The Onslow County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution Monday night against the proposed insurance rate increase and asked residents to join them in protesting the hike in Raleigh on Wednesday.
“It makes me plain sick,” said Onslow County Chairman W.C. Jarman, adding that it’s time for the inequitable increases to stop.
The rate hike could mean an average 30-percent increase in homeowner policies across 18 coastal counties including Onslow and Carteret counties while western counties see barely an increase at all, according to the rate filing from the North Carolina Rate Bureau, which represents property insurance companies doing business in the state.
A public comment period is set for Wednesday.
“I think folks should go and should say they are against it,” said State Senate Majority Leader Harry Brown, R-Onslow. Brown pushed for legislation last year that created the public comment session in front of the state insurance commissioner.
The N.C. Department of Insurance said last week that it received the requested rate hike from the NCRB at a statewide average increase of 17.7 percent. The NCRB is also requesting that the new rates take effect June 1, 2013.
The increase is unfair to counties east of I-95, said state Rep. Phil Shepard, R-Onslow.
“A homeowner with a house valued at $75,000 in Mecklenburg County pays $341 for insurance,” Shepard said. “A homeowner with the same valued house in Onslow County pays $1,200. That’s just not fair and they want to raise it 30 percent here and next to nothing there.”
While coastal counties see a 30 percent increase, other areas of the state would see increases of only 1.2 percent. Coastal homeowners have seen rate increases every cycle since 1992.
NC-20, a group of individuals, local governments and businesses that promote economic development in coastal counties, said it fought against the 2009 rate increases and plans to oppose this increase as well.
Onslow County Manager Jeff Hudson said he was organizing a trip to Raleigh for residents to be able to speak in front of the commissioner. Hudson said the county couldn’t use tax dollars to pay for the bus so he was seeking funds from local business organizations.
The Jacksonville Board of Realtors, the Jacksonville-Onslow Chamber of Commerce and the Onslow County Home Builders Association have partnered to charter a bus to Raleigh on Wednesday morning. The bus will depart from the county parking lot adjacent to the Onslow County Justice Complex on Court Street at 7:30 a.m.
Tag Archives: Mt Kisco Real Estate
California Leads U.S. Out of Housing Bust It Started | Mount Kisco Realtor
Listing inventories down in most markets | Mount Kisco NY Real Estate
Editor’s note: This report is based on Realtor.com’s September 2012 Real Estate Trend Data Report. The report covers 146 U.S. metros, and includes single-family homes, condos, townhomes and co-ops.
The number of homes for sale nationwide continued to fall in September from a year ago, Realtor.com reported today. The 17.77 percent drop to 1.8 million units continues a trend that’s played out in every month this year so far.
For-sale inventory dropped on a year-over-year basis in all but three of the 146 markets tracked by Realtor.com in its report.
Nationwide, median list prices were up 0.78 percent from August to September, to $191,500 and have held steady throughout 2012 — another sign that the housing recovery is solidifying, the report noted. However, median list prices are still 23.37 percent off their early 2007 high of $249,900.
Annual change in listings, inventory and median list price
Data point Percent change from year ago 2012 September 2012 Number of listings -17.77% 1.80 million Median age of inventory (days) -11.21% 95 Median list price +0.78% $191,500 Source: Realtor.com
Article continues belowThe number of homes for sale nationwide was down 40 percent from a September 2007 high of 3.1 million units. The median age of inventory was also down 11.21 percent on a yearly basis to 95 days. However, that number represents a 4.4 percent increase from August.
Source: Realtor.comAs was the case last in August, California markets continue to dominate a top 10 chart of markets that have experienced the largest year-over-year drop in inventory. Tight inventories and lending standards are two of the California housing market’s biggest challenges to full recovery, said Leslie Appleton-Young, California Association of Realtor’s vice president and chief economist.
Stockton-Lodi, Calif., topped the chart with a 63.04 percent drop in inventory between September 2011 and September 2012. Sacramento, Oakland, and Riverside-San Bernardino (Calif.) rounded out the top four, in order, with drops in inventory of 60.26 percent, 57.14 percent and 42.57 percent, respectively.
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett (No. 9 at a 38.34 percent drop) and Atlanta (No. 10 at a 37.15 percent drop) were the only two metros on the list not in California.
Top 10 markets for annual inventory declines, September 2012
Percent change -63.04% -60.26% -57.14% -42.57% -41.97% -41.26% -38.92% -38.39% -38.34% -37.15% Source: Realtor.com
California metros also made up the majority of the top 10 metros experiencing the largest year-over-year percentage median list price increases. Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, Calif., topped the list at a year-over-year jump of 32.05 percent in its median list price. San Francisco (No. 3), San Jose (No. 4), Sacramento (No. 6), Oakland (No. 7), and Riverside-San Bernardino (No. 9) were the other Golden State metros on the list.
