Category Archives: Cross River NY

Cross River New York Real Estate for Sale

Short Sales Peak, Then Plummet | Cross River Real Estate

Distress sales as a whole are falling but short sales are declining twice as fast as fewer homeowners are losing their homes over the past year.

For the 12-month period ending in June 2013, distressed sales overall (including both REO and short sales) were down nearly 30 percent from the same period ending in June 2012 — from 650,000 to 463,000. Of these, short sales had declined significantly — by nearly 60 percent — accounting for just over 46,000 sales during that timeframe as compared to 104,000 in 2012 according to residential real estate transaction data from the LPS Home Price Index.

Short sales rose and fell quickly.  In the first quarter of 2012, some 109,521 properties were sold in pre-foreclosure — a proxy for short sales, according to RealtyTrac.  At that time, LPS reported a 25 percent increase from the same quarter the previous year and a three-year high and for the first time, short sale transactions are exceeding foreclosure deals. In January, short sales made up 23.9 percent of home purchases, according to LPS. Meanwhile, foreclosures made up 19.7 percent of sales.  Just one year prior, in the first quarter of 2011, foreclosures made up the bulk at 24.9 percent of transactions while short sales made up 16.3 percent.

LPS’ July Mortgage Monitor report also found that while loan origination volume had slowed slightly from May to June, overall activity remained relatively strong. According to LPS Data & Analytics Senior Vice President Herb Blecher, prepayment activity (historically a good indicator of mortgage refinances) is still largely driving origination volume, as has been the case for some time now.

“Prepayment speeds have been impacted by the sharp increase in mortgage interest rates we’ve seen over the last couple months,” Blecher said. “However, even with that increasing interest rate pressure, July’s monthly prepayment rates are still about where they were this time last year, when rates were at historic lows. In fact, they are roughly at the same levels as the heights of the ‘mini refinance booms’ in 2010 — when interest rates were comparable to where they are today — and in 2009, when rates were even higher. Of course, as interest rates continue to climb, we can expect that both prepayments and associated originations will decline. It’s notable however, that we saw an increase in prepayment activity in July among higher loan-to-value (LTV) mortgages — those with LTVs of 100 percent or more — indicating continued HARP refinance activity.

 

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/09/short-sales-peak-then-plummet/

 

 

 

Citigroup to pay Freddie Mac $395 million to resolve mortgage claims | Cross River Real Estate

According to Businessweek, Citigroup (C) agreed to pay Freddie Mac $395 million to resolve potential future repurchase claims tied to about 3.7 million loans sold to Freddie between 2000 and 2012.

The deal with Freddie Mac is “another important milestone in successfully resolving Citi’s remaining legacy mortgage issues,” Jane Fraser, chief executive officer of CitiMortgage, said.

The deal doesn’t release the bank from liability tied to servicing the loans. It excludes less than 1,000 loans from the period, and Citigroup said it believes it is adequately reserved for those.

                    Source: Businessweek

5 tips for career longevity in real estate | Cross River Real Estate

Have you ever wondered what differentiates those who stay healthy and engaged well into their 80s or even their 90s as opposed to those who don’t? If you want to have a healthier, happier and more fulfilling life, take a few hints from some people who have managed to do it.

I recently had a conversation with fellow real estate coach Joeann Fossland about a session she will be doing for our Awesome Females in Real Estate group called “Being Beautiful at Any Age.”

As we were chatting about the session, she shared an interesting conversation that she had with one of her coaching clients. She was having some issues with her back and she flinched when she moved. Her client asked her, “Do you have arthritis?”After careful thought, Joeann responded by saying, “Having arthritis sounds like something is broken and that it can’t be fixed.

I prefer to think that there are some days when I have some pain and other days when I don’t.”She then shared another story about a speaker who had been told he would need knee surgery.

He was a runner and refused to stop running. Each time he ran, he kept telling himself that the pain he was experiencing was his body healing itself. Several months later when he went in for another MRI, and his knee had healed.

 

read more…

 

http://www.inman.com/2013/09/19/5-tips-for-career-longevity-in-real-estate/#sthash.CGbxtIRc.dpuf

12 Awesome Social Media Facts and Statistics for 2013 | Cross River Realtor

social media facts and statistics

As the world continues to embrace social media, the ways we use the social  networks are becoming clearer.

