1/24/13

8 ways the housing market has changed for 2013


The real-estate recovery is now in full effect in most areas, and that means more of you are hopping off the fence to buy or list a home. Do you know what you're in for?

The housing market is a different place than it was just six months ago, with new issues, rules and opportunities — even for those who are planning on staying in their house for a while. We will fill you in on eight ways the housing market has shifted since last spring's peak selling season and what these changes mean for you: the buyer or seller. 

1. Homes are more expensive — but not much more.
 
An improving economy and low interest rates have boosted buyer demand in most markets, decreasing supply and raising prices. Indeed, the national median home price increased 10.1% in November to $180,600 from the same period a year earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors. November marked the ninth consecutive month of home-price increases.

This year, the gains should be more restrained, says Alex Villacorta, director of research and analytics at Clear Capital. "2013 should be interesting for the housing market, where national gains should continue to see upward growth, but likely at a more modest growth,” he says. Clear Capital expects prices to rise just 2.1% nationally this year.

2. Loans are getting pricier.
 
After bouncing along at record lows in 2012, interest rates are expected to rise slightly in 2013. Just how much is really anyone's guess. However, Greg McBride, senior financial analyst with Bankrate.com, says he wouldn't be surprised if rates hovered between 3.5% and 4% for much of the year, barring any big changes in the overall economy.

Moreover, the costs associated with securing some loans are rising, as well. The Federal Housing Administration last spring once again increased its one-time upfront mortgage insurance premium for minimum down-payment loans to 1.75% of the loan, while raising its annual monthly premiums to 1.25%.

Still, McBride says he doesn't expect small increases to deter many buyers from the FHA's low down-payment loans. Many people, he says, just don't have enough cash tucked away for a conventional loan.

3. Inventory is bottoming out.
 
Rates are great, but not a lot of houses are for sale.

The inventory of existing homes for sale at the end of November was down 3.8% from the previous month to 2.03 million. That represents a 4.8-month supply at the current sales pace and is the lowest supply since the go-go market of fall 2005. Listed inventory is down 22.5% from a year ago, when there was a 7.1-month supply.

The dearth of listings should begin to change sometime this year, analysts say, as pent-up demand, historically low interest rates and slightly higher home prices prompt more move-up buyers to list their home.

However, for the foreseeable future, if home shoppers see a desirable property, they should move quickly, because in this tight market they can be sure that someone else will.

4. A new mortgage rule will protect buyers from shady lenders.
 
To head off another financial crisis, the government's consumer watchdog, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, recently announced a new rule to ensure that prospective buyers are actually able to repay their mortgage.

The Ability to Repay rule, which officially takes effect in January 2014 but will be put into place by most lenders sometime this year, protects consumers from risky practices such as "no doc" and "interest only" features that contributed to so many people losing their home in recent years.

The new rule, spurred by 2010's Dodd-Frank financial-reform law, requires that borrowers' financial information — employment status, income, assets and debt – be supplied and verified by lenders, thereby eliminating no- or low-doc loans. That information, including debt-to-income ratio, must be used to prove that the borrower has the ability to pay back a loan.

5. Home-equity loans are back.
 
Low mortgage rates may have stolen all the headlines last year, but rates on home-equity loans have been falling, too, making those long-overdue home remodels more attractive to people who have been in their house for some time.

The average rate on a fixed-rate home-equity loan fell to 6% in early January from 6.3% at the beginning of November, according to Bankrate.com. That average ran as high as 8.5% during the financial crisis in 2009.

Why did these loans get so pricey? Home-equity loans became much riskier for lenders in recent years, as home values declined and huge waves of people began defaulting on their mortgage. Equity lenders get paid only after the primary mortgage lender gets its money, so many lenders were taking losses on these loans as distressed-property sales failed to recoup enough to satisfy these second liens. Many got out of this business, McBride says.

Now, however, with home values rising, more lenders are willing to make these loans.

6. There are fewer distressed-home bargains to buy.
 
The mortgage crisis is starting to fade into memory, and so are those cheap foreclosure deals. While the number of distressed homes is still fairly high at 2.3 million units, according to CoreLogic, fewer of these homes are getting a for-sale shingle.

