print.

Bedford Pool Schedule this Week | Bedford NY Real Estate

We hope you are enjoying the pools! As stated in our spring/summer brochure, from time to time certain pools will close early or open late due to home swim meets.  As a member of the Town of Bedford pools, if your hamlet pool is closed due to a swim meet, you are entitled to use another hamlet pool that is open. Below is the schedule of pool closings/delayed openings for the week of Friday, July 19-Sunday, July 28:

SATURDAY, JULY 20:  KATONAH POOL-HOME MEET *Delayed opening: Will open at approximately 12:30pm. **BEDFORD HILLS & BEDFORD VILLAGE will open at 10:00AM

SUNDAY, JULY 21: KATONAH POOL INVITATIONAL *Delayed opening: Will open at approximately 12:30pm *There will be NO Adult Early Morning Swim at Katonah this day **BEDFORD HILLS & BEDFORD VILLAGE will open at 10:00AM

TUESDAY, JULY 23: BEDFORD HILLS POOL-HOME MEET *Deep End/Dive & Lap Lanes Close at 4:30pm. *Shallow End/Wading Pools Close at 5:00pm **KATONAH & BEDFORD VILLAGE will be OPEN

SATURDAY, JULY 27: BEDFORD HILLS POOL-HOME MEET *Delayed opening: Will open at approximately 12:30pm **KATONAH & BEDFORD VILLAGE will open at 10:00AM

If you need to reach any of the pool facilities:

BEDFORD HILLS – 666-7150
BEDFORD VILLAGE – 234-3246
KATONAH – 232-9349

Thank you,
Bedford Recreation
666-7004
7-19-13
11:00am
Please see attached files for your receipt, report, etc…

Interest rate increases may have silver lining | Bedford NY Real Estate

Though a recent surge in interest rates may dissuade some consumers from buying homes, the development also could have a silver lining for the real estate market: making mortgages available to more people.

With the recent spike in interest rates, refinances have plummeted. In the last week of May, shortly after Fed officials hinted that the Fed may scale back its stimulus program later this year, refinance applications dropped to their lowest level since November 2011, the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reported.

With the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage continuing to push higher, they have trended lower since then.

That’s chipping away at banks’ profits. JPMorgan and Wells Fargo recently reported that their earnings from refinances have dropped significantly in recent months.

To make up for the lost revenue, some experts say, banks may extend credit to a larger swath of borrowers, allowing them to originate more mortgages.

“Because refi activity is down, you have a little more room to do business with people who don’t have an 800 credit score,” said Zillow Senior Economist Svenja Gudell.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/07/15/interest-rate-increases-may-have-silver-lining/#sthash.CZXfQzkk.dpuf

Cubans on the move as new real estate market grows | Bedford Real Estate

“Its capitalist!” So goes the Cuban real estate description of a great house to buy. After President Raul Castro eased restrictions in 2011, the housing market is beginning to boom, though underground maneuvers are of course part of the wheeling and dealing.

HAVANA — At an informal housing market on Havana’s historic Paseo del Prado, Renaldo Belen puts the hard sell on a prospective buyer under a tree hung with hand-lettered signs advertising homes for sale.

A house near Boyeros, the avenue to the city’s airport, is being offered for the equivalent of $120,000, with all the amenities.

“The house is beautiful. It has four bedrooms, a pool with a bar and a fountain with a lion’s head on top. Look,” says Belen, pointing to photos on the sign, “water comes out of the lion’s mouth.”

Pausing for dramatic effect, Belen, one of the many touts, or “runners” working at the market, delivers what he hopes will be the coup de grace.

“This place needs no work. It is of capitalist construction,” he says, using a now frequently invoked commendation meaning it was built before Cuba’s 1959 revolution and is therefore of superior quality.

Given that “capitalist” has been a dirty word in communist-run Cuba for the last half century, the description perhaps grates on the nerves of Cuban leaders.

Cuban real estate market grows: A child stands at the door of a farm with a 'For Sale' notice on the outskirts of Havana Tuesday. IMAGEReuters: Desmond Boylan

But its widespread usage is a sign of the times on the Caribbean island, where President Raul Castro has loosened things up as he tries to modernize the country’s economy in the name of preserving the socialist system put in place by his older brother Fidel Castro.

Cubans on the move as new real estate market grows.

Elijah Wood Buys Home in Austin, TX | Bedford Real Estate

Most actors choose Hollywood homes characteristic of the region: sprawling mid-centuries, Spanish-inspired Mediterraneans or the very occasional colonial. But a Victorian in Austin, Texas? Not the first guess for someone like Elijah Wood.

The 32-year-old actor has quietly purchased a new home in Austin. Built in 1890, the home is a classic Victorian, right down to the gingerbread trim and gables. According to property records, the “Lord of the Rings” actor dropped $1.075 million. The Daily Mail reports that Wood had been searching for homes for awhile in the Texas live music capital before he decided on this one.

The listing claims Wood’s new home combines Victorian architecture with modern details — no cabbage-rose wallpaper here. Instead, the interior of the home boasts marble countertops, large windows and light-filled living space. Measuring 3,285 square feet, the home has 4 beds, 4.5 baths and 3 living rooms as well as a front porch, perfect for enjoying Texas sunsets.

Prior to moving to the Lone Star State, Wood called Santa Monica home. He sold his former Spanish-style bungalow in February 2012 for $1.759 million. Wood hasn’t completely written SoCal off yet; property records confirm he still owns a 3-bed, 2-bath home in Venice that he purchased for $1.2 million in 2004.

 

Elijah Wood Buys Home in Austin, TX | Zillow Blog.