Tag Archives: Bedford Hills NY Homes

Bedford Hills NY Homes

Why You Shouldn’t Have to Jump Through Hoops to Get a Mortgage | #BedfordHills Real Estate

 

Ever hear stories in the break room about how difficult it is to get a mortgage? “I have to jump through so many hoops to get my mortgage, it’s ridiculous. They keep asking me for financial information, I swear I already gave it to them.”

Reality check: Obtaining a mortgage is no easy feat these days, no matter how great your credit score is or how good your lender is. By understanding the loan process, however, you can make sure you don’t have to jump through hoops, and more importantly, that your loan closes on time.

The Nature of Mortgage Lending

Lenders have to meet tight federal requirements on your ability to repay. This includes a thorough review and examination of your credit, debt, income and assets, as well as the property and occupancy of the home in which you plan to be financing. Furthermore, lenders operate in a world in which they usually only have a one-time chance to make how you look on paper favorable to the decision-maker, i.e. the underwriter, the person within the mortgage company who issues an approval.

Know this: The role of the lender’s underwriter is to mitigate risk for the mortgage company. They carry out this objective by making sure your full financial picture adheres to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines, which serve as the model for other lenders and loan programs.

The reason you’ll often hear stories about all the hoops to jump through is because the loan officer did not properly set the borrower’s expectations at the forefront of the loan process — and/or the loan was not put together correctly. Remember, it’s very difficult to create a second first impression — if your loan officer did not properly package the loan for the underwriter to thoroughly examine and subsequently sign off, then you may have a cumbersome process. That’s if the loan can be approved.

Here’s a typical mortgage loan process:

  1. Lender gathers your financial documentation.
  2. Loan officer drafts a cover letter to the underwriter laying out the framework mortgage scenario.
  3. Underwriter reviews the complete credit package, ensuring the documentation adheres to risk requirements.
  4. Underwriter issues a disposition — a new loan status, approved with conditions, or at times a suspense.

The ideal outcome is the loan officer provided all of the necessary documentation, preemptively demonstrating how the loan package meets all the lending guidelines of the particular program the borrower is applying for, such as a conventional loan, FHA loan, etc.

 

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http://finance.yahoo.com/news/why-shouldnt-jump-hoops-mortgage-100047265.html

 

Great Plains Road Gets a Great Big Pricechop | #BedfordHills Real Estate

 

291 Great Plains Road Southampton
24 images

Back when we first posted about this property, a little over two years ago, the asking price for the new-build was $18M. Now it’s just been pricechopped another $1.45M, down to $15.5M. We assume it’s just been price keeping this house from finding a buyer, because it’s rather lovely. It’s also huge: 12,000sf, nine bedrooms, 12.5 bathrooms. One drawback which we can’t figure out is the tininess of the kitchen in relation to the rest of the house; although there are separate prep and service kitchens in the lower level, we still think the main eat-in kitchen should be larger than it is. Other than that flaw, the house is in an elegant traditional style with beautiful bathrooms and a nice paneled office/den. The pool is stunning, as is the terrace and pool house, and there is a separate staff apartment above the garage. The grounds are 1.8 acres, which isn’t huge for this size of house but surely adequate, and the property is in a sought-after location in Southampton. Will the latest pricechop attract a buyer?

 

 

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http://hamptons.curbed.com/archives/2014/09/05/great_plains_road_gets_a_great_big_pricechop.php

 

Home price growth slows to 21-month low | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased 7.4% in July 2014 compared to July 2013, according to the July report from CoreLogic (CLGX) – a significant slowdown that continues the long-term trend and a 21-month low.

This change represents 29 months of consecutive year-over-year increases in home prices nationally. On a month-over-month basis, home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased 1.2% in July 2014 compared to June 2014.

Having all-but stalled during the previous three months, the CoreLogic measure of house prices posted a decent gain in July,” said Paul Diggle, property economist with Capital Economics. “But this is probably no more than a temporary reprieve, and we expect house price growth to continue slowing over the remainder of the year.”

At the state level, including distressed sales, only Arkansas posted a decline in July 2014 with 0.9-percent depreciation. A total of 11 states, plus the District of Columbia, reached new highs in the HPI dating back to January 1976 when the index started. These states are Alaska, Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Vermont.

 

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/articles/31220-home-price-growth-slows-to-21-month-low

New signs the housing market is approaching normal? | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

More fresh reads on housing this week as an industry group reported applications for home mortgages rose last week — driven by refinancing demand — and home improvement retailer Lowe’s came out with second quarter earnings, lowering its outlook on sales for the year.

Yahoo Finance Editor-in-Chief Aaron Task in the video above points to a “dichotomy in the housing market” as evidenced by the data from the Mortgage Bankers Association, which showed a seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications up 2.7% last week but a gauge of applications for home purchases falling 0.4%. The MBA points out a recent interest rate drop pushed mortgage rates lower.

In addition, with Lowe’s (LOW) reducing its sales forecast just a day after rival Home Depot reported better-than-expected earnings and raised its guidance, Task says there’s “something for bulls and bears alike” in the data. Task contends the difference between Lowe’s and Home Depot’s (HD) performance is likely retailer-specific versus reflective of the housing sector.

The bulls are also bolstered by data out Monday showing new home construction rose sharply in July to its highest level in eight months. The Commerce Department reported housing starts rose 15.7% to 1.09 million homes, beating expectations for 963,000.

 

 

 

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http://finance.yahoo.com/news/from-lowe-s-lowering-forecasts-to-the-uptick-in-refis–why-the-housing-market-is-approaching-normal-144631941.html

Down Payments Go Up for First-time Buyers | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

Fewer first-time homebuyers are finding a way to buy a house with a relatively low down payment as their options shrink and lenders’ down payment requirements rise.

