Archive for the ‘Buyer Information’ Category

The end to the First Time Home buyers “party”

Thursday, January 21st, 2010 by erik.reilly

Today, after weeks of speculation, the FHA announced their plan to secure the solvency of the Insurance Fund.  And it is NOT good news for Homebuyers, and therefore, NOT good news for sellers either.  I’ll discuss the particulars in a minute; but first, let’s look at how this is the THIRD nail in the coffin for First Time Homebuyers (who we all know have fueled the market for the past year).

Nail 1- The end of the First Time Homebuyer Tax Credit.  While there is some debate on how big an impact the Tax Credit has had, there can be no debate on how its elimination (when combined with the other two nails) appears devastating to continuing the momentum.

Nail 2- The slowing, and eventual end, to the Federal Government’s purchase of Mortgage Backed Securities.  In 2008, 99% of all loans sold in the Secondary Market were bought by Uncle Sam.  When he moves to the sidelines on March 31, rates will climb swiftly.  It’s the only way to attract other buyers of MBSs back into the market.  Bottom line mortgage rates 1-1.5% higher than most buyers have become used to……and home sellers reluctant (or financially unable) to reduce prices 10-15% further to compensate.

Can anyone else see the faucet being turned off?

Today, we add the third nail.  Basically to lessen defaults on FHA loans (which have constituted more than 50% of the loans closed in some markets), guidelines are being tightened….even though we don’t have a definitive date for it yet.

1.      Lower FICO scores (below 580) will now require a 10% down payment….a significant jump from the current 3.5% down payment.

2.      The Up Front Mortgage Insurance Premium is being raised from 1.75% to 2.25%.  While this amount can be financed into the loan, it still raises the cost of home buying.

3.      The allowable seller’s concession (by which sellers have been able to pay closing costs on behalf of their purchaser) has been slashed from 6% to 3%.

While I understand requiring more cash in the deal for people who have not demonstrated good credit histories and raising the insurance costs to defray losses, I personally do not believe in reducing the allowable seller’s concession.  I acknowledge that by having more of the buyer’s money in the deal may make them more likely to fight to stay in the home, rather than walk away, I cannot believe that that potential benefit outweighs the number of people who will be forced to continue to rent because they cannot save up an additional 3%.  Taking buyers who would qualify for financing based on their income and credit, and keeping them in apartments when the market so desperately needs them to buy NOW doesn’t make sense to me.

Regardless, we need to adjust to the landscape.  Buyers who were even debating buying need to find a home, get into contract and apply for a mortgage today….waiting even for April 30 could be disastrous.  Home sellers need to price their homes to sell TODAY and not “wait for spring”.  At this point, I can see a first-time buyer who waits until May losing the $8000 tax credit, having to need 3% more cash, and paying a 1% higher rate……my advice, don’t look back with regret.  ACT and celebrate your decisiveness.

Buying a Long Island short sale

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by erik.reilly

I recently had someone inquire about buying a Long Island short sale property, and he wanted some tips and advice. For those who don’t know what a short sale is, it is when the seller of the property anticipates that the property will sell for less than the mortgage notes being held against it. Short sales started popping up in the Long Island marketplace with regularity in 2008 because of the decline in market values, and since then, have spread like a cancer. With the beating the real estate market has taken recently, it’s a fairly common situation now.

Since the short sale is now so prevalent, I figured I’d share my experience with everyone, since it could benefit a lot of people. Here are my short sale purchase tips, in no specific order:

