Friday, May 9, 2008

Good News Continues for US Housing Market

Released today by NAR, this report outlines some of the great reasons the summer market is going to look up across the US! If you would like to discuss these or other postings please feel free to post to this blog. Otherwise feel free to contact me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or call me at 508/737-5280. To search for homes go to this Cape Cod real estate website.

Expect a Summer Rise in Home Sales

A flat pattern in home sales activity should continue for the next couple of months before improving over the summer, according to the latest forecast by the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the extent of an expected recovery hinges on better access to affordable loans. “Things are beginning to improve, but the availability of affordable mortgages is uneven around the country and sometimes within metropolitan areas,” he says. “As anticipated, we continue to look for a soft first half of the year, for both housing and the economy, before notable improvements in the second half. Some time is needed for FHA and new conforming jumbo loans to become widely available.”

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in March, edged down 1.0 percent to 83.0 from a downwardly revised level of 83.8 in February, and was 20.1 percent lower than the March 2007 index of 103.9.

NAR President Richard F. Gaylord says additional costs in many markets are hindering a recovery. “Our members are telling us that more buyers are looking at homes but are slow in signing contracts, and that’s contributing to the weakness in pending home sales,” he says. “In many cases buyers are waiting for greater access to affordable credit, especially in higher cost areas, but some are disappointed with what appears to be unnecessarily restrictive lending requirements. The good news this week is there is some discussion toward relaxing some of the burdensome lending practices.”

The PHSI in the Northeast jumped 12.5 percent in March to 80.8 but remains 15.4 percent below a year ago. In the South, the index slipped 0.1 percent to 84.9 and is 26.7 percent lower than March 2007. The index in the West declined 1.4 percent in March to 91.2 and is 9.5 percent below a year ago. In the Midwest, the index fell 10.4 percent in March to 74.1 and is 22.3 percent below March 2007.

Existing-home sales are projected to rise from an annual pace of 4.95 million in the first quarter to 5.82 million in the fourth quarter. For all of 2008, existing-home sales are likely to total 5.39 million, and then rise 6.1 percent to 5.72 million next year. “Although more than half of local markets are expected to see price growth this year, the aggregate existing-home price will decline 2.4 percent in 2008, driven by a relatively few markets that are very oversupplied,” Yun says. The median price is forecast at $213,700 this year before rising 4.1 percent to $222,600 in 2009.

Some areas already are seeing sales increases, underscoring that all real estate is local. In March, unpublished snapshot data shows sales in Bakersfield, Calif., and Jackson, Miss., were higher than a year ago. At the same time, price gains were noted in markets such as Buffalo-Niagara Falls, and Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

On May 13, NAR will report first-quarter data on metropolitan area home prices, covering about 150 metro areas, and state home sales. “Although some market adjustments are necessary, a downward overshooting of the housing market would cause unnecessary loss in economic output, income, and jobs,” Yun says. “It is critical to stimulate housing demand by inducing fence sitters back into the market. A home buyer tax credit on any home purchase would accomplish that.”

Here are some highlights from NAR's report:

  • New-homes. Sales of new homes are expected to fall 30.9 percent to 536,000 this year before rising 10.1 percent to 590,000 in 2009. Housing starts, including multifamily units, will probably drop 29.5 percent to 955,000 in 2008, and then rise 1.3 percent to 967,000 next year. The median new-home price is estimated to fall 3.7 percent to $238,000 this year, and then rise 5.4 percent in 2009 to $250,900.
  • Rates. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is likely to rise gradually to 6.2 percent by the end of the year, and then average 6.3 percent in 2009.
  • Affordability. NAR’s housing affordability index is expected to rise 10 percentage points to 127.0 for all of 2008.
  • GDP. Growth in the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) should be 1.5 percent this year and 2.3 percent in 2009. The unemployment rate is projected to average 5.3 percent in 2008 and 5.5 percent next year.
  • Inflation. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, is seen at 3.4 percent this year and 2.2 percent in 2009. Inflation-adjusted disposable personal income is forecast to grow 1.2 percent in 2008 and 3.0 percent next year.

Source: NAR

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Home-price data has its flaws

In this excellent expose by Chris Pummer, former senior editor for MarketWatch and Bloomberg News, some of the market fervour created is dispelled based on activity in the market place and not necessarily a lack there of. Prices on Cape Cod reflect the type of drop in value described in this article, particularly in the town of Barnstable where the short-sale and forclosure markets have spiked. This is driving investor activity and the large volume of low-priced sales skews the true valuation of the market.

