Tag Archives: Katonah NY Realtor
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Katonah NY Buyers and sellers may need an appraisal contingency| Inman News for Katonah NY Real Estate buyers
Tool offers buyers deposit protection when canceling deal
Ever since Fannie Mae introduced new residential appraisal guidelines a couple of years ago, some transactions haven’t closed because the listing didn’t appraise for the price agreed to in the purchase contract.
There was a time when market value was defined as the price a willing and able buyer would pay and a seller would accept — neither party acting under duress. It would appear that market value is now determined by underwriting requirements, which tend to be conservative and in some cases are not in synch with market realities.
In one case, there were two offers on a property in a popular Oakland, Calif., neighborhood. Both offers were for the same price and for more than the asking price. The appraiser was from out of the area and apparently out of touch with the subtleties of the local market.
The house in question was located on one of the most popular streets in the neighborhood. One of the comparable sales was on a nearby busy thoroughfare. Another was a house that needed $40,000 of foundation work. They were not good comparables.
The appraiser appraised the house for less than the purchase price, even though she knew that there were multiple offers at the purchase price.
HOUSE HUNTING TIP: Buyers who need a large loan amount in order to complete the purchase are at risk if they don’t include an appraisal contingency in the purchase contract. An appraisal contingency protects buyers if the appraised value is less than the price they’ve agreed to pay for the property.
Let’s say the purchase price is $500,000. The buyers need a mortgage for 90 percent of the purchase price, or $450,000. The house appraises for $475,000. If the buyers qualify financially, the lender will give them a mortgage, but only for 90 percent of the appraised value, or $427,500. The buyers need to come up with an extra $22,500 to close the deal.
If the contract includes an appraisal contingency, the buyers can usually withdraw from the contract without penalty, depending on how the contract is written. Without an appraisal contingency, the buyers’ deposit would be at risk if they backed out of the contract because the property didn’t appraise for the purchase price.
Sometimes buyers and sellers will renegotiate the price in order to keep the transaction moving forward. To bridge the gap, the sellers might reduce their price and the buyers could make a larger down payment if they have the extra cash.
Another strategy is to have a second appraisal done and hope it comes in higher. However, the second appraiser could value the property at a lower price.
Buyers purchasing in a multiple-offer competition might choose not to include an appraisal contingency in their contract under certain circumstances. For instance, an all-cash buyer, who doesn’t need a mortgage to close the deal, doesn’t need an appraisal contingency for protection. He or she has enough cash to close without the help of a lender.
Some all-cash buyers don’t want to buy a home unless it appraises for the price they’ve agreed to pay. In this case, an appraisal contingency should be included in the contract.
Buyers who have lost out in competition multiple times in the hot niche markets around the country might make an offer without an appraisal contingency. The larger the cash down payment, the less risk involved.
For example, if you’re buying a house for $1.5 million and you want a $729,750 mortgage, the house would have to appraise very low before the lender would give you a lower loan amount than you need.
A lender who’s willing to give you a mortgage for 75 percent of the purchase price will lend $729,750 as long as the house appraises for $973,000 or above.
THE CLOSING: The risk factor is low.
Katonah NY Real Estate Market wants to understand real estate walkaways from mortgages| Inman News for Katonah NY Homes
Mood of the Market
More than one person I know is walking away from their home. Strategically defaulting — meaning, they can afford to make their mortgage payments, but have decided to stop, stay in the home, and allow the bank to take it in foreclosure, because the home is now worth much less than they paid for it — and much less than they owe on it.
What they once saw as unthinkable is more and more socially acceptable. In some cases and some circles, strategic defaults are even viewed as an admirable guerrilla tactic and smart financial decision made in denial of the core, emotional desire every human has to hold on to a home.
And these strategic defaults are socially contagious. I know one set of homeowners who recently reunited with several other couples they hadn’t seen in years, and realized that three of the four were in the process of walking away.
The data bears this out: a recent study conducted jointly by professors at the University of Chicago and Northwestern University found that homeowners who know someone who has walked away from their home become 86 percent more likely to also walk away.
At the same time, a number of people I know are buying homes now, trying to take advantage of rock-bottom pricing and mortgage interest rates. One of these couples is buying a unit, and asked my advice on what to look for in their homeowners association documents.
I briefed them on the woeful state of many HOAs right now, and the ripple effect an insolvent HOA can have, first making the units virtually impossible to finance, minimizing the available pool of buyers to those who have cash, and finally, decimating the value of the association’s units.
In her post-bubble voice, this uber-professional, responsible mother who earns six figures and has a 740 credit score, said, “We understand. We’ve decided to put 3.5 percent down, and we’re buying the place for a couple hundred thousand dollars below what we sold for three years ago. We plan to stay put for the next 20 years-plus, but if we need to sell and can’t because of HOA issues, we’ll just walk away.”
And as she said it, I had my own real estate awakening of sorts.
We can coin cute turns of phrase to lighten up the conversation, like calling frugal women “recessionistas” all we want, but let’s face facts: This generation of real estate consumers has seen and lived through a brutal market.
And there are elements of that brutal business that have changed the way they will view and interact with and make decisions about real estate — forever.
Data shows that walking away from a home and a mortgage is the very last resort, even for the most distressed homeowner. Yet this generation of real estate consumers now knows that it is a last-ditch option, if and when things do ever get that tough.
And, as the Chicago-Northwestern study found, consumers have seen people do it and not die, or get sued (banks can and do sue strategic defaulters, in a small number of cases and places where the law allows), or burst into flame from the immorality of it all.
