Tag Archives: Mt Kisco Luxury Homes
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Property in Westchester County Is for Sale | Mt Kisco Real Estate
A listing on the Web site of Ginnel Real Estate refers to the three-story, 10,000-square-foot colonial-style home, in the Mount Kisco area, as a “state-of-the-art and eco-friendly country estate” with geothermal heating and cooling, energy-efficient appliances and fiber-optic lighting. It sits on 10 acres on South Bedford Road.
Muffin Dowdle, the agent listed as managing the sale, did not respond to requests for comment.
The names of Mr. Kennedy and his estranged wife, Mary R. Kennedy, appear on a deed for the property, as well as on a record of a $500,000 mortgage taken out on the residence in June 2010.
The Kennedys were embroiled in divorce and child-custody proceedings in the period before Ms. Kennedy’s death. The body of Ms. Kennedy, 52, was found in a barn on the property. The medical examiner said she died of asphyxiation after hanging herself.
Home sales dip, but tight inventories provide price support | Mount Kisco NY Homes for Sale
Sales of existing homes slipped from August to September but were still up strongly from a year ago — a sign that the national housing market is finding solid ground, the National Association of Realtors said today.
At a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.75 million, sales of single-family homes, townhomes, condos and co-ops were down 1.7 percent from August to September, but up 11 percent from a year ago.
September sales of existing homes were up 11 percent from last September with a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.75 million, which represents a slight dip of 1.7 percent from August’s upwardly revised rate of 4.83 million.
The 2.32 million homes on the market at the end of September represented a 5.9-month supply, down from 8.1 months a year ago. Many analysts view a six-month supply of housing as an even balance between buyer and seller demand.
Thanks to tight inventories, the national median home price was up 11.3 percent to $183,900 from a year ago, the seventh month in a row of annual increases and the longest stretch of annual increases in six years.
“We’re experiencing a genuine recovery,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, in a statement. “More people are attempting to buy homes than are able to qualify for mortgages, and recent price increases are not deterring buyer interest,” he said.
Article continues belowLow inventory will be a temporary issue, said Jed Kolko, Trulia’s chief economist. “Rising prices will get some homeowners back above water and willing to sell their homes, and tight inventory will encourage builders to keep ramping up new construction, bringing more new homes to market,” he said.
First-time buyers accounted for 32 percent of purchasers in September, up from 31 percent in August.
Foreclosures and short sales sold for 21 percent below market value, on average, and accounted for 24 percent of September’s sales.
All-cash deals accounted for 28 percent of September’s sales — up a percentage point from August and down two from last September.
Existing-home sales, September 2012
Seasonally adjusted annual rate 4.75 million % change from September 2011 11.0% % change from August 2012 -1.7% National median price $183,900 % change from September 2011 11.3% Unsold inventory (months’ supply) 5.9 Share of all-cash buyers 28% Share of investor buyers 18% Share of first-time buyers 32% Share of distressed sales 24% Source: National Association of Realtors
All U.S. regions saw existing-home sales and prices rise in September from a year ago.
As was the case in August, the Midwest led the way in home sales with a 19.6 percent year-over-year increase to an annual rate of 1.1 million sales. The median price in the Midwest also rose in September from a year ago, up 7 percent to $145,200.
The South saw sales jump 14.2 percent from last September to an annual rate of 1.93 million. Median prices jumped, too, to 13.1 percent from last September to $163,600.
Home sales rose 7.3 in the Northeast on an annual basis to a rate of 590,000. Median prices in the region rose 4.1 percent to $238,700.
The West experienced a slight 0.9 percent yearly increase in home sales to 1.13 million, but saw the largest yearly median price jump of any region, 18.4 percent to $246,300, in September.
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California foreclosure activity reaches 5-year low | Mount Kisco NY Real Estate
The number of California homes landing in foreclosure reached a five-year low in the third quarter as home prices rose, home sales ticked up and more distressed borrowers obtained short sales.