Luxury areas such as Chatham and Orleans have seen price increases. Luxury sales in Barnstable County as previously discussed (First Quarter Luxury Homes Sales on Cape Cod Up dramatically!) are still strong. Enjoy the article and let me know your thoughts. As always, if you have any questions about this article feel free to post to this blog or email Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com. To see properties for sale on Cape Cod click here to view Cape Cod real estate.


Market anomalies are painting a skewed picture, index producers acknowledge
by Chris Pummer

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Commonly cited measures of U.S. home prices are overstating the degree to which the vast majority of Americans' home values have declined in the last year, producers of two of the most widely tracked indexes acknowledged this week.

Top officials with the National Association of Realtors and Standard & Poor's, which issues the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, agreed this week their monthly reports are giving imprecise readings of price changes at all levels -- national, state and regional -- due to rare market conditions that are skewing survey results.

The NAR reported last week that U.S median home prices fell 7.7% in March from a year ago. The decline resulted largely from a market anomaly -- a steep decline in costlier home sales due to tighter lending standards and high jumbo-mortgage rates, coupled with a foreclosure-driven spike in cheaper homes.

"If there are a lot more homes sold on the low end and fewer on the high end, the median price is bound to drop dramatically," NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said. "In normal times, a median price would reflect typical homeowner equity changes, but these are not normal times. The jumbo (mortgage) market is frozen and the buying activity is more concentrated in lower-value homes."

The S&P/Case-Shiller index, which Tuesday posted a 12.7% decline for February, is skewed for two reasons of its own -- it tracks just 20 major markets, many among the hardest hit, and its "repeat sales" survey by design pulls in individual homes both bought and sold in the last few years. Many of those are now being dumped by distressed homeowners and investors who bought at peak market prices and face higher mortgage-rate adjustments.

A widespread problem

The misleading home-value figures are just one example of recently sketchy readings of the U.S. economy. U.S. consumer-confidence readings, for instance, have been wildly divergent.

The Conference Board's closely tracked index Tuesday showed confidence falling in April to its lowest since the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003. A University of Michigan survey incorporated in the U.S. Index of Leading Economic Indicators last week rang in at its lowest level since November 1982 --when the country was suffering through 10.8% unemployment and the worst recession since the Great Depression.

That 26-year-low confidence mark grabbed headlines nationwide while the Conference Board number that many economists find equally reliable drew far less media attention. Not one journalist who contacted Conference Board Communications Director Frank Tortorici's office Tuesday inquired why there was such an astounding discrepancy, he said.

NAR's Yun said the financial media is seizing on gloomy numbers and providing little analysis or historical perspective. He freely admits NAR's readings aren't accurately reflecting what's happening with home values for the overwhelming majority of Americans.

"Like any economic measure, it can be imprecise, and it is especially so now," Yun said.

Grim reapers

As reported Tuesday, the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index's12.7% decline in February was the largest drop since its creation in 2001. Despite that index's limited seven-year history, the Associated Press reported that home prices "plunged by a record" percentage and "at their fastest rate ever."

The glaring discrepancy in this case is that 17 of the 20 metro areas posted record annual declines, and yet 78% of the 330 metropolitan regions that NAR tracks reported price increases in the latest period -- and that despite the acknowledged downward bias in current price readings.

S&P Index Committee Chairman David Blitzer acknowledged his organization's overall and metro-market readings paint an incomplete picture. For that reason, he said, the report now charts price changes in 17 of the markets at three specific levels - low-, mid- and high-priced homes -- to provide a clearer assessment.

In the high-priced San Francisco area in February, for example, homes priced below $512,000 fell 32% in value from a year ago, while homes priced from $512,000 to $750,000 fell 21% in value and those over $750,000 fell 6%.

"The homes that had the biggest run-up and biggest run-down more often than not are the least-expensive homes," said Blitzer, S&P's managing director of portfolio services.

Yun said the S&P/Case-Shiller Index is flawed because "if you focus on down markets you're going to get a downward price. We are disappointed that its very limited market coverage gets such attention."

