Home Prices in 2012: Best Year-on-Year Gain in Six Years

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Take a look at that headline! Prices climbing is a great thing but there is also a small problem, low inventory! Buyers are out looking for homes and they need YOURS to be on the market for them to buy! Thinking about making a move this year? Today is the time to get listed before a spring rush! I would love to sit down and discuss the listing program for the John Mendoza Team as we are doing things that, quite frankly, many other agents haven’t even considered! Take a look at the article below and give me a call today!

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CoreLogic®, a leading residential property information, analytics and services provider, recently released its December CoreLogic HPI® report. Home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased on a year-over-year basis by 8.3 percent in December 2012 compared to December 2011. This change represents the biggest increase since May 2006 and the 10th consecutive monthly increase in home prices nationally. On a month-over-month basis, including distressed sales, home prices increased by 0.4 percent in December 2012 compared to November 2012. The HPI analysis shows that all but four states are experiencing year-over-year price gains.

Excluding distressed sales, home prices increased on a year-over-year basis by 7.5 percent in December 2012 compared to December 2011. On a month-over-month basis, excluding distressed sales, home prices increased 0.9 percent in December 2012 compared to November 2012. Distressed sales include short sales and real estate owned (REO) transactions.

The CoreLogic Pending HPI indicates that January 2013 home prices, including distressed sales, are expected to rise by 7.9 percent on a year-over-year basis from January 2012 and fall by 1 percent on a month-over-month basis from December 2012, reflecting a seasonal winter slowdown. Excluding distressed sales, January 2013 house prices are poised to rise 8.6 percent year over year from January 2012 and by 0.7 percent month over month from December 2012. The CoreLogic Pending HPI is a proprietary and exclusive metric that provides the most current indication of trends in home prices. It is based on Multiple Listing Service (MLS) data that measure price changes for the most recent month.

“December marked 10 consecutive months of year-over-year home price improvements, and the strongest growth since the height of the last housing boom more than six years ago,” says Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic. “We expect price growth to continue in January as our Pending HPI shows strong year-over-year appreciation.”

“We are heading into 2013 with home prices on the rebound,” said Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO of CoreLogic. “The upward trend in home prices in 2012 was broad based with 46 of 50 states registering gains for the year. All signals point to a continued improvement in the fundamentals underpinning the U.S. housing market recovery.”.

Highlights as of December 2012:

• Including distressed sales, the five states with the highest home price appreciation were: Arizona (+20.2 percent), Nevada (+15.3 percent), Idaho (+14.6 percent), California (+12.6 percent) and Hawaii (+12.5 percent).

• Including distressed sales, this month only four states posted home price depreciation: Delaware (-3.4 percent), Illinois (-2.7 percent), New Jersey (-0.9 percent) and Pennsylvania (-0.5 percent).

• Excluding distressed sales, the five states with the highest home price appreciation were: Arizona (+16.4 percent), Nevada (+14.7 percent), California (+12.8 percent), Hawaii (+11.7 percent) and North Dakota (+10.8 percent).

• Excluding distressed sales, this month only three states posted home price depreciation: Delaware (-1.9 percent), Alabama (-1.0 percent) and New Jersey (-0.5 percent).

• Including distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the national HPI (from April 2006 to December 2012) was -26.9 percent. Excluding distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the HPI for the same period was -20.8 percent.

• The five states with the largest peak-to-current declines, including distressed transactions, were Nevada (-52.4 percent), Florida (-43.5 percent), Arizona (-39.8 percent), Michigan (-36.5 percent) and California (-35.4 percent).

• Of the top 100 Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) measured by population, only 16 are showing year-over-year declines in November, two fewer than in November.

For more information, visit www.corelogic.com [2].