One reason: Almost half of those 2.3 million homes are still seriously delinquent but haven't been taken back by the bank because of a backlog in processing.

Moreover, a large number of the properties being repossessed by lenders are being sold off in portfolios to investors, rather than listed for individual buyers. When they make it back onto the market with a little face lift, they aren't such a bargain anymore.

In addition, many portfolios of single-family bank-owned homes are being auctioned as rental properties. These big portfolios of homes are attracting the big guns, including national real-estate investment trusts (or REITs) that are expected to buy tens of thousands of properties over the next several years.

That's great news for sellers, who have seen their neighborhood property values hammered by bargain-basement bank sales. But it's meant rising prices for buyers as inventory has dwindled.

7. More new construction is coming.
 
Existing homes are in short supply, but there will soon be many more new homes to add to the mix.

While housing starts fell slightly in November on delays related to superstorm Sandy, the number of building permits for new single-family homes and condominiums rose 3.6% from the previous month alone and a whopping 27% from the same time last year.

Record-low interest rates and an uptick in hiring spurred the increased activity by builders. New-home sales are up 15.3% over the past year, hitting an annual rate of 377,000 in November, according to Census Bureau data.

New-home prices, however are moving up faster than prices for existing homes. The median price of a new home in the U.S. rose to $246,200 in November, a 15% increase from the previous year. Greater supply in the months ahead, however, could ease the pace of future price increases.

8. The luxury market suffers a hangover.

Sales of homes over $1 million surged 51% in November, as high-net-worth owners rushed to list their existing homes and buy new ones to avoid the capital-gains tax hikes in January that were part of the fiscal-cliff deal.

Under these changes, high-income earners would pay $88,000 less in taxes if they made a $1 million profit on their home in 2012 rather than in 2013. So, out went the for-sale signs, and down came the inventory of luxury homes in the last quarter of 2012.

Publicly traded Toll Brothers, which specializes in the luxury-home market, saw its sales contracts jump 60% in the fourth quarter from the same period last year — the highest level since the red-hot market of 2005. "We enjoyed resurgent activity across all of our product lines and in most of our geographic regions," said Douglas C. Yearley Jr., Toll Brothers' chief executive officer.

However, due to the dwindling supply of luxury homes in many markets and the huge number of buyers who took the plunge last year, experts predict a bit of a slowdown in luxury-home sales during the first part of this year.

For those shopping for a high-end custom home, it means less to choose from, but also a lot less competition. Of course, the drop-off in demand probably won't last long. More and more big-budget international buyers are continuing to invest in U.S. real estate, particularly along the coasts.

After so many years of decline, American real estate remains quite the bargain.
 

In what other ways do you expect the housing market to change this year? How will these changes affect buyers and sellers? If you would like to discuss, call me, Mynor Herrera, for expert advice on everything real estate. I am licensed in DC, MD & VA, and I specialize in Bethesda and Chevy Chase, as well as the subdivisions of Rosemary Hills, Rock Creek Forest, East Bethesda and Whitehall Condominium.

1/22/13

Mynor & Associates is looking for a Showing Specialist


Mynor and Associates, a small, but top producing real estate team, is looking for showing specialist to join its team!

Primary Role

  • Assist the lead agent by showing homes to buyer clients
  • Assist the lead agent by identifying homes that meet the criteria as specified by the lead agent after he/she has completed the needs analysis
  • Close buyer clients to contract offers

Regular Work Activities

  • Driving buyer client to homes
  • Working with buyer clients to refine their needs and wants based on seeing homes
  • Finding homes that meet buyer clients' criteria

Key Skills
  • People oriented
  • Happy, positive
  • Ability to spend a large amount of time driving in his/her car
  • Ability to analyze clients' needs and wants and match them to homes
  • Learning-based
  • Ambitious with proven ability to succeed
  • Willing to learn scripts and dialogues

The Showing Assistant will be an individual who is highly sociable, draws energy from working with people, and is optimistic and outgoing. They will have a strong sense of urgency, but not at the expense of quality. They have a compelling desire to support the lead agent in achieving team success, while being committed to growing their own skills and developing into a leader within the team.

