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Pamela Mello
Realtor
    Years of Experience: 5

    Certified Distress Property Expert
    Arizona & California 01457226

Direct: 928-219-9155

Office: 928-219-9155



Company Info

Bullhead Laughlin Realty
2765 Hwy 95
Bullhead City, AZ
928-219-9155


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  • Ave. Home Sale: 145000.00

  • Ave. Days on Market: 62

Housing Market

Bullhead City-Fort Mohave-Mohave Valley Arizona 147 Foreclosures For Sale at Bargin Prices

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Today in Bullhead City, Fort Mohave & Mohave Valley we have 147 Bank Foreclosed Homes For Sale at unbelievable Prices. If you are looking or thinking of purchasing a home for yourself or as an investment now is the time before you miss the boat and ship sales without you. Interest rates are at historicly low rates at 4.35% today and we have lots of homes available under $100,000. It is now cheaper to Buy a home then Rent. Call or E-mail me today to take advantage of this great opportunity and I will E-mail you the list or Mail it to you.

Bullhead City Arizona Real Estate Housing Shortage Comming Soon.

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Today I got a call from a client I have been working with for the past 6 months, we have looked at over 20 homes all in the neighborhoods of there desires. They have been heart broken now for the 4th time because they procrastinate on making an offer hoping the homes would not be purchased and drop in price.

I have been reviewing with them that homes are selling in Bullhead City and not staying on the market for as long as they use to so prices are very affordable right now along with interest rates at a historically low rates. I asked them why are they waiting so long to make an offer on the home that meets there wishes and desires. He paused and said don’t you watch the news, did you see the news this morning foreclosures are at 1 million I said hold up…

Lets take a look a step back from the doom and gloom of foreclosures and declining sales prices and lets focus on what you have experienced first hand in the last 6 months. I was doing some research today for another client and I made this discovery that I would like to share with you. In Bullhead City most of the foreclosures are priced at fair market value and are not being sold for pennies on the dollar most are priced based on location, Condition and age.

Long term demographics support my theory that now is the best time to buy a home. The U.S is adding only about 600,000 new units a year & long term growth in new households is 1.3 million per year. Today most college graduates have chosen to live at home with there parents and some couples have put off getting merried, in 5 to 6 years of no housing growth I believe we could see in Bullhead City Arizona and Fort Mohave Arizona a big housing shortage. In the peek of 2005 2.1 Million Homes added, 2006 1.81 Million Homes, 2007 and 2008 1.34 Million, by 2009 555,000, Bullhead Citys population is expected to grow from 40,000 to 100,000 in the next 30 years and Fort Mohave Arizona is expected to explode.

With 1.3 million people per year entering the workforce and starting a family it may become a big problem & home values would spike again along with mortgage rates, jobs and growth means homes in Bullhead City Arizona and Fort Mohave will become more expensive. Bullhead City Arizona has alot to offer over other parts of the country. Lots of sunshine, no polution, Great schools and much much more.

Today there are 137 Foreclosures available for sale in the Bullhead City, Fort Mohave, and Mohave Valley communities, I have something available for everyone from sizes to prices to living on the Colorado River. I wish I had a crystal ball that would show there may never be another time like this to own the Home of your dreams at such an affordable price. Call or e-mail me today for more information on purchasing a home lots of Financing options still available also before this opportunity is gone. Pamela Mello Bullhead Laughlin Realty 928-219-9155 Pamela@PamelaMello.com

Bullhead City-Fort Mohave FHA Rolls Out Principle Reduction Refis For Underwater Borrowers

Monday, August 9th, 2010

FHA Rolls Out Principal Reducing Refis for Underwater Borrowers
08/06/2010 By: Carrie Bay

Nearly a quarter of U.S. homeowners with a mortgage owe more on the loan than their home is worth, and home prices are threatening to fall further and push even more borrowers underwater. The Federal Housing Administration (FHA), though, is throwing out a lifeline.
Starting September 7, the federal agency will offer new FHA-insured mortgages to certain underwater, non-FHA borrowers who are current on their mortgage payments and whose lenders agree to write off at least 10 percent of the unpaid principal balance.