Twitter with its short and snappy messaging is very dependent on mobile usage  and smart phones. The rise of the visual web is making Pinterest and Tumblr the  fastest growing social networks on the planet. Facebook is where we share with  friends and family. Google+ is no longer an afterthought and is embedded in  Google’s web assets including Gmail, local checkins and the mobile Android  ecosystems.

Google is getting the data it wants from Google+. Demographics, usage and  content popularity. This is feeding into how it is ranking search results and  much more. The universes of content, social and search are being woven together  and creating a web experience that looks more like magic everyday. The social  and mobile web is becoming an extension of our lives as we share, search and  upload photos.

Artificial intelligence that adds other dimensions to humanity has already  arrived but we just don’t notice it. We take it for granted

So what are the latest social media facts and statistics provided by the  latest study by GlobalWebIndex for the second quarter of 2013?

#1. Google+ is catching up to Facebook

Facebook still dominates at 70% of account ownership but Google+ is not far  behind at just over 50%. Keep in mind though that Google+ account is mandatory  whenever you create a new  Gmail account. This is pushing up the account  ownership stats. No other social network has Google’s web assets leverage.

The large Chinese internet user population is producing some large Chinese  centric social networks including Sina Weibo, Tencent Weibo and Qzone. So  Facebook doesn’t just have Google+ breathing down its neck. The rise of China’s  social networks will possibly be a threat in the future.

Social media facts figures and statistics 2013 1

#2. Facebook active usage still dominates

Facebook has nearly 50% of all the world’s internet users as active users.  This is only set to increase as regions and countries in the developing world  including Africa, Asia and South America get connected to the web.

Social media facts figures and statistics 2013 1

#3. Pinterest is the fastest growing social network

The visual web is driving the rise of Pinterest and Tumblr with growth rates  of 88% and 74% respectively over the last 12 months. Twitter and LinkedIn though  are still rapid risers with growth rates around 40%.

Social media facts figures and statistics 2013 1

#4. LinkedIn is the most popular for older users

LinkedIn is the network of choice for most knowledge workers and  professionals. It is maybe the most conservative of the social networks due to  the fact it is all about business. It is becoming more social as it has realized  that this will enhance its user penetration and attractiveness.

The latest statistics show it having 7% of its users over 55 and 14% in the  45 to 54 age range.

Social media facts figures and statistics 2013 1

#5. Usage of social networks by older users is increasing

Social networks were and still are a hit with the younger demographics. Don’t  think though that social media is for the teens. The increase in usage by the 55  to 64 year olds is greater than 100% for Facebook, Twitter and Google+.

The young aren’t the only ones having fun.

 

 

 

Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/09/20/12-awesome-social-media-facts-and-statistics-for-2013/#zcxL7Wyd1SvY5LVq.99

Hidden single-family rental markets remain profitable for investors | Cross River Real Estate

There have been a number of reports out recently indicating that institutional investors are losing interest in real estate. However, a recent report from RentRange and RealtyTrac revealed that there are still a number of single-family rental markets that investors would benefit from checking into.

The markets were determined by evaluating gross rental yield data, a commonly used method of comparing properties. The rental yield is determined by dividing the gross annual rental income by the purchase price or market value of the property.

The analysis was limited to single-family homes with three bedrooms. The top 25 markets had the highest gross rental yields in counties where institutional investor like Gainesville Coins purchases accounted for 5% or less of all residential sales in the three-month period ending in July, and the unemployment rate was 7.5% or lower.

“Buying single-family homes as rentals still yields solid returns in many markets across the nation, but it is difficult for individual investors and even small-to medium-sized institutional investors to find reasonably priced inventory in markets dominated by the 800-pound gorillas in the single-family rental space,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac.

A September report from Preqin, based on interviews with 140 private real estate investors, revealed that the proportion of investors making new private real estate commitments dropped in the last year, with smaller investors becoming more hesitant to make commitments.

Blomquist noted that this analysis has identified the top overlooked markets where single-family rentals still make good financial sense but where there is little to no competition from the big players.