Conversely, Blitzer said the NAR figures are faulty because "it's well understood that a median is subject to sharp swings in the sample. The only plus is that it's easy to compile using inexpensive computing resources. If I had 88 years of data, I wouldn't want to change (methodologies) either."

In both cases, pockets of severe price declines in local markets are skewing figures, Yun said. If homeowners want to determine their property's value, it's never been more critical to take the measure of recent sales by home-price level in their town or city neighborhood.

"Just like saying the average nationwide temperature today is 57 degrees doesn't tell you anything, the same is true for real estate prices," Yun said. "The only way to tell what your own home is really worth is to look at local-market conditions, do Internet research and utilize professionals (such as licensed appraisers) to help determine the value of your home."

Chris Pummer is a former senior editor for MarketWatch and Bloomberg News and a reporter for such papers as the Los Angeles Times and San Jose Mercury News.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

First Quarter Luxury Homes Sales on Cape Cod Up dramatically!

Wondering if home valuations at the high-end will appreciate on Cape Cod? Apparently so!

Home sales for Single family homes over $1,000,000 in March of 2008 are down slightly compared to 2007. In March 2007 25 homes sold for an average sales price of $2,013,551 and a total volume of $50,338,775, according to the Cape Cod and Islands MLS as of 5/1/08. In the same month in 2008 18 homes sold for a total volume of $40,368,500. The story to pay attention to here is the average sales price is up month versus month to $2,242,694, a 11.4% price increase.

This price increase trend is consistent with Quarter over Quarter numbers and when looking at the broader picture for the first quarter of 2008 the picture gets even better for the luxury market.

First quarter of 2008 everything looks good for Cape luxury single-family sales. Sales units went from 50 in 2007 to 60 in 2008; a modest 20% increase. Total sales volume went from $89,804,275 up to $123,941,004, a very healthy 38% increase. Average sales price also had a healthy increase from $1,796,086 to $2,065,683, or a nice 15% increase.

Other factors to look at include average Days on Market (DOM) and average square-footage of those homes. First, properties over $1,000,000 sold 30 days quicker, down to 186 DOM in 2008 from 216 DOM in 2007.

Why is this happening? Well, they aren't making any more Cape Cod first of all. Second, a very large transfer of wealth is happening in the country right now and investing in real estate in desireable high-end areas such as the Cape are still a great investment.

If you have any questions about these statistics post to this blog or email Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com. To see some of the properties for sale over $1,000,000 click here to view that luxury Cape Cod real estate.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

First Quarter Single-Family Sales and Median Prices 2007-2008

The Boston Globe published Massachusetts housing data from the Warren Group for the first quarter of 2008.

If you would like to discuss these or other postings please feel free to post to this blog. Otherwise feel free to contact me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or call me at 508/737-5280. To search Cape Cod real estate now click here.

Home Sales Numbers on Cape Cod looking UP versus the State

As compared to Massachusetts as a whole Cape Cod sales numbers look pretty good. As a whole, the Warren Group reports that the median sales price for the first quarter of 2008 is down 10% statewide. Cape Cod as a whole (Barnstable County) is off 12%. The volume of sales is where Cape Cod is starting to pick up the pace, a testament to the return of the market on Cape Cod. State wide home sales numbers for the first quarter are down 27% from 2007, off 2,542 units.

The Cape is off only 1/2 of that figure, down only 14% and down only 103 homes sold. In the first quarter of 2007 734 homes sold according to the Warren Group. In the same time frame in 2008 the report says 631 homes have sold.

We believe this is because the Cape started its decline in 2005 and price dropped to the point that they are now very desirable investment properties once again. Luxury areas, such as Chatham and Orleans have actually shown double digit median price increases!

Here are the statistics for Cape Cod. For the statistics for all of Massachusetts visit Boston.com.



Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Home prices in Northeast outpace the rest of the nation

If you would like to discuss these or other postings please feel free to post to this blog. Otherwise feel free to contact me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or call me at 508/737-5280.

To search Cape Cod real estate now click here.

The AP recently put out a report based on results from the National Association of Realtors that stated that sales of existing single-family homes and condominiums dropped by 2% in March. The median price of a home sold in March declined nationwide by 7.7%, the second-biggest year-over-year price decline following a record 8.4% drop in February.

Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer reports, “According to NAR, the Northeast was the country's only region to experience a rise in median prices, which were up 4.6 percent compared with a year ago. Prices were down in all other regions of the country, dropping by 14.7 percent in the West, 7.1 percent in the South and 5.3 percent in the Midwest.”

According to statistics from MLS PIN taken April 22, 2008, the average price of homes sold in Boston from March 2007 to 2008 has risen 4.3%. This is in line with the results for the rest of the market and bode well for the Boston real estate market in general despite significant decay in home prices in some areas of the country. Being the major influencer market on the Cape the rise in Boston home prices is a good meter stick for Cape Cod as well. This means people selling homes in Boston have more discretionary income for second and vacation homes on Cape Cod!

Monday, April 14, 2008

Home Sales in Northeast Skyrocket!

Do you think the market in the Northeast is a dangerous place to invest? Wondering if now is the right time to invest on Cape Cod or play it safe and wait? You might be alone in that thought process moving forward.

In the most recent Regional Report presented by RealEstateABC.com the Northeast experienced the greatest increase in sales volume this March. See the full details below.

If you would like to discuss these or other postings please feel free to post to this blog. Otherwise feel free to contact me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or call me at 508/737-5280.

To search Cape Cod real estate now click here.

Regional Report: Northeast by Realty Times Staff

RealEstateabc.com reported at the end of March that sales of existing homes in the US went up by 2.86 percent last month, from 4.89 million homes to 5.03 million homes.
The sharpest increase they found was in the Northeast region, which saw a jump of 11.25 percent for the month.

That is a really phenomenal increase for Northeastern states like Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York, where local agents are overall quite positive about their market.

Our market expert in Canton, Massachusetts, David Nelson, reports that 20 homes have sold in his area over the last few months and 17 others have gone under contract.
These numbers are up from last year, Nelson says, and there are still plenty of good buys to be had.

Our market experts for Fishkill, New York, Vincent and Roberta Lario, also have some good news for their area.

They report that though sales are down in surrounding areas, they have actually seen an increase in sales and home price and their area, where the average home price is $368,000.
And despite the unusually high prices, the Larios also report a large number of homes for sale in their market.

And lastly to Kinnelon, New Jersey, where market expert Anne Fisher also has some good news.

Unsold inventory in Kinnelon is down from a year ago, Fisher reports, and sales are up and the projected absorption has gone from 18 months down to 9 months.

All this indicates that buyers are beginning to re-enter the housing market, and now is still a good time to buy while there is plenty of inventory and prices are still relatively low.
That's all for today's regional report. Be sure to check back for the latest report on your area.

Published: April 11, 2008

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

MORTGAGE APPLICATIONS JUMP

Boston.com today reported that mortgage applications are UP as the FHA index climbs higher.

This represents one of the first times we have seen such a dramatic increase in Year-to-Year increases in mortgage applications in a while. Buyers in the market should be aware that if they are thinking about making an offer the time to move is now. As people are seeing from one of our previous reports, the summer competition will rise as tends to happen in the Cape Cod real estate market this time of year - especially with the deals to be had in the market!

If you would like to discuss these or other home selling strategies please feel free to post to this blog. Otherwise feel free to contact me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or call me at 508/737-5280. To search Cape Cod homes for sale now click here.

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Applications for U.S. home mortgages jumped last week, fueled by the ongoing increase in activity for government-backed loan programs, according to data published by an industry group on Wednesday.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity rose 5.4 percent to 725.6 in the week ended April 4. A year earlier the index stood at 646.6.

The MBA's index of refinancing applications last week rose 3.4 percent to 2,724.7, and its gauge of loan requests for home purchases climbed 8.1 percent to 384.7.

The sub-index of applications for loans backed by government programs such as the Federal Housing Administration and the Veterans Administration jumped by 12.9 percent last week, bringing the measure to 375.2, nearly three times the level of a year ago.

Borrowers have increasingly looked to FHA programs in recent months after lenders that once courted them have now closed or severely tightened requirements for getting a loan. The government has expanded the reach of the FHA for homeowners facing foreclosure, and key lawmakers are lobbying to broaden the programs even more.
Fixed 30-year mortgage rates averaged 5.78 percent in the week, up 0.03 percentage point from the prior week.