Source: Realtor.comPhoenix-Mesa, Ariz. (No. 2 at 26.66 percent), Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, Wash. (No. 5 at 14.98 percent), Boise City, Idaho (No. 7 at 13.33 percent) and Atlanta (No. 10 at 11.94 percent) were the non-California metros on the top list for the largest year-over-year median list price increase.
Top 10 metros for annual median list price increases, September 2012
Percent change 32.05% 26.66% 18.11% 17.50% 14.98% 14.23% 13.97% 13.33% 12.56% 11.94% Source: Realtor.com
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.
First Cameraman: Insider Secrets to Marketing the Obama Presidency on YouTube | Mount Kisco Real Estate
Run, don’t walk, to your favorite bookstore and buy First Cameraman: Documenting the Obama Presidency in Real Time. Or, if there aren’t any bookstores left within running distance, then bike over to your local library and check out this new hardcover book by Arun Chaudhary. Or, if you haven’t been on a bicycle since 1983, then just go to Amazon.com, buy First Cameraman, and start reading it on your Kindle in under a minute.
Get it? Got it? Good.
Arun Chaudhary was the Official White House videographer. He traveled extensively with the President capturing public events and behind-the-scenes moments.
Arun was the New Media Road Director of Obama for America (OFA) during the 2008 presidential campaign. He oversaw the team responsible for capturing the day-to-day life of the future president in video and stills. He and his team set a new standard in documenting history, delivering crucial images to the public from the road in real time. His work as part of the Obama team has been featured in the New York Times, National Journal, Politico, Fortune Magazine, and as part of the Frog Design Mind Series.
Before joining the Obama team, Arun worked in fiction film in New York as a writer, director, location sound recordist, post-production sound designer, and film critic. For five years, he was part of the NYU Graduate Film Department faculty. He got his MFA in Filmmaking from NYU and his BA in Film Theory from Cornell University.
I interviewed Arun via email for my book, YouTube and Video Marketing: An Hour a Day. Here are some excerpts:
Documenting Obama on Camera – Tips & Best Practices Learned
Jarboe: Who was your target audience? Was it opinion leaders in the YouTube community or political activists who also watched online video?
Arun Chaudhary, Official White House Videographer and Author, “First Cameraman: Documenting the Obama Presidency in Real Time.”Chaudhary: Our target audience was voters, all kinds of voters. While YouTube community folks and political activists were probably vocal commenters on our work, I don’t think it would make sense to think of them as a target audience. We wanted to appeal to a wide variety of folks. When you have a candidate as exciting and dynamic as Barack Obama was, the most important thing you can do is get him in front of as many people as possible. We used to say the YouTube or live stream hits of his speeches were like adding thousands of extra seats in the room. Especially in the early states, the sort of people you want to watch an event are folks who couldn’t physically make it for some reason. Rather than fishing for viral success, you’d rather have real prospective voters see your candidate make his or her case.
Jarboe: Did you optimize your videos for YouTube? Were there search terms that you put in your title, description, and tags of your videos on YouTube?
Chaudhary:We tried to be very specific. Location and date of the speech was very important because you really hope that folks who weren’t physically able to make the rally are able to find the footage. Topic is very important as well, because a lot of folks looking for political content online are hoping to find answers to their specific questions (what is the candidate’s position on health care?) in that way; the candidate’s websites are very much a modern update of campaign literature, or maybe even a bit like the voting guides various groups used to publish close to election times. You really can’t be too specific with your titling, though of course there are only so many words you can actually have in the title itself. I also think it’s important to include information in the piece itself.
With emerging technologies and when posting videos on many different platforms, you never quite know what will happen. One of the format rules for BarackObama.com that was designed and enforced by Kate Albright-Hanna was that the opening card for every video would be the date and location. I remember thinking that it was maybe a little too austere, but she was absolutely right. If you lived in Keokuk, Iowa, and a friend forwarded you a video link, the first thing you would see when you clicked on it would be November 20th, 2007, Keokuk, Iowa, and you would immediately know why it was relevant to you.
Jarboe: What was the most compelling video content of the campaign? Was it “Yes We Can – Barack Obama Music Video” or “Obama Speech: ‘A More Perfect Union’”?