This last part could prove to be the caveat that leads the new FHA refi program down the same road as the federal government’s other housing programs – a road of below par results and public criticism.

Lenders are fantastically reluctant to write down mortgage principals. It would mean either they or their mortgage investors would have to eat the amount of debt that’s forgiven, and it could set a precedent that a loan contract is not a contract at all if the terms spelled out in black and white can be changed based on market nuances, such as a slump in real estate values.

The FHA refi program for underwater borrowers was originally announced in March as part of the administra-
tion’s expanded foreclosure prevention strategy. On Friday, FHA and HUD published a mortgagee letter explaining to lenders the details of the new negative equity refinancing program.

To be eligible for a new loan, the homeowner must owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth, be current on their existing mortgage, and occupy the property as their primary residence. The homeowner must qualify for the new loan under standard FHA underwriting requirements and have a credit score equal of at least 500.

Participation in the program is voluntary and requires the consent of all lien holders. The borrower’s existing first lien holder must agree to write off at least 10 percent of their unpaid principal balance to bring the borrower’s combined loan-to-value ratio to no more than 115 percent.

In addition, the existing loan to be refinanced must not be an FHA-insured loan, and the refinanced FHA-insured first mortgage must have a loan-to-value ratio of no more than 97.75 percent.

To facilitate the refinancing of new FHA-insured loans under this program, the Treasury will provide incentives to existing second lien holders who agree to full or partial extinguishment of the liens.

Servicers planning to take part in the new program must execute a Servicer Participation Agreement (SPA) with Fannie Mae by October 3, 2010.

HUD says interested homeowners should contact their lenders to determine if they are eligible and whether the lender agrees to write down a portion of the unpaid principal.

FHA Commissioner David H. Stevens, said, “This is another tool to help overcome the negative equity problem facing many responsible homeowners who are looking to refinance into a safer, more secure mortgage product.”

E-Mail Me today for the Details Pamela@PamelaMello.com

Area Housing Market Felt Impact of Federal Program

Monday, July 12th, 2010
By DANIEL CALLAHAN/The Daily News
Published: Sunday, July 11, 2010 10:12 PM MDT
BULLHEAD CITY — The federal program offering a first-time home buyers a tax credit created an out-of-character blip on the real estate scene, according to local Realtors, but it didn’t significantly affect sales prices in the area.

The first-time homebuyer tax credit allowed anyone who has not owned a home in the past five years an $8,000 tax credit if they were under contract to purchase a home as of April 30. Homeowners also could buy a new home and receive a $6,500 tax credit. Originally, the deal must have been closed by June 30, but Congress passed an extension of this act to allow for a new closing deadline of Sept. 30, which has yet to be signed by President Barack Obama. Under the extension, homes still must have been under contract by the April 30 deadline.

“People were obviously trying to get in under that deadline,” said Bullhead Laughlin Realty broker Evan Fuchs, noting that it was not only those who were already considering purchasing who took advantage of the tax credit. “I think it did bring people into the market.

The first quarter of 2010 saw 287 single-family homes sold with a median sale price of $113,500, according to figures from the Western Arizona Realtor Data Exchange (WARDEX).

“If anyone was interested in buying in 2010, that was the incentive to go,” said Petra Fahey, co-owner and Realtor with Country Ranch GMAC Real Estate in Bullhead City, which explains the better-than-average first quarter of the year. “It was a good reason to

get off the fence.”

According to the National Association of Realtors, “The legislation is designed to create a seamless extension of the new closing deadline for eligible transactions to Sept. 30. There will be no gap between June 30 and the date the president signs the bill into law.”

“There’s no indication that prices are going down,” said Dick Tripp, broker with Remax at the River, “They’re creeping upward.”

May 2010 saw an increase in the median sale price for site-built homes in Bullhead City from $92,900 in April to $130,000. The June figures show a decrease to $97,000.

The increase in May could be attributed to more homes being under contract or sold because of homebuyers trying to take advantage of the tax credit, but could be due to other factors as well.

“We’re just seeing a lot of these low-end properties distressed,” said Fahey, noting that the surplus of lower-cost homes on the market can skew the median sales price, along with the high percentage of sales being foreclosures.