(Reporting by Al Yoon, editing by Walker Simon)

Monday, April 7, 2008

Seller Tips on Creating a Buzz and Selling Quickly

Smart Money magazine recently published this article from Dow Jones writer Rachel Koning Beals. It outlines some great strategies on how to make your home more attractive in this market. If you would like to discuss these or other home selling strategies please feel free to post to this blog. Otherwise feel free to contact me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or call me at 508/737-5280.

To search Cape Cod real estate now click here.

REAL ESTATE: Here's How Home Sellers Can Create Buzz And Move Their ListingMarch 12, 2008

By Rachel Koning Beals

CHICAGO (Dow Jones) -- Curious home buyers filing through a renovated five-bedroom mid-century ranch in North Caldwell, N.J., on a recent weekend could be heard gushing over the home's condition.

Some ventured to call the $799,000 listing "immaculate" and "pristine," lingering inside and outdoors long enough to get a sense of home life in this kid-friendly, upscale New York suburb, recalled Phyllis Pezenik, an agent who attended the high-traffic open house.

Positive buzz, owed to some elbow grease and a good dose of reality from these owners and their agent, is just what's needed to sell homes in all price ranges and regions this spring, say real estate experts.

"It's a job [to sell a house]. There's just no way around it," said Pezenik, vice president of residential sales at Manhattan-based agency DJK Residential.

Location, condition and, above all, price, can make or break a speedy, problem-free sale under most conditions. It's especially true in an economy handcuffed by steep energy and food prices, thrifty consumers and restrained job creation.

Anemic economic growth is aggravating persistently tight credit conditions and home foreclosures in many parts of the country. This uncertainty is keeping some buyers sidelined even as sub-6% 30-year mortgage rates beckon those who qualify. For now, opinions vary on whether housing might rebound later this year or not until 2009.

For sure, stories of houses selling within days or hours after listing may be distant memories, but houses languishing for months with little or no interest are becoming rarer too, said Pam O'Connor, president and CEO of Chicago-based Leading Real Estate Companies, a trade group for independent real estate agencies.

"Of those selling in 90 days or less, price is a huge factor," O'Connor said. Home resales are competing with each other and the reduced prices offered on the stagnant inventory of newly constructed homes.

Freshly painted and stripped of its clutter and personal effects -- but maintaining its charm -- the 50-year-old northern New Jersey home drew plenty of compliments for its first open house. But importantly, it was priced to get potential buyers through the front door for a look, said Pezenik. The median home price in North Caldwell is $998,000 and though that is well above the $208,000 national average it is typical of the suburbs that are close to the nation's business capital.

Touchy subject

"You have to be ruthless in looking at your own house value," said Jon Gollinger, CEO of residential real estate sales and auction consultants Accelerated Marketing Partners, which has headquarters in Boston and Danville, Calif.

"That's difficult for someone who owns one single property and every penny means something," he said.

Though price moves vary by region, it's hard to deny the statistics: national home prices are down 10% from an early-2006 peak, while that decline intensified to 19% late last year, according to the Standard & Poor's Case-Shiller index.

One of the biggest mistakes that sellers make when determining price is looking only at comparable listings and not necessarily those properties that have actually sold, Gollinger said. Although Internet listings are shortening the time that information gets into the hands of agents and buyers and sellers, there's still a gap of two or three months before closing data is available.

"If the market is moving away from you, the value of your home may be declining in just weeks or a few months," said Gollinger. Depending on how fast conditions are changing, aggressively high pricing early on can result in a seller dropping the price too aggressively out of desperation. A house that sits too long on the market begins to smell of deeper problems than just a high price, whether warranted or not.

Sellers must consider time when setting their price. There's a big difference between someone who hopes to sell their home and someone who needs to sell, say for a job transfer or to accommodate an expanding family.

Since time is money, those needing a fast escape are going to have to price their listing below the prevailing range in their neighborhood, say the experts. And, since most buyers are doing their own preliminary searches online, it's often beneficial to price a listing a few thousand below a major figure; for instance, a home priced at $299,000 will include searchers whose cut-off is $300,000, but a listing at $305,000 excludes this group, said O'Connor.

If selling your home through an agent, go with the professional who best knows the area and local selling patterns, not just the one who's willing to put the biggest price on the listing, the experts said.