Article posted from RISMedia: http://rismedia.com

URL to article: http://rismedia.com/2013-02-07/home-prices-in-2012-best-year-on-year-gain-in-six-years/

URLs in this post:

[1] Image: http://rismedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/home_price_gains.jpg

[2] www.corelogic.com: http://www.corelogic.com

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Homeowners Recover 13.5 Percent of Lost Equity Through Q3

Author: admin / Category: Blog

Great article here from RISMEDIA about the rising home values and recovery of lost equity. Want to see what kind of equity you have in your home? Lets sit down today and see what the market in your neighborhood is like. Talk to you soon!

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

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Rising home values have brought homeowner equity to its highest level since the third quarter of 2008 and helped lift 1.3 million families above water. Homeowner equity jumped $406 billion, or 5.9 percent, to $7,275 billion in the second quarter of 2012, according to the Obama Administration’s September Housing Scorecard.

After a sharp first quarter rise, total equity has grown to $863 billion, or 13.5 percent, since the end of 2011. The number of underwater borrowers has declined by 11 percent since the end of last year, from 12.1 million in the 4th quarter of 2011 to 10.8 million in the second quarter of 2012.

Nearly 1.3 million homeowner assistance actions have taken place through the Making Home Affordable Program, while the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has offered more than 1.4 million loss mitigation and early delinquency interventions. The Administration’s programs continue to encourage improved standards and processes in the industry, with HOPE Now lenders offering families and individuals more than three million proprietary mortgage modifications through July.

As of August, more than one million homeowners have received a permanent HAMP modification, saving approximately $539 apiece on their mortgage payments each month, and an estimated $15 billion to date. In August, 81 percent of homeowners with eligible non-GSE mortgages benefitted from principal reduction with their HAMP modification. Eighty-seven percent of homeowners entering the program in the last two years have received a permanent modification.

“As the September housing scorecard indicates, our housing market is showing important signs of recovery – with homeowner equity at a four-year high and summer sales of existing homes at the strongest pace in two years,” says HUD Acting Assistant Secretary Erika Poethig. “The Administration’s efforts to keep housing affordable and refinances strong are critical with so many households still struggling to make ends meet. That is why we continue to ask Congress to approve the President’s refinancing proposal so that more homeowners can secure the help they need.”

Rising home values have brought homeowner equity to its highest level since the third quarter of 2008 and helped lift 1.3 million families above water. Homeowner equity jumped $406 billion, or 5.9 percent, to $7,275 billion in the second quarter of 2012. After a sharp first quarter rise, total equity has grown to $863 billion, or 13.5 percent, since the end of 2011. The number of underwater borrowers has declined by 11 percent since the end of last year, from 12.1 million in the 4th quarter of 2011 to 10.8 million in the second quarter of 2012.

The Administration’s foreclosure programs are providing relief for millions of homeowners as we continue to recover from an unprecedented housing crisis. Nearly 1.3 million homeowner assistance actions have taken place through the Making Home Affordable Program, while the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has offered more than 1.4 million loss mitigation and early delinquency interventions. The Administration’s programs continue to encourage improved standards and processes in the industry, with HOPE Now lenders offering families and individuals more than three million proprietary mortgage modifications through July.

Homeowners entering HAMP continue to benefit from deep and sustainable assistance. As of August, more than one million homeowners have received a permanent HAMP modification, saving approximately $539 on their mortgage payments each month, and an estimated $15 billion to date. In August, 81 percent of homeowners with eligible non-GSE mortgages benefitted from principal reduction with their HAMP modification. Eighty-seven percent of homeowners entering the program in the last two years have received a permanent modification

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5 Things to do When You Move Into Your New Home

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Everyone has a long laundry list of items they like to take care of when they move into a new home. Today’s post takes a look at some things that many people may over look. Ready for that new home yourself? Give me a call today and lets stop looking and start FINDING you a new home!

Visit houselogic.com for more articles like this.

Copyright 2012 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

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Housing Bust Over?

