Tag Archives: Bedford Hills Homes

Bedford Hills Homes

Will Housing Save the Economy? | Bedford Hills NY Homes

Don’t count on it, says a leading macroeconomist at the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago.   “We need to temper our optimism on what a housing recovery can do,” says Amir Sufi, professor of finance.

Thought leaders ranging from President Obama to Bill Dudley, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, have pinned the nation’s economic progress on the housing recovery, but the fact is that “we will not be returning to the boom years that preceded the Great Recession. The days when housing was the predominant force driving economic activity are gone, and I view that as a good thing,” says Sufi in an article in the fall issue of Capital Ideas, a Booth School publication.

However, the housing wealth effect is less than meets the eye and price growth owes as much to investors as to homeowners, which means home ownership won’t recover more to

“An increase in house prices drives economic activity in two ways. First, it induces investment in new residential construction. Second, it leads some households to spend, either for home improvement or consumption. The latter effect has generally been called a “housing wealth effect,” but in my view that’s the wrong way of thinking about it. Instead, the positive effect of house prices on household spending relies crucially on the degree to which a given household is constrained from spending as much as it would like in the short run, either because of borrowing constraints or behavioral biases.

But Sufi argues that spending as a response to an increase in house prices was not uniform, which is a critical point often neglected in the discussion of housing wealth effects. “In our study of the housing boom, we found enormous differences in the propensity of homeowners to extract equity from their home based on credit scores. Homeowners with the lowest credit scores were very aggressive, borrowing 40¢ against every dollar of increased home equity. Homeowners with the highest credit scores were almost completely passive, pulling almost no equity out of their homes when house prices increased,” said Sufi.

“In research with Kamalesh Rao of MasterCard Advisors, Mian and I also found the exact same relationship during the housing bust. For a given dollar decline in house prices, constrained borrowers cut back on spending much more dramatically than unconstrained households. The marginal propensity to consume out of housing wealth was three-to-four times larger for constrained versus unconstrained households.” wrote Sufi.

Today these constrained borrowers have been shut out of housing and mortgage markets, he said. ‘The only households that can buy a home or borrow against one are precisely the unconstrained households that are least likely to spend out of an increase in housing wealth. Therefore few homeowners are aggressively borrowing against their homes, precisely because they have high credit scores. If we take the results from our previous research, the housing wealth effect for these households may be close to zero, which would substantially dampen the effect of house prices on spending.”

Another way to measure the wealth effect is to look at home improvement, he said.  Year-over-year spending on home improvement, appliances, and furniture was up 2.4% in January through March of 2013, while other retail spending was up 3.5%. Spending on home-related purchases remained weak even as house prices climbed. In contrast, during the 2002-06 boom, year-over-year spending on home improvement, appliances, and furniture outpaced other retail spending every single year.

“The nature of the housing recovery is quite different than what we’ve seen in the past. Up to this point, it appears to be driven in large part by investors and cash-buyers. The direction of causality is difficult to discern: investors may be responding to house price growth as much as driving it. But the recent growth should be understood in the context of the boom in investor activity,” he wrote. The most direct effect would be a permanent return to homeownership rates in the United States of 65% or perhaps even lower. Further, investors renting out apartments and single-family homes are likely to invest less in the homes than homeowners would. We still need good theory and data to back up this argument, but it seems to be accepted wisdom among professionals working in housing and durable goods markets. It does make intuitive sense. Landlords tolerate more depreciated washing machines and kitchen appliances, and more transient renters are less willing to pay the landlord for better equipment.

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/09/will-housing-save-the-economy/

 

 

 

 

Chinese investors remain confident in the US | Bedford Hills Real Estate

According to The Wall Street Journal, China recently purchased a record amount of U.S. government agency debt and mortgage-backed securities, even as it sold Treasurys. The WSJ has more:

“There is no evidence that Chinese investors are losing confidence in the U.S. market,” said Ian Lyngen, a senior government bond strategist at CRT Capital Group LLC. “In fact the notion that they are buying dips [in bond prices] is longer-term constructive” for the U.S.

