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Bedford Hills Homes

Bing Video Search Gets Fancy New Features For A Better User Experience | Bedford Hills Realtor

Bing Video Search Gets Fancy New Features For A Better User Experience

Bing are giving their video search results a much  needed makeover and users of the site will find larger video thumbnails, extra  search filters and pop out hover previews part of the new package. In an  announcement via their blog, the company promised the new  streamlined navigation would lead to a better browsing experience for the video  content it pulls in via YouTube and Vimeo as well as from Dailymotion, Hulu, Vevo, CBS,  MTV and MSN amongst others.

Bing wants to provide a “completely re-imagined search experience” for video  so let’s take a look at some of the new upgrades:

Improved Navigation and Video Overlay Features

The new video overlay tweak allows users to multitask by continuing to browse  through their search results whilst currently watching a video. Bing have also  introduced a side bar of ‘related videos’ to provide the user with more relevant  results.

Larger Video Thumbnails For Easier Recognition

New larger thumbnails should make it much easier for users to scan through  videos until they find the one they want.

Pop-out Hover Previews Keep Users On Bing Longer

Rather than take you off site to see whether the video you have chosen is the  one you want, the new pop out hover preview allows you to see just that. Bing  have provided much more information regarding the video (favicons from the top  sites, descriptions, view counts etc). There is also a new volume control  feature.

 

 

Source:  Bing Video Search Gets Fancy New Features For A Better User Experience

 

http://www.reelseo.com/bing-video-search-new-features/#ixzz2eOvjJPKw

Price appreciation picks up in emerging real estate markets | Bedford Hills Real Estate

The release of the latest S&P/Case-Shiller Home Prices Indices turned out to be anticlimatic as rising mortgage rates spooked the market a bit, causing home price appreciation to subside a bit in key markets.

On the other hand, markets once considered ‘struggling’ saw their prices soar.

The June S&P Case-Shiller report, while still impressive, fell slightly showing a 12.1% gain in home prices year-over-year. That is still comparable to the 12.2% annual home price gain recorded in May — the largest gain recorded since March 2006.

“Case-Shiller put up some big numbers in June, but more current data shows the pace of monthly home value appreciation slowed in both June and July, likely as a result of mortgage rate increases,” said Zillow (Z) Chief Economist Dr. Stan Humphries. “We expect even the Case-Shiller index will begin to show this trend when its July data finally comes out in September, but it will be more muted since the index is looking at a three-month average.”

There are two main drivers in the housing industry right now: consumer demand and interest rates, said Quicken Loans chief economist Bob Walters. “Despite rising rates and higher home prices, consumers continue to buy. Today’s 7.1% increase in the second quarter suggests the housing market is improving, supporting the U.S. economic recovery,” he explained.

But what really stood out to some observers is how once outperforming cities are starting to see home prices subside.

“What we are seeing is that the cities that are spiking the most are not Washington D.C., which is really interesting,” said Anthony Sanders, professor of finance in the school of management at George Mason University. Sanders implied that once thriving markets have since leveled off.

On the other hand, markets once doing far worse are starting to see substantial improvement.

Atlanta saw the most home price growth, up 3.4% in June, with Chicago close behind with a 3.32% gain. Las Vegas and San Diego followed with 2.8% and 2.79% monthly gains, respectively. Sanders runs his own blog in which he goes deeper into the data. Washington D.C. grew at a more mild 1%.

The emergence of once distressed markets became clear as cities like Las Vegas saw rapid price appreciation.

“In terms of annual rates of change, San Francisco lost its leadership position with Las Vegas showing the highest post-recession gain of 24.9%,” said David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

According to Sanders, this is an indication that speculators are starting to pull out of the West Coast cities and move into markets that have yet to reach such high home prices. “It has to be investors driving this up,” he said. “This is an unusual switch.”

 

 

Price appreciation picks up in emerging real estate markets | 2013-08-27 | HousingWire.

Classic Harborfront ‘Cottage’ on Vinalhaven Listed for $3.6M | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Location: Vinalhaven, Maine
Price: $3,600,000
The Skinny: Built in 1904 as one in a long line of Maine “cottages,” Stonecropboasts 11 bedrooms and 4.4-acre property that spills downhill to a dock on the edge of the Fox Island Thoroughfare, the channel that separates Vinalhaven from neighboring North Haven. Joined on the property by a pair of historic boathouses, the main shingle-style cottage includes plenty of historic charm, with a stone fireplace, ceiling beams, and “one-of-a-kind beautiful Japanese-style wall panels.” Worryingly, the listing includes no photos of the kitchen or bathrooms, suggesting that after the buyers are done forking over $3.6M for the property, they should be ready to spend thousands more to bring it up to date.

