Category Archives: Waccabuc NY

Incredible treehouse hotels | Waccabuc Real Estate

Hainan Island, China

SANYA NANSHAN TREEHOUSE RESORT AND BEACH CLUB The operators of this four-unit treehouse resort, which has a sister site in Maui, are quick to warn potential guests that their accommodations are “not for the fussy.” Maybe so, but they’re perfect for environmentalists who want a fresh-air experience that doesn’t involve tented shelter. Located in the South China Sea, the property sits adjacent to a 5,000-acre Buddhist park rife with pagodas, temples, and manicured gardens. The Big Beach in the Sky treehouse sleeps six and is accessible only via suspension bridge; the Hawaiian Hale Hotel Treehouse, meanwhile, is ideal for larger parties: It sleeps up to 20 and is just two minutes from the beach.

 

 

http://living.msn.com/life-inspired/life-unleashed/incredible-treehouse-hotels#4

Evander Holyfield’s Foreclosed, 109-Room Palace | Waccabuc NY Real Estate

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Selling a home for $7.5 million usually calls for champagne — but not if you’re Evander Holyfield and you owe nearly twice that much on the property. The former heavyweight champ sold his palatial Fayette County estate with 109 rooms last year in a public auction to a bank, which his attorney softly described as “technically part of a foreclosure.” The famed 54,000 square-foot mansion sits on 235 acres, has a bowling alley and theater and costs more than $1 million annually to maintain, Holyfield once told the AJC. On his website, Holyfield boasts of making more than $230 million in the boxing ring, but child support cases in Georgia, Texas and California — in additional to the general drying up of boxing royalties — took a heavy toll. · Holyfield sells Fayette mansion for $7.5 million [AJC] · When Selling Your House for $7.5 Mil Actually Sucks [TMZ]

Housing Outlook 2014: 10 Predictions From The Experts | Waccabuc NY Real Estate

In 2013, the housing recovery was a welcome bright spot for the economy: prices were shooting up, fewer homeowners were underwater, and builder confidence was finally on the upswing. It’s looking like 2014 should be another good year for housing–mostly. Here are ten things housing experts expect to see in 2014:

1. More homes will be available Short supply drove rapid price increases at the beginning of 2013, but watch for that to change next year. Realtor.org notes that the inventory (homes available for purchase) shortage began to soften in February. New construction and rising prices should bring more homes, both new and old, on to the market in 2014, helping inventory return to traditional levels.

2. Mortgage rates will rise Zillow Z +4.86% predicts rates will hit 5% by the end of 2014–well up from the 4′s and 3′s of late, but still well within normal levels. New Fed Reserve chief Janet Yellen is expected to continue Ben Bernanke’s policy of keeping mortgage rates low by buying blocks of mortgage-backed securities, but the Fed’s bond-buying taper could push rates higher. “While this will make homes more expensive to finance – the monthly payment on a $200,000 loan will rise by roughly $160 – it’s important to remember that mortgage rates in the 5 percent range are still very low,” says Erin Lantz, Zillow’s director of mortgages. Really. “Prior to the Federal Reserve’s 2008 decision to buy $85 billion in debt per month, the 36-year average was 9.2%, and never below 5.8%,” notes Glen Kelman, CEO of Redfin.

MortgageRate

Zillow: National mortgage rates, 30-year, fixed-rate

3. Mortgages will be easier to get “The silver lining to rising interest rates is that getting a loan will be easier,” says Lantz. “Rising rates means lenders’ refinance business will dwindle, forcing them to compete for buyers by potentially loosening their lending standards.”

4. Home prices will rise 3% Redfin and Zillow are predicting that home prices will rise between 3% and 5% in 2014. For comparison’s sake, 2013 saw jumps of 5% nationally, with increases of more than 20% in some hot spots. “These gains, while beneficial in many ways, were also unsustainable and well above historic norms for healthy, balanced markets,” says Dr. Stan Humphries, Zillow’s chief economist. “This year, home value gains will slow down significantly because of higher mortgage rates, more expensive home prices, and more supply created by fewer underwater homeowners and more new construction.”