“Until it really swings into buyer’s market territory … it’s only makes sense that you wouldn’t see market appreciation until then,” Fuchs said.

While May did show a jump in the median sales price, over the course of the entire first quarter of the year, the spike doesn’t stand out as clearly.

“If you look at them by quarter, there’s not that much of a change,” Tripp said.

With all issues taken into account, “Considering the location, I think we’re rocketing,” Fahey said. The Bullhead City region sits in the midst of the some of the hardest-hit markets — Phoenix, Las Vegas and Los Angeles — but has seen more positive gains than those areas, she said. “The good news is that we have people that want to buy real estate in Bullhead.”

“I don’t think our market is going to drop now,” said Tripp, predicting a 1.5 percent increase in sales prices from January 2010 to January 2011. “That’s very, very healthy.”

“It’s a buyer’s market,” he said, “a very, very good buyer’s market.”

“We still have a supply issue,” Fuchs said. The Bullhead City area market is sitting at about 7.7 months supply for all residential real estate, a number that has plateaued over the last few months. A six-month supply is generally considered a balanced market. “We’ve come a long way with inventory.”

The real estate market responds to any number of factors, said Tripp, and to pin the results on any one of them would be hasty.

Said Fuchs: “This year’s going to be very interesting.”

Foreclosures and Short Sales in Bullhead City, Fort Mohave Arizona

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Today’s mortgage Interest Rates are  historically low at  4.375%  along with low Home prices, Foreclosures and Short Sales are the craze today it is a buyers market. I have been receiving a large number of  calls lately from clients who only want to purchase foreclosures , when I offer information or try to show  homes that are being offered as Short Sales  I get responces like, No short sales they never get approved. One of my clients would not even get out of the car when I said this home is the best priced and maintained home in the neighborhood they wanted to live in and was listed for $20,000 less than the foreclosed home that needed thousands of dollars worth of work.

Short Sales can be a great value so I decided to explore the stats to prove my point that people are missing out on great deals on homes that are a  much better value than some Foreclosure.

Right now in Bullhead City Arizona we have 48 Foreclosed homes available for sale in the price range of $28,000 – $329,000 and  the Short Sale inventory in Bullhead City is 28 Homes in the Price Range of $39,500 – $380,000 I did not include any Manufactured Homes or Condos or Homes in Fort Mohave. Now lets Compare the two:

The Foreclosed/Reo VS. Short Sale Homes

In checking out the recent Foreclosure/Reo closings it is obvious to me and confirms my experience on what is happening with the Foreclosure/Reo homes for sale right now. When the buyer is ready to make an offer on a foreclosure the norm right now is there are usually multiple offers that are already submitted so I usually prepare my buyers to make their offer as good as they can to start with. Every time I put an offer in on a Foreclosure the next day like clock work I get an e-mail stating  multiple offers so put in your highest and best and we do well over the asking price and walla the next day the property is pending in the MLS. Being hopeful its our offer that was accepted I call and guess what, sorry someone got it at a higher price. After viewing all the closed sales it is clear as to what is happening on the Foreclosure/Reo Sales.

You the buyer must be prepared to pay more than the asking price then the home is being offered For Sale For. WHY? The sales price is so low that multiple offers come to the table and when that happens, the buyer will be asked to give their “HIGHEST and BEST’ purchase price offer. The bank will ask only once so make that offer the best you can possibly do. This is not an auction, so one SHOT is all you get to re-price your offer and banks prefer cash and prefer owner occupied homeowners probably because of investors who buy and flip homes for a profit. They also want the highest and best offer quickly and you will also need your proof of funds or letter of prequalification also keep in mind if you are the lucky highest bidder you are accepting the property in the AS-IS condition. The Bank is not going to be giving you a repair allowance. From the closed sales stats almost all the foreclosed homes sold for a lot more than the asking price.

Short Sales on the other hand are closing quicker,  Banks have streamlined the process. I have been getting quicker responses on my short sale listings and almost all of the closed sales sold  for the list price. Why is this?  Because the Banks are now setting the Sales Price of the Short Sale listing and this is the price they will accept and the home is usually well maintained and in most cases the best value for the buck.