DataQuick reported that 49,026 notices of default were recorded on homes in the state during the third quarter. That is down 10.2% from the 54,615 properties reported in the second quarter and a 31% drop from the 71,275 notices recorded a year earlier.
Short sales helped stave off foreclosures by allowing homeowners to escape without facing the distress that comes with a foreclosure. Short sales overall made up 26% of the state’s resale activity during the third quarter.
However, DataQuick says that may change when the New Year kicks-in since a temporary debt forgiveness feature to the tax code will expire without Congressional intervention. The feature encourages short sales for troubled borrowers, giving them a way out without having to pay a penalty on the debt forgiven.
Home prices also are rising giving homeowners more equity. The median price for a California home hit $300,000 last quarter, a 32% jump from the market’s bottom price of $227,000 in the first-quarter of 2009.
Apartment Demand Slows in Third Quarter | Mount Kisco NY Real Estate
Having recently participated on a panel at the National Apartment Summit, I had a chance to discuss drivers of demand and overall trends for the multifamily market. Investors are still bullish on the performance of the apartment sector, though they are concerned with the pace of job creation and the impact of sluggish economic growth on the under-35 years of age demographic. In addition to low wages, this group of traditional renters has also been contending with increasing education debt levels.
With payroll employment still stuck in second gear, demand for apartments has been slowing into the third and fourth quarters. Net absorption of apartment space—a measure of demand—is projected to be 54.830 units in the third quarter, with a year-end total of 219,318 units. This figure represents a noticeable improvement over last year’s demand numbers, especially in light of the supply trends.
Completions of new multifamily buildings have been rising, boosted by financing availability from Government Sponsored Enterprises. Supply of apartments is projected to total about 31,543 units in the third quarter and 80,000 units for 2012.
Given the strong demand of the past year, there’s still a gap of about 140,000 units between demand and supply of space in 2012. Vacancy rates have been declining, reaching 4.3 percent in the third quarter. However, with the slight decline in demand, national vacancies are expected to close the year at a level 4.3 percent. The local markets with the lowest availability rates are Portland, Minneapolis and New York with vacancy rates of 2.0 percent, 2.2 percent and 2.2 percent, respectively. At the other end of the spectrum, Memphis, Jacksonville and Houston continue to work through rates at or above 7.0 percent. Rent growth for office space has been positive so far and is expected to stay in the 4.0 percent range for 2012, although the underlying fundamentals are pointing to a potential slowdown.
West NYS housing market heating up | Mount Kisco NY Real Estate
When Christopher and Amy Capalbo saw the four-bedroom house on Clarendon Place in Buffalo, they just knew they had to have it. They just didn’t expect what it would take.
The parents of two young children had looked at homes in the city for eight months, but “we never really saw anything we liked,” said Chris Capalbo, 36. “Something always was missing from our wish list.”
They already lived in one half of a duplex they owned in Depew, near where Amy worked as an art teacher, so they weren’t in a rush, but they were “slowly outgrowing” what they had after eight years. They considered building a new house in Orchard Park, but many of their friends lived in the city, and a new build “would have been a lot more expensive and our lifestyle would have been different than we had hoped,” said Capalbo, an information technology manager at Sodexho in Williamsville.
So when their agent, Kristan Andersen of Gurney Becker & Bourne, showed them the 2,400-square-foot, three-story house, on a street they liked, “we jumped on it.”
But it wasn’t so easy. Even after offering $10,000 more than the $349,000 asking price, they still found themselves in a bidding war with two other buyers just days after the house was listed. So they raised their price to $362,000, waived the inspection and any contingencies, and agreed to give the seller extra time to move in order to win.
“We had never heard of that in this area, a bidding war,” Capalbo said. “So we were a little surprised by that, but we knew we wanted it.”
The nation’s economy continues to languish in a tepid recovery and developers are still adding new rental apartments to the local scene, but the housing market is heating up in Western New York, particularly in some key neighborhoods and communities.