                    Source: WSJ

How Much Does it Cost to Remodel a Basement? | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Average reported cost:
$23,073
based on 233 cost profiles
Most homeowners spent between:
           $19,605 –            $26,541
Minimum cost:
$9,200
Maximum cost:
$44,640
We are still gathering data for this location.
Average reported costs:
Most homeowners spent between:
National
              $19,972               based on 2,672 cost profiles
          $16,979 –           $22,965           based on 2,672 cost profiles
We are still gathering data for this location.           Try changing location above or choose another project
Tell us your location to find local project cost data
New York
              $19,947               based on 156 cost profiles
          $16,836 –           $23,058           based on 156 cost profiles
We are still gathering data for this location.           Try changing location above or choose another project
Tell us your location to find local project cost data
New York, NY
              $23,073               based on 233 cost profiles
          $19,605 –           $26,541           based on 233 cost profiles
We are still gathering data for this location.           Try changing location above or choose another project
Tell us your location to find local project cost data
Find Trusted Pros for this Project
Tell us a few details about your project and we’ll match you to pre-screened pros you can trust to get the job done.

Find Pros Browse All Project Categories

Remodeling your basement is a big job potentially involving many different parts: moving or adding walls, installing floors and window coverings, and furnishing. While it is difficult to predict the exact cost, there are general factors to consider before starting the project.
Square footage

The size of your basement is a large factor. Some homeowners only remodel part of their basements to curb total remodeling costs. Any project with a large square footage will be more expensive as it means more materials and longer construction time.  Continue Reading

Materials

For a basement remodel, you’ll have to consider walls, ceilings, flooring, lighting, and insulation. If you’re adding a bathroom, then you’ll deal with installing countertops, cabinets, a toilet and even a shower or bathtub. All of these options mean various price ranges, depending on the types of materials selected. It’s important to figure out your budget and then choose the most important aspects to focus on for the remodel.

Electrical

Your basement will likely need to be fitted with additional wires to support more lights and electronics. You will need to hire a licensed electrician if you plan to install additional overhead light fixtures, outlets and other components that require additional wiring.

Plumbing

If you’re adding a bathroom, then you’ll need to hire a licensed plumber to install the necessary elements. The more you decide to install in your bathroom, the higher the bathroom remodeling costs will be. Adding a shower or bathtub might be necessary if you plan to use the basement as a guest suite. Otherwise a half bath may be perfect if the basement is used as a living or family room space.

Resale Value

Adding a bedroom or another living space to your home might cost you a lot by the end, but you will see a return on your investment when you go to resell your home. Having another room adds value to the house, which means someone will pay more for your home when it comes time to put it on the market.

Local Bedford Hills Farmers Markets | Bedford Hills Real Estate

ShopperMasthead_Update

Fresh Food from Local Sources – October 3rd-9th, 2013 Down to Earth Markets
RadishBunches_2011
What’s New and in Season This Week
Apples Alex’s Tomato Farm                                     Migliorelli Farm                                     Rexcroft Farm Taliaferro Farm Arugula John D. Madura Farms
Broccoli Mead Orchards
Brussel Sprouts Karl Family Farm Cauliflower Mead Orchards Colored Cauliflower John D. Madura Farms Cookies Meredith’s Bread
Cupcakes Meredith’s Bread
Dandelion Greens John D. Madura Farms
Decorative Gourds Migliorelli Farm
Frozen Kofta, Rajma, Saag,                                     & Samosa **$2 OFF when you buy four products from frozen/chutney selections!** Bombay Emerald Chutney Company
Gluten-Free Black & White Cookies Meredith’s Bread
Gluten-Free Rustic                                     Farmhouse Sliced Bread Meredith’s Bread
Goat Cheese Amazing Real Live Food Co.
Green Beans Rockland Farm Alliance
Herbs Rexcroft Farm
Hubbard Squash Mead Orchards
Lettuce Migliorelli Farm
Pears Migliorelli Farm  Pumpkins Mead Orchards Pumpkin Pie Meredith’s Bread
Pumpkin Spice Cake Bread Alone Quick Breads Meredith’s Bread
Romaine Lettuce Rexcroft Farm
Spicy Microgreens Rockland Farm Alliance
Summer Spinach

Learn how forests, wetlands reduce flood risks at seminar | Bedford Hills Homes

A seminar about the science of how forests and wetlands work to help limit damage from flooding will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Sept. 24 at the Desmond Fish Library, 472 Route 403, Garrison,

Admission is free, but registration is recommended.

Marilyn Wyman, team leader of the Natural Resources Program with Cornell University Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene Counties, will talk about the relationship between forests and flood mitigation: how forests slow the flood of water, increase filtration and absorption, and help to stabilize stream banks. She will also discuss some of the problems facing important forested land, including invasive species, fragmentation and the lack of regeneration.

Laura Heady, biodiversity outreach coordinator with the Hudson River Estuary Program and Cornell University’s Department of Natural Resources, will share her knowledge and research about wetlands: their role in maintaining clean water, controlling floodwaters and protecting shorelines and stream banks from erosion and property damage.