5. Fewer homeowners will be underwater Rising prices helped 2.5 million homeowners with underwater mortgages regain positive equity status during the second quarter of 2013, according to Realtor.org. By Q3, a CoreLogic report found that about 6.4 million homes were still in negative equity at the end of Q3. Watch for that number to shrink in 2014.

 

 

http://www.forbes.com/sites/erincarlyle/2013/12/23/housing-outlook-2014-10-predictions-from-the-experts/?partner=yahootix

 

Where Is Content Marketing Headed in 2014? [INFOGRAPHIC | Waccabuc NY Realtor

As the year 2013 comes to an end, marketing experts and internet professionals are taking a look forward to what the marketing terrain will be like in the year 2014, especially in the area of content marketing.

2013 has experienced a lot of innovative changes as far as marketing is concerned. There were a whole lot of new tools and conventions to deal with. But in all of these content marketing stood out! Today, content marketing is not just a buzz word but something that every business now takes as a MUST.

For example, in a recent survey conducted by MarketingProfs and the Content Marketing Institute, it was revealed that 93% B2B organizations now use content-based tactics for their marketing campaigns while 73% indicated they now produce more content than the previous year!

These are not mean figures. They are definitely an indication of what to expect in content marketing trends for 2014. The following infographic from Uberflip gives a concise view of what the trends will be like in content marketing in 2014.

So, whether you are a B2B or B2C business and you are among those who intent drive out-standing results for your content marketing spend in  2014 then you need to study this infographic very carefully because you will definitely get something from it!

Content Marketing Trends For 2014

So, how are you preparing to make good use of what the experts say about the content marketing in 2014?

 

 

 

http://socialmediatoday.com/okesteady/2002261/where-content-marketing-headed-2014-infographic?utm_source=smt_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter&inf_contact_key=4e31d2e7346a5924bb28ec66a4887c9d1df030b8e5d58a3e790461ece08da544

 

 

 

 

Housing starts jump to near 6-year high in good sign for economy | Waccabuc NY Homes

U.S. builders broke ground on homes at the fastest pace in more than five years, strong evidence that the housing recovery is accelerating despite higher mortgage rates.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that developers began construction on houses and apartments in November at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.09 million. That’s 23 percent more than October’s pace of 889,000 and the fastest since February 2008, just a few months after the recession began.

Construction of single-family homes jumped 21 percent to an annual pace of 727,000, also the highest in more than five years. Apartment construction soared 26 percent to a 354,000 annual pace.

Permits for future building slipped 3 percent to just over 1 million, down from 1.04 million in October. The drop reflected a decline in apartments, which can be volatile. Permits for single-family homes rose.

“Evidently, builders in the field are genuinely confident about the outlook for sales of new single-family houses, despite the rise in mortgage rates,” said Pierre Ellis, an economist at Decision Economics.

The housing market has been improving steadily since early last year, but construction had leveled off this summer after first reaching a 1 million annual pace in March. Last month’s surge comes as mortgage rates remain about a percentage point higher than they were in the spring. That suggests home building will boost economic growth in the final three months of the year.

 

 

http://www.nbcnews.com/business/bitcoin-price-plunges-china-clampdown-escalates-2D11765766?ocid=msnhp&pos=7#housing-starts-jump-near-6-year-high-good-sign-economy-2D11765607

 

Reno’d English Manor in Connecticut Countryside Asks $20M | Waccabuc Real Estate

Location: Greenwich, Conn. Price: $20,000,000 The Skinny: A complete renovation and expansion of a 1929 home, this English country manor sits on five acres of land in pricey Khakum Woods, an exceedingly exclusive neighborhood that was once part of the extensive estate of famed New York architect I. N. Phelps Stokes. Linden Court, as the home is now known, was stripped to the studs and rebuilt by luxury builders Xhema, with interior work by David Easton. An impressive modern pedigree, to be sure, but the home’s $20M asking price (down $5M from the original ask, yet still nearly $10M over the highest sale price of nearby homes) has stirred debate—not to mention genteel snarking—among those residing in the rarefied air of Greenwich real estate circles. Which, “po-tay-to, po-tah-to”, it’s a huge sum of money either way.