On the upside, this reflects that this generation of homebuyers and owners is less bullied by corporate propaganda touting the immorality of strategic defaults, as put out by corporate entities that regularly, strategically default on their own loan obligations as a matter of good business.
This generation will be more prone to make financial decisions based on what is beneficial for their families and their financial futures than by the fear of a bad credit rating or the stigma of losing a home.
This generation’s concept of their home will be as a place to live, and an asset which — like all asset classes — can increase and decrease in value (rather than our now-cured national delusion that homes only ever go up, up, up in value).
Homes, while still playing a role in how we see ourselves and express ourselves and how we live, will not for this recession-honed era of housing consumers be overblown in our heads as the be-all-and-end-all of our identities.
This, I hope and suspect, means that real estate will be respected as an area of life in which decisions must be made as deliberately as any other business decision, and with sustainability as the aim, but has also been put back in its place, so to speak, behind a number of other things that are actually, truly more important in life.
This is what I hear as the subtext behind the woman’s statement that if forced to, she’d just walk away: I’m not willing to sink my family’s entire financial ship over this asset.
Of course, there are certainly some much more grim implications to this evolution in the way we think about real estate. Ask anyone in the foreclosure hot spots in California, Nevada and Arizona.
When home values begin to decline widely, jobs leave, and people start walking away en masse so that everyone knows someone who has done it — and lived to tell the tell — it becomes extremely difficult to stabilize the market and avoid a complete plummeting of the entire market.
Not only do home values drop, so does sales activity as buyers become more and more fearful of continued value declines after they buy.
One of the issues with developing a more mature, less extremely optimistic and emotional attachment to anything in life, including real estate, is that it is very hard to rewind these sort of awakenings.
You’ve experienced this sort of thing as you grow awake to not just the parts of an issue in life that you love, but also the warts and gritty elements that make up the whole picture — you grow, and are empowered to better assess and make decisions.
But some of those more informed, wiser decisions are painful. The outcomes, like the truth that caused you to evolve in your understanding, also have lovely and excruciating elements about them.
And so it is with America’s real estate awakening. Lovely. Mature. Wise. And occasionally, excruciatingly painful.
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10 Year Katonah – Lewisboro School District Prices | Katonah NY Real Estate
The median price of a home in the Katonah-Lewisboro School District rose from $502,000 in 2000 to a peak median price of $815,000 in 2007. In 2009 it dropped back to a low of $617,500. In 2010 the median price jumped up again to $690,000.
2000 $502,000
2001 $595,000
2002 $647,500
2003 $675,000
2004 $750,000
2005 $749,500
2006 $790,000
2007 $815,000
2008 $730,000
2009 $617,500
2010 $690,000
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Public Hearing For New Katonah-Lewisboro Teacher’s Contract | Katonah NY Real Estate
LEWISBORO — The Katonah-Lewisboro District Teachers’ Association has ratified an agreement on a new two-year contract with the school district to replace the contract expiring at the end of the current school year.
The school board will hold a public forum on the agreement on Jan. 6 before voting on whether to approve it on Jan. 13. The agreement covers the 2011-12 and 2012-13 school years and includes very low raises for teachers.
Board of Education President Michael Gordon said the board’s goal has been to reach a fiscally responsible budget that preserves programming.
“Since so much of our budget is devoted to personnel expenses, obviously what we pay to our teachers and provide them in benefits is a significant issue,” he said.
In the first year the contract agreement calls for a 1 percent raise that is deferred to Feb. 1, 2012. Salary adjustments for education credits are also deferred until February. Teachers will also take a half-day furlough when school is not in regular session. The union will contribute to the cost of a $10,000 retirement incentive.
In the second year, a 1 percent salary increase will take effect at the beginning of the school year and another 1 percent increase on Feb. 1. Teachers will have to take a one-day furlough and contribute 13 percent to health insurance premiums, up from 11 percent.
Manhattan Luxury Market Picks Up. Good News for Katonah Market | Katonah NY Real Estate
Manhattan Real Estate Market Continues Steady Growth, as Luxury Sales Perk Up
The 2010 real estate market in Manhattan will be remembered for slow but steady growth, with luxury sales of $3 million and up finally making a strong return in the final months of the year, according to fourth-quarter market reports to be released on Tuesday.
The steadiness in the market was welcome news for brokers who had spent at least part of last year concerned about a possible double dip in prices.
The median fourth-quarter sales prices, in separate reports compiled by the city’s biggest brokerages and by the real estate Web site Streeteasy.com, ranged from $825,000 to $845,000. Those prices represent increases of 3 percent to 11 percent from the same period in 2009. But average sales prices, which were more affected by the increase in higher-end sales, ranged from $1.37 million to $1.48 million, as much as 14.4 percent higher than last year’s prices.
The prices are still far from the peak of the market in 2008, when the median was close to $1 million and the average over $1.7 million, but they are also up from the bottom of the market, in mid- to late 2009, when the median hovered around $800,000 and the average dipped below $1.3 million.
“The year started out strong and remained really solid, despite some slight bumps along the way,” said Diane M. Ramirez, the president of Halstead Property. In 2009 and early 2010, homebuyer tax credits pushed up sales of studios and one-bedroom apartments. Overall volume slowed significantly during the summer, only to return to more typical levels later in the year.
“Now things are selling across the board at all price points,” Ms. Ramirez said, “and we’re finally seeing a more normal market.”