Bullhead City-Fort Mohave Arizona Home Sales Are On The Rise

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Home sales continue upward trend

By DANIEL CALLAHAN/The Daily News

Published: Wednesday, June 2, 2010 12:38 AM MDT

BULLHEAD CITY — Seventy-seven homes were sold in Bullhead City in April, according to information taken from the Western Arizona Realtor Data Exchange. April 2009 saw just 60 homes sold, which marks April as the 18th month in a row of year-over-year local sales increases.

Inventory in the Bullhead area again decreased this month, bringing the overall supply of residential homes to 7.9 months supply, down from 8.1 months in March and 11.2 in December 2009. Six months supply is generally considered a balanced market.

Even as the inventory decreased  “more houses came on the market in April than we’ve seen in several months,” said Evan Fuchs, the broker with Bullhead/Laughlin Realty, indicating healthy sales/inventory numbers.

Months of supply is a good indicator, Fuchs said, because it takes more than simply the number of homes on the market in account.

“The months of supply takes into consideration both the rate of sale and the inventory,” he said, allowing for a broader view of the health of the market.

While sales have seen a steady increase, prices continue to decline, said Bob Lewis of P.R.O. Realty in Bullhead City.

“Values are slowing down in dropping, but they’re still dropping,” he said.

In the first two quarters of 2009, the average sale price in Bullhead City was around $162,000. The first two quarters of 2010 have seen a 27.64 decrease in that average sale price to $117,230.

“We know we have foreclosures coming for a while,” which drives down price, Fuchs said. With a glut of foreclosures, the houses on the market that are owner-occupied are assessed compared the price of a foreclosed home, which is generally much lower and attracts more buyers.

“It’s a great time to buy,” Lewis said, if the buyer plans to be in the homefor a number years. Homes are not an investment, financially speaking, but the generalized 5 percent increase in value has been consistent in the long term. There are spikes and drops in that graph, he said, but over five to 10 years, the increase holds true.

There is some concern on the national scene that the improvements in the housing market were brought on by and expire with government incentives such as the first-time home buyer tax credit, which granted a $8,000 tax credit to first-time home buyers and $6,500 to current homeowners who bought and moved into a new home.

“My gut feeling is it’s still going to be a free market situation,” which draws the real estate market out of the troubles it has recently seen, Fuchs said. “It’s not going to be federal programs.”

Despite government programs such as the Making Home Affordable Program or its counterpart, the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program, the number of closed short sales did not increase in a statistically notable way in April.

“It feels like there’s more going on” from all the industry discussion of short sales, Fuchs said, but WARDEX shows just five short sales closed in April posing the question of whether the numbers are going to start going up.

“I foresee you’re going to see a lot more short sales happening,” Lewis said, attributing the increase less to the government incentives or programs and more toward the greater education of the banks and lenders.

“Banks are staring to realize they’re not going to get the money out of those loans,” he said.

It costs the bank around $6,000 to turn a foreclosed property around for sale, Lewis said. Tack onto that the 5 percent to 6 percent sales commission and the bank needs to sell that house for more than what it is worth just to see a return on the outstanding loan amount.

“It didn’t sink in six months ago, but it’s starting to sink in now,” Lewis said.

Pamela Mello works with Buyers and Sellers and is a Certified Distressed Property Expert and  Short Sale Foreclosure Resource Certified

Home Sales in Bullhead City-Fort Mohave and Mohave Valley Arizona are Up In February and March.

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Today my Broker Evan Fuchs Broker of Bullhead Laughlin Realty was quoted in the Mohave Dailey News. He was sharing the Great News about our Local Housing Market.

Home sales show positive gains in BHC

By DANIEL CALLAHAN/The Daily News

Published: Thursday, April 1, 2010 1:09 AM MDT

BULLHEAD CITY — While February’s home sale numbers showed continued gains in the Bullhead City real estate market, Realtors are split when it comes to the future.

In February, 86 homes were sold in Bullhead City, up 40 percent from just 63 in January 2010 and up a considerable 80 percent from February 2009. Last month’s numbers almost touch the best month of 2009 — August — which came in with 87 closed sales, according to statistics from the Western Arizona Realtor Data Exchange (WARDEX).