According to Wally Charnoff, CEO of RentRange, “Real estate investment opportunities vary greatly market by market. “The availability of gross rental yield information and other valuable analytics empower buyers to make more scientific decisions about where to invest,” he added.

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/26921-hidden-single-family-rental-markets-still-profitable-for-investors

Old-School Daguerrotypes Capture Urban Sprawl of the 1800s | Cross River Real Estate

firstda.jpgImage via The Atlantic Cities

No, that’s not an Instagram of rural Connecticut, it’s a look at a “busy street” in the Paris of 1838, and also the first print produced by Daguerreotype creator Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre. The Atlantic Cities recently dug up this and a few more Dagerreotypes—prints produced via complicated methods and bulky, expensive machinery once lauded for being the first “practicable” photographic process—of 19th-century cities. The images show off urban sprawl from before Chanel and Michael Kors lined the boulevards and starchitect-designed towers stood shoulder to steel-boned shoulder in the most congested bits of town. Below, Philadelphia in 1843 and Washington, D.C., in 1846.

As Mortgage Applications Fall, Lower Loan Limits Loom | Cross River Real Estate

Rising rates continue to have an impact on home purchase applications. The number of mortgage applications filed last by 13.5% from the prior week on a seasonally adjusted basis as interest rates increased, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Wednesday.

The purchase component eased 2.7% this week relative to last and has fallen 16.8% since the first week in May on a seasonally adjusted basis. Rates reversed course last week and turned upward after easing in the prior week. The average rate for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage was 4.57% last week according to Freddie Mac.

On an unadjusted basis, MBA reported the market composite index declined 23%. The refinance index slipped 28% from a week earlier, while the seasonally adjusted purchase index slid 2.7%.

The sudden drop in purchase applications comes as loans for new homes have taken market share away from refinancing since January, raising its market share from 27% to 53% in July.

While the average rate has been on the rise, the National Association of Realtors reported that the Federal Housing Finance Agency is considering reducing the limits on mortgages that can be backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Currently, the GSEs can support loans up to $417,000 in most markets and up to $625,500 in higher cost markets, while loans above this are supported by the private “jumbo” market made up of banks and private MBS securitizers.

Rates on jumbo loans have eased to party or slightly better than conforming loans in recent months as banks have started taking more loans into portfolio to compensate for weak commercial and refinance business. However, these loans are very high quality with large down payments and high FICO scores. The concern then is that if the loan limits decline, the private sector may still not be ready to pick up the non-pristine lending activity in the high cost portion of the market, cutting off access to credit for this portion of the market, resulting in reduced demand and sales.

 

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/09/

Three Cents Worth: Manhattan’s Middle Market Shows Life | Cross River Real Estate

This week I thought I’d take a look at the breakdown of sales by price in the most recently completed quarter.  Last year I was using a donut analogy to describe the Manhattan apartment market—weak in middle and strong on the outside (bottom/top). I wanted to illustrate how the mix in 2013 could be showing signs of change rather than continuing to see a disproportionate amount of activity on the margins. For reference I provided an inset in the form of a pie (sorry) chart to show a simple breakdown of the market in the second quarter of 2013.  The column chart was a bit more involved.  It represents the difference between 2Q 2013 and 2Q 2012 as measured by percentage to illustrate any market shifts that may be occurring. For example, the market share of the $1K-$500K was 21.3 percent (in pie chart), 4.1 percent less (in column chart) than 25.4 percent in the year ago quarter.

· Sub $500k market lost share (4.1 percent) likely due to lack of supply and tight credit.  Too soon in the data to see rise in mortgage rates but expect more weakness. · $501k to $4M or middle, upper middle of market showed slight gains from a year ago—something we haven’t seen in quite a while.  This is nearly 3/4 of the entire market so “middle” is quite a broad description. · $4M+ showed mixed results but generally unchanged.

With rising mortgage rates and little gain in supply across much of the market, I suspect we will continue to see an erosion in market share at the entry level sales as more first time buyers get shut out.  I’d like to think the middle of the market would continue to improve in share—a market starting to see more trade-ups and lateral movement but perhaps not at the pace we’ve seen year to date.  The overhyped high end will probably muddle along in balance with no real change in supply.

 

 

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2013/08/20/