From April through June 2014, about 67 percent of first-time buyers made a downpayment of 6 percent or less, down from 74 percent in 2009, according to the latest Realtor Confidence Index report from the National Association of Realtors.

One reason the average down payment is growing may be that more and more first-timers are choosing conventional over FHA financing, which requires only 3.5 percent down. Underwriting standards have been getting tighter (see More Loans Close Despite Tight Standards) and borrowers’ costs are going up. Tight underwriting standards are especially challenging for first-time buyers, who generally need mortgage financing with low downpayment terms, who may be paying off student debt, and who may have credit scores that are not top-notch . Cumulative increases in FHA insurance premiums over the past two years that translates to about $100 a month in additional out-of-pocket costs for borrowers also is also discouraging buyers from using FHA financing, according to Realtors participating in the survey. (For more on FHA’s cost increases, see First-time Buyers to Pay for FHA’s Cost Increases).

 

 

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http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2014/07/down-payments-go-up-for-first-time-buyers/

 

 

Existing home sales in June down 2.3% YOY | Bedford Hills Homes

 

Existing home sales declined 2.3% in June 2014 from June 2013, reaching an annual pace of 5 million sales for the first time since October 2013, while rising inventory continues to push overall supply towards a more balanced market, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Sales are at the highest pace since October 2013, but remain 2.3% below the 5.16 million-unit level a year ago.

The downward pressure on existing home sales comes from the West, where sales remain 7.3% below June 2013.

Total existing home sales, which are completed transactions that include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, climbed 2.6% from May 2014 to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.04 million.

Single-family home sales rose 2.5% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.43 million in June from 4.32 million in May, but remain 2.9% below the 4.56 million pace a year ago.

The median existing single-family home price was $224,300 in June, up 4.5% from June 2013.

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/articles/30734-existing-home-sales-in-june-down-23-yoy

Amazingly accurate Paul Krugman predictions from 2011 | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

Earlier today, HousingWire posted some coverage of the alleged circumstances around the pending resignation of New York Times columnist Paul Krugman from his professorship at Princeton University.

The main reason for Krugman’s decision?

The Forbes coverage points to Krugman being “thoroughly indicted and publicly eviscerated for intellectual dishonesty by Harvard’s Niall Ferguson in a hard-hitting three-part series in the Huffington Post, beginning here, and with a coda in Project Syndicate, all summarized at Forbes.com.”

Soon after posting, I received an email from a popular economics blogger, who took me to task for publishing the article in the first place.

“Ferguson has become a laughing stock among analysts (remember his declaration that public employment was soaring under Obama – ignoring the temporary Census hiring! ROFLOL),” they wrote.

“Ferguson has been wrong about everything from inflation to employment … one good historical book doesn’t make him an expert on everything,” they added.

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/30647-amazingly-accurate-paul-krugman-predictions-from-2011

Own a Modernist Home in an Architects’ Utopia for $1.4M | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

 

26 images

This circa-1948 International Style three-bedroom was designed and inhabited by Norman and Jean Fletcher, two founding members of The Architects Collaborative, or TAC, which was started in 1945 when Bauhaus mainstay Walter Gropius teamed up with a group of young architects. The very rectangular 3,400-square-foot abode is part of the planned community of Six Moon Hill in Lexington, Mass., an early TAC pursuit that saw most of the founding partners (Gropius excluded) building houses and starting families on 20 bucolic acres they bought together. The Fletcher residence, which was last sold in 2013 for $1.34M, has the same flat roof, vertical wood siding, and walls of glass shared by the original Six Moon Hill homes, and also shares their communal commitment to keeping bedrooms small and shared spaces expansive. Back in 2004, one resident told the Boston Globe that “things have changed since the ’50s and ’60s, when everyone was running in and out of everyone’s houses.” But at least a decade ago, the socialist spirit of the place lived on in “great community traditions, like snowstorm parties.” The ask, for admittance into this Bauhaus-inspired American experiment? $1.398M.

 

 

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/07/07/own-a-modernist-home-in-an-architects-utopia-for-14m.php

Detroit homes face foreclosure due to unpaid taxes | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

 

In January, the owners of 43,634 properties in Detroit owed the county more than $328 million combined in unpaid taxes and fees, the New York Times reported.

Since then, some have paid their debts, entered payment plans or qualified for assistance, but 26,038 properties continue to face foreclosure and many are headed for public auction, the news outlet said.

Most of the properties are residential, though 5 percent are former businesses. One-third of the properties are vacant lots.

Source: nytimes.com

Dramatic Glass Design With Penobscot Bay Views Asks $4.75M | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

31 images

Location: Camden, Maine
Price: $4,750,000
The Skinny: There’s a stereotypical assumption that glassy, modern homes are usually found in the warmer climes of states like California or Florida, but the northernmost regions of the country do have their own representatives of see-through housing—exorbitant heating costs notwithstanding. Philip Johnson’s Glass House and the Ben Rose house (of Ferris Bueller fame) come immediately to mind, and now New York architect Toshiko Mori has designed a dramatic glass home on the shores of Maine’s Penobscot Bay. The 3,500-square-foot glass-enclosed home’s windows put the dramatic seasonal changes of the Maine landscape on full display, from the lush green of summer to the stark, snowy vistas of the deep northern winter. Inside the light-filled, climate-controlled bubble of the home there are two bedrooms and three bathrooms, an indoor lap pool, and views of the bay from almost every room. The home, which also features landscape design by Michael Van Valkenburgh, is recently completed and is asking $4.75M.

 

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/06/25/dramatic-glassy-design-with-penobscot-bay-vistas-asks-10m.php