Tag Archives: Mt Kisco Luxury Homes

Beachfront Cottage in Dennis Port Wants $88K | Mt Kisco Real Estate

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With an $88,000 price tag, this Dennis Port cottage probably would have been included on last week’s map of Cape Cod’s least expensive beachfront listings, but the property hit the market just days ago. Located in Chase’s Ocean Grove, the seasonal home “is right on the edge of a gorgeous Nantucket Sound beach!!” Built in 1950, the 292 square foot studio features an enclosed porch, a full bath and an outdoor shower. The lot in the classic cottage community is just 740 square feet – perfect for those who despise yard work and really, really enjoy residential density. According to the listing, the beachfront home is a “popular rental,” but there’s no mention of weekly rates. There’s an annual land lease fee of $6,500 and, for better or for worse, all of the furniture is included in the sale.

 

 

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http://capecod.curbed.com/archives/2013/08/29/beachfront-cottage-in-dennis-port-wants-88k.php

Haunted Houses in New Orleans | Mt Kisco Homes

8 Haunted Houses in New Orleans That Will Scare Your Pants Off

 

The Hermann-Grima House in New Orleans’s French Quarter is said to be alive with pleasant, friendly Southern ghosts. They’ve been known to scatter scented rose and lavender around the rooms and light the fireplaces to make it cozy. Built in 1831 for prosperous Creoles, it’s now a museum and one of the most significant residences in New Orleans.

Source: Flickr user wallyg

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https://homes.yahoo.com/photos/8-haunted-houses-orleans-scare-slideshow-133930238/

 

 

 

Sources of Financing for New Home Sales Relatively Unchanged for Third Quarter | Mt Kisco Homes

 

The onset of the housing crisis in 2007 led to a decline in the share of new home sales due to conventional mortgage financing and increases in the shares due to mortgages backed by the FHA and the Department of Veteran’s Affairs (VA), as well as cash purchases.

Third quarter data from the Census Bureau’s Quarterly Sales by Price and Financing indicate that count of cash-based new single-family home sales stood at 8,000 for the quarter or about 7% of total sales. During the 2002-2003 period, cash sales made up only 4% of purchases. In contrast, cash purchases constitute a considerably larger share of the existing home market – 24% in September per National Association of Realtors estimates.

It is worth noting that another measure of cash sales for total new construction from CoreLogic shows a higher level of cash sales than the Census: 16% in July 2014.

New home sales due to FHA-backed loans were 12% of the market during the third quarter according to the Census estimates. This is down from 28% in the first quarter of 2010 and is closer to the 10% 2002-2003 average. As the conventional mortgage financing share has risen, the share of new single-family home sales due to FHA-backed mortgages has declined.

VA-backed loans were responsible for about 8% of new home sales during the third quarter of 2014.

These sources of financing serve distinct market segments, which is revealed in part by the median new home price allocable to each. For the third quarter, the median new home price due to FHA financing was $201,500. The median price for VA-backed loans rose to $258,900.

Conventional mortgage financing had a median price of $298,400.

Finally, the median price for cash purchases for the third quarter was $284,300.

Analysis of mortgage markets is important because it suggests the underlying strength of housing demand, particularly for younger buyers with less equity or savings who must use a mortgage to buy a home.

 

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http://eyeonhousing.org/2014/10/sources-of-financing-for-new-home-sales-relatively-unchanged-for-third-quarter/

Mount Kisco Scores High In Economic Growth Survey | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Mount Kisco receives high marks in a new economic growth survey from financial news site NerdWallet.

The municipality comes in seventh out of 188 communities that were researched for the site’s “Cities on the Rise” survey.

Criteria used for the survey, according to NerdWallet, involve growth in income, employment and population.

NerdWallet’s data, which are as recent as 2012, show that Mount Kisco’s working-age population is 8,863 and that it had a median income of $50,342.

The survey also shows that from 2009 to 2012, Mount Kisco’s working-age population grew by 5.47 percent and that its median income grew by 18.75 percent.

Mount Kisco was also the highest-scoring Westchester County community in the survey. The next-highest community in Westchester is Mamaroneck, which came in 14th.

