Cliff's Notes...on Real Estate

Useful information YOU may use to help buy or sell SF Bay Homes in California. With a total of 39+ years of experience in real estate, I bring to the table what YOU want in your Realtor. Get a winning team in your corner when you sell or buy a home.

Friday, May 30, 2008

5 new rules for home buyers

There's no guarantee that prices have hit bottom yet - but that doesn't mean that you can't get a great deal now.
By Amanda Gengler, Money Magazine
Last Updated: May 12, 2008: 1:06 PM EDT

(Money Magazine) -- There's no telling how long the housing crisis will drag on. Here's what you need to know before you start shopping in a rocky market.
Rule 1: You can't time the bottom
Face it: The house you buy today will more than likely be worth less next year. That could get you thinking about trying to time the bottom. Resist. It's harder to do than you think, and this is the best buyers have had it in two decades, with inventories up and mortgage rates low.
Pace yourself, find the perfect place and drive a hard bargain: Ignore the seller's asking price and bid 10% below what comparable homes are selling for. If the seller balks, move on. Remember that if you're trading up, your home could sit. So sell before you buy.
Rule 2: One reason to buy now - mortgage rates
Homes are plentiful and will remain so, but financing will be getting more expensive. True, the Federal Reserve has slashed interest rates, but fixed mortgages don't directly follow the Fed. They reflect the bond market's expectations about inflation, which remains a concern. The 30-year, now at 6.1%, will likely reach mid-6% by December and 7% in 2009, says Celia Chen of Moody's Economy.com.
That means there could be a penalty for waiting to buy even if prices fall more. Today a $250,000 loan would set you back $1,500 a month. At 7%, a $1,500 payment gets you only a $225,000 mortgage. As for variable-rate loans, the spread between conforming ARMs and fixed loans is too narrow to do you much good.
Rule 3: Another reason to buy - rates on big mortgages
Mortgages in amounts greater than $417,000 - the limit for buying by federally sponsored mortgage agencies - usually run a fifth of a percentage point above conventional products. But investors are shunning jumbos, which now average 7.2% and are unlikely to drop much this year, according to HSH Associates.
Certain jumbo borrowers could get relief, however. A new law allows Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to buy loans as large as $729,750 in 71 high-priced areas. So far "jumbo conforming" loans average 6.6%. The program has gotten off to a slow start; you'll need to shop around. And unless Congress acts, this bargain will disappear at year-end.
Rule 4: Don't buy cheap; buy good schools
By now you've heard from somebody who knows somebody who got a great deal on a foreclosed property. But when you buy a house, you're also buying into a neighborhood. And foreclosures tend to be bunched in areas where residents and speculators alike took out exotic mortgages to get into homes they subsequently found they couldn't afford. That's not a recipe for stability. Prices and quality of life could both decline further.
Similarly, avoid developments that popped up in the past few years. They too likely have a lot of owners with risky loans and little equity, says Mike Larson of Weiss Research. Instead, go for areas with highly rated schools. They generally fare better during downturns, and that pattern is holding today, according to a recent study by real estate site Trulia.com.
Rule 5: Make sure your agent has your interest at heart
The real estate game has a built-in conflict of interest, since the listing agent and your agent both get paid by the seller. And these days more sellers are offering extra cash to buyer's agents.
So make sure you're not being steered to a house that's better for your agent than for you. Agree up front on his commission (typically 3%) and that any extra payments will go to you, says Jon Boyd, past president of a buyer's agent trade group.First Published: May 12, 2008: 5:41 AM EDT

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Redwood City Home Prices Drop

April 2008 Statistics for Redwood City

60 - Sales

$817,500 – April 2008

$887,500 – April 2007

-7.89% - % Change

Source: DataQuick from San Mateo County Recorder’s Office

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

NOW is the time to buy!

The Memorial Holiday has shortened the week for real estate activity. Prices seem to be holding their own and in some market places there are still multiple offers and over asking sale prices. However, this is the exception and not the rule.

Fortunately for Redwood City in San Mateo County price are going sideways to a slight upward movement (1%). I see this as a trend through the rest of the year.

Oil prices have definitely had an impact on people. This past weekend I went to Hollywood for the release of my youngest son’s new album. Traveling down 5 and driving around the streets of Hollywood there was not the traffic there was a year ago. Even in the Bay Area I see less and less cars on the road when I am out there.

All this has a direct impact on homes selling and at what price. (This too will pass.) We still have the smartest men and woman around here and where else in the world can you find paradise like the Bay Area? You can’t.

Prices will go up again! Now is your opportunity to buy. Utilize this market to your advantage.

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