  • In a short sale the deal is still negotiated with the homeowner with his or her agent. The listing agent or sellers attorney is really the key to the transaction. If the paperwork in a short sale package is incomplete the entire process will go no where. I am finding that there are a lot of Realtors trying to do short sales with no real experience.However, once you come to terms in your negotiation, the signed offer is sent to the bank holding the note to get their approval. They, the bank may take months to accept, reject or counter the offer already agreed upon. A strong offer in a short sale has NO CONTINGENCIES, offers a significant amount in down payment (LTV), preferably cash deal, quick close, and accept in as is conditions.
  • The asking prices Realtors offer Long Island short sales for are somewhat based on comparable sales. However the home is worth less than the mortgage note the homeowner is on the hook for, and, as I mentioned previously, it’s the bank that’s calling the shots now, not the home owner. The fact that the homeowner has no equity at stake gives them the freedom to advertise a price that is very aggressive, in order to get a great deal of interest and multiple offers.
  • Back in the mid 2000s, if you brought a fully qualified offer at list price for a home with no contingencies on the contract, and there were no competing bids, that house was pretty much yours. Now, since the list price is very aggressive, and the person who is selling the house doesn’t call the shots on the deal, a fully qualified offer at list price doen’t means a thing. It’s all up to the bank whether your offer will be accepted.
  • Despite the fact that your fully qualified, no contingency offer doesn’t mean what it once used to, you pretty much have to bring one anyway. The bank is going to do its best to force the buyer into an ultimate “caveat emptor” situation with no wiggle room to get off the hook.

Understanding the points above, it behooves the buyer of a property that is being sold short to plan ahead and expect a drawn out process. Consider the following…

  • If you are looking to buy a Long Island home and have a short contract-to-closing timeframe in mind, the short sale might not be for you. The bank probably has a huge backlog of short sales to work through, and as I mentioned above, they’re just not set up to handle these transactions expeditiously.
  • If you have need to sell a property in order to buy the short sale, sell your property before even considering the short sale purchase, since the bank isn’t interested in your home sale or home close contingency.
  • Once you’re ready to submit a contract on a Long Island short sale property, have a thorough home inspection done by a trusted, qualified, and licensed home inspector. Since you’re probably going to have to come up with a no contingency offer, you have to get your inspection done up-front.

And finally…

  • Make sure you have a real estate attorney who has experience handling Long Island short sales. The process can be very intensive, and the contract is most likely not going to be a standard real estate contract a Realtor is accustomed to dealing with.
  • Understand that you are going to contract subject to a 3rd party (the bank, investor and often a mortgage insurance company) approving the short sale
  • If you have a Realtor assisting you with purchasing a home on a short sale basis, and they aren’t providing you with the kind of tips and insights in this article, IMO, perhaps it’s time to find a new Realtor.
  • If you think you might owe more than your home is worth and need to sell, make sure the Realtor you hire has lots of experience with Long Island short sales.
  • There are opportunities for buyers in the Long Island short sale inventory, although it takes patience.

Has the Long Island housing market bottomed out?

Thursday, September 24th, 2009 by erik.reilly
has housing bottomed out

Has the Long Island housing market bottomed out?

There is no doubt that the Long Island real estate market is heading in a much more positive direction. Sales of existing homes, pending sales of existing homes and sales of new construction are all up. The media headlines are now mentioning and, in some cases, are exclaiming that we have reached a bottom. However, let’s not lose track of the real data behind the headlines.

Things are better. But, we still have a long way to go. For example, though it is true that nationally new construction sales shot up 11% in June, June has historically always been the best month of the year for this category. And, in actual units delivered, this June was the worst June since 1982! I am not trying to play the role of the pessimist just as I wasn’t playing the role of the optimist this past winter when I said the market wasn’t as bad as the media was reporting. I try to be a realist. What is reality telling me right now? All our hard work over the last twelve months is starting to pay off. Let’s remain diligent in the pricing of Long Island real estate to ensure we keep the present momentum going.

Now might be the time to pull the trigger on that Long Island real estate purchase. According to this year’s National Housing Pulse Survey from the National Association of Realtors:

83% of Americans still believe buying a home is a good financial decision.

75% of those surveyed also believe now is a good time to buy a home, a number that has increased steadily the past two years.

33% of renters are thinking more about buying a home than they were a year ago.