“This is the best time to buy a home that I have ever seen,” said Dan Symoniak, vice president and general manager for RealtyUSA. “The combination of adequate supply, relatively stable prices over the last several years and amazing borrowing costs have created a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”
Demand is high and some homes are selling almost as quickly as they go on, with multiple competing offers happening frequently. Throughout the area, homes are going for an average of 95 percent of the asking price, according to the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors. In many cases, bidding wars are driving prices well above the listed amount.
“Prices are wonderful,” said Ann Edwards, broker and owner of Realty Edge in Amherst. “Homes priced right to sell are going quickly and in many cases to multiple bids over asking. But the rates are so terrific that buyers are doing so well, too.”
Western New York’s affordable housing values have always tilted the buy-versus-rent equation in favor of “buy,” as consumers can own a decent home for as much or even less than they would pay to rent an apartment. The region didn’t suffer the massive decline in housing values that California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada experienced, but it also never experienced the boom that made homes unaffordable in those areas. So buying a home here has remained attractive. “For what you can get in Western New York compared to other cities, it always makes sense to buy, but particularly because the interest rates are so low,” Andersen said. “Your buying power is so much better. You can afford a lot more.”
Also, the supply of rental units is down, because more people are unable to qualify under the more stringent mortgage standards right now, so they’re renting apartments or homes until they can save enough money and improve their credit.
As a result of the demand, rental rates are going up.
So, with interest rates still hovering at record lows, real estate agents say now is a great time to buy.
“This is the best time in a long time to buy,” said Susan Lenahan. a broker at M.J. Peterson Real Estate’s City Office on Delaware Avenue. “I’ve been doing this for more than 30 years. They’ve never been lower. I’ve never seen the rents so high.”
After several tumultuous years of falling prices, weak demand and sluggish sales — tempered only by special tax incentives that propped up the market temporarily — the housing industry is coming back.
The Federal Reserve’s newest economic survey released last week, known formally as “The Beige Book,” found that stronger housing activity helped drive economic growth in 10 of the Fed’s 12 regional banking districts from August through September, and rising home sales drove prices up. That helped overcome generally flat consumer spending and mixed manufacturing activity.
The housing surge is driven heavily by the Fed’s efforts to keep interest rates low to spur more borrowing and spending, particularly by consumers.
The average interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages of less than $417,500 — conforming loans — fell to 3.53 percent at the end of September, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s weekly index. It ticked up a week later after six weeks of declines, but was still “historically low,” the group noted.
Loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration were even lower, at 3.34 percent, while 15-year fixed-rate mortgages were 2.90 percent. Both rates are the lowest in the 20-year history of the MBA’s survey.
As a result, mortgage applications nationwide increased 17 percent in one week at the end of September, according to the MBA. More than 80 percent of the volume stems from refinance applications, but home purchase loans also rose, and that continued into the first week of October. Purchase activity was up 11 percent to 12 percent from the same weeks a year ago, and hit the highest level since June, with both conventional and government loan volume increasing, according to MBA.
“The market is definitely better than it was a couple of years ago,” Andersen said.
Locally, the impact of the low rates is significant because prices are already inexpensive. For example, Symoniak noted that a borrower would pay $422 a month in principal and interest on a $100,000 loan at 3 percent interest over 30 years. For the same loan at 7 percent, which was common several few years ago, the payment would be $665, or $243 more.
And a $500 monthly payment for 30 years at 3 percent would buy a home for $118,594 (not including taxes). The same loan at 7 percent would only pay off a $75,153 loan. “Today, you get over $43,000 more house for the same money,” he said. “In our market, at this price range, that is a major difference in lifestyle.”
Most of Western New York remains a buyer’s market, because there are plenty of homes on the market in most price ranges, so sellers can’t command premium prices. That’s particularly the case with the suburbs. “Buyers are looking for good deals now, and you can definitely find some,” Andersen said. “The suburbs are a little more sluggish. There are a lot more houses, and the houses are not going as quickly as in the city.”
