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NY housing market posts strong third quarter | Katonah NY Real Estate

The New York state housing market posted its fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year home sales gains in the third quarter. The 3Q statewide median sales price increased by 4.4% and the number of pending sales grew for its fifth consecutive quarter, according to the New York State Association of Realtors.

NYSAR CEO Duncan Mackenzie said year-to-date home sales are up 6.2% and pending sales are up 15% compared to the year-ago period. The year-to-date median sales price of $215,000 is unchanged from a year ago.

“As we enter the final quarter of the year, New York state’s housing market continues to move in a positive direction as closed and pending sales continue to increase compared to a year ago,” he said. “While we have a seasonal market in our state, which tends to slow down in the fall and winter months, we are positioned to exceed the 2011 closed sales total and project that we will do so.”

Click the image below to see the full report.

The state reported 27,203 closed sales in 3Q, up 4.6% from the year-ago period.  The year-to-date closed sales reached 69,144, an increase of 6.2% from the same period last year.

“There are many positives in the 2012 housing market for buyers who are seeking to move into their new home before the end of the year including all-time low mortgage rates, which were driven even lower by the Fed’s recent mortgage purchases,” said MacKenzie. “Sellers also continue to see improvements as they received nearly 95% of their list price in the third quarter, aided by shrinking inventory levels.”

Higher Interest Rates Expected from End of Fed Bond Buying | Katonah NY Real Estate

Mortgage rates and other long-term interest rates are bound to rise measurably in the second half of this year, if not earlier.  The Federal Reserve has been aggressive in buying U.S. government bonds as part of Quantitative Easing and has tried to hold down the long-term rates with Operation Twist.  But both measures will soon be coming to an end.  Furthermore, there will inevitably be a reversal of these policies at some point, which means the Federal Reserve will be selling back the bonds it had already purchased and sitting on the balance sheet, probably at the same time the U.S. government will continue to sell its bonds to cover the deficit spending.  That means someone has to buy the flood of U.S. government bonds.  If there is a lack of investors, then higher interest rates will be required to induce buyers to step forward.  Higher offered interest rates also mean higher mortgage rates as well.

A quick review of recent history will help better understand why rates will move higher.  In the aftermath of the financial market crisis from 2008 the Federal Reserve purchased roughly $1.6 trillion in U.S. government debt.  Without this purchase, the interest rates would have been higher since relying on purchases solely from private bond investors and foreign governments such as China and Saudi Arabia would have been insufficient.  The U.S. Federal Reserve in essence printed money to hand over $1.6 trillion to the U.S. Treasury to meet its borrowing needs.  At the time, inflation was not an issue and if anything there was a growing concern over future deflation, a period of falling consumer prices.  The buying of government debt by the Federal Reserve was known as Quantitative Easing.  Two rounds were pursued, thereby giving the name QE1 and QE2.  A third round appears out of the question because the economy is healing and growing, and with inflation above the Fed’s preferred rate of 2 percent.

In addition to Quantitative Easing, the Federal Reserve implemented something known as Operation Twist.  The goal for this (given some harsh critics, like the Presidential candidate Ron Paul, who have accused the Federal Reserve of printing too much money), was to not to print money, but simply to re-shift the type of bonds that the Federal Reserve would hold.  The Fed sold off some of its short-term U.S. Treasury bills it already had in its balance sheet to the market and thereby took in cold hard cash already in circulation (not freshly printed ones).  It then used this cash to buy long-term U.S. Treasury bonds of 10 and 30 years in length, thereby recirculating this cash back into the market.  So the total amount of the cash remained the same from the broader economy point of view but the composition of type of bonds held by the Federal Reserve was towards longer-term bonds and away from shorter-terms ones  In essence, this helped push down the long-term bond yields.  Automatically, this pushed down the 30-year fixed rate mortgages.

But these measures of Quantitative Easing and Operation Twist are coming to an end in a couple of months.  The bottom line being who will now buy incoming the long-term government debt.  After all, the U.S. is running a very high budget deficit and needs to continue to borrow heavily for the foreseeable future.  In addition, the Federal Reserve may need to unwind what it did (by selling off government bonds it had purchased) if inflation picks up.  Even more government bonds will need to be absorbed.  Very hard to see how this can be done without offering higher interest rates.

The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage is around 4.0 percent today.  It will rise to 4.4 percent by December.  It will then reach 5.2 percent by the end of 2013.  This projection is being done with fingers crossed that it will not be even higher.

Buying Title Insurance in Katonah NY | Katonah NY Homes

title ins by robert paulTo understand title policy insurance in America, let’s look at chain-of-title and how title companies search the public records. Title insurance companies aren’t really concerned with where dinosaurs once roamed, whether our ancestors trekked across the Bering Straight or where American Indian tribes settled. Title searches begin with when the United States government stole the land, I mean claimed it — from the U. S. patent — and move forward from that point.

