Tag Archives: South Salem

Who Pays America’s Highest (and Lowest) Property Taxes? | South Salem NY Homes

 

The second biggest cost of home ownership — following the mortgage — is usually property taxes. In 2012, U.S. homeowners paid an average of about $2,800 in property taxes, according to a recent Zillow study. And if you live in New York, New Jersey, or Colorado your taxes were in some cases five times more than the national average. The numbers are based on an average of real estate taxes paid on single family housing in 2012.

The residents of Westchester County in New York pay more in property taxes than the typical resident of any other major American county. The average property tax bill for a single family home in Westchester County comes to $14,829 a year.

Want to know how your county stacks up against the rest of the country? Check out our rankings below.

 

https://homes.yahoo.com/news/pays-america-highest-lowest-property-taxes-163136546.html

 

Construction worker dies from fall at Dream Hotel | South Salem Real Estate

 

A male construction worker, likely in his 40s, died today after falling from a four-story scaffold at the Dream Hotel, at 210 West 55th Street, a New York Police Department spokesperson confirmed.

An investigation into the incident is ongoing. The identity of the worker is not being released at this time. He fell on top of a sidewalk shed and was pronounced dead at the scene.

A spokesperson for Hampshire Hotels, the owner of the building, was not immediately available for comment.

Hampshire appears to have been  performing repair work to the building’s terracotta facade and general remediation in connection with Local Law 11 compliance, according to Department of Buildings permits.

http://therealdeal.com/blog/2014/04/02/construction-worker-dies-from-fall-at-dream-hotel/

 

10 things your real-estate agent won’t tell you | South Salem Homes

 

1. “I’m using your house to sell myself.”

U.S. home prices have rebounded to mid-2004 levels, according to the latest S&P/Case-Shiller home price survey, and though monthly gains are slowing, this spring — traditionally the prime home-buying season — looks to be a sellers’ market.

That’s good news for real-estate agents as well. A 2013 National Association of Realtors member survey showed that agents’ $34,000 median annual income last year reflected a level not seen since 2006, just before the U.S. housing boom went bust; incomes in 2012 were up 37% from 2010.

But while most agents are hardworking professionals, buyers and sellers may encounter some agents who see only the “me” in home.

To get a listing, some agents tell dazzling stories about houses they’ve sold in your area. They’ll promise to splash photos of your home across the advertising pages of glossy magazines and blanket your neighborhood with direct mail to lure move-up buyers.

Critics say these agents are great marketers — of themselves. Photos in real-estate circulars “market the agent,” says Karen Krupsaw, vice president of real-estate operations at brokerage website Redfin. Mailers generate interest in the neighborhood — not the home. “It’s an avenue [brokers take] to generate business for themselves — using your house,” she says.

Furthermore, just because an agent does a lot of business, that doesn’t necessarily mean his clients were happy with his work, Krupsaw says. Indeed, the Council of Better Business Bureaus reports that consumer complaints against agents nationwide rose 22% in 2012 over the previous year.

The real estate website Trulia advises sellers to ask an agent how long their recent listings stayed on the market before selling, and compare that to the neighborhood’s history. Find out the average sale price compared with the average listing price of the homes they’ve sold. And ask how many other sellers the agent currently represents.

 

 

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/10-things-real-estate-agent-124050800.html

Pending Home Sales at 30-Month Low | South Salem Homes

 

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) Thursday morning released its data  on pending sales of existing homes in February. The pending home sales index  fell 0.8% from a downwardly revised index reading of 94.7 in January to the  February reading of 93.9. That is 10.5% lower than in February 2013, when the  index reading was 104.9. The consensus estimate called for a month-over-month  decrease of 0.8% in pending sales. The index reflects signed contracts, not  sales closings. An index reading of 100 equals the average level of contract  signings during 2001.

Total existing home sales are expected to come to 5 million, below the 2013  total of 5.1 million. National median home prices are forecast to rise by about  5.5% to 6.0% this year, but existing home inventory levels need to increase to  help keep prices in check. The median price forecast is slightly higher than  last month’s forecast. Home prices rose 11.5% in 2013.

The NAR’s chief economist noted:

Contract signings for the past three months have been little changed,  implying the market appears to be stabilizing. Moreover, buyer traffic  information from our monthly Realtor® survey shows a modest turnaround, and some  weather delayed transactions should close in the spring.

Pending home sales in the northeastern United States declined 2.4% in  January, posting an index reading of 77.1, down 7.4% from February 2013. The  index rose 2.8% in the Midwest but remains 8.5% below last year’s reading. Sales  fell 4% in the South and rose by 2.3% in the West. Compared with February 2013,  all regions are down.

Pending home sales do not have the economic impact of new home sales, which employ  thousands of people in building and furnishing new homes. But it does give some  indication of the market for housing

Read more:  Pending Home Sales at 30-Month Low – 24/7 Wall St. http://247wallst.com/housing/2014/03/27/pending-home-sales-at-30-month-low/#ixzz2xGWrwkK4

Distressed sales down, investor activity wanes | South Salem Real Estate

 

Residential properties sold at an estimated annual pace of 5,083,241 in February, a 0.2% decline from January but up 7% from February 2013, according to the latest report from RealtyTrac.

February marked the fourth consecutive month where sales activity has fell on a monthly basis. This includes single-family homes, condominiums and townhomes.

There were monthly declines in 31 states, and year-over-year declines in six – including Massachusetts, California, Arizona and Nevada. Twenty-one of the nation’s largest 50 metropolitan areas likewise suffered sales volume declines, including Phoenix, Orlando, Las Vegas and Detroit, among others.