Chaudhary: I think I better leave the awarding of superlatives to folks who were the audiences of these movies, but between the two you mentioned, I would have to go with “A More Perfect Union.” The Will.i.am piece (which was not produced by the campaign; it was made by the artists themselves) was really great, and I think a lot of people found it very inspiring and accessible, but we had consistent calls from the public to put up speeches in their entirety. As time went on, we found that some of the effort of finding specific clips and producing them with cut shots was better spent trying to get entire speeches and town halls online. Folks really seemed to respond to being allowed to see the candidate unedited. In a sense they wanted to see the candidates in the raw and make their own decision, not to feel like they were being fed media. With a candidate as compelling as Barack Obama was, it made a lot of sense to let them see him in this manner. The more people actually saw him speak and hear his views, the more likely they were to vote for him. With a different candidate one might need to take a different strategy, but for us, Barack Obama was always the star; we were just the backup singers.
Jarboe: In addition to creating compelling video content, did you engage in any outreach effort with the YouTube community or bloggers? Was there any effort to give opinion leaders a “heads-up” when a new video was uploaded?
Chaudhary: There was some effort put into blog outreach, mostly from the HQ side; I can’t really speak to it, because I wasn’t involved with it, nor was it something we thought about much on the road.
Jarboe: What production challenges did you face and overcome? Are there any tips or tools that you used to get videos uploaded on a daily basis?
Chaudhary: The production challenges were immense. We would often arrive at events with about 10 minutes to go before a speech would start and need to set up our cameras and live-streaming computer as fast as we could. If everything went right, it was just about possible. Editing was just as challenging. The Road Team edited in the field on laptops and uploaded with aircards. On an airplane you can only upload to about 30,000 feet before losing all signal, so time was always of the essence. The watchword on our team was “workflow.” Because we were doing so many events and traveling so constantly, we had a lot of opportunity to improve the workflow; see what order things should be done in, what tasks the computer could handle doing at the same time, figure out how to fill what little time we had to its fullest. Redundancy also helped. Every Road Team member had a camera, a laptop, and an aircard. That way we weren’t reliant on any one person to get the job done; we were all able to do what we needed to do. It was definitely a process. By the end of the campaign, it was taking us minutes to upload what was taking hours at the beginning. There was no magic formula, it was just experience. The thing about doing a process over and over and over is that eventually you get better. A tip I would definitely offer others is to always worry about the audio first; once you have that everything else is fixable. Bad video can seem like a choice while bad audio is always a mistake.
Jarboe: Did you take advantage of any video advertising opportunities?
Chaudhary: This isn’t really anything I can speak to directly; Joe Rospars and our online ad guys Michael Organ and Andrew Bleeker did a lot of amazing things, even putting up Obama posters in video games, but it wasn’t something the Road Team got involved with other than providing footage—something we did for the television folks as well.
Jarboe: How did you measure your video campaign? Did you use YouTube Insight, TubeMogul, or web analytics BarackObama.com? What feedback did these tools give you that led you to change what you were doing?
Chaudhary: We did pay attention to the analytics. In fact, there was an entire section of the New Media Department devoted to analyzing all the data.
On a personal level, I was never quite sure how accurate the metrics of YouTube Insight or TubeMogul were, but I think it can show you some general trends and that can be quite useful. Seeing that folks would actually watch entire speeches and not just clips was very useful, especially as it is slightly counterintuitive. Also finding out that our core audience was much older than the 18–25 demographic was very interesting. According to the YouTube Insight tool, our main audience was 40 to 50, which is what you would expect from normal political media but not necessarily online. It has certainly reinforced my notion that online political video was essentially the modern replacement for the printed campaign guides of the past. I think a lot of folks went to all the websites to compare and contrast the candidates’ views and make an informed decision.
Now, the first official White House videographer chronicles his time capturing behind-the-scenes moments of the president and his administration. “I’m sort of like President Obama’s wedding videographer,” Arun explains, “if every day was a wedding with the same groom but a constantly rotating set of hysterical guests.”
President Obama Pretends to Tape Videographer Arun Chaudhary – Image courtesy of whitehouse.gov.Some of the moments Chaudhary captures are small, like the president throwing warm-up pitches deep inside Busch Stadium in St. Louis before the All-Star game. Some are intensely emotional, as when Obama comforts a grieving teenager whose father had died in a devastating tornado. And some are just plain bizarre—like getting thrown out of the Indian parliament by his belt, or being trapped in a White House bathroom while Obama conducts a YouTube town hall on the other side of the door.
Arun’s entertaining and eye-opening book – which includes stories and images of key players such as Barack and Michelle Obama, Joe Biden, and Hillary Clinton, among others – will give online video marketers lots of expert advice and plenty of best practices to share with either executives in their company or clients of their agency.
In other words, get your hands on a copy of First Cameraman. And don’t wait until after Nov. 6, 2012, to start reading it.