This seminar is part of a series sponsored by Cornell Cooperative Extension and Cornell University, in partnership with the state Department of Environmental Conservation’s Hudson River Estuary Program and New York State Water Resources Institute.  The Hudson Estuary Watershed Resiliency Project is an educational initiative designed to help municipal officials and stream-side landowners prepare for floods and climate change in the Hudson Valley.  Educators from the Cornell Cooperative Extension associations in Columbia, Greene, Dutchess, Orange and Putnam counties are teaching municipal personnel and landowners in target areas about flood preparedness.

 

http://northernwestchester.lohudblogs.com/2013/09/13/learn-how-forests-wetlands-reduce-flood-risks-at-sept-24-seminar/

 

10 Smart Tips for Creating, Marketing and Sharing Content on Twitter | Bedford Hills Real Estate

10 Smart Tips for Creating, Marketing and Sharing Content on Twitter

Twitter, the online texting service on steroids at only 140 characters is  often a challenge for those with a traditional marketing mindset. It’s more  about brutal brevity, smart succinctness and simple shortness than monstering  the masses with multi-media sensory overload.

It’s all about doing more with less.

Creating and then marketing content with Twitter is more about tempting the  click than revealing all your secrets at once. Twitter should be seen as  the teaser social network. It offers the promise of much more beyond the  link.

It’s unsophisticated ways are its charm and its fatal attraction for  celebrities who dare to tweet while under the influence of substances, emotion  or plain stupidity.

The Twitter torrent

Twitter is sometimes seen as an inbox when it is more like a fleeting torrent  that streams and screams its content past you. Often never to be seen again. It  pushes the “I don’t want to miss out” syndrome.

This led to the creation of Twitter tools like Hootsuite that organises  Tweets into lists for reading later. The corralling of Tweets into hashtag  categories can be an effective way to manage Twitter  that is sometimes  seen as similar to the ungainly management that is like herding cats.

3 key elements to a tweet

There are 3 core elements to a tweet. Get these right and you are on your way  to using Twitter well. They may seem simple but they are often poorly executed  or ignored.

So what do you need to hone, polish and include to make your tweets sing and  dance?

  1. Headline – tempt the reader to click the link. That’s its  job, nothing more nothing less.
  2. Links – It was 4 years ago that I watched a video that said “don’t waste a tweet without a link“. It sort of made sense.
  3. Hashtags – Drive those tweets into Twitter searches and  lists that are relevant. It is becoming the glue for social. This is the role  of a hashtag.

What are your goals?

Stumbling onto Twitter with poor intent can lead to wasted time and effort.  You need to have some specific goals in mind.

Some goals that are worth considering.

  • Do you want to drive more traffic to your blog, website or online store?..So  tweet and automate the content but not the conversation.
  • Is it sales you are after? Use tweets with links to landing pages that have  something to sell. Or tweet a coupon that can be claimed in-store or via a  Facebook page.
  • Are you wanting to connect and engage with influencers, customers and  prospects?…Tweet their content, offer to help.

There are more goals than this but bait the Twitter hook, get focused and  strategic and maybe those tweets will lead to blogging nirvana.

10 tips for Twitter content success

So here are 10 top tips for creating, marketing and sharing content on  Twitter.

Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/09/17/10-smart-tips-for-creating-marketing-and-sharing-content-on-twitter/#PiFDERoxr7D4eetb.99

The 4 Most Common Kitchen Remodeling Mistakes | Bedford Hills Real Estate

What’s the secret to a successful kitchen remodel? Knowing what mistakes to avoid! Almost everyone who has been through a remodel has a war story to share about what they’d do differently. Whether it’s the neighbor’s never-ending remodel, or the friend of a friend whose contractor couldn’t get along with the architect, keep your dream kitchen from becoming a nightmare by protecting yourself from these common first-timer mistakes.

 

 

The 4 Most Common Kitchen Remodeling Mistakes | Cultivate.

One-Foot-Wide Path to Hamptons Beach Sells for $120,000 | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Ordinarily, when Suffolk County, New York, takes over a small piece of land for back taxes, they like to sell it off cheap. As in, maybe ten bucks. But when the little piece of land is a path that leads to a beach in the Hamptons … well, things may take a different course, reports Newsday (“Bidder buys 1-foot-wide strip of Napeague land for $120,000,” by Mitchell Freedman).