If you have any questions about whether it is the right time to buy or sell Long Island real estate feel free to contact me, Erik Reilly by cell/text 516.984.0789 or email reillyerik@aol.com

Oceanside NY 11572 3Q Closed Real Estate Statistics

Monday, October 13th, 2008 by erik.reilly

Oceanside NY 11572 3Q Closed Real Estate Statistics

Field

Count

Mean
(Average)

Median

Mode

Low

High

Listing Price 67 $505,340 $484,999 $399,000 $299,999 $999,000
Original Price 67 $527,903 $499,000 $499,000 $299,000 $999,000
Sold Price 67 $471,716 $460,000 $535,000 $270,000 $935,000
% Difference 67 6.47 6.3 6.5 -0.2 20.9
Taxes 66 $9,419 $8,964 $8,144 $6,111 15286.91
Bedrooms 67 3.5 4 4 2 6
Baths 67 2.1 2 2 1 4.5
Days On Market 67 116 103 43 15 351

(Calculations are done excluding zero-values except for %Difference)

Counts

Field

Value

Count

Town Oceanside

67

Zip 11572

67

Zone 6

67

County N

67

Last Status Change CL

67

Style Antique/Hist

1

Bungalow

2

Cape

11

Colonial

17

Exp Cape

3

Exp Ranch

1

Farm Ranch

1

Hi Ranch

10

Raised Ranch

1

Ranch

10

Splanch

3

Split

7

Stats are just stats. They don’t tell the truth & they
don’t tell lies. Some observations though— Volume (the # of houses
sold) was way up over the 2Q. Average and mean selling price also
up—compred to the 2ndQ 2008. What does that tell us? That selling
prices are going up? No they are not. It tells us that Oceanside Real
Estate Sellers have been humbled, have reduced their prices, and sold
their houses at what the market will bear. Houses that did not sell for
$650,000 were reduced in price to the low $500K and finally sold, after
2-3 years on the market chasing prices.

Oceanside Cove Oceanside NY 11572

Friday, July 25th, 2008 by erik.reilly

100 Daly Blvd, Oceanside, NY 11572

oceanside-cove-sign

The good life
tops your list of priorities.  You belong at the Oceanside
Cove.  This Unique cooperative (co-op) on Long Island’s fabulous
south shore offers the very best quality of living.  Oceanside
Cove is your chance to achieve your desired lifestyle with a, pet
friendly, 24 hour secure gated community.

For the young,
and the young at heart, there is no better location.  You have
easy access to all the pleasures of south shore waterfront.  The
Reynolds Channel marinas are moments away.  Neighboring Long Beach
is renowned for one of the finest beaches of the east coast.

At Oceanside
Cove you will enjoy your own beautiful residence.  The setting,
open, beautifully landscaped, park-like some units located on the pond
cove-pond

Every
aspect of gracious living provided.  Oceanside Cove’s superior
construction and amenities make this community unique.  And with
its appealing recreational facilities and terrific location- affordable
prices- it is incomparable.

Oceanside Cove gives you all the pleasures of the season:

In spring and
summer, you can play a hard game of tennis, cool off in one of the3 pools, and relax on the sundeck.  It’s all part of you Oceanside Cove recreational facilities. In the cool of the evening stroll about the spacious grounds.  Wander through the extensive, untouched foliage and wildlife of the Oceanside Nature Study Area, or play golf at the local 9-hole course.

Visit any of the 18-hole golf courses, just a short drive away, including the private Middle Bay Country Club or the public Lido Golf Club.  But don’t forget to visit the Oceanside Park recreation facility, with its playing fields, swimming pools and
children’s play facilities.

Come autumn and winter and the need for indoor pleasures, exercise and relax with your friends in the exquisite Oceanside Cove Clubhouse.  If you feel like going out, partake of fresh seafood at any of Oceanside’s fine restaurants.  You can enjoy your choice of shopping- The Sands Shopping Mall, Waldbaums Plaza and Lincoln Plaza are moments away.  Not to mention many fine boutiques.

There’s plenty of community activity, including on-going programs for both adults and children.  Oceanside boasts one of the most highly regarded school districts on Long Island.

Going to Manhattan?  Its only forty scheduled minutes to Penn Station by Long Island Rail Road, or an easy drive by convenient parkway.
Oceanside Cove, just forty minutes to Manhattan with the bright lights, glitter, music, theater, and fun of the world’s greatest cultural center.