 

 

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http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/mount-kisco-scores-high-economic-growth-survey

 

You Know It’s a Tough Market When Ben Bernanke Can’t Refinance | Mt Kisco Real Estate

 

Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Ben S. Bernanke, former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Ben S. Bernanke said the mortgage market is so tight that even he is having a hard time refinancing his own home loan.

The former Federal Reserve chairman, speaking at a conference in Chicago yesterday, told moderator Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics Inc. — “just between the two of us” — that “I recently tried to refinance my mortgage and I was unsuccessful in doing so.”

When the audience laughed, Bernanke said, “I’m not making that up.”

“I think it’s entirely possible” that lenders “may have gone a little bit too far on mortgage credit conditions,” he said.

Bernanke, addressing a conference of the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing and Care in Chicago yesterday, said that the first-time home buyer market is “not what it should be” as the economy in general strengthens.

“The housing area is one area where regulation has not yet got it right,” Bernanke said. “I think the tightness of mortgage credit, lending is still probably excessive.”

 

 

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-02/you-know-it-s-a-tough-market-when-ben-bernanke-can-t-refinance.html

Are Home Values Back to Normal? | Mt Kisco Homes

Have you ever asked yourself, “Are home prices over- or undervalued today?” If so, you have been comparing current prices to prices over the long-term trend, which is known as intrinsic value.

Many of the best investors in the world tout intrinsic value as the most important metric for long-term investing. Buy when prices fall below intrinsic value and don’t buy when they rise above. The difficulties come in determining your opinion of intrinsic value and having the patience and courage to withstand what can sometimes be very long periods when prices are over- or undervalued.

Last week, we sent our values to our clients, and just this week John presented the methodology at a mortgage industry conference in DC. The reception has been fantastic.

To cut to the chase, we believe a long-term view of housing dictates that homes are overvalued today by 3.5%—but range from 11% undervalued to 20% overvalued depending on the MSA. This is not a bearish view on housing simply because:

  • 3.5% income growth will solve the problem, and
  • we used a 6.0% mortgage rate for our calculation, and rates are much lower today.

We also assumed that the best long-term ratio of housing costs / income* is 31.4%, ranging from 21.0% in Atlanta to 79.5% in San Francisco. In 29 of the top 30 markets, we used a ratio that is higher than the historical average over the last 20 years because we believe US housing has become slightly more expensive. Determining this ratio by market was difficult, particularly in markets that seem to be undergoing permanent changes in homeownership demand, both positively and negatively.

 

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http://investorextreme.com/have-home-values-finally-normalized/

 

10 things your landlord won’t tell you | Mt Kisco Real Estate

 

1. Your real landlord might be Wall Street

The bursting of the housing bubble, and the recession that came with it, have led more Americans to rent rather than own their homes. In the first quarter of this year, 64.8% of American families owned the homes they lived in, the lowest level since 1995—and far from the peak of nearly 69% of households in 2006.

Fewer owners means growing tenant demand for rental property, and that has allowed landlords to raise prices. Apartment rents in the U.S. rose at the fastest pace this year since the Great Recession, according to the property research company Axiometrics, as April occupancy rates reached 94.8%. And for many Americans, the rent is too damn high, at an average of 30% of monthly household income—the highest in 30 years, up from an average of around 25% from 1985 to 2000, according to data from Zillow Z, +0.51%

The housing bubble and its aftermath also created an opportunity for Wall Street, as investment firms used the opportunity to snap up cheap foreclosed homes and build rental empires. Private-equity firms, hedge funds and other institutional investors accounted for nearly 6.5% of single-family home purchases in 2012, according to a recent research note from the Federal Reserve, up from less than 1% in 2004. Read: Apartment rent hikes are slowing — finally.

Those parties now own about 200,000 single family homes nationwide, the investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods estimates. Blackstone Group BX, -1.66% which Bloomberg News estimates is now the largest single-family landlord in the U.S., owns about 43,000 rental homes across the country, from Phoenix to Tampa, through a subsidiary called Invitation Homes

What’s it like when Wall Street is your landlord?