Carlo Zavatti Jr. and his wife, Anna, just bought a 3,701-square-foot, four-bedroom home on Stonebriar Drive in Clarence, to be closer to family members. The sellers had listed it for $439,000, but the Zavattis offered $400,000 to start — and found themselves in a bidding battle with another buyer well below the asking price. They won it for $412,500.
“We kept countering back and forth,” said Zavatti, 40. “We were surprised to see that there was a lot of activity on that street.”
They also sold their former house, also in Clarence, to his mother-in-law, who was downsizing from a five-bedroom home in Amherst, which also sold — all in a couple of months. “It was a quick turnaround,” he said. “There are definitely people out there who are looking.”
The key for sellers, agents say, is to do the research to price a home properly the first time. “It’s all about price right now. If you price your house correctly, it will sell very quickly,” Andersen said. “If you overprice your house, hoping you’ll get more, those are the houses that you’ll see sitting. People are not just going to pay anything.”
By contrast, she said, “homes go pretty quickly” in certain desirable neighborhoods of Buffalo, such as Allentown, the Elmwood Village or the Delaware District. “There is a shortage of housing right now in the city,” Lenahan said. “There are more buyers than there are properties that they want to buy.”
A few suburban villages have particular appeal as well, such as East Aurora or Orchard Park. “You can’t ever find a house,” Andersen said. “They come on the market and they sell quickly.”
30-Year Fixed Mortgage Rate Continues to Rise | Mount Kisco Real Estate
Mortgage rates for 30-year fixed mortgages rose this week, with the current rate borrowers were quoted on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace at 3.26 percent, up from 3.18 percent at this same time last week.
The 30-year fixed mortgage rate hovered between 3.18 and 3.28 percent for the majority of the week, dropping to the current rate this morning.
“Mortgage rates rose slightly at the end of last week following the release of the Federal Open Market Committee’s meeting minutes and a stronger than expected jobs report,” said Erin Lantz, director of Zillow Mortgage Marketplace. “This week, we expect rates to remain fairly steady since we do not foresee any new announcements that have the potential to offset the optimistic tone set by last week’s employment figures.”
Additionally, the 15-year fixed mortgage rate this morning was 2.63 percent, and for 5/1 ARMs, the rate was 2.52 percent.
What are the rates right now? Check Zillow Mortgage Marketplace for up-to-the-minute mortgage rates for your state.
*The weekly rate chart illustrates the average 30-year fixed interest rate in six-hour intervals.
Redraw title for proper inheritance | Inman News in Mt Kisco NY
DEAR BENNY: My parents (now in their 80s) own a fourplex with my brother and his wife as joint tenants with right of survivorship. They agreed to a 50/50 partnership at the beginning. Both couples agree that if they died their respective 50 percent share would go to their respective estate and not to the remaining partners.
Question 1: Shouldn’t they have the title redrawn as tenants in common to do what they initially intended?
Question 2: If my brother and his wife refuse to go along with changing the title to the property to tenants in common (which they may not want to do), can my parents proceed to change it without their partners’ consent?
My brother and his wife have made it very clear that they want their 50 percent share to go to their kids in the case of their death, but they may be banking on acquiring 100 percent of property upon my parents’ death (because of their advanced age) if title stays the way it is. –Meg
DEAR MEG: The fourplex, in my opinion, is titled in a very confusing way. When property is held as joint tenants (or preferably joint tenants with rights of survivorship), on the death of one joint tenant the property automatically is vested in the name of the survivor. We lawyers call this “title by operation of law.” So if X and Y own title as joint tenants, when X dies, Y becomes the sole owner. No probate is required.
In your parents’ situation, what happens if your dad dies? Presumably, the remaining three owners remain in title, again as joint tenants.
But if the intention of the parties was their respective heirs are to inherit the property on their death, that will not happen the way title is currently held.