“That’s a good sign,” said Bullhead/Laughlin Realty broker Evan Fuchs.

With so many homes sold, February marks the 16th month in a row of year-over-year sales increases, Fuchs said. Additionally, the inventory of homes on the market has again decreased.

Bullhead City has about an 8.2-month supply, Fuchs said, which is down from a 10.3-month supply in January. Six months is generally considered a balanced market.

“It’s the same thing: when the inventory goes down, the number of homes selling goes up,” he said.

As far as foreclosures are concerned, at the conclusion of 2009, there were 152 foreclosed homes on the market in Bullhead City, Fort Mohave and Mohave Valley. As of March 22, that number had dropped to 113.

“They’re being absorbed faster than they’re coming on the market,” Fuchs said. That said, 54 percent of the homes sold so far in 2010 in Bullhead City were foreclosed properties, compared with 51 percent for all of 2009.

“It’s a significant presence just like it has been,” Fuchs said, “but it’s not like that’s all people are buying.”

The types of homes selling also is changing. In January, 19 percent of the homes sold were manufactured homes; February saw 27 percent.

“That’s good,” he said.

The overall number of site-built homes on the market in Bullhead City listed for less than $100,000 has come down, Fuchs said. Buyers who were able to jump the price gap between a manufactured home and a site-built home are finding fewer and fewer options available in that price bracket, which is a good sign for owners of manufactured homes who want to sell.

“When that get’s bigger, they won’t make that jump,” he said. “Everything’s just working as well as we could possibly hope, as far as putting us in a position to see values come up. We haven’t see it yet, but these are the signs that lead to appreciation.”

Not all Realtors in the area are feeling quite so optimistic.

“We haven’t seen the worst of it yet,” said Lisa Ristow, broker with the Ristow Group in Bullhead City.

The problem with forecloses, Ristow said, is that lenders are holding on to inventory and slowly releasing it to the marketplace.

“Last year … the data showed that for this area in the multiple listing service, 68 percent of all sales were distressed,” she said. “That’s continuing this year.”

Ristow cites statistics that show the national average for the number of short sales has gone up 20 percent, along with a decrease in the national average of foreclosure sales.

“We’re faring much better,” than the national statistics, Fuchs said.

Locally, “as far as short sales go, there has been no noticeable change in the number that are selling,” he said.

“If a whole bunch of foreclosures came on the market at the same time, that could affect the supply and demand,” Fuchs said. “But right now … we’re seeing that they’re selling faster than they’re coming on the market.”

December and January Were Big Months For Home Sales In Bullhead City Arizona.

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Thursday, February 11, 2010 1:45 AM CST

 

 Mohave Dailey News quoted My Broker and Company today, Evan Fuchs, Broker of Bullhead /Laughlin Realty,  he was spreading the great news about our housing market .

 

 Realtor: ‘There’s a lot of people buying homes in Bullhead right now’

By DANIEL CALLAHAN/The Daily News

By DANIEL CALLAHAN

The Daily News

 

 BULLHEAD CITY — Bullhead City Realtors saw a different fourth quarter than was expected.

In general, the area’s real estate market builds through the first and second quarter, crests into the third quarter and drops off in the fourth quarter.

This was not the case in 2009.

“This quarter was just crazy,” said Tamra Sprague, broker with Premier Executives Real Estate in Bullhead City.

December, she said, was a good month for residential home sales.

“For me it was,” she said, “and for a lot of my agents.”

According to Evan Fuchs, broker at Bullhead/Laughlin Realty, December was one of the biggest months of 2009 in terms of sales.

Bullhead City saw a nearly 66 percent year-over-year increase in homes sold. In December, about 78 homes were sold, compared with 47 in December 2008 and 32 in December 2007, according to the WARDEX multiple listing service.

“That’s a big deal,” said Fuchs.

The dramatic increase in sales carried into January as well with 58 homes sold, compared to 45 in January 2009. While the difference may not seem significant, it’s a positive sign because it shows more homeowners are selling their properties instead of banks selling foreclosures. Of the homes sold in January, around 45 percent were foreclosures.

