Since proper home staging is an absolute must in a buyers’ market, it’s not a question of if you will stage your property but rather how will you tackle the staging of your property. Like everything else in life, completing tasks always comes down to choosing between time  and money. So, before you hit the market,  you need  to ask yourself if you’d rather spend the time to stage  the property yourself or pay a pro to do it for you. (Please note that I am calling your home “the property” as it now becomes a business transaction and all emotional or sentimental ties must be placed aside for the time-being. It is important to look at your surroundings with a “new set of eyes”–the eyes of a buyer.)

If  finances are tight or you feel like you have the talent to  complete the staging  yourself, then  the best way to effectively create the spaces that buyers connect to is to DE-CLUTTER, NEUTRALIZE, and CLEAN.

  • Now is the best time to PURGE! Take 3 boxes or other containers with you into each room and all closets. One is for trash, one is for storage, and the other is for charity. If you haven’t used an item in a year, donate or toss.
  • Step back and look at the spaces individually. Paint and repair items should be tackled immediately. Once that is out of the way, ensure that the decor is simple and neutral. Too many accessories or too much furniture can visually reduce a room’s size. Less is definitely more!
  • Bedroom linens should be crisp and clean.
  • Every room should be furnished and decorated for its intended use. In other words, the formal dining room should not have a treadmill in it! (The exception could be an extra bedroom being used as a study.)
  • A few tasteful framed photos are ok, but minimize the “this is MY house” feeling wherever possible.
  • Warm neutrals are always a good choice. This includes taupes, creamy beige, mocha, etc…You can go into green hues as long as they are soft and subtle.
  • Clean, clean, clean! This includes baseboards, doors, carpeting, windows inside and out, ceiling fans, vents & return grates, window sills, grout, caulk, etc… Yes! Buyers will notice!

If you need an opinion or some help with staging, I am here to help. Send me photos or make an appointment with me (972) 898-4832 or jackie@fathomrealty.com. Please note; This is a previous blog platform. My new blog is located at www.jackielillis.com. Please go there for real estate advice, information, stats, and home searches for North Dallas areas including Frisco, Prosper, McKinney, Allen, Plano, and Little Elm.

I  have  received several inquiries on listings lately  asking  how “motivated” my  owners are to sell.  I got to thinking about how  buyers’ views of the market and their assumptions may hamper their goals, thereby becoming their own worst enemy.  Whether you have found the ideal, move-in ready home or the œneeds TLC property, there are some important considerations when moving forward with an offer to purchase.

First, a CMA or a œComparative Market Analysis and detailed property listing sheets should be provided to you by your Realtor. This report will tell you which homes similar in size, age, condition, and features to the subject property have sold in the area recently. Ideally, a six month history is preferred, but going back a year is acceptable. This report will tell you;

  • How long the sold properties were on the market
  • What the selling price was and the sold price per square foot
  • The total average sold price per square foot

What it will NOT tell you is if the seller made any seller contributions. You must ask your agent for this information specifically. This is important because this figure must be deducted from the sold price to see what the seller™s actual NET was from the sale. (Contributions can be for closing cost assistance, repairs, allowances, etc¦)

Based on this data, you will devise your plan for securing the home. There is no set œreduction or œnorm here. Just like when you are purchasing a car, you should never work down from the sticker price, since some homes are listed high, some low, and some just right. You must work off of the comparables report. Where does the home fall in features, finish-out, condition compared to the sold homes? Is it average? Then you will most likely end up close to that average price per square foot range. Is it inferior or superior to œaverage? Then you must adjust accordingly.

But you are thinking, œHey, it™s a buyers™ market, so where do I  win here?   Many Buyers in today™s market are aggressively pursuing a œdeal, and that is understandable considering the vast amount of inventory. Before you go in with a œlowball offer take note;

DON™T;

  • Believe that the national market is the same as a local market. Understand that the market in North Dallas and surrounding suburbs has remained much more stable than other areas of the country.
  • Assume the seller is desperate  
  • Go in with an attitude that the seller is lucky to get any offer
  • Presume every house should be purchased for less than market value in a buyer™s market
  • Use tax records to determine market value. They are highly inaccurate figures for use in this step. Otherwise property Appraisers wouldn™t bother with comps and careful analysis and just simply pull tax records, right?