"Brokers put together a 'hot buy' list and that's what you want to be on," said O'Connor. "You've got to be on the radar and it all comes down to price and condition."
Along with informed pricing, consider these selling tips:





  • Finishing repairs, freshening paint, clearing clutter and staging the home for a wide range of potential buyers has become increasingly important in this tough sellers market. The superficial condition of the home reveals how well it's been taken care of by the seller. O'Connor says her members report some 20% of listings being professionally staged versus 5% a few years ago. "It doesn't cost a fortune," she said. "Consider it like getting your car detailed."


  • If going for a kitchen or bath remodel before listing, consider smart use of space and materials and energy efficient appliances in order to appeal to buyers wary of high energy prices, said Accelerated Marketing's Gollinger. "Buyers are going for value and efficiency," he said. "Bigger isn't necessarily better any more."


  • Tap all media for your listing. Create buzz with a blog about your home, which, along with high-quality photos can add a virtual open house to any traditional showings. Be clever with your listing. New York-based Pezenik enticed would-be buyers into a condo she sold recently by raving in the ad about the view of Fourth of July fireworks.


  • Sweeten the deal by offering to help buyers with upfront cash, such as offering to pay closing costs or golf memberships. Gollinger says some mortgage companies, also anxious to drum up business in this slower market, are covering closing costs. That's another carrot to dangle in front of interested buyers.


  • Anticipate the needs of potential buyers long before any numbers are being tossed around. Another Pezenik client got contractor estimates for tearing out and seeding a mostly concrete back yard and presented those figures to interested buyers.


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

Cape, especially Luxury market, strengthens. Buyers re-activate.

In this personal experience story, Boston Globe columnist Kris Frieswick expounds on the Cape real estate market. She expands her personal knowledge of the Cape market through research, recounting her experiences and discoveries as she prepares to make a purchase herself, taking a true look at the current situation on Cape: What is selling? What is foreclosing? and How does a real estate investment might stack up against others investments?


If you have questions about this article please post your comments or feel free to contact me directly at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or 508/737-5280.


Click on this link to start your search for Cape Cod real estate now.



The Cape Is Calling


Still kicking yourself for not buying that Cape vacation home years ago? Well, market forces and foreclosures are presenting a second chance, as one intrepid couple discovers.


By Kris Frieswick March 16, 2008

If you're thinking of purchasing a vacation home on Cape Cod any time soon, stop. Abandon your plans. It's a total sellers' market. Trust me, you can't afford anything you'd want to live in. And the traffic - I mean, do you want to sit in three hours of traffic each way every weekend? Look elsewhere for your vacation home, like New Hampshire or the lakes region of Maine, wherever . . . just not the Cape. Really. You'll be very disappointed.

OK, I'm lying. Statistics, market trends, and reality on the ground make buying a Cape vacation home one of the no-brainer investment decisions of 2008 for those with a 20 percent down payment and pristine credit to meet banks' new stricter requirements and no need to sell an existing home in this tough market. That's why my husband and I are spending most our weekends house hunting. We are relaxed, sipping our piping-hot to-go coffees, politely yielding the way to the other house hunters where Route 6 goes from four lanes to two. In a month, I fear I'll find myself in a drag race to the Sagamore Bridge. (That's why I lied.)


Despite my exaggerated fears, the vacation home buying activity is more likely to resemble a horse race than a drag race. Housing values aren't expected to reverse their slide for another year, based on the latest economists' data. This means that Cape buyers today aren't flippers, investors, or speculators. Today's house hunters are buying because they love the Cape, not because they want to make a quick buck. They'll make money eventually, when things turn around, but this market offers something far more precious: a chance to fulfill a dream that had previously been far from reach - a vacation home on the Cape.


Due to a recent inheritance, my husband and I now quite unexpectedly find ourselves among this group of buyers. When the money came to us, we thought about investing it in a financial portfolio. But you can't watch the sunset from the deck of your mutual fund. You can't walk to the beach from your ETF. You can't host rockin' all-night parties in the backyard of your high-yield CD. So we now find ourselves compulsively scanning the Multiple Listing Service in search of "The House."


There are many reasons why the Cape currently represents a nearly irresistible buying opportunity. First, it's gorgeous down there, in case you haven't been. It possesses some of the finest beaches on earth. "I can feel myself relax the minute I cross the Bourne Bridge," says Courtney French of Norwood, who, with her husband, Warren, purchased a vacation home in Mashpee in October. "I feel like I'm coming home. We can't wait for summer."