Author: admin / Category: Blog

We are seeing a surge in the Des Moines market that hasn’t been seen in years. Buyers are buying, sellers are selling, and interest rates remain low. This type of trend is growing across the country and as a Realtor and a homeowner I couldn’t be happier. Below is an article by David Wessel of the Wall Street Journal about the bust and recovery. Ready to join the party? Give me a call today and take advantage of the hot market (and hot weather). The time is now to get your home on the market & we have a lot of programs that are just simply not being used by any other agents in town. Talk to you soon!

Original Article

Housing Passes a Milestone
by David Wessel

The housing market has turned—at last.

The U.S. finally has moved beyond attention-grabbing predictions from housing “experts” that housing is bottoming. The numbers are now convincing.

Nearly seven years after the housing bubble burst, most indexes of house prices are bending up. “We finally saw some rising home prices,” S&P’s David Blitzer said a few weeks ago as he reported the first monthly increase in the slow-moving S&P/Case-Shiller house-price data after seven months of declines.

Nearly 10% more existing homes were sold in May than in the same month a year earlier, many purchased by investors who plan to rent them for now and sell them later, an important sign of an inflection point. In something of a surprise, the inventory of existing homes for sale has fallen close to the normal level of six months’ worth despite all the foreclosed homes that lenders own. The fraction of homes that are vacant is at its lowest level since 2006.

The reduced inventory of unsold homes is key, says Mark Fleming, chief economist at CoreLogic, a housing data-analysis firm. For the past couple of years, house prices have risen in the spring and then slumped; the declining supply of houses for sale is reason to believe that won’t happen again this year, he says.

Builders began work on 26% more single-family homes in May 2012 than the depressed levels of May 2011. The stock of unsold newly built homes is back to 2005 levels. In each of the past four quarters, housing construction has added to economic growth. In the first quarter, it accounted for 0.4 percentage points of the meager 1.9% growth rate.

“Even with the overall economy slowing,” Wells Fargo Securities economists said, cautiously, in a note to clients, “the budding recovery in the housing market appears to be gradually gaining momentum.”

Housing is still far from healthy despite the Federal Reserve’s efforts to resuscitate it by helping to push mortgage rates to extraordinary lows: 3.62% for a 30-year loan, according to Freddie Mac’s latest survey. Single-family housing starts, though up, remain 60% below the 2002 pre-bubble pace. Americans’ equity in homes is $2 trillion, or 25%, less than it was in 2002 and half what it was at the peak. More than one in every four mortgage borrowers still has a loan bigger than the value of the house, though rising home prices are reducing that fraction slowly.

Still, the upturn in housing is a milestone, a particularly welcome one amid a distressing dearth of jobs. For some time, housing has been one of the biggest causes of economic weakness. It has now—barely—moved to the plus side. “A little tail wind is a lot better than a headwind,” says economist Chip Case, the “Case” in Case-Shiller.

From here on, housing is unlikely to drag the U.S. economy down further. It will instead reflect the strength or weakness of the overall economy: The more jobs, the more confident Americans are about keeping their jobs, the more they are willing to buy houses. “Manufacturing had led growth and construction had lagged,” JPMorgan Chase economists said last week.”Now the roles are reversed: Manufacturing growth has slowed as private construction comes to life.”

Plenty could go wrong. The biggest threat is a large shadow inventory of unsold homes, homes which owners won’t put on the market because they are underwater, homes that will be foreclosed eventually and homes owned by lenders. They have been trickling onto the market, slowed in part by government efforts to delay foreclosures; a flood could reverse the recent rise in prices. Or the still-dysfunctional mortgage market could get worse. Or overly zealous regulators or a post-election change in government policy could unsettle mortgage lenders or home buyers.

But the housing bust is over.

Write to David Wessel at capital@wsj.com

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School District Information for Any Address!

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One of the most frequent questions I get as an agent is what school district a home is in. That is usually followed up with a question about how good the school performs. Below is a great tool for searching any address and finding the schools in the area. Even better, it links to the National Education Center’s test information and rates the school compared to others in the state. Looking to make a move with your family? Take a look below and then give me a call and we can find you a great home in that perfect district!