Reports Newsday: “The battle royale began after Suffolk — which acquired the wooded ribbon of land in 2003 for nonpayment of taxes — tried to sell the property in Napeague to any of the six adjoining land owners for $10. Four of the owners didn’t respond to the offer to submit a bid but the other two were so interested the county set up a face-to-face auction and imposed a $1,500 minimum bid.”

Marc Helie (of Manhattan firm Chevalier Investments, LLC) and Kyle N. Cruz (a managing director at Centerbridge Partners LP in Manhattan) jumped quickly to bids of $5,000, $12,000, and $17,000. Cruz folded after Helie saw his $115,000 and raised it to $120,000.

The parties aren’t talking about what they saw in the slender property. But SuffolknCounty official Wayne R. Thompson commented: “I gathered one guy really did not want the other one walking over his property to the water.”

 

 

http://www.jlconline.com/home-prices/

Luxury builders better positioned in rising interest rate environment | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Market analysts remain confident in homebuilders, with luxury builders expected to lead as rising interest rates freeze out entry-level buyers, analysts say.

Sterne Agee analyst Jay McCanless believes investors should be looking to move-up and luxury homebuilders since households operating on modest incomes are generally the first to bail on housing when mortgage rates rise.

McCanless specifically highlighted the stocks of Ryland Homes (RYL) and Meritage Homes Corp. (MTH) as solid picks. “Our takeaway from this month’s data is to continue buying these names because the fundamental backdrop remains positive,” McCanless said of the two stocks.

The 30-year mortgage reached 4.80% this past week, the highest level obtained since April 2011, and more proof that overly competitive rates are slowly becoming a thing of the past.

Homebuilder stocks overall fell Friday after experiencing a positive run on the HW 30—HousingWire’s exclusive index for mortgage finance and housing stocks.

The dip in share prices followed a strong week for builders – many of which closed in positive territory on Thursday afternoon, only to fall a day later. On Thursday, D.R. Horton (DHI), Lennar Corp. (LEN) and Toll Brothers (TOL), saw their stock prices shoot up on positive gross domestic product and jobless claims data.

D.R. Horton alone rose 3.55% by close on Thursday, only to fall more than 2% by Friday afternoon. Lennar Corp. also fell more than 2% by market close, with Toll Brothers also down 1.86% by market close on Friday.

Despite a weaker close on the HW 30 index for the week, analysts still see homebuilders in a position to benefit from the nascent housing recovery.

“Average sales and inventory trends in the Top 25 markets we monitor continue to improve sequentially and month over month, and we view these indicators as the best barometers of housing demand in our builders’ collective footprints,” McCanless said.

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/26573-luxury-builders-better-positioned-in-rising-rate-environment

 

Installing Kitchen Cabinets Solo | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Next time you’re hanging around a bunch of carpenters  and the conversation starts to lag, ask whether it’s more efficient to hang kitchen wall cabinets with one or two people. I’ve done it both ways, and have found that I can do the job more efficiently alone. This may sound surprising. Without a helper, positioning overhead cabinets can be a real balancing  act, with the installer struggling to brace a cabinet with one    hand while reaching for a clamp with the other. Dropping the cabinet may mean ordering a costly replacement, and putting the  job on hold while you wait.  But it doesn’t have to be that way. Solo installation can be easy; all you need are a few simple brackets and clamps,    the right kind of fasteners, and a good organization system. If after reading this article you’re still not ready to go it alone, these tools and techniques will still make the job go    smoother for two people.

Uppers First

Many cabinet    installers put the base cabinets in first, then use them to    support the uppers. This sounds good, but I find it’s    inefficient. Not only must you reach over the base cabinets to    hang the uppers — a position my back loudly complains    about — but there’s a real danger that you’ll    damage the base cabinets as you work over them. Installing the    uppers first also leaves plenty of room to get under them to    make adjustments, and lets you stand next to the cabinet when    working — a position that my back seldom complains about.    The only problem is that you might forget about the uppers when    installing the lowers. You would be surprised how easy it is to    unthinkingly stand up and whack your head.     To temporarily support the upper cabinets, I use a set of    easy-to-build wall-support brackets. No high-tech gimmickry    here, just some plain old 1×4 pine that can be screwed or    nailed together in a few minutes (see Figure 1).

I make my brackets 52 inches long (a few inches shorter than    the common 54-inch upper height) and fasten them to the wall    with two screws each. I then place the cabinet on the brackets,    shim it to the proper height, and clamp it to the adjacent    cabinet. That leaves both hands free to screw the face frames    together and to fasten the cabinet boxes to the wall.