However, for your enjoyment, Oceanside Cove by itself, provides you with a healthy, pleasurable lifestyle.  It’s your chance for the secure good life.  It’s your Oceanside Cove.  “A well run ship”

Managed by Alexander Wolf & Co. Inc

Features:

Building:

  • Custom designed contemporary facades
  • Individual front entrances
  • Private rear patios
  • Professionally landscaped and sodded with sprinkler systems
  • Sanitary and storm sewers
  • Decorator designed color coordinated bathrooms
  • Ceramic tile floors and walls over the shower and tub
  • Kitchens with furniture crafted cabinetry, fully equipped with oven, range and dishwasher.
  • Unusually spacious rooms with an abundance of closets
  • Thermostatically controlled central air conditioning and heating

Energy Features:

  • Double glazed Thermo break insulated glass windows
  • Insulated weather stripped steel front doors
  • Insulated Thermo-Break sliding doors to rear patio
  • Fiberglass insulation in roof and ceilings
  • Full thick fiberglass insulation in exterior walls
  • Energy efficient glass-lined hot water heaters
  • Perimeter insulation on all exterior foundation walls
  • “Green” Energy effecient electric CAC/Heat system (no gas or oil carbon emmissions)

Recreation Features:

oceanside-cove-gym

Exquisitely
furnished community clubhouse/recreation center with fully equipped
exercise rooms, men’s and women’s saunas, locker rooms, showers and
lavatories, magnificent lounge with cathedral ceilings, equipped paerty
kitchen, 3 pools 1 for babies, 1 for adults only, 1 for everyone

Oceanside cove pool

Just closed 2 Bedroom duplex
w 1.5 baths located walking distance
to the clubhouse and mailboxes, with attached garage $360,000.00 US
Dollars

Call  Erik Reilly Lic. Broker Assoc. for more information and appointments 516-984-0789 or email reillyerik@aol.com

Green House

Thursday, June 26th, 2008 by erik.reilly

Just
a few years ago, making a commitment to help the environment meant
recycling your plastic bags and glass bottles. But today that concept
can be taken much further, to the products we buy, the cars we drive,
and even the homes we live in.

Now builders have the know-how
to make your home healthier, more energy-efficient and more
cost-effective by using green materials and technologies. Here are some
questions you may want to ask if you are interested in hiring a
professional who is also committed to the cause.

  • Have
    you completed any special education or training courses on this topic?
    Some states and local agencies offer training and even certificate
    programs for builders who are serious about putting green technologies
    to work for their clients.

  • How
    can we use the latest technology to reduce costs and boost comfort?
    This could include using specific kinds of insulation, a special
    ventilation system, or even solar panels to supplement traditional
    energy sources.


  • What
    kinds of appliances and home systems should we use? When you think
    green about all parts of the home, from the toilet (water conservation)
    to the windows (are they energy efficient?), is when you can make the
    most difference. An experienced green builder should be able to
    recommend the products and fixtures that are best.


  • How
    do you reduce, re-use, and recycle? Find out if the builder uses
    materials made from recycled materials when they are available and
    recommended. Also, inquire how he disposes of waste materials from the
    construction site.


Going
green when you are building a new home is a worthwhile and serious
undertaking. Learn as much as you can about the topic and the builder
to ensure a smooth process and productive result. For more information
on green building, visit the Green Advantage web site at
http://www.greenadvantage.org/index.php

 

Improving Affordability = Buying Opportunity

Friday, June 13th, 2008 by erik.reilly

Improving Affordability = Buying Opportunity

Here’s
an all-points bulletin to prospective homebuyers: The protracted
decline in home prices has made many houses more affordable than
they’ve been in years. You know what this means? Housing could shift
from a buyer’s market to a seller’s market before you know it.
 Remember, incomes are still rising, so home prices don’t have to
fall as much as you think before buyers decide that they can once more
afford the home of their dreams. Sooner or later, the fact that housing
is more affordable will sink in. That’s when the market will turn.