 

 

Classic Harborfront ‘Cottage’ on Vinalhaven Listed for $3.6M – House of the Day – Curbed National.

Bedford Hills NY Weekly Real Estate Report | RobReportBlob

 

Bedford   Hills NY Weekly Real Estate Report9/5/2013
Homes for sale34
Median Ask Price$1,357,500.00
Low Price$289,000.00
High Price$30,000,000.00
Average Size4501
Average Price/foot$569.00
Average DOM154
Average Ask Price$3,201,112.00

What $16.95M buys in Honolulu | Bedford Hills Real Estate

The five priciest listings on Oahu include a four-bedroom beachfront home in Honolulu that sold for $25 million in 1998.

Now it’s on the market for the bargain price of $16.95 million.

 

Source: honolulumagazine.com.

 

 

read more…

 

 

http://www.inman.com/wire/what-16-95m-buys-in-honolulu/#sthash.2OEr6wuV.dpuf

Monday Morning Cup of Coffee: Housing will take a beating | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Monday Morning Cup of Coffee is a quick look at the news coming across the HousingWire weekend desk, with more coverage to come on bigger issues.

The mooted Federal Reserve tapering of its asset purchases has the capital markets on tenterhooks. So much so, a report in the Financial Times suggests investors are scurrying for riskier parts of the debt markets.

That means junk bonds. Essentially the Fed’s attempt to stabilize the markets may actually harm as those investors exit safe havens as the government does as well.

It’s that old chestnut again: Rising mortgage interest rates and the upward creep of home prices is taking a toll on housing affordability. That is the news from USA Today Sunday report hinged on data from John Burns Real Estate Consulting and Zillow.

The problem is grounded in six key housing markets, five of them in California, and all of them on the Western Seaboard, the newspaper reports. In these cities — which, of course, include San Francisco — home prices have risen dramatically in tandem with the lauded housing recovery.

Furthermore, the cost of housing in 30 of 250 metropolitan areas will exceed historical averages for affordability and the average mortgage rate will pass the dreaded 5% mark.

The Washington Post reported on a weighty potential problem for the wider U.S. economy: the “outsize” influence of the graying population on the housing economy.

According to a study conducted by the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., quoted by the newspaper, baby boomers in the Washington, D.C., area make up just 26% of the total area population but account for 47% of the region’s homeowners.

That could be viewed as a microcosm, a kind of allegory for a nation facing a coming calamity — widely written about and apparently occurring in a number of regions across the country, far outside the Beltway and its close confines.

The debate over eminent domain continues apace. Of late, Richmond, Calif., has been ground zero over planned use of the controversial measure.

The city government intends to put the legal mechanism to work to seize troubled mortgages within its limits from bondholders — under the pretext of saving communities. In response, the municipality is facing a legal fight from investors. The Federal Housing Finance Agency, guardian of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, may also take adverse action.

But one voice emerged late last week in support of the Richmond eminent domain plan in a prominent financial organ. Stephen Mihm, associate professor of history at the University of Georgia, wrote a column for Bloomberg claiming the Richmond case had merit, unlike, he wrote, with other examples where state authorities had excessively used eminent domain powers. He argues in favor of a train of thought that says by using eminent domain to keep homeowners in their properties, the risk of default likely would decrease, thereby benefiting the mortgage investors.

“In fact, the city’s plan relies not on a novel use of eminent domain but on one endorsed by the conservative Supreme Court of 1935,” wrote Mihm.

Some more negative press for foreclosure attorneys: The Denver Post carried a report alleging a number of homeowners in Colorado had become the victims of large legal bills in relation to “phantom court cases against them.”

“The Post found 126 foreclosures since January 2012 in which homeowners in 11 counties were told by county public trustees to pay the charges associated with the filings or the foreclosure would continue,” the newspaper reported. “But, in fact, no foreclosure lawsuit was filed.”

Fannie and Freddie appear to be continuing their befuddlement of different points on the investment vehicle spectrum.

 

 

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Monday Morning Cup of Coffee: Housing will take a beating

Recovery Lags in Baltimore, Philadelphia, Rockford, Fresno, Stockton | Bedford Hills Homes

Markets in northern Maryland, southeast Pennsylvania and downstate Illinois are lagging the furthest behind in the recovery while metro area markets in upstate New York, southwest Florida and the Bay Area of Northern California are leading the housing recovery, according to RealtyTrac’s Housing Market Recovery Index.