Because humans are involved in recording deed transfers and plotting land parcels, a lot can go wrong. You want title insurance because it will protect you against defects and human error.Property Searches and Public RecordsDivision of Land

Early deeds involved large chunks of land known as Townships.

Townships contain 36 sections and are six miles by six miles.

Sections measure one mile by one mile and contain 640 acres.

Half of a section is 320 acres.

1/4 of a section is 160 acres.

1/4 section of 1/4 section is 40 acres.

An acre is 43,560 square feetTitle Search Basics

Title searches start with the most recent deed, searching the grantee’s name (the person now holding title) backwards in time, until the deed when the grantee acquired the property is located.

That grantor’s name is then searched backwards in time in the grantee’s book to find when the grantor acquired title as a grantee.

This process continues, and over time, the property description involves larger and larger parcels of land.

Eventually, the searcher finds the U. S. Patent.Other Factors Affecting Title

Deeds establish chain-of-title, but sometimes those chains are broken. In addition, title searchers also look for reconveyances (proof that the encumbrances are paid off), and they look for easements, rights-of-way, cc&rs, other elements affecting title to the property. Here are more records that are searched to piece title together:

Marriage records

Death certificates

Tax salesTitle Insurance Coverage

Depending on the title company, consumers can choose among a variety of options, but the top three choices are Owners, Lender’s and Extended Coverage.

Basic Owner’s Title Policy Coverage:

Clear title to the property

Incorrect signatures on documents

Forgery, fraud

Defective recordation

Restrictive covenants

Encumbrances or judgments

Basic Lender’s Title Policy Coverage:

Mechanic’s liens and unrecorded liens

Unrecorded easements and access rights

Defects and other unrecorded documents

Extended Owner’s Coverage

Building permit violations from previous owners

Subdivision maps

Covenant violations from previous owners

Living trusts

Structure damage from mineral extractions

Variety of encroachments and forgeries after title insurance is issuedWho Pays For Title Policy Insurance?

This depends on your local custom.

It can differ from county to county, but it is also negotiable in the purchase offer.

Sometimes sellers and buyers split the fee for the owner’s policy.

Typically, the buyer pays for the lender’s coverage.How Long Are Title Policies Good For?

Forever, theoretically. If you are planning to resell the property within a couple years, ask your title company about “binder” coverage. Most companies will sell you a binder policy for 10% more. A binder is good for two years, often can be extended beyond that time, and the fee charged for the new buyer’s policy will be the difference between what you bought the property for and the price at which it sold. In other words, you will get a credit for the amount of coverage you purchased under your own Owner’s Title policy.How Often Are Title Policy Insurance Premiums Paid?

Once. The fee is due when you buy. You will never pay it again. Title policy insurance is the best insurance policy you can ever buy.Property transfers were first recorded alphabetically in separate Grantor and Grantee books.

The books are heavy to lift and dusty.

County records are often maintained at local courthouses or the Clerk of Registrars.

Today, most records are stored on the computer.

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Katonah Luxury Homes

Katonah NY Weekend Real Estate Report | RobReportBlog | Katonah NY Homes

71    homes currently available

$940,000    median price

$15,000,0000    high price

$379,000     low price

$348   average price per foot

193    average days on market

3776   average size

Katonah NY Homes

Katonah Luxury Homes

How Tough Is It To Get A Mortgage? | Katonah NY Homes

Katonah NY  Residential Real Estate  |   RobReportBlog

 

mortgages by robert paul

mortgages by robert paul

Facebook’s next big media move: Comments | The Social Media Realtor | Katonah Homes

Facebook is planning to launch a third-party commenting system in a matter of weeks, according to multiple sources familiar with the new product. This new technology could see Facebook as the engine behind the comments system on many high-profile blogs and other digital publications very soon.

The company is actively seeking major media companies and blogs to partner with it for its launch, part of a bigger media industry move spearheaded in part by the recent hires of Nick Grudin and Andy Mitchell, media business development executives with respective track records at Newsweek and The Daily Beast.

Representatives from Facebook were not immediately available for comment.

Facebook, of course, is already very present in blog comments. Currently, a digital publishing outlet–say, a blog or a newspaper’s Web site–can integrate Facebook’s developer API and allow users to “connect” to their Facebook accounts, or can build in “Social Comments” in a widget of related messages. Often, users can post alerts on their Facebook walls announcing that they’ve commented, or can have a “Social Comment” turned into a status message. The new commenting product is a significantly deeper expansion of this, according to sources. Facebook will be able to power the entire commenting system–handling the log-in and publishing, cross-promoting comments on individuals’ Facebook walls, and possibly even promoting them as well on media outlets’ own “fan” pages. Undoubtedly, the Facebook “like” button will be deeply integrated as well.

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-20030106-36.html#ixzz1CjJ6BgFt