Showing posts with label Real estate in Auburn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Real estate in Auburn. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2016

Real Estate is in High Demand

Real estate is the overwhelming preferred choice by Americans as identified in a recent survey. With the Dow Jones industrial average reaching record highs, it might be expected that the stock market would be the favored choice but that wasn’t the outcome.
Analysis of the report suggests that the popularity for houses could be that they are tangible assets that you can see where your money is actually invested compared to stocks and bonds which tend to be unclear where the money is invested.Best way to invest.jpg
There are several distinct advantages of homes as investments over other popular alternatives.
  1. High loan-to-value mortgages available
  2. At fixed interest rates
  3. For long periods of time
  4. On appreciating assets
  5. With definite tax advantages
  6. And reasonable control.
Another advantage of rental homes is that most people are comfortable with them. It is the same type of property that they live in but used as a rental. They have a tendency to understand the key components such as value, appreciation, rent, maintenance and financing.

Monday, February 9, 2015

Lee County area residential sales up 14% in December; 2014 sales up 8%

Lee County area residential sales up 14% in December; 2014 sales up 8% 

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Click here to view or print the entire December report compliments of the ACRE Corporate Cabinet.
Lee County area residential sales totaled 101 units in December, an increase in sales growth of 14.8 percent or 13 units above the same period last year. 2014 sales increased 7.7 percent from the prior year.
Forecast: December sales were 19 units above our monthly forecast. The Center's 2014 sales forecast projected 1,344 closed transactions while the actual sales were 1,378 units, a favorable variance of 2.5 percent.
Historical Sales.jpgView full sizeLee County residential sales increase 15% in December from last year. Housing Inventory has been favorably reduced by 36% from the December 2010 peak. Infograph courtesy of ACRE. All rights reserved. 
Supply: The Lee County housing inventory in December was 802 units, a decrease of 2.8 percent from December 2013 and 35.7 percent from the month of December inventory peak in 2010 (1,248 units).
December inventory in Lee County did increase 4.2 percent from the prior month. This direction contrast with historical data indicating that December inventory on average ('09-'13) decreases from the month of November by 3.3 percent.
The inventory-to-sales ratio in December was 7.9 months of housing supply. Restated, at the December sales pace, it would take 7.9 months to absorb the current inventory for sale. The market equilibrium (balance between supply and demand) is considered to be approximately 8.5 months during the month of December. Last month, the ratio stood at 11.2 months of supply so this month represents encouraging news as a result of the marked improvement toward a balanced market.
Demand: December residential sales increased by 46.4 percent from the prior month. This direction is consistent with seasonal buying patterns and historical data indicating that December sales on average ('09-'13) increase by 20.3 percent from the month of November. Existing single family home sales account for 56 percent (up from 50% in Dec'13) of total sales while 34 percent (down from 40% in Dec'13) were new home sales and 10 percent (same as Dec'13) were condo buyers.
Pricing: The Lee County median sales price in December was $189,700, a 3.5 percent decrease from last December. The December median sales price also slipped 4.2 percent compared to the prior month. Historical data ('09-'13) indicates that the December median sales price traditionally increases from the month of November by 10.1 percent. Pricing can fluctuate from month-to-month as the sample size of data (closed transactions) is subject to seasonal buying patterns so a broader lens as to pricing trends is appropriate and we recommend contacting a local real estate professional for additional market pricing information.
Industry Perspective: "The housing market is likely to continue its gradual climb upward next year after a sub-par 2014," according to Doug Duncan, senior vice president and chief economist at Fannie Mae. "We anticipate a fairly strong increase in housing starts in response to stronger employment and some improvement in related household incomes. As a result, that may help to unfold some of the suppressed household formation numbers and incent builders to meet some of that increased demand. For all of 2015, we expect total housing starts to increase by about 22 percent and total home sales to rise approximately 5 percent, with total mortgage originations ticking up slightly to $1.13 trillion." For full report, go HERE.
See how Lee County compares to other Alabama real estate markets.
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The Lee County Residential Monthly Report is work product developed in conjunction with the Lee County Association of REALTORS to better serve Opelika/Auburn consumers. The ACRE monthly report is provided to illustrate the "general" market direction & trends when comparing prior periods with the most current available data. Real estate is local and statistics will fluctuate between areas within a city including subdivisions. ACRE recommends that you consult a local real estate professional for "specific" advice associated with your market.
The foundation of the Lee County Association of REALTORS is to promote and enhance the success of its members through education, professionalism, and ethical conduct.
The Alabama Center for Real Estate's core purpose is to advance the real estate industry in Alabama by providing relevant resources in the areas of research, education and outreach. ACRE was founded by legislative act in 1996 due to the efforts of the Alabama Real Estate Commissionthe Alabama Association of REALTORS and the Office of the Dean, UA Culverhouse College of Commerce to serve the State of Alabama real estate industry and the consumers it serves. ACRE is not a state-funded entity, rather its operates in part because of the goodwill & generosity of the ACRE Corporate Cabinet, Alabama real estate licensees and our statewide ACRE Partners. For other Alabama real estate resources & news, please visit our website and our ACRE blog. You can also follow ACRE from our facebook page and on twitter @uaacre.

