Category Archives: Bedford

Positive momentum bolsters downtown real estate market | Bedford Hills NY Real Estate

The deal momentum from the end of 2012 gave the downtown commercial real estate market a strong start for the first part of 2013.  

Vacancy rates for office and retail space in the city are down and activity levels in both sectors have brokers bullish on the progress of downtown, according to a new market report from brokerage firm Colliers International.

Activity in the West Michigan office market saw 50,641 square feet of new absorption in the first quarter of 2013, according to reports from Colliers. The downtown and central business district accounted for approximately 11,381 square feet of that figure.

The numbers are a modest improvement over total office absorption of 49,026 square feet in the fourth quarter last year, but the new data also marks nine straight quarters of positive absorption.

Job stability drives Abu Dhabi home prices | Bedford NY Real Estate

Average asking prices of residential properties in Abu Dhabi’s investment areas rose “significantly” by eight per cent in the first quarter 2013 due to its safe haven status and job stability driving people to buy than rent, says a new report.

In its report on Abu Dubai real estate, Jones Lang LaSalle said average prices within investment areas rose to Dh11,000 per square metre from Dh10,200 sqm in fourth quarter 2012. Average asking prices for apartments stood at Dh12,000 per sqm, while average prices for villas were at around Dh9,900 per sqm.

“With increased job stability some people are preferring to buy property rather than renting and this demand is concentrated in investment areas. There is additional demand from investors looking to capture price growth from a potential future upswing,” the report stated.

The consultancy pointed out that these increases, however, did not reflect a “market-wide recovery.”

On the rental side, the wider market continued to experience declines, resulting in a further divergence of residential market performance. Prime buildings showed signs of stabilization and selective recovery, while secondary market continued to experience downward pressure on rents.

Moreover, rents in Abu Dhabi have become relatively more affordable since those in Dubai have begun to rise which is encouraging more renters to consider relocating to the capital.

Average asking rents for prime two bedroom apartments reached Dh130,000 per annum in Q1, increase over 8 per cent from Q4 2012.

However, JLL said the increase was largely restricted to selected prime developments where performance has improved due to a number of factors such as more community facilities being completed within master planned areas; job growth from major infrastructure projects; limited availability of high quality units for private rental and initial relocation of Abu Dhabi government employees from Dubai in response to new regulations.

16,000 new housing units

The capital, JLL said, is set to witness supply of 16,000 residential units this year of which nearly 2,000 units were released in the first quarter alone. Thus the total residential stock stood at 208,000 units at the end of Q1 2013.

Home prices Orlando: home prices Orlando up | Armonk NY Homes

Orlando home sales prices in March were up 22 percent from a year earlier ¿ the largest year-over-year increase since 2006.

By Mary Shanklin, Orlando Sentinel

7:46 p.m. EDT, April 15, 2013

The Orlando area’s 2-year-old climb up from the depths of the nationwide housing slump has been accelerating lately, with the median home price in the core market rising 22 percent in the past year alone, a new report shows.

The midpoint price for a house in the core market, mainly Orange and Seminole counties, was $140,000 in March — up 5.2 percent from a month earlier and 21.7 percent from a year earlier, according to the report released Monday by the Orlando Regional Realtor Association.

That’s the largest year-over-year increase in the Realtor group’s monthly median price since February 2006, close to the height of the home-buying frenzy.

Winter Park real estate agent David Welch said the market is so heated right now that one of his prospective buyers offered cash on three houses — for more than the asking price each time — yet in each case was beaten by other buyers.

“Every sale I have had for the last nine months was in a multiple-offer situation,” Welch said. “You almost have to look at it by asking: How much over the asking price do I have to offer?”

The Orlando area’s median price hit bottom in January 2011 at $94,900. But it has risen almost 50 percent since then, including an increase of almost 30 percent just in the 15 months since January 2012.

Among the market pressures driving up prices: a dwindling inventory of listings and an influx of hedge funds purchasing distress properties.

One of the most dramatic turns in the local market has been that continuing decline in inventory: Last month the core market had a 2.6 month supply of homes based on the current pace of sales — its smallest supply since 2005, which was the Orlando Realtors’ single-busiest year on record for existing-home sales.