Since no one is making any more land on the Cape (and the ocean claims a little of it each year), the amount of buildable property is dwindling. Conservation rules are making it next to impossible to expand many existing homes..... Until very recently, the prices of homes on the Cape reflected all of these factors. Which is to say, prices were beyond the reach of most families seeking an affordable second home.


Since the real estate peak in 2005, the median price for a single-family home in Barnstable County (everything on the Cape side of the canal) dropped by 8.7 percent, according to data from the Warren Group, which tracks New England real estate transactions. (These figures do not include foreclosure deeds.) That's a hit, to be sure, but to put it into perspective, prices dropped up to 30 percent in the county in the 1989-1993 real estate crash, recalls John F. Meade, the Barnstable County register of deeds. That crash, which he also witnessed as registrar, was fueled by rampant speculation, overbuilding, and the savings and loan crisis. "I look at this market, and I don't think it comes close to where it was in the early '90s," says Meade. "Back then, you could pick up a great place near the water. They were all over the place and for a reasonable price. I haven't seen that in this market.


What Meade has seen, and we've seen firsthand in our weekly travels to the Cape, is a flood of properties that sold below $200,000 - a real rarity for these parts. "In 2004 and 2005, you didn't see anything less than $300,000," he says. "I'd look at my daily transactions, and everything went for $300,000-plus. Then in the last year or two all of a sudden, you're seeing lots of $200,000-range sales and even some in the $100,000 range." A sector of the market in which Meade has noticed a sales slowdown is the $500,000 to $1 million range. "We're just not seeing those deals, and those were really moving in the early 2000s."


He notes that properties in the high end of the market, $1 million-plus, have been relatively unaffected by the downturn. Many have held their value or continue to appreciate. Others have been in families for a long time or were purchased largely for cash, so their owners still have equity and, even if the home value has decreased, it's unlikely the house is worth less than what, if anything, is owed. These owners have no need to bail out of their properties in this less-than-stellar market.

Our love of the Cape initially interested us in buying a vacation home there. The rate of property foreclosure in Barnstable County - among the highest in Massachusetts - sealed the deal. It's not that we want to buy a foreclosed property - you usually can't make a full inspection prior to making a bid, all sales are "as is," and, often, previous owners must be evicted - but we are interested in the aftereffects of those foreclosures.


Two things happen when foreclosures spike. The first is that since many of those foreclosure auctions end without a bid large enough to cover the cost of the existing mortgage, the bank ends up retaining ownership. The bank must then market the property, often through a realtor, just like a regular home - only much, much cheaper - and bank-owned properties are now flooding the Cape. Bank-owned properties allow a full inspection and price negotiation, as do short sales (when an owner about to be foreclosed upon sells the property at a price that is approved by the bank).


The second effect of a high foreclosure rate is a price drag on all properties for sale. "Comparables," also known as "comps," are the sample properties that buyers and sellers use to determine the offering price for homes, and that bank appraisers use to determine whether the house is worth the purchase price and the mortgage they will write. In many communities, foreclosures are becoming the dominant comps in certain price brackets (in Hyannis, this is true in the $200K-and-under range), which is driving down the fair market value of properties not in foreclosure. It's a bummer for homeowners selling, but it is a powerful negotiating tool that a savvy buyer is a fool not to use. Add in historically low 30-year fixed mortgage rates, and it truly is a perfect time for buyers.


"We were happy about the amount of house we could buy for the price range we were looking in," says French, who ended up buying a three-bedroom, two-bath Saltbox near a freshwater pond in Mashpee for $295,000. The asking price was originally $350,000.
Some towns are softer than others, of course. The farther out the Cape you go, the firmer the market becomes, and there are pockets all along Route 6 that have retained their value. Median single-family home prices in Bourne dropped 16 percent between 2005 and 2007, but Chatham values have merely flattened. Cotuit never stopped appreciating in value. Hyannis home values are getting creamed. How 2008 will play out is anyone's guess, but given the ripple effect of the subprime debacle, increasingly tightened access to loans, and overall decline in property values, no one expects things to truly turn around until the first few months of 2009. That's just fine with us.