“Housing Market May Turn More Quickly Than You Expect,” by Dr. Irwin Kellner, MarketWatch,June 3, 2008.

Declining
home prices across the nation are bringing valuations - the difference
between what a home should cost and its actual price - back to
pre-bubble levels, according to a survey conducted for financial
research firm Global Insight and banking company National City Corp.
“We’ve covered a lot of territory in terms of restoring balance in the
housing market. The froth has been completely blown away.”

– Richard DeKaser, National City’s chief economist, “Housing Affordability Back to Pre-bubble Levels,” by Ben Rooney, CNNMoney.com, June 2, 2008.

The
reason sales are slowly turning around is that smart homebuyers
recognize that prices will recover. They’d rather benefit from the next
boom than see the current seller get it. When have you ever seen
housing retest previous lows? This past year is the first in decades in
which housing prices went lower. Typically, housing prices beat
inflation by one or two percent. The 2007-2008 housing recession is an
anomaly. You’ve seen housing prices retreat as far back as 2004 in some
locales, but you don’t see them retreating to 2000.

– Richard DeKaser, National City’s chief economist, “Realty Viewpoint: Guess What? Equity Recovers,” by Blanche Evans, Realty Times, May 30, 2008.

Foreign Buyers Have Confidence in U.S. Housing Market

Declining
prices and a weak dollar have made U.S. property more appealing to
overseas buyers, while a weak U.S. economy has forced real estate
agents to look farther afield for buyers.  Last year one-third of
American agents worked with at least one international buyer, according
to the National Association of Realtors. The top five countries
supplying international customers were Mexico, Britain, Canada, India
and China.

“They’re getting away from it all, to the U.S.,” by Jane Hodges, MSNBC.com, June 4, 2008.

While
Americans are discouraged by images of neighborhoods blighted by “For
Sale” signs and taped-off properties, foreign buyers are much more
optimistic, especially about the long-term health of the U.S. market.
“The foreign buyer has an unbridled confidence in the U.S. market that
is lacking in the domestic purchaser today. They view this as the
bargain of a lifetime and are terribly excited about it.”

– David Michonski, a certified international property specialist, “Foreign Buyers Flock to U.S. Housing Market,” by Aleksandra Todorova, SmartMoney.com, May 23, 2008.

The Wedgewood section of Oceanside NY

Thursday, May 29th, 2008 by erik.reilly

Oceanside
is a hamlet in the Town of Hempstead with a population of app. 32,733
residents.  There are currently 277 homes on the market in
Oceanside.

The
Wedgewood section of Oceanside NY 11572is a quiet neighborhood, which
is bordered on the north by the Waukena Avenue, on the east by Middle
Bay Golf Course and Country Club, on the south by a Nature Preserve and
the on the west by canals leading out to Middle Bay.  Most of the
homes in this area are Split levels or Hi Ranches. There are a few
ranches as well. Some homes have basements and two car garages.
All the homes are three to five bedrooms, 1.5 to 3.5 baths.  The
lot sizes range from app. 60×100 to 80×220. Some of these homes have
lovely backyards and bulkheads on Bedell Creek offering easy access to
Jones Inlet and the ocean.  Others homes border and have lovely
views of the golf course, the Nature Preserve or the bay. Children
attend Boardman elementary school #9, Oceanside Middle School and
Oceanside High School.  There are currently five homes on the
market. They range in price from $549,000 for a three bedroom, two bath
split level with taxes of approximately $10,000 to a diamond condition
4 bedroom 3.5 bath split asking $849,000with taxes of $15,700. One of
the homes currently on the market is a splitlevel with waterfront
property at the end of one of the canals with an asking price of
$679,000. It has been on the market for almost six months.  In the
last six months there have been two sales- a large waterfront split
level with 4 bedrooms, 3.5baths and an in ground pool which sold for
$850,000 after 62 days on the market.  Taxes were approximately
15,000 per year.  The other home was also a large Split on 82×114
property with taxes of $12,599.  The house asked $675,000 sold for
$635,000 and was on the market for 79 days until full contract.