Orlando real estate broker Kari Gann, who by her own reckoning has purchased, fixed up and sold more than 100 properties in the past 20 years, said Monday that hedge funds have now made it impossible to find suitable houses because they are buying up so many of them.

And just as Orlando prices spiraled downward from 2007 through 2010 because of a flood of foreclosures and short-sale properties selling for below-market prices, housing prices now are experiencing hyperinflation because foreclosure sales are dwindling and more “regular houses” are selling for the going, market rates.

“Normal sales traditionally carry a higher price tag than foreclosures and short sales,” said Steve Merchant, chairman of the Orlando Realtors group and a broker at Global Realty International. “For example, in March the median price for normal sales is $173,590, while the median for foreclosures is $96,000 and for short sales is $110,000.”

Of the 2,605 sale completed by the local association’s members in March, half were houses that were not in distress. The number of normal sales has increased 50 percent from a year ago, while the number of short sales and foreclosures have dwindled.

The average interest rate paid by Orlando-area homebuyers in March was 3.65 percent, the first month-to-month increase since April 2012. Houses that sold in March were listed on the market for an average of 80 days, which is about two weeks less than the listing window for houses that sold a year ago.

In addition, March sales prices were only 4.1 percent below the asking prices, on average, which is slightly less negotiating room than buyers had a year ago.

mshanklin@tribune.com or 407-420-5538

Why Home Prices Change (or Don’t) | Bedford NY Real Estate

WHAT prices will today’s home buyers get if they sell a decade from now?

Most people live in their home for many years. They don’t need to view it as an investment at all, but if they do, they surely need a long forecasting horizon.

The problem is that modern economics has a poor understanding of past movements in home prices. And that makes the task of predicting the state of the market in 2023 challenging, at the very least. Still, we can learn something by analyzing the factors that affect home prices in general.

There has been some good news lately: home prices have risen over the last year, and with those gains there has been a renewed sense of optimism. But do these price increases mean that homes are now good investments for the long haul?

Unfortunately, no. We do know one thing from economic research: one-year home price increases, after correcting for inflation, have had almost no statistical relationship to increases 10 years down the road. Thus, the upturn last year is irrelevant to long-run forecasting. Booms are typically followed by busts, usually in far less than 10 years. In a decade, an entire housing boom, if there is one in inflation-corrected terms, is likely to have been reversed and completely washed away.

Inflation has a major impact on long-term home prices. So do the costs of construction. We’ll examine these factors now, and turn to other important influences like speculative pressures and cultural and demographic trends in subsequent columns.

Home prices look remarkably stable when corrected for inflation. Over the 100 years ending in 1990 — before the recent housing boom — real home prices rose only 0.2 percent a year, on average. The smallness of that increase seems best explained by rising productivity in construction, which offset increasing costs of land and labor.

Of course, home prices are likely to be much higher in 2023 when measured in nominal dollars — those that aren’t inflation-adjusted. Inflation is the deliberate policy of the Federal Reserve, with a target rate now of 2 percent a year as measured by the personal consumption expenditure deflator, or about 2.4 percent on the Consumer Price Index. At those rates, nominal prices will be roughly 25 percent higher, over all, in a decade.

All else equal, the current Fed policy would have this effect: a home selling for $200,000 today will sell for around $250,000 in 2023, though the real price — corrected for inflation — would be unchanged. But because people often forget to correct for inflation, they may have the illusion that the market is improving.

In an ideal world, steady and uniform inflation would have no effect on rational decision-making because it affects incomes as well as prices. But in the real world, inflation does affect our psychology. People feel more optimistic when their nominal pay rises or when a neighbor’s house sold for more than they paid for theirs. But in thinking about investments for the long term, we should focus on fundamentals — on real, inflation-corrected values and on the economics behind them.

Here is a harsh truth about homeownership: Over the long haul, it’s hard for homes to compete with the stock market in real appreciation. That’s because companies whose shares are traded on a stock exchange retain a good share of their earnings to plow back into the business. The business should grow and its real stock price should also grow through time — unless the company makes poor decisions, as some certainly do.

By contrast, real home prices should decline with time, except to the extent that households shell out some money and plow back some of their incomes into maintenance and improvements, because homes wear out and go out of style.