Inaccurate Zillow 'Zestimates' a source of conflict over home prices

Inaccurate Zillow 'Zestimates' a source of conflict over home prices

Home shoppers, sellers and buyers routinely quote Zestimates to realty agents as gauges of market value
Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff says that nationwide Zestimates have a “median error rate” of about 8%
When "CBS This Morning" co-host Norah O'Donnell asked the chief executive of Zillow recently about the accuracy of the website's automated property value estimates — known as Zestimates — she touched on one of the most sensitive perception gaps in American real estate.
Zillow is the most popular online real estate information site, with 73 million unique visitors in December. Along with active listings of properties for sale, it also provides information on houses that are not on the market. You can enter the address or general location in a database of millions of homes and probably pull up key information — square footage, lot size, number of bedrooms and baths, photos, taxes — plus a Zestimate.
Shoppers, sellers and buyers routinely quote Zestimates to realty agents — and to one another — as gauges of market value. If a house for sale has a Zestimate of $350,000, a buyer might challenge the sellers' list price of $425,000. Or a seller might demand to know from potential listing brokers why they say a property should sell for just $595,000 when Zillow has it at $685,000.
Disparities like these are daily occurrences and, in the words of one realty agent who posted on the industry blog ActiveRain, they are "the bane of my existence." Consumers often take Zestimates "as gospel," said Tim Freund, an agent with Dilbeck Real Estate in Westlake Village. If either the buyer or the seller won't budge off Zillow's estimated value, he told me, "that will kill a deal."
Back to the question posed by O'Donnell: Are Zestimates accurate? And if they're off the mark, how far off? Zillow CEO Spencer Rascoff answered that they're "a good starting point" but that nationwide Zestimates have a "median error rate" of about 8%.
Whoa. That sounds high. On a $500,000 house, that would be a $40,000 disparity — a lot of money on the table — and could create problems. But here's something Rascoff was not asked about: Localized median error rates on Zestimates sometimes far exceed the national median, which raises the odds that sellers and buyers will have conflicts over pricing. Though it's not prominently featured on the website, at the bottom of Zillow's home page in small type is the word "Zestimates." This section provides helpful background information along with valuation error rates by state and county — some of which are stunners.
For example, in New York County — Manhattan — the median valuation error rate is 19.9%. In Brooklyn, it's 12.9%. In Somerset County, Md., the rate is an astounding 42%. In some rural counties in California, error rates range as high as 26%. In San Francisco it's 11.6%. With a median home value of $1,000,800 in San Francisco, according to Zillow estimates as of December, a median error rate at this level translates into a price disparity of $116,093.
Some real estate agents have done their own studies of accuracy levels of Zillow in their local markets.
Last July, Robert Earl, an agent with Choice Homes Team in the Charlottesville, Va., area, examined selling prices and Zestimates of all 21 homes sold that month in the nearby community of Lake Monticello. On 17 sales Zillow overestimated values, including two houses that sold for 61% below the Zestimate.
In Carlsbad, Calif., Jeff Dowler, an agent with Solutions Real Estate, did a similar analysis on sales in two ZIP Codes. He found that Zestimates came in below the selling price 70% of the time, with disparities ranging as high as $70,000. In 25% of the sales, Zestimates were higher than the contract price. In 95% of the cases, he said, "Zestimates were wrong. That does not inspire a lot of confidence, at least not for me." In a second ZIP Code, Dowler found that 100% of Zestimates were inaccurate and that disparities were as large as $190,000.
So what do you do now that you've got the scoop on Zestimate accuracy? Most important, take Rascoff's advice: Look at them as no more than starting points in pricing discussions with the real authorities on local real estate values — experienced agents and appraisers. Zestimates are hardly gospel — often far from it.
Distributed by Washington Post Writers Group.

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Auburn University invites community to witness planting of new oak trees on Valentine's Day

Auburn University invites community to witness planting of new oak trees on Valentine's Day

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Posted: Monday, February 2, 2015 11:28 am | Updated: 11:43 am, Tue Feb 3, 2015.
Nearly four years to the day that Auburn University announced the lethal poisoning of the historic Auburn Oaks, two new live oaks will begin taking root in Samford Park at Toomer's Corner.
Landscapers are scheduled to begin planting the 35-foot-tall trees at 8 a.m. on Feb. 14. The university is inviting the public to attend the event, which should finish early in the afternoon. A viewing area will be set up, and streets will be closed for safety reasons.
"We are partnering with the City of Auburn to make this a special day," said Mike Clardy, director of university communications. "Downtown merchants will be open early and three of Auburn's athletic teams will be in action that day. We are hoping people will come to the Plains and make a weekend out of it."
Beginning around 7:30 a.m., crews will close College Street from Thach Avenue to Tichenor Avenue, and Magnolia Avenue from Wright Street to the Compass Bank parking lot entrance.  Roads are expected to remain closed until 2 p.m.
The new trees will arrive at Toomer's Corner via flatbed trailer between 7:30 and 8 a.m.
The planting of the oaks is the final step in Phase I of the Samford Park renovation, which included enlarging the plaza and improving the landscaping near the corner. The second phase, slated to begin after A-Day in April, will feature the planting of 30 15-foot-tall trees — grown from acorns collected from the original oaks — between Toomer's Corner and Samford Hall.
The university is asking fans not to roll the two new oak trees until fall 2016 as they establish roots and acclimate to their new environment.
For more information about the Auburn Oaks, visit www.auburn.edu/oaks<;http://www.auburn.edu/oaks>.

Mud Room Benches, Cabinets, Lockers and more!

Architects and designers tell us how to set up one of the toughest rooms in the house

Houzz Editorial Staff; writer, reader, serial remodeler.
A recent Houzz Call for your mudroom photos drew a lot of praise for this drop-it-all zone off the entryway — and some strong opinions. Perhaps the highest praise came from reader lake1114, who said, “The mudroom is one of the best house creations since indoor plumbing.” When we talked with Houzzers who have created great mudrooms, we found out more about the layout, setup and cost of this hardworking space. All of them emphasized one thing: A mudroom is as individual as the people who use it.