 DO;

  • Consider days on market to judge how anxious the seller may be
  • Consider time of the year and possible competition
  • Study the CMA and detailed property pages
  • Have a strategy for the goal. What price range do you feel comfortable with?
  • Know what your needs are for seller paid closing cost assistance, if any, beforehand from your lender.
  • Think about the degree to which this home is suited to you. How badly do you want it?
  • Remember that the desired closing date and other terms of the contract are important too.
  • Be honest with your Realtor about your limits. If you are holding back because you think your agent won™t work as hard to get you the deal if he/she knows your highest and best offer, then you don™t trust the professional you have hired and need to reconsider or get a new agent to represent you.

Opening Bid & First Counter Offer;

Finding that sweet spot between not offending the seller and not leaving money on the table can be tricky to some, but as long as it is not a ridiculous figure, the vast majority of sellers will respond to your initial attempt. Think of it as dipping your big toe in a pool to test the water! This first counter offer from a seller will tell you a lot! For example, if they come back with a sale price close to list, they probably don™t have much intention of a sizeable reduction. If they were already priced well, then this is something to consider. If they were priced high, you may not get them to deal. Obviously, sellers that must sell are more likely to make it work. Sellers who are just testing the market may not. (Although, I highly advise sellers who are doing the latter, don™t! Now is not the time.)

Second counter;

Ok, now you must remember your comfort range. The seller will see your counter offer as a gauge of your sincere interest at this point. How did they respond to your other terms in the offer? Are they flexible or rigid? There is normally give and take on both sides. If one party to the transaction feels the other is only taking and not giving, then bad feelings surface and deals can go south. Make sure your second counter is much closer to your intended target.

The offer may go back and forth a few more times. And remember! During your option period, you will have your inspection(s) performed. Repair negotiations open up at this point, which brings me to my next blog topic coming soon”œWhich Repairs Should a Buyer Ask the Seller to Pay For?

With guidance from an experienced Realtor, you should have all the information you need to get it done! Want to search the North Dallas area MLS? Go to  http://jackie.fathomdallas.com  for real time, active listings.

Please note; this is a previous blog platform. My new blog is located at www.jackielillis.com. Please go there for advice, information, stats, and home searches for North Dallas areas including Frisco, Prosper, McKinney, Allen, Plano, and Little Elm Texas.

Jun

29

NEW Listing in Frisco!

Posted by jackielillis under For Buyers, General Information

You will absolutely LOVE this home in Lone Star Ranch’s Quail Meadow listed at $284,000. Call today for a private tour! In the meantime, please click on the link below to view the property web site;

www.2800ForestManor.info

Frisco, other Dallas-area cities among fastest-growing in U.S.

 07:10 AM CDT on Wednesday, June 23, 2010 By ERIC AASEN / The Dallas Morning News eaasen@dallasnews.com

 In North Texas, the newcomers keep coming and coming and coming.   Frisco was the nation’s fastest-growing city last year, according to U.S. Census Bureau   data released Tuesday. McKinney wasn’t far behind, ranking third.  The top 25 list is studded with several other North Texas cities, including Lewisville  , Fort Worth, Carrollton and Denton.

Frisco claimed the top spot among cities with more than 100,000 people, thanks to a 6.2 percent population increase during a 12-month period starting in July 2008. Its Collin County neighbor, McKinney, scored a 5.5 percent jump.

Any way you slice or dice the census data, Frisco and McKinney remain chart toppers. Over the past decade, Frisco also had the country’s biggest population growth, while McKinney ranked No. 2. More than 102,000 residents were in Frisco in 2009, compared with fewer than 34,000 in 2000, a take-your-breath-away 204 percent jump.  In 2009, McKinney’s population was nearly 128,000, up from about 54,000 in 2000 “ a 135 percent increase.

