Tag Archives: Katonah NY Homes for Sale

Katonah NY Homes for Sale

Tread Lightly Around the Rickety Homes of Wilderness Dwellers | Katonah Real Estate

 

6antoinebruy6.jpgPhoto by Antoine Bruy via Art the System

From 2010 to 2013, French photographer Antoine Bruy spent his life threading through the remotest regions of Europe, capturing the daily existence of the ultimate in civilization-eschewing people. His Scrublands series tells the stories of individuals and families whose extreme brand of self-reliance translates to, among other things, the most rudimentary and ramshackle of homes—think “The Burrow” from Harry Potter, but without all the magical bits holding it together.

 

 

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/08/04/houses-wilderness-people.php

 

3 housing charts show we’re heading for an echo bubble | Katonah Real Estate

 

Charles Hugh Smith’s Of Two Minds blog is required reading, and in his post Thursday he details how after six years of central planning by the Federal Reserve – and let’s be honest, that’s exactly what it’s been – the economy is more fragile than it was before.

There’s strong evidence he’s not exaggerating.

“The central bank/state intervene in the economy in a dominant fashion, controlling functions such as interest rates by order of central authorities that were once set by decentralized, self-organizing markets,” he writes. “The central bank/state pick winners and losers: for example, the Too Big To Fail Banks (TBTF) were selected to win, as the central bank/state bailed out their private losses with public-taxpayer money. In effect, the central bank/state enrich cronies at the expense of everyone else.

“The central bank/state manipulate the nominally ‘free’ market to boost asset valuations as a way of enriching cronies who own most of the financial assets and as a public-relations charade to mask the failure of their picking winners and losers,” Smith says.

“In other words, in centrally planned economies, markets are not allowed to discover price–they exist only to reflect positively on central planners,” he says.

One of the many current drags on housing has been the more than 30 years of stagnant income growth, especially for the middle class – the bulk of homebuyers.

Smith argues the Fed’s policies are what are causing that stagnation.

“How about real median income? Central planning has greatly boosted the wealth and income of the financier winners picked by the Planners, but sadly this does not include wage earners, who have seen their inflation-adjusted earnings plummet,” Smith writes

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/1-rewired/post/30377-housing-charts-show-were-heading-for-an-echo-bubble

Inside a Vintage Store Owner’s Treasure-Strewn NYC Home | Katonah NY Real Estate

 

DrielyS-1857.jpgPhoto by Dreily S./Racked NY

Considering the fact that Ariana Boussard-Reifel owns the lovely Mode Marteau—a vintage store known for its high-end luxury brands and eclectic artisan goods—it should come as no surprise that her Victorian-era brownstone in NYC is a veritable treasure trove of artistic collages, turn-of-the-century furnishings, and jewelry used as home decor. Boussard-Reifel renovated the entire pad herself, outfitting the space in antiques, flea market finds, and even barstools found on the street. An ornate spiral staircase leads to the two-bedroom’s second floor, which offers “secret chambers in the walls” and an airy outdoor area further decorated in colorful, exotic pieces. “I like to keep all my internationally collected objects around me to keep my mind wandering,” says the artist, entrepreneur, and avid collector to Racked NY. “Sometimes I feel like my apartment looks more like The Explorer’s Club than a home.”

 

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/06/09/inside-a-vintage-store-owners-treasurestrewn-nyc-brownstone.php

Experts say Colorado homes selling within days in hot real estate market | Katonah Real Estate

 

Real estate and mortgage experts in Denver say houses across the state are selling in days, leaving few options for potential buyers to choose from.

Coldwell Banker Managing Broker Andy Sommer said metro Denver is a true hot market — attributable to job growth in the region and low supply — because those who already own likely refinanced and have a great rate and have no desire to leave.

“Many of our listings are sold within the first day and most of them with multiple offers,” said Sommer. “People are set. They’re financially sound, they don’t have to go anywhere and they are solid in their jobs.”

Jim Perkins, with First City Mortgage-Megastar Financial said northern Colorado is the same story.

“The most I’ve heard on one property was 16 offers on one house,” said Perkins.

For buyers who find something, experts say keep your eyes on it and make a move quickly, because if you don’t someone else will.

The most in-demand price range for buyers right now is anywhere in the $200,000 to $300,000 range — even up to $350,000.

If a home goes up for sale at that price and it’s priced right, experts said sellers are looking at an average of eight offers within two to three days.

 

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http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/experts-say-colorado-homes-selling-within-days-in-hot-real-estate-market04232014

House prices in Britain are rising again | Katonah Real Estate

 

AFTER their worst slump for a generation, house prices in Britain are rising again. In the 12 months to January 2014, the value of homes increased by 6.8% across the country and by 13% in London, according to the Office for National Statistics. In the capital, where cash-rich buyers have viewed property as shelter from economic turmoil in the euro zone and elsewhere, prices are now at an all-time high after adjusting for inflation. In his old job at Canada’s central bank, Mark Carney, the boss of the Bank of England, was accused of presiding over a housing bubble. But since the crisis the bank has a bag of new tricks it can use to steady the market (see print article).

With base rates at an all-time low, mortgage repayments as a percentage of income are near their historic lows for first-time buyers, according to the Council for Mortgage Lenders, a trade association. That has allowed homeowners to borrow ever larger amounts of money from the banks. If real wages continue to stagnate across the country, they may struggle when interest rates eventually start to rise.