The market recovery index in Baltimore was lowest among the 100 major metro areas ranked in the report thanks to underperforming numbers for all factors except for underwater percentage and cash purchase percentage. Although home prices have risen 9 percent from the bottom in Baltimore, that is short of the 19 percent increase nationally. Similarly, foreclosure activity was down 26 percent from its peak in Baltimore, but that decrease is well below the 65 percent decrease nationally. The Maryland metro of Hagerstown-Martinsburg also posted one of the five lowest recovery index scores.

Two metros in southeastern Pennsylvania posted total index scores that were in the five lowest among the 100 major metro areas ranked in the report: Allentown and Philadelphia. Although both had below-average percentages of underwater homeowners and distressed sales, both also underperformed in the areas of home price increases, foreclosure decreases, institutional investor and cash purchases, and unemployment rate.

An 11 percent unemployment rate helped place Rockford, Ill., among the five lowest recovery index scores. The downstate Illinois metro area also underperformed in the areas of underwater homeowners, decrease in foreclosure activity, percentage of distressed sales and cash sales, and rebounding home prices.

Three California metros posted recovery index scores among the 20 lowest despite above-average increases in home prices: Fresno, Visalia-Porterville, and Stockton. Unemployment rates above 12 percent, along with above-average percentages of underwater homeowners and distressed sales, lowered the index scores in these Central Valley California cities.

Four Florida cities posted recovery index scores among the 20 lowest: Pensacola-Ferry Bass-Brent, Tallahassee, Ocala, and Port St. Lucie. All four cities had above-average percentages of underwater homeowners along with below-average participation by institutional investors.

 

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http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/08/recovery-lags-in-baltimore-philadelphia-rockford-fresno-stockton/

Connecticut increases protection for homeowners against foreclosure | Bedford Hills Real Estate

According to Stamford, Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy signed a new housing bill into law that will increase homeowners protection from foreclosure.

“It will help keep more people in their homes, it will help the homeowner, it will help the lender and help the neighborhoods,” Malloy said during his first bill-signing in his hometown.

                    Source: Stamford

Builder confidence reaches highest level in eight years | Bedford Hills Homes

Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes rose three points to an August index score of 59, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index.

This is the fourth consecutive monthly gain, bringing the index to its highest level in nearly eight years, the association noted. Any number over 50 suggests the majority of builders view conditions in a particular segment of the market as “good”.

“Firming home prices and thinning inventories of homes for sale are contributing to an increased sense of urgency among those who are in the market,” NAHB Chairman Rick Judson said.

“Builder confidence continues to strengthen along with rising demand for a limited supply of new and existing homes in most local markets,” noted NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe.

“However, this positive momentum is being slowed by the ongoing headwinds of tight credit and low supplies of finished lots and labor,” he added.

Additionally, two of the three components of the index posted gains in August.

The component gauging current sales conditions increased three points to 62.

Meanwhile, the index gauging sales expectations in the next six months gained a single point to 68.

The traffic index for prospective buyers stayed frozen at 45.

 

 

Builder confidence reaches highest level in eight years | 2013-08-15 | HousingWire.

10 superpowers of the world’s greatest social media marketer | Bedford Hills Real Estate

When I was little I so wanted to be a superhero. I couldn’t wait to get home from school to watch cartoons. I marveled at the mild-mannered Clark Kent’s quick change from reporter to Man of Steel and the amazing Wonder Woman with her ability to miraculously foil the bad guys without ever breaking a sweat. I haven’t forgotten my dream, although truthfully I never imagined it would require superhuman feats to be successful in life. Juggling friends, family, health and career just to enter the game.

What’s become more and more apparent in the world of online marketing is that the game has changed and we all need to become superheroes if we want to be heard above the noise. Now that everyone is a publisher, it’s not enough to create content and send out a few tweets: Your Spidey sense has to kick in, allowing you to really listen to your audience, create compelling content, and share it with an audience that you’ve taken the time to nurture.

While we may not be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, we still have the potential to do great things. Here’s a good place to start. Let me know what superpowers you think are required to be a great marketer and I’ll add them to the list.

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/next/10-superpowers-of-the-worlds-greatest-social-media-marketer/#sthash.4V2oly07.dpuf

 

 

10 superpowers of the world’s greatest social media marketer | Inman News.