The best way to accomplish that is as follows: “mom and dad as joint tenants with rights of survivorship as to their interest and as tenants in common with brother and wife, who hold title as joint tenants with rights of survivorship as to their interest.”
Your parents should discuss this with their son. You should stay out of this issue, other than to show them my answer in this column. But if your brother is unwilling to cooperate, it is possible for your parents — without their son’s permission — to break the joint tenancy arrangement and change it to a tenant-in-common title.
I have done this several times for clients, under similar situations. A joint tenancy can be unilaterally broken. However, your parents should consult their own attorney to assist them in the proper procedure and drafting of the new title arrangement.
DEAR BENNY: In a recent column, you indicated that a giftor’s lifetime tax exemption is $1 million. However, after searching this out, I believe that for 2011 the lifetime gift tax exemption is $5 million, which is the same as the federal estate tax exemption. Am I wrong? –Frank
DEAR FRANK: You are correct. For years 2011 and 2012, the lifetime gift tax exemption is $5 million. This is the same amount as the federal estate tax exemption. What this means is that in your lifetime, you can give up to that amount. However, there is a catch: This amount will then be subtracted from your estate tax exemption.
That does not mean, however, that you should give all that money to your children tomorrow. In addition to the lifetime exemption, you are still entitled to the annual gift tax exclusion, which for 2011 is $13,000. That means that you can give up to that amount to anyone and everyone, and neither you nor the recipients will have to file any tax returns on that nor will they have to pay any tax. And the $13,000 annual exclusion does not reduce your lifetime $5 million gift and estate tax exemption.
This is beneficial for parents who want to help their married children buy a house. For example, if you have a married son and a married daughter, you can give each one of them $13,000 (or $26,000 per couple). You can also give the same amount to all of your grandchildren.
It should be noted that although the $5 million gift and estate tax exemption passed by Congress is the law until 2012, there is a good chance that the exemption will continue in at least that amount in later years. But stay tuned: Congress is completely unpredictable.
DEAR BENNY: We want to gift our daughter a house that we paid $123,000 for in 1999. We made approximately $20,000 in improvements to the house. Because of the depressed housing market, we believe the value of the house remains at the price we paid for it. Because our daughter suffered a stroke, she is on Social Security disability and is unable to work. What effect, if any, would gifting the house to her have on her Social Security disability? And what effect, if any, would it have on us? –Ardath
DEAR ARDATH: My first question is why you want to even consider gifting the house to your daughter. Are you trying to reduce your estate? Do you have another house — and sufficient assets — so as to live comfortably?
Regardless of your motives, there are several issues you must consider.
First are tax issues: If you gift the property to your daughter, she will receive your tax basis, which you have indicated is approximately the cost. Tax basis is the value of the property when it was bought, plus any improvements made over the years. When the property is sold, you have an adjusted sales price. That is the sales price less such items as closing costs and real estate commissions. Profit is determined by subtracting the basis from the adjusted sales price.
No big issue there except that if you instead keep the property and leave it to her when you die, she will receive a basis stepped up to the appreciated value as of the date of your death. Oversimplified, this could mean a substantial savings in capital gains tax.
I recognize that readers will say: Well, if she owns and lives in the house for at least two out of the five years before the property is sold, the daughter can claim the up-to-$250,000 exclusion of gain, and may not have to pay any capital gains tax.
That is correct, but with two caveats: First, the daughter is disabled and may not be able to live in the house for that length of time. Second, Congress may tamper with the exclusion and it may not be with us in the years to come.
Second, there may be gift tax issues. Because the value of the gift would be greater than the annual exclusion (which is $13,000 per person), you will need to report the gift to the extent the current value is greater than $26,000 — i.e., $13,000 each. So you would each need to report around $50,000 against their $5 million lifetime exemption. Depending on your total net worth, this may not be a problem for you.
However, the bigger issue is that it is very likely that if your daughter is given the property, her government benefits could be reduced or terminated. There may be an exception for a personal residence so that it may not be counted as an asset for purposes of determining her qualification for disability benefits.