After the lead agent performs a needs analysis on clients, that individual will pass the desired criteria to the Showing Assistant. The Showing Assistant will pick up the baton and find homes that meet the criteria, and he/she will drive buyer clients to those homes. As clients explore homes, the Showing Assistant will work with clients to confirm or refine criteria and will show additional homes as needed. The Showing Assistant will close buyers to contract offers, then pass the baton back to the lead agent.

A Showing Assistant should be able to successfully show homes to around 3 - 4 buyers a month, while he/she earns bonuses based on a percentage of each deal. This is a full-time position.

The Showing Assistant will have or will attain a real estate license in order to meet MLS criteria for the duties in this role. Additionally, he/she will be eager to earn the right to use their license as a Lead Buyer Specialist. Showing Assistants are forward-looking individuals who develop and maintain positive professional relationships. They have a track record of success and a palpable desire to succeed in this role, as well as their next.

If you think you've got what it takes to rock this position, we would love to know more about you! Please contact if you are interested and send us any information you would like to share about yourself to info@mynorandassociates.com.

Mynor & Associates is looking for a Buyer Specialist

Mynor and Associates, a small, but top producing real estate team, is looking for buyer specialist to join its team!

Primary Role

  • Hire, train, consult, and hold accountable all Showing Assistants
  • Prospect for buyer leads, convert leads to appointments, close for agreements, and conduct high-level fiduciary needs analyses
  • Oversee Showing Assistant in selecting homes that meet clients' needs, identifying homes that best meet those needs, refining needs, and closing to contract offers
  • Consult with clients to ensure fiduciary service of the real estate transaction from initial contact through contract to close
  • Effectively negotiate, or oversee negotiations, for all buyers
  • Develop expert knowledge regarding mortgage financing, neighborhoods, schools, and all homeownership issues
Regular Work Activities
  • Oversee all aspects of buyers' transactions from initial contact to contract to close
  • Hire, train, and consult all Showing Assistants
  • Negotiating for buyers
Management Responsibilities
  • Showing Assistants
  • Possible Virtual Assistants
Key Skills
  • Excellent at building rapport
  • People oriented
  • Strong written and verbal communication skills
  • Good organizational skills
  • Learning based
  • Able to build and lead a team
  • Willing to learn scripts and dialogues
The Buyer Specialist is an individual who is highly sociable, draws energy from working with people, and is optimistic and outgoing. He/she is an excellent leader within the organization, able to build a cohesive team of Showing Assistants who are united in their commitment to the team's standards and to achieving the team's goals. They have a strong sense of urgency, but not at the expense of quality.

The Buyer Specialist leads the buyer side of the team by hiring, training, consulting, and holding accountable all Showing Assistants. In addition, he/she demonstrates on a daily basis the knowledge, attitudes, skills, and habits of a high­-achieving buyer agent who is committed to putting clients first, to doing the right thing, and to seeking win-win agreements. The Buyer Specialist prospects for leads daily, closes those leads to appointments, closes for agreements, and then conducts a high-level fiduciary needs analysis. At that point, he/she communicates the desired criteria to the Showing Assistant. The Showing Assistant will select homes that most the criteria and will drive the clients to the homes. That person will refine the criteria and close for contract offers. At that point, the Buyer Specialist will negotiate the offer, write the contract, and oversee the deal through its close.

The Buyer Specialist also demonstrates a commitment to learning and strives for growth by regularly attending courses, teaching courses when appropriate, and regularly practicing scripts and dialogues. He/she is committed to investing in the people on the team and regularly provides them with learning and growth opportunities as well.

If you think you've got what it takes to rock this position, we would love to know more about you! Please email a short synopsis of your experience and production to info@mynorandassociates.com. Candidate must have a real estate license.

1/18/13

Real Estate: Writer/Social Media/Admin (Downtown Bethesda)

Mynor and Associates, a small, but top producing real estate team, is looking for a creative, tech savvy professional to join its team! This is currently a part-time position that could grow into a fulltime position.

Are you a fast learner? Are you flexible and willing to do a bit of everything? Are you creative AND tech savvy? Do you have a great attitude and an awesome personality that can adapt to a quick environment? If this sounds like you, we would love to talk to you!


Additional MUST-haves include:
- Excellent writer
- Great attention to detail - this is very important
- Exceptional organizational abilities
- Excellent writer
- Learning based
- Own a laptop
- Ability to work 20 hours/week, between Monday and Friday
- Did we say, "Excellent writer?!"