**You can pan around on the map by “grabbing” with your mouse or just enter an address**


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Wall Street Journal: C21 Super Bowl Ad ‘Fell Flat’

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REBLOG FROM RE/MAX:

By Kevin Doll, RE/MAX Director of Corporate Communications

Posted 2/7/12

They made it to the big game, but came up a little short.

Despite costing an estimated $3.5 million – or $117,000 per second – Century 21′s Super Bowl ad rated poorly among consumers and ad executives in most postgame rankings. The lackluster response to the high-stakes gamble reinforced the soundness of the advertising approach RE/MAX employs, which is ongoing, long-term, targeted and consumer-focused.

“Century 21 put all of their eggs in one basket,” says Abby Lee, RE/MAX Vice President of Brand Marketing. “We prefer a different strategy.”

The C21 ad featured Donald Trump, Deion Sanders and Apollo Ono, and viewers were apparently unimpressed. A USA Today panel of 286 consumers ranked it second-to-last. The Wall Street Journal grouped it with a handful of “spots that fell flat,” based on the thoughts of advertising experts.

When production and talent expenses are factored in, the spot cost far more than the $3.5 million paid to NBC, Lee says, noting that RE/MAX produces major results with its TV advertising approach, which spreads the message throughout the year.

In 2011, RE/MAX had 57.3 percent share of voice on national television (ages 25-54). That compares to 4.1% for Century 21, which advertised on national television in the second and third quarters but aired no ads in the first and fourth quarters of last year.

The 2012 RE/MAX national advertising campaign is appearing on television (network, cable and Hispanic), radio, online and keyword search. It includes four new TV spots about pivotal moments in life,such as a marriage proposal or a new job, under the theme, “For All the Things That Move You.” A RE/MAX radio spot aired on the Dial Global network broadcast of the Super Bowl.

First-quarter and second-quarter advertising in 2012 will be heavier than the last half of the year in order to position RE/MAX agents for the heart of the home-buying and selling season, Lee says. She notes that RE/MAX supports its national advertising with local and regional campaigns.

RE/MAX Affiliates may share this article, provided they do not charge for it and this notice is included. All other rights reserved.

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Best & Worst Celebrity Neighbors

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Below is a fun look from Zillow at American’s opinion of celebrity neighbors. I wouldn’t mind some of those clients!


More than 40 Percent of Americans Do Not Want a Celebrity Neighbor, According to 5th Annual Zillow Celebrity Neighbor Survey

SEATTLE, Dec. 28, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — U.S. adults would most like to be neighbors with Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow in 2012, according to the fifth annual Zillow® Celebrity Neighbor Survey[i]. The cast of the reality TV show “Jersey Shore” was named least desirable neighbors of 2011. Meanwhile, 42 percent of surveyed adults said they did not want to live next to any celebrities, up from 27 percent last year. The annual Zillow poll asks U.S. adults which celebrities they would most like to be their neighbor, and with whom they wouldn’t want to share a fence.

Most Desirable Neighbors for 2012
In the coming year, 11 percent of adults surveyed would like to be neighbors with Tebow. His popularity was significantly higher among males (14 percent) compared to females (7 percent).

Celebrity super couples Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, and Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux received 10 percent and 9 percent of the vote, respectively. Americans with children, however, preferred to live next to Jolie and Pitt (14 percent) rather than Aniston and Theroux (9 percent).

Worst Neighbors for 2011
For the second year in a row, the “Jersey Shore” cast was voted worst neighbors of the year. More than one in four (28 percent)  surveyed Americans found the reality show cast to be the most undesirable neighbors of 2011, a slight increase from 26 percent in the 2010 Zillow Celebrity Neighbor Survey. Twenty-one percent of respondents found Charlie Sheen to be the worst neighbor, ranking second by a large margin compared to competitors Lindsay Lohan (14 percent) and Kim Kardashian (13 percent).