Housing is an ambiguous investment to evaluate, because a good part of its real return typically comes in its providing a place to live, not in providing dividends paid in cash. For example, a homeowner may gradually realize that she doesn’t need all of the space in her house, but may not be emotionally prepared to start recapturing some of its economic value. The owner may not want to take in roomers, to use the old phrase, just as a modern renter may not want to live in a room in someone else’s home (though new markets like airbnb.com are aiming to change that mind-set).

Then there is the role of the construction industry, which is very good at building new homes and will crank out many more of them if prices rise relative to construction costs. It’s logical that homes’ ultimate values should be affected by home construction costs.

In a 1956 study of home prices by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Leo Grebler, David M. Blank and Louis Winnick documented a substantial decline in inflation-corrected construction costs per housing unit in the first few decades of the 20th century. They traced this decline to multiple causes, including a decline in the number of rooms per home, the use of gypsum wallboard in place of plaster and of asphalt shingles in place of slate, a shift in construction to lower-cost Southern climates and a relative increase in the number of multifamily housing units and apartment buildings. The authors concluded that the long-run movements in construction costs and home prices are “remarkably similar.”

This was the prevailing theory of home prices at the time: construction costs drove the entire housing market. That view — which implies that increasing productivity has restrained prices and could do so in the future — is very different from the focus on financial pressures and speculative bubbles that drives much of our thinking now.

Steady progress in developing new construction equipment, materials and techniques can be seen in something as simple as the history of power drills. A big step forward came in 1889, with the invention of the electric drill. Then came a series of other inventions: the portable electric drill in 1895, the pistol-grip-and-trigger-switch portable electric drill in 1917 (by S. Duncan Black and Alonzo G. Decker), the Phillips head screw in 1935 (by Henry F. Phillips), the first cordless electric drill in 1961 and the first lithium ion battery, which improved cordless drills, in the 1970s. Each set in motion a string of other improvements that, over decades, penetrated the construction industry and vastly improved its productivity. We can expect more such inventions in the future.

It is hard to imagine the next advances in home construction technology, but there are some clues. For example, Behrokh Khoshnevis of the University of Southern California is developing “contour crafting” robotics that he says will be able to accept computer instructions and, like gigantic 3-D printers, build houses. We cannot tell how well this will work, but computer technology has produced some amazing results. Why is it that we worry about the effect of information technology on our jobs but usually don’t link such uncertainty to the outlook for home prices?

Technical advances affect other industries, too, of course, and the performance of housing as an investment relative to others depends ultimately on the comparative rates of progress.

THESE variables alone suggest how tricky it is to forecast your home’s value when the time comes to sell. Prices can go down as well as up. That is also true for investments in general, of course, and is why generations of portfolio analysts have advocated assessment of risks, and not just extrapolation of recent trends, as the key to intelligent investing.

Next week, a look at real estate bubbles. Robert J. Shiller is the Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale.

Spring Cleaning: 6 Ways to Declutter Your Closet | Armonk Real Estate

By Rowena Ritchie, EcoSalon

Get to grips with your disorganized, cluttered and overflowing closet this season. Chances are you already have some of spring’s essential looks tucked away… if only you could find them.

If your closet is anything like mine, it’s a minefield. Every time I open the door something explodes out at me. As a fashion journalist who writes about ways we can enjoy style without excessive consumption, the plain truth is that my closet is bursting at the seams and yet I’m wearing the same old pair of jeans, boots and sweater I’ve been wearing all winter.

Just as the warmer temperatures and longer days gently awaken our spring spirits, the awareness for a seasonal closet clean-out becomes explicitly clear. Now’s the time to devote a few hours to tackling your closet and in the process, set yourself up for a year of wearing wisely.

Because chances are, like me, you already have some of spring’s essential pieces tucked away in your wardrobe. And as an ethical style seeker you know that the most sustainable fashion is the clothing you actually wear more than anything new you are tempted to buy. So save your money and prolong the life of our landfills with my 6-step guide for creating an uncluttered and organized closet you can shop guilt-free and without ever having to leaving the comfort of your home.

1. Take Inventory. This is a great opportunity to get intimate with all the clothes you do have and gain awareness of the items you tend to habitually overbuy. I was shocked to count 15 black t-shirts in my wardrobe, I can safely strike the need for a new one from my list for quite a while. The goal is to whittle down your closet to only the things that you absolutely love. Try everything on and be brutally honest with yourself about whether it still fits or suits your body shape. The rule is if it doesn’t look 100 percent great on you, let it go.