 All that city growth has helped pump up Dallas-Fort Worth. The area added more residents than any other metropolitan area in the country, both in the last year and the past decade, according to census data released in March.Credit the population growth to good jobs, as well as an economy and housing market that aren’t as bad as in other parts of the country.

 All of last year’s 10 fastest-growing cities are in Southern states, including North Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee. Of the 50 fastest-growing cities, 19 are in Texas.

 Texas’ robust population growth “ it’s the fastest-growing state “ means it’s bound to add at least three new seats in Congress after the 2010 census, which is under way.

Most sellers understand that it is still a buyers™ market out there. But what if you can™t wait until the market is more balanced? Then you need to take an honest look at your property and your personal situation before deciding to list your property for sale. The good news is many homes are selling in less than 60 days in the North Dallas real estate market. But how can you judge if yours would be among them?

There are 7 clear test categories that I use that must be examined before predicting how long a residential property will remain on market. They include several financial considerations, property condition, location, lot, finish-out, show shape, and show “friendliness”. The results will give you a crystal ball view into the predicted outcome of listing your home for sale.

Would you like to take the FREE œSalability Test? Contact me at jackie@fathomrealty.com today! I™m here to help!

Please note; this is a previous blog platform. My new blog is located at www.jackielillis.com. Please go there for advice, information, stats, and home searches for North Dallas areas including Frisco, Prosper, McKinney, Allen, Plano, and Little Elm Texas.

Specializing in Frisco, Plano, Allen, McKinney, Prosper, Little Elm, and North Dallas

By David S. Jones, senior editor, Real Estate Center

COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (Real Estate Center) ” A new study from the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University explains why Texas™ housing market fared far better than other states during the current downturn. It also suggests why the state™s economy is expected to continue to do better than the rest of the nation in the coming months.

“Texas™ lower-than-national-average housing cost is one reason for the state™s higher-than-national-average growth rate,” said Dr. Ali Anari, a Center research economist and one of the study™s authors. “When Texans are able to spend more on nonhousing goods and services, the state™s economy is strengthened and more people attracted.

“These results illustrate one of the key reasons the Texas economy outperforms the United States in terms of job growth almost every year,” said Center Chief Economist Dr. Mark Dotzour. “The fact that Texans pay less of their income for housing means they have more to spend on other things that add to the overall quality of life. Texas offers a lower cost of living than many places in the United States.

“This allows Texas employers to be able to attract workers at a reasonable wage rate that allows them to compete successfully in the global economy,” said Dotzour.

Since 1987, the average annual expenditure for shelter per consumer increased in every major American metropolitan market.

Texas data for the study came from the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston-Galveston-Brazoria metro areas because they are among the major metropolitan areas for which consumer expenditure data are available. These two metros accounted for 60.3 percent of Texas labor force last year and 64 percent of Texas GDP the previous year.

“Houston and Dallas consumers spent the smallest shares of their incomes on shelter in 2008 (18.6 percent),” said Anari.

The two Texas metros in the study had virtually no increase in their shelter expenditure shares from 1987 to 2008. Houston™s share rose 1 percent while Dallas™ share increased 2.2 percent.

According to the National Association of Realtors, Houston was the only metro in the study to post a home price appreciation, albeit a small one. Dallas had the nation™s smallest home price decline (-3.8 percent).

“It is not surprising that the two Texas regions are experiencing normal home price fluctuations,” said Anari. “The risk of a home price decline in Texas is low.

“The study found that the larger the share of housing expenditures in the consumer™s budget, the more home prices in their region have fallen since 2007,” said Anari, who conducted the study along with Center Chief Economist Dr. Mark Dotzour.

“Consumers allocate their income among various goods and services,” said Anari. “By doing so, they determine the quantities produced and prices of consumer goods and services.

“Regardless of income level, the most important items in a consumer’s budget are food, shelter and clothing. However, no matter how important an item, its share of a consumer™s total expenditures cannot continually increase for a long time.”