“As a voyeuristic culture that breathlessly tracks every celebrity movement, it’s extremely surprising to see so many Americans saying they wouldn’t like to live next to any celebrity at all. In fact, more people opted out of a celebrity neighbor in 2012 than in any of the past years we’ve run this poll,” said Zillow Chief Marketing Officer Amy Bohutinsky. “We may want to watch, read and talk about celebrities, but when it comes to sharing a back fence, many Americans think it’s just too close for comfort.”

Most Desirable Neighbors for 2012 Worst Neighbors of 2011
Name Percent Name Percent
Tim Tebow 11 Jersey Shore Cast 28
Angelina Jolie & Brad Pitt 10 Charlie Sheen 21
Jennifer Aniston & Justin Theroux 9 Lindsay Lohan 14
Jennifer Lopez 6 Kim Kardashian 13
Beyoncé & Jay-Z 5 Nancy Grace 3
Nancy Grace 4 Angelina Jolie & Brad Pitt 3
Kim Kardashian 4 Anthony Weiner 2
Other 11 Other 2
None of the above 42 None of the above 14

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Politics and the Housing Market?

Author: admin / Category: Blog

Uh-Oh! Politics is such touchy subject I am sometimes reluctant to even mention it but below is a good look at some of President Obamas comments on housing from the State of the Union last week.

Visit houselogic.com for more articles like this.

Copyright 2012 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

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Residential Housing Ready to Awaken?

Author: admin / Category: Blog

Here’s a pretty promising article from CNBC about the reawakening of the housing market! Ready to make a move and take advantage of the new activity? Give me a call today and we can discuss all of our great marketing programs to help you make those dreams a REALITY!

Original Article

After half a decade of withering sales and slumping prices, there are strong and diverse signs that the single-family housing market is poised for a rebound.

In some metropolitan areas, the market has bottomed, with both sales and prices on the rise and foreclosures on the decline.

This contrarian – and largely overlooked – thesis flies in the face of the persistent gloom that has nagged the industry since 2007, when the subprime crisis flared.

Industry analysts and players cite a number of reasons – some traditional (employment), others unique to the post-credit bubble era (foreclosures) Â – for the long-awaited sea change. An analysis of industry and government data also support the forecast.

“It has become increasingly apparent to us that the pieces for a housing rebound next year are beginning to fall into place,” declared Barclays Capital analyst Stephen Kim in a recent note to investors.

Proponents admit that the nascent rebound could easily be derailed, but stress that after years of government efforts to support sales and prices as well as the volatile impact of foreclosures, the market has regained a measure of normalcy.
“With the exception of really hard-hit markets, the vast majority is ready to turn around,” adds Jerry Howard, president and CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, NAHB. “The Washington, D.C., area is not only ripe for recovery, they need to start building units.”

The iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction Index Fund (NYSE Arca: itb), for example, is up some 38 percent, while the S&P 500 is up about 21 percent.

Nevertheless, skeptics overwhelmingly outnumber the optimists, given the false-starts of previous years, the economy’s sub-par performance, a new wave of distressed properties and the capacity for the European debt crisis to spook business, consumers and investors.

“I think it’s premature,” says Richard Smith, CEO of Realogy, the nation’s largest real estate company, whose brands include Century 21, Coldwell Banker and Sotheby’s International. “We see little indications here and there. Transaction volume is improving. Prices are still under pressure. This isn’t going to be one of those spiked robust recoveries.”
Smith is echoing the conventional industry calculus: that price increases follow sales growth amid consistently strengthening demand.

There’s been little conventional, however, about this housing slump, which is one reason it’s had so many false bottoms. Among its many firsts – housing starts fell through 1 million annual units, foreclosures topped 2 million in three consecutive years, and home prices declined on a national basis.

The catalysts to recovery are mostly the same: for potential buyers, residential rents have now risen enough to consider buying; existing-home inventory is the lowest in five years, while that of new homes is at a 40-year low; affordability is at a record high; delinquencies have peaked; consumer confidence is on the rise ; and job growth is accelerating.
For investors, with a continuation of the gold rally in question, real estate is beginning to look like a viable inflation hedge alternative, while rising rents mean greater profits.