We would love the following skills, though they are not required:
- Experience with WordPress, Blogger, etc.
- Knowledge of SEO tactics
- Knowledge of Top Producer
- Knowledge of Constant Contact, BombBomb, etc.
- Knowledge of MRIS
- Knowledge of Adobe products

Responsibilities include:
- Prepare monthly e-newsletters
- Coordinate print marketing
- Maintain our social media accounts
- Blogging...and lots of it!
- Data entry - a necessary, but VERY important evil
- Handle inquiries for two beach rentals
- Miscellaneous projects and research
- Anticipating problems and suggesting solutions

Our team takes pride in working hard, but having fun at what we do. We are very passionate about work and want the person who takes this position to take ownership and feel the same way over their assigned areas.

We want to know more about you! We know time is valuable and we don't want to waste yours or ours, please send us a resume and cover letter detailing your hourly rate and why you think you would rock this position!
E-mail: info@mynorandassociates.com

1/16/13

Great Tips from a Serial Remodeler



Has your roof been sitting on for years waiting to be remodeled but you just couldn’t quite get the perfect timing and resources to get it started? A number of factors can get in your way in achieving your remodeling ideas as planned. 

Josh Garskof, a self-professed serial remodeler who, along with his wife, has been doing a series of trial-and-error remodeling quest for 8 years. He wrote a Money Magazine article on the 4 biggest tips he can give homeowners contemplating on remodeling their patio or kitchen, repainting and re-roofing.

1. Go with a mom-and-pop shop
When it comes to tradesmen, from roofers to painters, a pro who will do your job with his or her own hands is preferable to one who'll send out hired guns. You tend to get better quality and reduce the chance that details of the project will get lost or muddled as they get passed from person to person. You may also pay 5% to 20% less because the company's overhead costs are lower.


2. Buy it yourself
You can get a cheapie faucet for $25, or, if you're tired of using your cash for fireplace kindling, buy a remote control model for $3,000. And there's similar price variation for nearly every aesthetic element of a project, so never let your contractor choose an item that involves personal taste.

I guarantee he'd base his bid on something cheaper than you want, and when it's time to install, say, the pendant lights over your new island, you'll have to settle for the cheesy ones he picked or absorb the upcharge for the lights you prefer.

3. Be a good customer

The homeowner-contractor rapport tends to start out affable but can wind up somewhere between civil and surly. Remodeling is stressful, and as in many business transactions, things can turn adversarial when problems arise.
Still, it pays to pick your battles. While you certainly want to hold a hard line on quality and price, be flexible about timing when possible.

Yes, delays are a nuisance when you're living without a kitchen or a place to shower, but the contractor is dealing with a massive scheduling puzzle of different customers, tradesmen, materials deliveries, and weather conditions. Better to get the job done right but late, than on time but slapdash.


4. Plan for overspending

Big projects go over budget. Surprises like missing beams and carpenter ants -- or in my case, a yard-long crack in a drainpipe -- may hide behind your walls. And you're probably going to fall in love with, say, a spectacular stone countertop, despite having planned something easier on the pocket.
So don't stretch for a project and tell yourself that you're going to "Just say no" to costly changes as the work goes on.

Before you make the final payment

You know to hold back a few grand until you're satisfied with every last renovation detail. Below, three things you may not think to include:

Magnet sweep. A laborer should walk a giant wheeled magnet around any exterior work (and dumpster) locations on your property to pick up the hundreds of rusty old nails hiding in the grass and mulch.

Sample pieces. Ask for scrap pieces of any moldings used and product specs for items like windows and floor stain so you can easily match them on future projects, even if you hire someone else.

Certificate of occupancy. When you sell someday, you'll need proof that the work is safe and up to code. Hold back payment until you have this document -- usually called the certificate of occupancy -- in hand.

Do you want to work with a Realtor who never fails to provide his clients about home safety, remodeling tips and what-to-dos?  Call me, MynorHerrera, today for expert help buying or selling in the DC, MD, & VA areas! I also specialize in Bethesda and Chevy Chase, as well as the subdivisions of Rosemary Hills, Rock Creek Forest, East Bethesda and Whitehall Condominium.