When expenditures in a particular category in the consumer™s budget take larger and larger shares of total expenses, consumers look for less expensive substitutes, which can lower demand for more expensive goods and services, leading to lower prices for those goods and services. “For example,” said Anari, “if the price of beef gets too high, people eat more chicken.”

Consumers have two basic shelter choices: buy or rent. Shelter expenses run the gamut from rent to mortgage interest, to property taxes, to insurance, to repairs, to security and other expenses.

“Even when on vacation, consumers have shelter expenses,” said Anari, “from costs on vacation homes to hotels and motels. Family members in college must be housed, and that™s another shelter expense.”

Anari points out that home price changes affect expenditures and wealth. Lower housing costs allow consumers to spend more on other goods and services, leading to higher regional economic growth, increased growth rates, a larger labor force and more demand for goods and services.

“At the same time,” he said, “lower costs and prices of real estate properties can significantly increase economic productivity, lead to more investments and increase economic growth rates.”

Where were shelter shares of income highest? California. San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos led the nation with 30.8 percent of income going to shelter.

Spending by U.S. consumers accounts for about 70 percent of the nation™s gross domestic product (GDP). Consumer expenditures are critical to the nation™s economy, and since 1980, the U.S. Census Bureau has conducted the Survey of Consumer Expenditures for the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The survey collects data and information on the buying habits of American consumers. These data are available for the United States, four geographic regions of the country (Northeast, Midwest, South and West), and for major metropolitan areas.

There is a lot of attention on short sale and foreclosure properties because they have become so prevalent. And many buyers believe this is the best way to “get a deal”; and it  is… but  for the right buyers.

What  does the “right buyer” profile look like? For a short-sale, it’s someone that does not have tight time restraints as a short-sale can be a  frustrating and drawn-out process. It can take weeks or even months just to find out if the bank accepted the terms of your offer. However,  some listing agents have done the  preliminary paperwork ahead of time, which will alleviate some of the wait. Many banks are so inundated with requests that their backlog is substantial. They simply don’t have enough staff to accommodate the number of requests. Many banks are trying to streamline their systems to provide a more efficient way to handle the demand. But if purchasing a home for under market value is your goal and you have some time and patience, this could be a good way to go.  

On a foreclosure (or REO)  purchase on the other hand, the closing can happen fairly quickly. However, a foreclosure comes with a different set of potential concerns like property condition. When you purchase a foreclosed home, you are purchasing “as-is”. You can still perform a thorough inspection, but you will be responsible for repairs yourself. The bank will provide for an option period in which to complete your inspections, and you can normally back out if you find something undesirable. There can be  stiff competition  for homes in the best location, the best condition, and the best value so don’t get overly attached. The bank will review all offers and choose the highest and best out of the bunch. Be sure to calculate repair and improvement costs into your budget. Is it still a good deal? Are kitchen appliances and lighting fixtures missing? Are you prepared to be out-of-pocket to get the house move-in ready? Or does it make more sense to purchase a home that has been well maintained, move-in ready and finance it over 30 years? Note; If you plan on financing a foreclosed property via a FHA loan, the home must be inhabitable with all systems functioning  in order to close.

Then there is the courthouse  steps auction. This is the step in between default and REO. If you are not an experienced investor or  very knowledgeable about the process,  don’t do it.  This is not for the first-time home buyer.

Have questions? Need guidance? Would you like a list of short-sale or foreclosed properties available for purchase in the North Dallas suburban area? Please contact me at (972) 898-4832. Also, visit my web site at http://jackie.fathomdallas.com. You can filter search results specifically by foreclosure or short sale.  

Apr

14

Interest Rate Forecast

Posted by jackielillis under For Buyers, General Information

The New York Times

On Sunday April 11, 2010, 1:00 pm EDT
Even as prospects for the American economy brighten, consumers are about to face a new financial burden: a sustained period of rising interest rates.

That, economists say, is the inevitable outcome of the nation™s ballooning debt and the renewed prospect of inflation as the economy recovers from the depths of the recent recession.