“There’s a lot of people buying homes in Bullhead right now,” said Petra Fahey, Realtor/owner at Country Ranch GMAC Real Estate.

Fahey said that while sales were up, prices were still tough, as well as the overall number of homes under contract. This January, 128 homes were under contract by the end of the month. Last year, January saw only 84.

As of Tuesday, Fuchs estimated the Bullhead City market to be carrying a 10.3-month supply of homes, a drop from the 14-month supply in January 2009.

A six-month supply generally is seen as a balanced market, said Fuchs. With the current 10.3-month supply, it’s still a buyers’ market.

“It’s important to understand that supply drives price,” said Fuchs via e-mail. “When the inventory shot up in 2006, it put us on course for a 21.5-month supply in 2008 as demand — and prices — plummeted.”

A good indicator of what’s going on in the market can be seen in the inventory and what segment of that inventory is selling or not selling.

Buyers have to remember, Fuchs said, that there really is no national real estate market; all markets are local. Within those local markets there are also “micro-markets” or market segments, which can point to areas that are having a large effect on the overall local market.

According to Fuchs, “Manufactured homes is where the market is sick.”

Manufactured homes account for a large portion of the overall inventory. The effect of low prices and a high number of manufactured homes is slowing sales in that segment.

“Because manufactured homes represent almost half of the inventory, it has a large effect,” said Fuchs. Manufactured homes make up approximately 47 percent of the active inventory.

“When the price of site-built homes fell, due in large part to the willingness of banks to meet the demand of the market, it put great pressure on manufactured homes,” said Fuchs. “If the price difference between a site-built home and a manufactured home is small enough, buyers will jump to the site-built home.

“The result is a clear separation of markets.”

Fuchs is quick to emphasise that just because the manufactured homes section is under-performing, it doesn’t mean the overall Bullhead market hasn’t seen vast improvements over the last two years.

“If you take away under-performing sections, you can see what the market’s really doing,” said Fuchs.

Also of note is the federal tax credit available to first-time home buyers. The program, which essentially grants a tax credit to home buyers who fit certain requirements, originally was introduced as part of the House and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. It was expanded as part of the American Recovery and Investment Act of 2009, but was set to expire at the end of November of this year. On Nov. 6, The Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009 was signed into law and expanded the program once again.

Under the revised program, first-time home buyers may be eligible for a tax credit of 10 percent of the purchase price up to $8,000. “Move up” buyers, or those who have been in their homes for five consecutive of the last eight years could be eligible for a tax credit of 10 percent of the purchase price up to $6,500.

The revisions also placed the maximum purchase price at $800,000 and set new dates for the expiration of the program. The credit applies to home purchases under contract by April 30, 2010, and closed escrow by June 30, 2010.

There also are new income restrictions. If the homeowner stays in the home for three years, the money does not have to be repaid and the credit can be claimed on either the 2009 or 2010 tax returns.

Because it is ending soon, “now is the time, for sure,” said Fuchs, for prospective home buyers to take advantage of the program.

Fahey had a similar view: “For sure, yes, yes yes,” now is the time to take advantage of the program. Some people, she said, may be kicking themselves later for expecting another extension of the program.

“The bulk of the homes sold were under the $150,000 price tag,” said Fahey in a statement. “That’s the perfect price range to the first-time buyers trying to take advantage of the $8,000 tax credit.”

“I’m hopeful we’ll see continued sales,” she said, noting that there will still be good inventory, good selection and good pricing even after the tax credit concludes.

Short sales

The practice of short selling a distressed property has seen a resurgence recently as lenders and banks are more willing to negotiate with homeowners who are unable to keep up with their payments. A short sale can take place when a homeowner is “short,” or owes more on a property than the property is worth. The homeowner then negotiates with the mortgage company to accept less than the full balance of the loan at closing. A buyer closes on the property and the property is sold “short.”

Tamra Sprague, broker with Premier Executives Real Estate, said short sales, while not the best choice for everyone, allow a homeowner to get out from under a home they no longer can afford, save their credit and expedite eligibility to purchase a new home.