2. Restyle. Acquaint your self with this season’s color trends and silhouettes and then spend some time putting some new outfits together from your newly culled wardrobe. Perhaps all you need is a pair of chunky fishnets and some booties to reinvigorate all those adorable tea dresses you collected in the ’90s? Would one new blazer in this season’s juicy tangerine shade instantly update your office separates?  Devising a list of exactly what you need for the upcoming season will make shopping for those key pieces so much easier, and spare you from the kind of unfocused shopping that is now cluttering up your closet.

3. Redesign. Take a fresh look at what you have that fits, but if it’s just ho-hum as far as this season’s trends are concerned, get in touch with your inner Project Runway contestant and consider what pieces can be reworked to inject some new life into them. Re-imagine that basic grey marl sweatshirt by slashing a sexier neckline. Could you cut off the arms of an old denim jacket to make this season’s must-have denim vest? For the scissor adverse, tell your local dry cleaner that does alternations your ideas and see if it’s something they can do.

4. Mend or Attend to. Are there any rips, holes or fraying hemlines that need attention? Buttons missing?  These are things that can easily be done at home with the aid of a basic alterations guide, if necessary. Broken zippers and setting in tailored sleeves should be left to an expert. Stains can be lifted with DIY natural solutions. Even those perspiration stains on silk that the dry cleaner couldn’t get out are worth a shot at. Mix vinegar and water in equal parts and pour it on a piece of soft cloth, dab it on the stain and then rinse with warm water, I’ve found this method can be successful even on stains that have been set in for years. If the item is truly beyond repair, consider cutting it into scraps to make quilts, pillowcases, rags or shopping bags.

5. Consign/Sell or Donate. The high-quality, designer or vintage pieces that are in great condition but just don’t fit or never really suited you, should be resold or consigned. There are a number of apps that allow you to do this now online. For everything else, take it down to your local Goodwill, Salvation Army or thrift store. The IRS allows you to deduct a fair market value for your used clothes if you itemize your deductions on your tax return.

6. Take Care Of What You Have. Savvy style lovers know the best way to save money and look great is to keep the clothes they own and love in tip-top shape. Plastic dry cleaner bags don’t allow your clothes to breathe, which leads to color fading and mildew. Replace with home-sewn muslin bags or ethically made options like Jendarlng bags. My favorite non-toxic moth repellant is Moth Away, these herbal moth repellent sachets are formulated with 100 percent natural ingredients and are highly-effective.

If you need more information or want to get help , check out list of services from House Cleaning Houston, TX – Top Houston Maid Service – Ready Set Maids.

Related Articles:

HOW TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE CLOSET

EASY TIPS TO MAKE YOUR CLOTHES LAST LONGER

AUTHOR INTERVIEW: ELIZABETH CLINE OF OVERDRESSED: THE SHOCKINGLY HIGH COST OF CHEAP FASHION

Photo Credit: Shutterstock

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About ecosalon

EcoSalon is the web’s leading conscious culture and fashion publication for women. Featuring style, design, life and culture, the arts, food, sex and relationships, EcoSalon is the first and finest general interest website for the modern green woman.

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Latest Housing Affordability Index Release | Bedford NY Real Estate

At the national level, housing affordability is still at a near-record level thanks to lower mortgage rates and in spite of higher home prices. What is affordability like in your market?

  • Housing affordability is down for the month of February in the United States, as rising incomes were not enough to completely offset higher mortgage rates and home prices from January to February. In spite of the slight decrease, affordability remains at a near-record level.
  • In fact, after incorporating revised price data, last month was the highest affordability index on record; data goes back to January 1971.
  • From one year ago, affordability is down slightly as lower mortgage rates and higher incomes have not completely offset double-digit home price gains.
  • By region, affordability is up slightly from one month ago in the West, down in the Northeast and South. There was no change in the Midwest. From one year ago, affordability is higher in all regions except the West, where price gains have had the most dramatic effect.
  • In the Midwest and South the median income family earns double what is needed to purchase the median priced home, so affordability remains high.
  • What does housing affordability look like in your market?
  • Check out the full data release here.