“They handle you beautifully from the door but once you get in the house, all hell breaks out,” says Chanda Mason, who moved into a three-bedroom, two-bath rental from Invitation Homes in Dallas, Ga., outside Atlanta, last July. She says she was greeted by moldy oven racks and a giant crack in the driveway, where her van got stuck each time she tried to drive in or pull out. Mason is one of a vocal group of Invitation Homes tenants who have complained about maintenance. When Mason complained, the corporate offices would “glaze over the situation and get me out of their face,” she says. “When it comes to getting something fixed, good luck. You’re going to have an issue,” she adds, noting that she will not renew her lease when it expires in July.

Invitation Homes spokesman Andrew Gallina says the company takes complaints and requests seriously, and that residents of a sprawling network of houses all hold different expectations. Invitation Homes has 1,600 employees in 35 field offices to handle tenant issues and offers a 24-hour emergency hotline, he says. Tenants can submit maintenance requests online, which enter a database that tracks when calls are put in, the average response and completion time for different types of work and homes’ repair histories. “We’ve invested in state of the art technology, which your average mom and pop landlord will not,” Gallina says.

Still, some commentators worry about whether any entity, high-tech or not, can do a good job managing a big, far-flung portfolio. These investors “may pose risks to local housing markets if investors have difficulties managing such large stocks of rental properties or fail to adequately maintain their homes,” potentially lowering the quality of neighborhoods, or even pushing prices down, the Federal Reserve note says.

 

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http://www.marketwatch.com/story/10-things-your-landlord-wont-tell-you-2014-06-13

Apply Google’s 6 key trends for homebuyers | Mt Kisco Real Estate

In my post last Friday, I expanded upon Peter Miller’s article titled “Would you bank with Google or Amazon?” where we looked at the stretch of a tech giant entering the mortgage space, which then led me to touch on what we could learn from them around customer experiences.

Less than a week later, Google publishes some information on 6 key trends of homebuyers, backed by some interesting stats. Now, I’m not trying to reinforce the concept of Google-going-mortgage. Rather, I’ve been watching the Think with Google site for a while now, hoping that they would share some insights relative to the housing industry, something everyone knows they’ve had stored in all those rows and rows of servers, along with the rest of the internet…LOL. If you’re not familiar with this site, it’s a digital candy store for analytics and trends junkies, where they’ve cleverly packaged content and their product offerings in an easy-to-consume format (kind of like that consumer experience thing I previously mentioned…).

For those who don’t wish to go through the article (although it’s a fairly quick read with some great charts and stats), here are Google’s six keys to unlocking opportunities with today’s homebuyers:

1. Every year, searches for real estate-related terms peak in July — a sign that people are out house hunting. Be there to meet this seasonal rise in demand. Remind them throughout the long process with remarketing.

2. Millennials are likely to make their long-awaited entrance into market soon. Understand what this audience cares about and appeal to them with relevant messaging.

3. More people (especially millennials) are relying on mobile devices throughout the process — from finding a home to financing it. Help them find what they’re looking for through mobile ads and extensions such as location and click-to-call.

4. Small and mobile homes are becoming an appealing option, even for high-income buyers. Think about ways you can address this new, growing market. Explore Search data to learn what else interests these consumers and use it to shape co-marketing opportunities, cross-promotions, creative executions and media buys.

5. While they’re looking for homes, people are also looking for interior design ideas, often turning to video for inspiration. Post home-tour videos to YouTube to make it easy for them to get an in-depth look at listings.

6. Vintage is all the rage in interior design. Help people get that retro, one-of-a-kind look with the products you offer and the content you create.

 

 

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http://www.housingwire.com/blogs/5-closing-call/post/31206-apply-googles-6-key-trends-for-homebuyers

London housing market put into reverse gear by surge in supply | Mt Kisco Real Estate

The number of new houses being put up for sale in London is increasing at a rate more than three times the national average as homeowners look to cash in on the surge in property values in the capital.

Meanwhile, demand for housing is rising much faster outside of London than in the capital, where the market has cooled significantly, according to new research.

The figures, published by the estate agents network Sequence, suggests that London has shifted from a seller’s market to one that is increasingly favouring buyers in recent months, while the opposite is true in the regions.

In the UK overall, buyer registrations rose 21pc in the year to July, three times faster than the 7pc increase in properties put on the market. In comparison, there was a 7pc increase in potential buyers and 25pc more houses put up for sale in London.

 

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/constructionandproperty/11053878/London-housing-market-put-into-reverse-gear-by-surge-in-supply.html