The process, however, is not necessarily easy. According to Petra Fahey, owner/Realtor with Country Ranch GMAC Real Estate in Bullhead City, a homeowner must be able to prove financial hardship and insolvency, find a buyer and negotiate a price. The lender must approve the short sale before it can proceed.

According to the Distressed Property Institute, if a homeowner can successfully negotiate a short sale with the lender, the effect on the homeowner’s credit score and credit history are far less destructive than a foreclosure. Additionally, a short sale does not have to be declared on a mortgage application. Similarly, eligibility for future loans also comes about much more quickly — two years instead of five.

It’s also more cost effective for a bank or lender to short sell a property, said Sprague, rather than foreclose on a home.

“They’re definitely not wanting to foreclose,” said Fahey, of banks and mortgage lenders, making the possibility of a short sale much more realistic for many underwater homeowners.

“Always consult an Arizona real estate attorney and an accountant before proceeding,” advised Fahey.

To find a Certified Distressed Property Expert in your area, visit www.cdpe.com

Bullhead City-Fort Mohave-Mohave Valley Housing Market

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

 

What will 2010 bring?  Will the market continue to stabilize?

To understand where our local real estate market is going we must understand where we have been:  I decided to look a bit further in the looking glass to recall where Bullhead City and the surrounding communities were three years ago. Can it be that the light at the end of the tunnel is within sight?  With fewer homes for sale on the market, we have about 4.5 months of inventory. . Most exciting is the number of home sales that have sold in the Bullhead City, Fort Mohave and Mohave Valley.  Another encouraging factor is that we are experiencing fewer homes expire.  With fewer homes expiring, pending sales up and the number of sales nearly even with 3 years ago, the data certainly looks encouraging.  Price is the big concern as the median sales price continues to decline.  It is the unknown of the shadow inventory the experts continue to worry us about.  For prices to stabilize and eventfully increase we need the inventory to continue to decrease.  True, if there is an increase in the homes for sale, we could see a dip in our local real estate market which could include the median sales price. 

Single family homes sales in Bullhead City, Fort Mohave and Mohave Valley Arizona were up 62% during Dec 2009 vs. Dec 2008.  Our average home sales price has increased 6.3% to $149,920 with the median sales price dipping 2% from $135,000 to $132,726.  The month of December closed the year with 84 single family home sales of which 74% were either foreclosures or short sales.  Country Ranch GMAC Real Estate is proud to announce that our agents represented 32% of the non distressed home sales. December 2009 finished the year with 33% fewer homes on the market giving us 4.5 months supply of inventory and a 70% increase in homes under contract. Pamela Mello can be reached at 928-219-9155 www.pamelamello.com or e-mail Pamela@pamelamello.com

BULLHEAD CITY NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY A HOME

Friday, January 8th, 2010

WSJ – time is right to buy

 

Brett Arends of the Wall Street Journal has an interesting argument he pulled together using the latest Case-Shiller data, and double checked against Census data.  In short, now is a good time to buy a home.  Real estate has now fallen 30% from its 2005 peak, at the same time as mortgage rates have also plummeted. In 2006 you had to pay an average of about 6.4% on a 30-year fixed loan, according to the Federal Reserve. Right now you can get deals for about 5%.  On average, buying a home now is as cheap as it was in the mid-1990s, when houses were an absolute steal. But what about waves of mortgage resets coming in the next two years? What about all the unemployment? And the foreclosures? 

 

Arends says these are all valid arguments for refusing to buy homes when they are expensive, or even averagely priced. But the whole point about markets is that they adjust. Prices are now cheap. They reflect this bad news, and more. If you have a stable income, and you can get a 30-year mortgage at 5% or so, and you are willing to drive a hard bargain on a home in this market, this is your time.   Arends continues:  “Over and over again, history suggests that the best investments are the ones no one wants–gold when it was $260 an ounce, Amazon.com when it fell below $10 in 2002, Hong Kong shares during the SARS “crisis” in 2003, and so on. If an investment feels comfortable, it’s should make you nervous. If it makes you really nervous, that’s probably good.”

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: 128.500

  • Avg. Days on Market: 45

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