Explanation:

This interactive chart allows readers to compare the ups and downs of Britain’s 13 regional housing markets as measured by the Office for National Statistics. The data begin in 1968 for nine regions and countries, extending to 12 from 1992 onwards. As well as prices in nominal and real terms (deflated by the retail prices index), we have presented affordability measures for first-time buyers compiled by the Council for Mortgage Lenders. There are five different measures:

• House-price index: in nominal terms, rebased to 100 at the select base date. Prices in real terms: the house-price index is deflated by retail prices and rebased at 100 to take account of the effects of inflation on purchasing power. • Mortage payments as % of income: first-time buyers’ median mortgage interest payments as % of income (at the time of housing completion).

 

 

 

 

http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2014/04/british-house-prices

13 riskiest cities for natural disasters | Katonah NY Real Estate

 

Before you can fully enjoy the sunshine of summer, you have to get through the April showers, in addition to any other natural disaster that might come through your neck of the woods.

The weather is a common variable that plays into the success of housing, with this year being no exception.

“During the winter and early spring unusually cold temperatures and frequent, powerful snow and rain storms in various markets and even regions (particularly the Midwest) deterred potential homebuyers and delayed construction activities,” Fitch Ratings said.

Back in January, HousingWire published a list of the top 10 cities to avoid natural disasters, but if you are not fortunate enough to live in one of those weather havens, you still might be well off…unless you live in one of these cities.

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/29599-riskiest-cities-for-natural-disasters

The best real estate plays in 25 years | Katonah Real Estate

 

The global real estate market in 2039 will be city-centric, with an increased focus on Asia and other emerging markets, and more investment by the public, according to senior executives at some of the world’s largest investment firms.

The big money sees China, India and other Asian markets as drivers of real estate growth—and investment opportunities.

“Asia will be the future of real estate over the next 25 years,” said Jonathan Gray, who manages about $79 billion for clients as global head of real estate for the Blackstone Group. “The largest investment markets will be in China, India and other countries in the region given their rate of growth. Both public and private real estate markets will be much, much bigger.”

A common criticism of Asian economic growth is the relative disregard for the environment. That concern could be a long term investment opportunity, such as taking advantage of high pollution in China, according to LaSalle Investment Management, a $47.6 billion real estate investment firm.

“Although China will be switching over to renewables by 2039, concerns about unhealthy air will be so intense after two decades of respiratory diseases that they could likely pioneer buildings with filtered air, oxygen supplements and artificial light to replace lost sunlight,” said Jacques Gordon, LaSalle’s head of global research and strategy.

Key to Asia’s rise in real estate will be the increasing importance of its urban centers, a global theme.

 

 

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101473257?__source=yahoo%7Cfinance%7Cheadline%7Cheadline%7Cstory&par=yahoo&doc=101473257%7CThe%20best%20real%20estate%20play

Last Year’s Foreclosures Hit Lowest Total Since 2007 | Katonah NY Real Estate

 

In the past year, the national foreclosure rate declined each month by at least 20 percent from where it had been the year before, according to the CoreLogic Market National Foreclosure Report from December. Additionally, the 12-month sum of completed foreclosures hit its lowest level since 2007.

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The progress is encouraging ? about 837,000 homes in the United States were in a stage of foreclosure in December, down from almost 1.2 million in December 2012 ? but that’s still a lot of homeowners struggling to pay for their homes.

CoreLogic’s report puts the serious delinquency rate among U.S. mortgages at 5 percent in December, its lowest level since November 2008. Quarterly data from Experian-Oliver Wyman Market Intelligence Reports and Experian’s IntelliView tool also show a smaller share of mortgages were delinquent. In the final quarter of 2013, the percentage of mortgages that were more than 90 days past due dropped from the previous year’s and the previous quarter’s levels, the reports said. The delinquency rate declined to 2.52 percent, down from 2.74 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012 and 3.26 percent at the same time in 2011.

?Clearly, 2013 was a transitional year for residential property in the United States,” Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO of CoreLogic, said in the foreclosure report. ”Higher home prices and lower shadow inventory levels, together with a slowly improving economy, are hopeful signals that we are turning a long-awaited corner. The housing market should continue to heal in 2014, but we expect progress to remain very slow.?

Mortgage originations had been increasing year over year since the first quarter of 2012, but that momentum faltered in the third quarter of 2013, when new loans declined by about 110,000 from the previous year, according to Experian. Fourth-quarter data isn’t yet available.

 

http://www.realtor.com/news/last-years-foreclosures-hit-lowest-total-since-2007/

 

Are mortgage servicers back to their old tricks? | Katonah Real Estate

 

The housing crisis of 2007-2008 pummeled home prices and tossed millions of people out of their homes because they couldn’t make their mortgage payments. Home prices and sales have rebounded and foreclosures have declined since then, but now there are signs that the recovery may be faltering.

The New York Times reported this week that the same abuses by lenders and mortgage servicers that led to massive foreclosures during the housing crisis are creeping back into the market.

Steven Antonakes, the deputy director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, told an industry meeting of servicers Wednesday that he remains “deeply disappointed by the lack of progress the mortgage servicing industry has made” despite “some improvements,” according to American Banker.

David Stevens, chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association, which hosted that meeting, told The Daily Ticker that he can’t speak directly to the Times story but he’s “sure this new set of allegations…will be looked into” and that they reflect “past practice.”

 

 

http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/new-rules-for-mortgage-servicers–will-they-really-protect-borrowers–132212701.html