That thinking may help explain why the iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction Index Fund (NYSE Arca: itb), a broad barometer for the housing market, is up some 38 percent from the stock market’s October bottom, while the S&P 500 is up about 21 percent.

Finally, there’s the intangible fatigue with bad news, and a desire to end the negative feedback loop.
“We believe there is sizable housing demand that could be released into the market,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, NAR.

The NAR is forecasting existing home sales will rise 5 percent in both 2012 and 2013; prices will edge up 2 percent in each of those two years, then 4 percent in 2014.

The NAHB is forecasting a 5.1-percent increase in new home sales and a 10-percent increase for new home starts in 2012.

Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
A turnaround in the housing market will require continued improvement in the job market.
The economy has created jobs 13 months in a row for a total of almost 1.9 million. Weekly jobless claims have been routinely below the key level of 400,000, and the national jobless rate is down to 8.6 percent.

There are already signs in some markets that an improving employment picture is boosting housing demand and sale prices.
In cities such as Tampa, Fla., South Bend, Ind., Grand Rapids, Mich., Raleigh, N.C., Wichita, Kan., and Green Bay, Wis.., the median sales price of an existing single family home increased 1-2 percent in the third quarter, during which time the jobless rate and/or payrolls growth improved dramatically.

Even in the Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla. metropolitan area – considered the epicenter of the foreclosure crisis a few years ago – prices were just 1.4 percent lower in the third quarter than the previous year.

A new index by the NAHB and First American, the Improving Markets Index, IMI, launched in September, tracks housing markets throughout the country that are showing signs of improving economic health. Thirty cities – including San Jose, Pittsburgh, New Orleans and Winston-Salem, N.C. – are showing growth in permits, sales and employment.

In San Diego – where in the last year the jobless rate has fallen from 10.4 percent to 9.7 percent and 24,000 jobs have been added – home inventory is down to two months; in some areas of San Francisco (9.4 vs. 10.3 percent), it is one month.
More broadly, 40 percent of all states showed existing home sale increases on both a quarterly and annual basis in the third quarter, according to National Association of Realtors data. That includes high foreclosure-rate states, such as California, Georgia, Michigan and Utah. All but six states showed double-digit gains year over year.

Location, Location, Location
There’s even a strong case to be made that the foreclosure crisis is easing.
“The pipeline of distressed property is plentiful but less than last year,” when foreclosure activity hit a record 2.18 million, says Yun.

For the first nine months of 2011, foreclosure activity is down sharply from the same period last year (26.59 percent), whether it is the worst-off states – (Florida, 54.98 percent; California, 31.51 percent; Utah, 27.41 percent) – or better-off ones (New York, 46.57 percent; Mississippi, 33.25 percent; South Dakota, 26.59 percent), according to RealtyTrac, which tracks the data.

Third-quarter foreclosures (610,337) were up 1 percent from the previous quarter but down 34 percent from the year-ago period.

The wild card right now is an impending wave of new foreclosed properties on the market, following the removal of state moratoria and the settlement of state and federal lawsuits with lenders and loan servicers.
It’s unclear how many properties will hit the market, but conservative estimates put the number at over a million.
Still, of the top 20 markets in the new wave, nine are in California, five in Florida and two in Ohio, according RealtyTrac, so the impact will be fairly concentated.

Another question is whether that wave will be a tsunami or merely a breaker. If the market is in fact recovering, why would banks want to weaken it again by deluging it with cheap properties.

“You could see them trying to gauge the market like speculators,” answers Howard.

Kim of Barclays is among those who say the threat is exaggerated, perhaps misunderstood. He estimates that 40 percent of the foreclosed properties haven’t had a payment made on them in two years, which means they are in poor condition and thus unattractive to many buyers.

