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Dyer & Company
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Reece and Nichols
11901 W 119th Street
Overland Park, Kansas
(913)402-2513


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Posts Tagged ‘Buying A Home in Kansas City’

Renter Nation Means Investor Opportunity

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Despite record low interest rates and increasing affordability in most markets, the new reality for many is renting. For some, it is the stress of having already gone through some type of pain related to the housing market and for others it’s the reality of being unable to qualify for a loan to purchase a home. In either case, the rental market continues to be on a rampage with many opportunities for ready investors. The vacancy rate for rentals has dropped to the lowest level since 2001.

This surge in occupancy has also pushed up rental rates only slightly due to other negative factors such as high unemployment. Higher quality properties in the most desirable locations had higher rental increases as compared to properties that cater to lower income tenants where landlords found it more difficult to raise rents.

The shift to a “renter nation” has lots of support to last for several years to come creating very good long term prospects for investors seeking to maximize the opportunities that exist with today’s high inventory and low price levels.

If you’ve been impacted by the decline in the real estate market and are considering a short sale, make a call to a team that has hundreds of closed transaction behind us. If you’re an investor ready to take advantage of the historically unprecedented buying opportunities that exist today, call us and we’ll help you find a great investment or project for you.

FHA Extends Flip Waiver Through 2012

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

HUD has extended their temporary anti-flipping rule that was put in place in 2010. The original rule was through January 31, 2011 then extended through the remainder of 2011. It is now extended through December 31, 2012 unless otherwise extended or withdrawn.

There are additional requirements in place for a buyer using an FHA loan to purchase a property that is being resold within 90 days of a previous sale. Such sales and circumstances are common with physically distressed properties where investors, contractors or other buyers have purchased properties, rehabbed them and placed the property back on the market for sale as a “move in ready” home.

The extension of the waiver should provide significant help in moving physically distressed properties to owner occupied homes helping with the inventory stress that is a large part of why the real estate market continues to languish in the doldrums.

Obama’s New Message “We Can’t Wait” Hits Housing Market

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Recently, President Obama proclaimed his new slogan of “we can’t wait” as he described new action that he claims will help the ailing housing market and save homeowners from foreclosure.  The action consists of re-working an already in place government refinance program through FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The primary change pertains to refinancing homeowners that are under water, or that owe more than their homes are worth. In the past, there was a restriction that the borrower couldn’t be more than 25% under water and that restriction has been removed.

So, it’s a plan that rewards good behavior with a lower payment but the plan does nothing to help the borrowers that have already lost their homes, nothing for the borrowers that are delinquent and nothing for borrowers that are already in foreclosure. Possibly more important in terms of the overall housing market, it does nothing for the huge inventory levels of foreclosed properties sitting on the books of Fannie, Freddie and FHA.  While it’s great that some homeowners will be able to stay in their homes longer, I’m convinced this is not the help the market is needing. What we’ve done is allow these borrowers to stay longer, only to come to the conclusion at some point a few months down the road that they still owe tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars more than their homes are worth and we may see increased defaults on these same loans in the future. Unless the negative equity problem is fixed, this isn’t going to bring the real estate market any headway in the need to stop the erosion in valuations.

At best, this is merely another stimulus plan and possibly nothing more than a political play. If this is the best the administration can do, then we’ll continue to see a housing market that struggles for a very long time. Possibly the best course of action to address the housing market would be an appropriate environment to increase employment and improve consumer sentiment. Unfortunately, with the petty partisian politics likely to play out until next November, the prospects of that kind of help seem far more distant than a year away.

Home Prices in Kansas Get Help From Increased Short Sales

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

According to Ron Peltier, chairman andchief executive officer of Home Services of America, Inc the second largest U.S. residential brokerage, there has been a ”dramatic shift” in banks willingness to complete short sales vs a foreclosure. Distressed sales brokered by Home Services used to be made up of 60% bank owned properties and 40% short sales, but that ratio has now flipped according to Peltier in an interview with Bloomberg. Reece & Nichols is a wholly owned subsidiary of Home Services of America, Inc.

Typically, short sales are completed at an average discounted price of around 20% vs a non-distressed sale vs a bank owned property with an average discount of about 40%, according to Realty Trac, Inc.  Short sales increased 19% in the 2nd quarter vs the previous quarter while foreclosure sales were flat. That’s better for banks who lose less money and better for sellers as the stress level from completing a short sale vs having a foreclosure action completed against them is generally less. 

This is also good for the overall economy and health of the real estate market as the downward pressure on home prices is somewhat abated by the higher prices realized from home sales completed in a short sale. It’s further good news as there remains over 6 million homes delinquent or in default, many of which will need to be sold.

According to the National Association of Realtors, almost a third of all transactions in August were either bank owned properties or short sales.

Home values have declined 31 percent in the last five years, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of values in 20 U.S. cities, as competition from foreclosures pressures sellers to lower their asking prices. The resulting crash was worse than the 27 percent plunge in values during the Depression, according to Stan Humphries, chief economist of Zillow Inc., a Seattle-based real estate information company.

The drop in home values has pushed almost a quarter of U.S. mortgage borrowers underwater, meaning their debt is more than their homes are worth, according to a report by CoreLogic Inc. (CLGX), a real estate data company in Santa Ana, California. That so- called negative equity prevents owners from conducting traditional deals because they would have to pay the difference between their loan balance and the sale price.

The drop in home values has pushed almost a quarter of U.S. mortgage borrowers underwater, meaning their debt is more than their homes are worth, according to a report by CoreLogic Inc. (CLGX), a real estate data company in Santa Ana, California. That so- called negative equity prevents owners from conducting traditional deals because they would have to pay the difference between their loan balance and the sale price.

If you believe you may benefit from a short sale, call an experienced and knowledgeable agent to help you review your options. We’ve closed hundreds of short sale transactions with every major lender and many small to mid sized lenders across the country. Give us a call today and set up a no-cost, no-obligation meeting.

A Possible End to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Affects Real Estate Market In Johnson County KS

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011
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Check out this video discussing the possibility of these mortgage giants going away. This could have tremendous effects on the housing market near and long term in Johnson County KS and nationally.

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