The shift is sure to come as a shock to consumers whose spending habits were shaped by a historic 30-year decline in the cost of borrowing.

œAmericans have assumed the roller coaster goes one way, said Bill Gross, whose investment firm, Pimco, has taken part in a broad sell-off of government debt, which has pushed up interest rates. œIt™s been a great thrill as rates descended, but now we face an extended climb.

The impact of higher rates is likely to be felt first in the housing market, which has only recently begun to rebound from a deep slump. The rate for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage has risen half a point since December, hitting 5.31 last week, the highest level since last summer.

Along with the sell-off in bonds, the Federal Reserve has halted its emergency $1.25 trillion program to buy mortgage debt, placing even more upward pressure on rates.

œMortgage rates are unlikely to go lower than they are now, and if they go higher, we™re likely to see a reversal of the gains in the housing market, said Christopher J. Mayer, a professor of finance and economics at Columbia Business School. œIt™s a really big risk.

Each increase of 1 percentage point in rates adds as much as 19 percent to the total cost of a home, according to Mr. Mayer.

The Mortgage Bankers Association expects the rise to continue, with the 30-year mortgage rate going to 5.5 percent by late summer and as high as 6 percent by the end of the year. Another area in which higher rates are likely to affect consumers is credit card use. And last week, the Federal Reserve reported that the average interest rate on credit cards reached 14.26 percent in February, the highest since 2001. That is up from 12.03 percent when rates bottomed in the fourth quarter of 2008 ” a jump that amounts to about $200 a year in additional interest payments for the typical American household.With losses from credit card defaults rising and with capital to back credit cards harder to come by, issuers are likely to increase rates to 16 or 17 percent by the fall, according to Dennis Moroney, a research director at the TowerGroup, a financial research company.

œThe banks don™t have a lot of pricing options, Mr. Moroney said. œThey™re targeting people who carry a balance from month to month.

Similarly, many car loans have already become significantly more expensive, with rates at auto finance companies rising to 4.72 percent in February from 3.26 percent in December, according to the Federal Reserve.

Washington, too, is expecting to have to pay more to borrow the money it needs for programs. The Office of Management and Budget expects the rate on the benchmark 10-year United States Treasury note to remain close to 3.9 percent for the rest of the year, but then rise to 4.5 percent in 2011 and 5 percent in 2012.

The run-up in rates is quickening as investors steer more of their money away from bonds and as Washington unplugs the economic life support programs that kept rates low through the financial crisis. Mortgage rates and car loans are linked to the yield on long-term bonds.

Besides the inflation fears set off by the strengthening economy, Mr. Gross said he was also wary of Treasury bonds because he feared the burgeoning supply of new debt issued to finance the government™s huge budget deficits would overwhelm demand, driving interest rates higher.

Nine months ago, United States government debt accounted for half of the assets in Mr. Gross™s flagship fund, Pimco Total Return. That has shrunk to 30 percent now ” the lowest ever in the fund™s 23-year history ” as Mr. Gross has sold American bonds in favor of debt from Europe, particularly Germany, as well as from developing countries like Brazil.

Last week, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note briefly crossed the psychologically important threshold of 4 percent, as the Treasury auctioned off $82 billion in new debt. That is nearly twice as much as the government paid in the fall of 2008, when investors sought out ultrasafe assets like Treasury securities after the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the beginning of the credit crisis.

Though still very low by historical standards, the rise of bond yields since then is reversing a decline that began in 1981, when 10-year note yields reached nearly 16 percent.

From that peak, steadily dropping interest rates have fed a three-decade lending boom, during which American consumers borrowed more and more but managed to hold down the portion of their income devoted to paying off loans.

Indeed, total household debt is now nine times what it was in 1981 ” rising twice as fast as disposable income over the same period ” yet the portion of disposable income that goes toward covering that debt has budged only slightly, increasing to 12.6 percent from 10.7 percent.