WE WANTED TO BUY A HOUSE SOMEWHERE on the elbow of Cape Cod - Chatham, Harwich, Orleans, and Brewster - towns that were expensive to begin with and that have mostly held their value. However, there are short-sale and bank-owned properties coming on the market every week, and when they do, we pounce. Many other homes have sat unsold for far longer than their owners expected. The owners are finally starting to lower their prices in response. Most of the properties we have seen have had at least two price reductions in the past few months.


The first thing we did before we set foot on the Cape was to determine what we were willing to spend, including assumptions about taxes, maintenance, utilities, and the occasional surprise expense (like a roof or boiler repair). We guesstimated that the mortgage payments would be about three-quarters of what we expected to lay out in monthly expenses. Secondly, we got a preapproval letter from our current mortgage company based on those preliminary assumptions. Our third step was to recruit the help of a buyers' broker who would represent us but still receive her commission from the seller.


After our first visit, we dialed in what we wanted (no more than a half-mile from the ocean, at least three bedrooms, a deck and yard, at least 1,000 square feet but no bigger than 1,800) and what we'd pay ($400,000 max and hopefully well below that). Our agent went to work, scouring the MLS for suitable properties, doing drive-bys to determine if they were worth our time, and giving us the real history of many of the "new" listings. A well-worn real-estate trick involves taking an old listing off the market, repricing it, and putting it back on the MLS as a "new listing," which will place it near the top of the many listings vying for your attention.


The first house we looked at was exactly what we wanted, an adorable three-bedroom Cape, huge backyard, a half-mile from the beach in Harwich, sold fully furnished with items that we actually liked. Many vacation homes come furnished - some with beautiful pieces, some in a style best described as Early Frat House. But we didn't feel right about bidding on the first thing we saw. We wanted to see what we could get closer to the ocean. During the rest of the weekend, we learned the truth of the old adage "location, location, location." A $400,000 house will get progressively smaller, uglier, and more run-down the closer you get to a major body of water. It seemed to us that the listing agents who showed us these hovels, some of which had rooms barely big enough to turn around in, were banking on the fact that people will still buy anything close to the beach. "They still have a bubble-icious mind-set," our agent told us.


Our agent's co-worker seconds that motion: "There are still a lot of listing agents who have to . . . reeducate . . . their clients about what the current values of properties are. Many are still living in 2005."


The good news is that we could nonetheless find plenty of options for under $400,000. We are also continually surprised by the number of new listings coming on the market every day. These are generally homes owned by people who have to sell (although each summer, our agent tells us, many vacation homeowners put their houses on the market just to see if they can snag an outrageous offer from a visiting New Yorker who falls in love with the Cape). Many homes are already vacant. If they're not bank-owned, this tells us that the sellers are carrying at least two mortgages and will be more open to aggressive negotiations.


We're also pleasantly surprised at the high quality of the properties that are more than 1 mile from the ocean - huge homes priced well below our threshold. About half of the homes we looked at that were within a half-mile of the ocean came with a rental history - a list of names of people who had already rented the home and were interested in doing so again - meaning renting out our vacation home would be easy if we wanted help paying the bills. However, new buyers are not obligated to honor rental reservations made with the prior owner as long as that is stipulated in the purchase and sale agreement - despite what one listing agent tried to persuade us of.
We're heading back down for a two-day house-hunting trip. We're in no rush to make what, in the final analysis, is still a huge investment. We are confident, though, that one day very soon, we'll find "The House."


See you on Route 6.

(GREAT JOB KRIS!!!) - Cristina

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Thursday, April 3, 2008

Cape Cod Real Estate








Spring is upon us on Cape Cod! This means the prime season for buying or selling real estate has come. This is an excellent time to take advantage of a buyers market on the Cape and make an excellent investment!



Here is some interesting information about the real estate market here for your review. If you have any questions on this or other real estate information feel free to email me at Cristina@ForSaleByCristina.com or visit http://forsalebycristina.com/ to search all Cape Cod real estate MLS listings.



Barnstable County Register of Deeds, John Meade, says "VOLUME, VALUE, SEE DROP! " He reports that the volume of real estate sales in March 2008 was down 15.3% from March 2007 volume and the total value of sales was down 22.4% from 2007. Meanwhile, the median individual property sale value was down 11.1% from last year. Mortgage activity was weak with a 4.9% decrease from March 2007 levels. The median sale price of property in Barnstable County for March 2008 was $310,000.00. For comparison, the average sales price for March 2007 was $348,800.00.

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