“The deterioration has been great,” he says. “It flies in the face of all the bearish arguments.”
Kim’s thesis is that there are now two kinds of buyers in the market; those who’ll take a chance on a bargain-priced, distressed property and those who’ll only make a conventional transaction. He says it helps explain why the Core Logic data he used for his latest report shows non-distressed prices flat or slightly higher in the past year.
“Even if the banks decide to move their inventory more aggressively, and I suspect they will, it’s OK because the buyer is making a distinction,” explains Kim.

“There’s a ready appetite for it,” adds Smith of Realogy, who agrees that there’s substantial pent-up demand for housing in general but also great uncertainty. “If you can relieve consumers of some of that uncertainty, then I can see a nice little recovery.”

That’s the psychological dimension of the wild card – the negative feedback loop that has plagued housing.
Optimists say most of the uncertainty and fear is gone.

“The major driver of negative sentiment was that prices were going down across the market by large amounts,” says Kim of Barclays. “Buyers need to see a stabilization.”

A contributing element to that is the unwinding of government intervention – whether to artificially spur demand – as was the case with the first-time buyer tax incentive program of 2009 and 2010 – and/or to retard and prevent foreclosures.
Many regard those efforts as largely ineffective, if not counter-productive because they delayed the inevitable – a deep descent to a market bottom, which has finally been touched.

“The numbers you’re looking at you can trust,” says Kim. “There are no exogenous factors.”
Though tight lending conditions and forthcoming regulations of the Dodd-Frank legislation are still an issue for some, sweeping housing finance reform is off the agenda for at least the next year.

“You’re back to the natural forces of the market,” says Howard of the builders association.

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Press Release: Trulia Premium for RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts Listings

Author: admin / Category: Blog

Des Moines, Iowa (December 10, 2011) – RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts a leading real estate brokerage with homes for sale in Des Moines Iowa, today announced their 2012 Ad Fund Campaign with Trulia, a leading resource for real estate professionals, homebuyers and sellers.

RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts today launched the Premium Listing Program, “The Premium Listing Program, of which Trulia enables our real estate professionals to deliver exceptional value to their customers and increased exposure for their properties.” said Robb Spearman, Broker of RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts Beaverdale Office. “This is truly an advantage for our real estate professionals giving them more opportunities for success.”

Trulia’s advertising solutions along with RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts real estate professionals will enhanced exposure for their listings. In February of 2011, Trulia was recognized as the fastest growing real estate site and the fourth fastest growing U.S. site overall (comScore Feb 2011). Through the growth of both audience and consumer engagement, brokers already using Trulia’s Premium Listings product have experienced 60 percent year-over-year growth in buyer and seller leads sent from Trulia (Internal Trulia Data, Jan 2011).

About RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts
RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts was founded in October 2000 and is celebrating 11 consecutive years of growth by “Doing the Right Thing at the Right Time” for their customers, the real estate professionals. This is accomplished by a laser focus strategy by providing Branding & Exposure, Education & Training, Business Planning and Systems for their agents. RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts now boast nearly 100 agents in central Iowa, a market share of 17% of the listings sold in Des Moines Iowa. RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts has six locations in the Des Moines area: Altoona, Beaverdale, Grimes, Newton, Southside and West Des Moines and can be reached at 515.276.2872. The office’s web site can be found at HomeConnectUSA.com and HomeConnectDSM.com. Real estate professionals can find out more about RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts at AgentCareLibrary.com, JoinREMAX.com, Facebook.com/realestateconcepts and YouTube.com/realestateconcepts.

About Trulia, Inc.
Trulia is the fastest growing online real estate resource, empowering buyers, seller and renters with smarter tools to help them find the right home. Trulia helps you find a home that best meets your specific needs. Our smart and personalized real estate search experience brings together local information, community insights, market data and national listings all in one place. Trulia is headquartered in downtown San Francisco and is backed by Accel Partners and Sequoia Capital.

Media Contact:

Robb Spearman, Robb@RealEstateConcepts, 515.276.2872

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