“Supply and demand have reached a bit of a standoff in this uneven real estate recovery,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. “The supply of distressed properties — which buyers and investors have come to rely on over the past few years — is evaporating quickly in most markets, but that dwindling supply is not being adequately replenished by non-distressed homeowners listing their homes or by new homes being built.”

Blomquist noted that some of the volume decline is from institutional investors, a primary driver over the past two years. Investor activity has declined in the last several months.

“It’s not yet clear if that diminishing demand will be filled by first-time homebuyers and move-up buyers,” he said.

 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/29449-why-did-residential-sales-decline-for-fourth-month-straight

 

Trulia: 3 weights pull the housing recovery down | South Salem Real Estate

 

The housing market is recovering, albeit a slow and staggering pace, but it is still improving.

According to Trulia (TRLA) Chief Economist Jed Kolko’s latest Housing Barometer blog, “Of the Housing Barometer’s five indicators, all have improved over the last year except new construction starts. But only rising home prices and falling delinquencies + foreclosures have been steady. The other three measures – sales, starts, and young-adult employment – have zigzagged, both gaining and losing ground over the year.”

So what are the dead weights adding pressure to the strength of the recovery?

In the blog, Kolko defines three variables holding the recovery back.

1. Affordability is getting worse.

Kolko mentions that even though it remains cheaper to buy a home than to rent in the 100 largest metros, homeownership is pricier than last year. “And declining affordability is a bigger challenge for first-time home buyers than for current homeowners looking to trade in a home that has also increased in value,” Kolko said.

2. Investors are slowly exiting.

Since prices have risen and fewer people are losing homes to foreclosure, Kolko noted that investing-to-rent makes less sense. Previously, investors were a main driver in pushing up home sales and prices, but as they step back, price gains are slowing and sales volumes are sagging, he added.

3. The mortgage market is unstable.

Purchase applications and mortgage-based home sales are declining, as rates continue to rise and new regulations are short-term uncertainty. “But this reason may be only a temporary hurdle: rates remain low by historical standards, and the new mortgage rules offer longer-term clarity that should encourage banks to make more loans that are within the new rules,” Kolko said.

Although this unusual winter created some burden on the housing market, these reasons are the main drivers behind recent stumbles in sales and starts.

But the good news: the delinquency and foreclosure rate is dropping, and young adults are going back to work.

 

http://www.housingwire.com/articles/29441-trulia-3-weights-pulling-the-housing-recovery-down

$12.9M Jaggedy Zapata House In Golden Beach Has FDR Twist | South Salem NY Real Estate

 

19 images

Curbed National has the story of a $12.9 million oceanfront house in Golden Beach designed by Carlos Zapata (the guy that did that space ship-like metal fountain on the Washington Avenue terminus of Lincoln Road) which claims to be the site of Franklin Delano Roosevelt‘s Winter White House. A little digging turns up little evidence to support this, except that Eleanor Roosevelt rented a house down the street, twice. A little more investigating might be in order.

 

 

http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2014/03/20/zapata-designed-house-in-golden-beach.php

This Carriage House With a Secret Pool Wants $85,000/Month | South Salem Real Estate

 

24 images

This 25-foot-wide house on East 83rd Street was once J.P. Morgan’s carriage house, and if the 19th century industrialist could see it today he would either be really impressed or run away screaming, because the entire house—from lighting to music to thermostats—is controlled via touchpad. And that’s not even the most intriguing part: apparently, the kitchen floor can slide open to reveal a swimming pool. (The pool is not pictured, but that’s okay—it doesn’t sound like something people would want to see pictures of.)

The house’s owner, businessman Karan Trehan, bought it with his wife in 1995 and they renovated it together, filling the 7,200-square-foot building “with artwork and heavy Anglo-Indian furniture, reflecting their shared Indian background.” After the couple separated in 2007, Trehan renovated the house again to reflect it being a sick bachelor pad. All the art is now for sale, and the house is available to rent at $85,000/month. Make sure you get a look at that pool before you sign the lease, though.

http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2014/03/20/this_carriage_house_with_a_secret_pool_wants_85000month.php

 

Inventory of homes for sale soars 10 percent in February from a year ago | South Salem Real Estate

 

Rising home prices are bolstering seller confidence, fueling rapid growth in the number of homes for sale in many markets in February, according to a report issued by realtor.com today.

Median list prices were up 7.6 percent from a year ago in February, to $199,000, and the inventory of homes for sale rose 10.1 percent, to 1.74 million. In other words, there were 160,000 more homes for sale than the same time a year ago.

Out of 146 markets tracked by realtor.com, 99 experienced annual growth in listings, with 63 of those markets seeing inventories swell by 10 percent or more.

Median list prices and inventory were up on a month-over-month basis as well, rising 2.1 percent and 4.3 percent, respectively, indicating that 2014 home sales, which got off to a slow start in January, have potential to grow as the spring buying season gets underway.

But even with the recent surge in listings, inventories “are still extremely low,” realtor.com said in summarizing the overall picture.

“Seller confidence is the factor to watch as we head into the spring homebuying season, and these are very encouraging indicators — not only are more homes coming onto the market, but typically we don’t see a rise in asking prices this early into the year,” said Steve Berkowitz, CEO of realtor.com operator Move Inc., in a statement. “This is the market these sellers have been waiting for.”

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2014/03/18/inventory-of-homes-for-sale-soars-10-percent-in-february-from-a-year-ago/?utm_source=20140318&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailyheadlinespm#sthash.7ipS3omW.dpuf