First Time Homebuyer in American Fork, Forclosures in American Fork UT, Short Sales in American Fork

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bettyjomckinlay
Betty Jo McKinlay
Professional Real Estate Agent

    ABR - Accredited Buyers Representative
    PMN - Performance Management Network
    C-21 MMS - Century 21 Mature Move Specialist

Direct: 801-830-1989

Office: 801-756-9559



Company Info

Century 21 At The Rockies
792 E State Rd
American Fork, Utah
801-756-9559


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National Stats

Market Trends:

  • Ave. Home Sale: $379,000

  • Ave. Days on Market: 69

Posts Tagged ‘low interest rates’

Getting Back to $5.5 Million Annual Existing-Home Sales

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Reprinted from REALTOR® Magazine [June, 2010] with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. printed in my July Newsletter, by Lawrence Yun, NAR Chief Economist:

“…There are some cautionary signs ahead. A big, albeit temporary, slump is on the way. Contract signings for May and June will be very weak. Do not be at all surprised if the pace of existing-home sales falls to 10-year lows of around 4.5 million annualized units for a couple of months before the housing market tries to get back on its own feet absent any government stimulus. If resales bounce back to a 5.5 million unit annualized pace toward year’s end then the housing market can be said to be fully back on a healthy track. It will be well short of the 7 million unit sales set in 2005, but that was an artificially fired-up figure resulting from terribly lax mortgage underwriting standards and a sizable number of speculative home purchases.

Getting back to 5.5 million annual existing-home sales will correspond to the level of home sales back in 2001. Back then, there were 130 million payroll job holders in the country. Today the worst in the job market appears to have passed. Excluding the artificial Census-related jobs, the private sector still added 495,000 in the first five months of this year and the total employment stands also at 130 million.

One big difference in the housing market now versus then is mortgage rates. The average 30-year fixed rate so far this year has averaged around 5.0 percent, compared to the average 7.0 percent rate in 2001. And while underwriting standards were not very stringent in 2001, they were not necessarily lax either. Provided that mortgage rates remain reasonable favorable for the foreseeable future – that is, remain at or under 6 percent – and if jobs continue to be added to the economy – my forecast is for 1 million new jobs in the second half of the year and another 2 million in 2011 – then home sales should easily be able to churn out a 5.5 million unit annual sales pace. Remember that total sales were 4.9 million in 2008 and 5.2 million in 2009, so settling in at 5.5 million will be a respectable improvement from the past two years.”

The fixed 30 year interest rates are holding under 5% which should help us on our way to the 5.5 million that will be a positive step in the right direction for home sales.

Will More Jobs Help the Housing Market Rebound?

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

A statistic given by RISMEDIA was that new homes sales increased 26.9% in March.  Many speculate that the federal tax incentives were the impetus.  However, there are those who think that job creation is essential for the housing momentum to be sustained.

The following was reported in RISMEDIA, Posted By susanne On April 27, 2010.

“It shows that the tax credit still has some punch, and we will probably see some better sales numbers for April,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com. (more…)

New Tax Credit Passed by Congress to be Signed by President Obama for American Fork, UT and Utah County

Friday, November 6th, 2009

News from the National Association of REALTORS® Government Affairs Division

500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, Washington DC, 20001

“Congress has extended and expanded the homebuyer tax credit. The credit will become effective when President Obama signs the bill. All changes made to the current credit become effective on that date, as well.” 

The current tax credit for the current first time buyer will be affective until November 30, 2009.  the new tax credit will be enacted December 1 – April 30, 2010 with the rules enacted on November 2009.  The amount of credit for the first time homebuyer stays the same, up to $8,000.  However, there is a new provision for a current homebuyer for $6,500 or $3,250 if filing separately.  The new provision for 2009 for current Homeowners is they they  must have used the home sold or being sold as a principal residence consecutively for 5 of the previous 8 years.

The current homeowners must be under contract by April 30, 2010 and they will have to close their transactions by July 1, 2010. 

This is great news for first time homebuyers who may not have found their dream home by November 30, 2009 and for current homeowners!  With low interest rates, great inventory of homes on the market in American Fork, UT and Utah County, now is the time to buy and sell as buyers will be looking for homes that may not be on the current market!

Realtors Endorse Extension of Federal Tax Credit to 2010

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

I received the following email from NAR this morning and felt it would be good to post it on my blog.  It’s message is timely in that the $8,000 first time home buyer’s tax credit will be expiring soon and buyers will need to be under contract by October 15, 2009 to safely close by November 30th, 2009 and receive the tax credit.  Importantly, I will lift my voice to join many other realtors in NAR in explaining to Congress that the housing recovery is not yet completed and we are asking for an extension of the tax credit to 2010 for first time home buyers.

 

Realtor Action Alert, Oct 7, 2009, NAR Government Affairs

A recent Washington Post article pointed out that many of the housing indicators are pointing in the same positive direction. Several analysts attribute the improvements to the soon to expire $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers, historically low interest rates, and rock bottom prices in many areas.

But the article continues to say that “If the first-time homebuyer tax credit expires as scheduled on Nov. 30, many analysts expect a drop in home sales and prices, though they disagree on how big the drops will be. The situation looks even more dire once swelling unemployment numbers and related delinquencies and foreclosures are factored in.”

The $8000 first-time homebuyer tax credit will end soon.  As the law stands today, eligible buyers will actually need to get under contract almost immediately in order to be able to close their transactions in time. The law requires that closing must occur by November 30th for buyers to actually take the credit. 

The housing market is stabilizing and improving, but the housing market crisis won’t end this year. We can’t wait until late in the year to see what happens.  

American Fork Real Estate: Tax Credit Helps Spur Pending Home Sales

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

According to RisMedia, http://rismedia.com/2009-09-09/tax-credit-helps-spur-pending-home-sales/: [1]RISMEDIA, September 10, 2009—(MCT)—A gauge of future U.S. home sales rose more than expected in July 2009 to the highest level in more than two years as first-time buyers rushed to take advantage of a tax credit that expires this fall. The National Association of Realtors recently said its seasonally adjusted index of sales contracts signed in July for previously occupied homes rose 3.2% to 97.6. It was the sixth straight increase, and 12% higher than the same month last year. The index of pending home sales could indicate how sales completed this month and next will turn out.

A 12% jump in sales contracts in the West and a 3% increase in the South drove July’s overall increase. Low home prices combined with the Nov. 30 expiration date of the $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers contribute to a spur in sales.

The NAR projects that about 2 million first-time buyers will take advantage of the credit this year and says it is spurring 350,000 additional sales that wouldn’t have happened otherwise.

Many real-estate professional are urging the federal government to extend the first-time home buyer tax incentive. Coy said there are even efforts to increase the credit to $15,000 and make it available to all home buyers.

Short sales, foreclosures, bank owned properties, lower interest rates, the Home Run 2 Grant in Utah and the $8,000 tax credit are strong motivators for buying now, says Betty Jo McKinlay, Century 21 At  The Rockies in American Fork, UT.   Now is a great time to buy a home! (more…)

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: 379,000

  • Avg. Days on Market: 69

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