Thirty-eight real estate markets have been tagged as “dangerous” for investors looking to make money on buying homes as rental properties in new quarterly data compiled by HomeVestors of America (known as the “We Buy Ugly Houses®” company) and Local Market Monitor.
The list categorizes markets according to different investor risk preferences and assigns a numerical score from minus-ten to plus-ten based on population, job growth, unemployment, home price changes, the market’s equilibrium home price (a proprietary measure of how much a market is over-priced or under-priced relative to local income) and the 12-month home price forecast.
“Despite the fact that home sales and home prices are increasing on average across the country, we are still seeing weaknesses in some markets,” said Ingo Winzer, president and founder of Local Market Monitor. “Sometimes weaknesses can signal opportunity for real estate investors, but not in the markets we ranked as ‘dangerous.’ In those markets, the risk far outweighs any opportunity.”
Leading the “dangerous” list is Battle Creek, Michigan, which drew a minus-four score because of its continuing job losses and weak home prices. Battle Creek is one of three Michigan cities-the others being Muskegon and Saginaw-that were ranked as “dangerous.” Only Florida had as many cities ranked as “dangerous” as Michigan. They are Port St. Lucie, Daytona Beach and Tallahassee.
The top ten “dangerous cities were, in order, Battle Creek, Salisbury (MD), Norwich (CT), Dalton (GA), Muskegon, Augusta, Decatur, Tuscaloosa, Dover and Port St. Lucie. The largest city to earn a “dangerous” label was Providence, Rhode Island, which ranks as number 26 on the “dangerous” list.
“All of the markets we ranked as dangerous have a combination of factors such as high-unemployment or weak job growth and falling or weak home prices,” said Winzer.
Tag Archives: Armonk NY Homes
Third-party websites’ problems are not mine | Armonk NY Homes
Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram Demographics | Armonk Realtor
3 Strategies You Need To Adopt To Make Social Media Marketing Work | Armonk Realtor
Third-party websites’ problems are not mine | Armonk NY Homes
A few months ago I wrote that third-party sites like Zillow and Trulia are not my competitors. I offer different services than websites and I can work without Internet access or electricity.
I love it when people get all excited about how many inquires through Zillow and Trulia and Realtor.com go unanswered. Some see it as a big problem.
I don’t see it as a problem at all, and I don’t care if consumers get a response when they inquire through a third-party website. The problem does not impact my income or hurt my reputation as an individual agent. If it did I might care about it.
There are any number of sites where consumers will see my listings, but because my name and phone number are not always apparent they call other agents. I honestly don’t have a problem with that — and if their calls go unanswered, that doesn’t bother me either.
5 Creative Ways to Use LinkedIn Company Pages | Armonk Realtor
Realtor.com marketing campaign zeroes in on listings accuracy | Armonk Realtor
Realtor.com operator Move Inc. is launching an aggressive marketing campaign today that portrays the timeliness, accuracy and completeness of listings on the portal as giving its users a competitive advantage over buyers searching for homes on less reliable third-party websites.
The “Find It First” marketing campaign makes the case that with inventories tight in many markets, accurate and timely listings data could make the difference between finding your dream home or losing out to another buyer.
“You’re not the only one dreaming about your perfect home,” warns one of the ads.
As the official website of the National Association of Realtors, realtor.com can claim to have the most up-to-date and accurate inventory of U.S. homes listed for sale. The site receives listings data from more than 800 multiple listing services that, in most cases, is updated every 15 minutes.
Because they gather data from a variety of sources, third-party websites like Zillow and Trulia can have gaps in their listings coverage, or show homes that have already been sold or withdrawn from the market as still being for sale. Zillow and Trulia don’t have data on about a quarter of MLS listings, according to recent studies by brokerages ZipRealty and Redfin.
“We are highlighting our competitive advantage in the new campaign,” said Andrew Strickman, vice president of brand and creative at Move.
Movoto: Big Drop in Days on Market | Armonk Real Estate
Falling Inventories are Hitting the Brakes | Armonk NY Real Estate
At long last, there are signs that the unprecedented year-long decline in for-sale inventories are slowing, though continuing to fall, just in time for the spring home buying season. But inventories may continue to decline through 2013.
Nationally, inventory is no longer in a free fall, reported Trulia’s Chief Economist Jed Kolko yesterday. The seasonally adjusted quarter-over-quarter change in inventory is negative, but no longer falling as sharply as it did a few months ago. (Year-over-year changes are slower to show a turnaround because they combine a full year’s worth of changes in a single measure. But looking at quarterly or monthly changes requires a seasonal adjustment because inventory has a strong seasonal pattern that makes the underlying trend hard to see.)
The quarter-over-quarter decline in inventory has been at a 14-21 percent annualized rate since October 2012, compared with a 23-29% annualized rate from March 2012 to September 2012:
Nationally, inventory fell 23 percent year-over-year in February, according to the Department of Numbers HousingTracker. Inventory fell year-over-year in all 50-plus markets they track, and by more than 50 percent in several California metros. Price increases and disappearing inventory go hand-in-hand: nearly all metros with the biggest inventory declines also had year-over-year price increases of 10 percent or more, such as Sacramento, San Jose, and Seattle.
Kolko said less inventory leads to higher prices, which in turn lead to less inventory – at least in the short term. Everyone wants to buy at the bottom; no one wants to sell at the bottom. When prices start to rise, buyers get impatient while many would-be sellers want to hold out in the hopes of selling later at a higher price. However, the “inventory spiral” can’t go on forever because eventually rising prices will encourage homeowners to sell and builders to build, which add to inventory and breaks the spiral.
“The critical question for the housing market – especially for buyers fighting over tight inventories – is how long until that kicks in? How long do prices have to rise before sellers and builders start adding to inventory?” asked Kolko.
In the long term, higher prices lead to more inventory -. As prices keep rising, more homeowners decide it’s worthwhile to sell, especially those who get back above water, which adds to inventory. Also, builders take rising prices as a cue to rev up construction activity, which also adds to inventory.
For the U.S. overall, an inventory turnaround in 2013 is unlikely. Since national asking home prices bottomed in February 2012, it may be at least another year before national inventory starts expanding. Inventory will make a turnaround first where asking prices bottomed earliest, such as in Phoenix, Miami, Detroit, Houston, and Oklahoma City. The inventory turnaround is a longer way off in metros where prices have bottomed more recently, such as in Sacramento and the Inland Empire.