You must consult with an attorney in the state from which your daughter is receiving benefits (or will receive them after she moves to your house. The laws very from state to state on this.
So, before you make your final decision, talk with an attorney on all these issues. You don’t want to do something that can hurt both you and your daughter financially, even though it sounds like a good deed.
Benny L. Kass is a practicing attorney in Washington, D.C., and Maryland. No legal relationship is created by this column. Questions for this column can be submitted to benny@inman.com.
Seth’s Blog: Self directed effort is the best kind | Mt Kisco Real Estate
How much are you paying for a drill sergeant?
Perhaps you can burn 500 calories on the treadmill before you give up for the day. With a personal coach, though, you could do 700. The trainer gets you to exert more effort.
You wake up on a Monday morning after a long hard weekend of misbehaving. You have a splitting headache. You can easily call in sick, no one will freak out. But then you remember that there's a $500 bonus at stake if you keep your attendance perfect. You make the effort because someone else is bribing you.
On the playground, it's tempting to rip into a kid who stole the swing from you. You're about to whack him, but then you see your mom watching. With a great deal of effort, you walk away.
Effort's ephemeral, hard to measure and incredibly difficult to deliver on a regular basis. So we hire a trainer or a coach or a boss and give up our freedom and our upside for someone to whip us into shape. Obviously, you give up part of what you create to the trainer/coach/boss in exchange for their oversight.
Has it become a crutch? Are you addicted to a taskmaster, to someone else's to do list, to short term external rewards that sell your long-term plans short? If no one is watching, are you helpless, just a web surfing, time wasting couch potato? Who owns the extra work you do now that you're being directed?
There's an entire system organized around the idea that we're too weak to deliver effort without external rewards and punishment. If you only grow on demand, you're selling yourself short. If you're only as good as your current boss/trainer/sergeant, you've given over the most important thing you have to someone else.
The thing I care the most about: what do you do when no one is looking, what do you make when it's not an immediate part of your job… how many push ups do you do, just because you can?
Housing Flipping Dead For 2011 | Mt Kisco Luxury Real Estate
We keep hearing about what’s popular in 2011 for home design — but how about what’s not? Builder Magazine writer Jenny Sullivan asked industry experts to weigh in on design fads that you won’t likely see in the new year. Here are some of the fading home trends experts mentioned:
1. Trophy space: Forget those two-story grand entrances. Builders are seeking more affordable, energy efficient design so they are getting rid of large, volume spaces in homes.
2. Just for show: Fancy, overdone rooms won’t cut it in the era of the practical, cash-strapped buyer. Lavish industrial-grade kitchen ranges or fancy master bath spa tubs– that are hardly even used anyway–will fall to the wayside. “The kitchen is once again becoming a working part of the home and not just a showcase,” architect Don Taylor of DW Taylor Associates in Ellicott City, Md., noted in the article. “It needs to provide all of the latest conveniences and technology, but with practical applications in mind. The faux commercial kitchen look may have reached its summit.”
3. Egocentric houses: It’s not just about the interior of a home that makes a home.
Buyers are caring more about its curb appeal and what’s nearby the home as well. Parks, amenities and neighborhood connections create a sense of community, said John M. Thatch, principal with Dahlin Group Architecture and Planning in Pleasanton, Calif. While most infill homes on the boards are 10-20 percent smaller in size, Thatch notes that buyers are willing to trade extra space for a more appealing neighborhood.
4. Home flipping: Gone is the trend of buying a “starter” home or a home for short-term investment. Buyers are now buying for keeps and it’s changing the way they view homes. “The idea of a home as a short-term money maker is essentially gone, so when people do buy they’ll do it with the intention of staying ten years instead of two or three,” says Jim Chittaro, president of Smykal Homes in Chicago. As such, he says buyers will care more about the design of the home and they won’t want it to feel cheap.