Household debt has been dropping for the last two years as recession-battered consumers cut back on borrowing, but at $13.5 trillion, it still exceeds disposable income by $2.5 trillion.

The long decline in rates also helped prop up the stock market; lower rates for investments like bonds make stocks more attractive.

That tailwind, which prevented even worse economic pain during the recession, has ceased, according to interviews with economists, analysts and money managers.

œWe™ve had almost a 30-year rally, said David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor™s. œThat™s come to an end.

Just as significant as the bottom-line impact will be the psychological fallout from not being able to buy more while paying less ” an unusual state of affairs that made consumer spending the most important measure of economic health.

œWe™ve gotten spoiled by the idea that interest rates will stay in the low single-digits forever, said Jim Caron, an interest rate strategist with Morgan Stanley. œWe™ve also had a generation of consumers and investors get used to low rates.

For young home buyers today considering 30-year mortgages with a rate of just over 5 percent, it might be hard to conceive of a time like October 1981, when mortgage rates peaked at 18.2 percent. That meant monthly payments of $1,523 then compared with $556 now for a $100,000 loan.

No one expects rates to return to anything resembling 1981 levels. Still, for much of Wall Street, the question is not whether rates will go up, but rather by how much.

Some firms, like Morgan Stanley, are predicting that rates could rise by a percentage point and a half by the end of the year. Others, like JPMorgan Chase are forecasting a more modest half-point jump.

But the consensus is clear, according to Terrence M. Belton, global head of fixed-income strategy for J. P. Morgan Securities. œEveryone knows that rates will eventually go higher, he said.

ACT NOW if you are interested in buying a property before rates rise any further! Search the North Texas MLS at http://jackie.fathomdallas.com and let’s go shopping!

Apr

8

You have barely a month left before the homebuyer tax credit expires. First-time homebuyers may qualify for up to $8,000, while those who are trading up could get as much as $6,500. But either way, buyers have to ink sales contracts by the end of April and close before July 1 to see the refund. And this is absolutely, positively your last chance to claim the credit. (Probably.) So don™t wait, thinking the credit will be extended for a third time. There is little sentiment for continuing this program, especially because many consider the latest iteration™s results to be disappointing. Even the Senate™s biggest proponent of the homebuyer tax credit, Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., is ready to let it end. “He has no plans to introduce legislation to extend the credit,” said Isakson™s spokeswoman. “Part of the benefit of the tax credit was the urgency its sun-setting generated.” That urgency was less pronounced after the latest extension, which was enacted last fall. While the first version, which just covered first-time homebuyers, netted huge sales jumps, the real estate market slumped over the winter and early spring. That may be because some people believed that Congress would just keep adding time to the game clock, according to Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard™s Joint Center for Housing Study. That could have kept them home by the fireside instead of out house hunting. Source: CNN/Money

You know exactly what you want. You can picture it in your head. You™ve been pre-approved and you are ready to shop!

The excitement of looking for your next or first home can be exhilarating, but it can also become exhausting if you do not keep realistic expectations. It is helpful to start with a list of criteria, or your œwish list ranked in order by importance. Will you get everything on that list? It™s highly unlikely, so don™t set false expectations. Don™t get me wrong, you will find the right home. It™s just probably not the one you had originally envisioned. Why? Because you need to give yourself permission to adjust your list based on what you learn from shopping. You may decide you prefer a two story instead of one. You may decide that you are willing to sacrifice some needed updating details for square footage or location. I™ll let you in on a little secret¦There is a popular line that has been around for a while in agent circles; œBuyer Are Liars. This isn™t meant to be demeaning; it just means that buyers rarely end up with exactly what they claim to be looking for. (And liar conveniently rhymes with buyerJ)

So give yourself some space to change your mind. You™ll know the perfect home when you see it!

Stay tuned for part 3 in the buyer series; œDistressed Properties”What™s the Deal?

Ready to search for a home in Frisco, Plano, Allen, McKinney, Prosper, or North Dallas? Go to http://jackie.fathomdallas.com  for a free, accurate home search!

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