· 218 Clapboard Ridge Rd. [Sotheby’s International Realty via Architectural Digest]

Branstad, MidAmerican officials plan major wind energy announcement | Waccabuc Real Estate

Officials at MidAmerican Energy Co. and the state of Iowa are set to make a major announcement regarding a new wind energy development.

Gov. Terry Branstad is expected to discuss the project at his morning news conference Monday and release further details with company officials at a 1 p.m. news conference to be held at the Siemens Energy wind blade factory near Fort Madison.

In August MidAmerican Energy received approval from the Iowa Utilities Board for a $1.9 billion project to install hundreds of wind turbines by the end of 2015.

More than 448 turbines are to be installed in Grundy, Madison, Marshall, O’Brien, and Webster counties.

MidAmerican, Iowa’s largest energy company began building wind turbines in 2004, and it currently has more than 1,200 wind turbines in Iowa.

 

 

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/viewart/20131216/BUSINESS/312160051/Branstad-MidAmerican-officials-plan-major-wind-energy-announcement

Manhattan Rents Dip Again, But Brooklyn’s Won’t Stop Rising | Waccbuc Real Estate

Elliman%20-%20Manhattan%20Rents%20November%202013.png [Chart via The Elliman Report.]

An NYC newbie might look at the data from Elliman’s monthly rental market report for November and say, “Hey, the rents in Manhattan have declined for three straight months now. Yippee!” The median rental price did, once again, drop year-over-year, down 3 percent to $3,100/month. Hold up: report guru and general market whiz Jonathan Miller cautions that Manhattan renters should contain their glee. “We are seeing rents top out, but the market is still strong,” he says, adding that the rental market saw much of its number exit in order to buy this summer in a flurry of record sales activity. Vacancy rates rose to a relatively high 2.8 percent, and so in order to appease renters, landlords were more willing than usual to offer concessions (say, a free month’s rent). Yet, concludes JMillz, “I don’t think we should expect a long downward trend in rents. The key drivers—rising NYC employment and tight credit—remain in place. I see rents bouncing up and down going forward on some sort of plateau and remaining at a high level.”

MNS%20-%20Manhattan%20YoY%20Rent%20Changes.png [Infographic via MNS.]

Meanwhile, brokerage MNS breaks down its extensive monthly report by neighborhood and type of apartment. Taking all the data together, though, Midtown West, Battery Park City, and the East Village saw the most intense rent hikes, while rents dropped for the Upper East Side, Chelsea, and the Lower East Side.

Elliman%20-%20Brooklyn%20Rents%20November%202013.png [Chart via The Elliman Report.]

Let’s turn our attention to Brooklyn, once seen as a bastion of affordability. Not anymore, folks, given that Elliman found median rents in the booming north and northwest parts of the borough rose yet again, this time by 3.8 percent to $2,800/month. And as rents are climbing, the availability of rentable apartments is decreasing: the number of new rentals slipped 6.5 percent from November of last year. The gap between Brooklyn and Manhattan median rents continues to narrow, with only $300/month between them now. “I see Brooklyn as about a year behind the Manhattan cycle,” Miller says. “I think they have more upside, whereas Manhattan more stable.” But, fear not, there’s relief ahead, in the form of increased supply: “Much of the new development in Brooklyn is rental, so that will temper growth next year, whereas most of the new development in Manhattan is condo.”

 

 

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2013/12/11/manhattan_rents_dip_again_but_brooklyns_wont_stop_rising.php