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Sandy Goodsell
Principal Broker
    Years of Experience: 9

    ABR - Accredited Buyers Representative
    CDPE - Certified Distressed Property Expert
    GRI - Graduate Realtor Institute

Direct: 541-549-2510

Office: 541-549-3333



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RE/MAX Revolution
625 N. Arrowleaf Trail
Sisters, OR
541-549-3333


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Posts Tagged ‘Black Butte Ranch Real Estate’

RE/MAX Revolution offers big-city resources in small-town setting

Thursday, September 1st, 2011
8/23/2011 1:04:00 PM
RE/MAX Revolution offers big-city resources in small-town setting
 

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By Jim Cornelius
News Editor    

No sector has felt the economic earthquake that shook America and the world more strongly than the real estate market.   

Changing its name and its location, Sisters’ RE/MAX Revolution is adapting to changes in the market and in the way people want to use technology to find properties.

RE/MAX Revolution (formerly RE/MAX Town & Country Realty) has moved to a new location in Outlaw Station, right next door to High Desert Hair Co. and around the corner from Ray’s Food Place.   

Longtime agent Sandy Goodsell loves the new location, which features a modern technological infrastructure and an efficient layout, all on one level. “We have a different environment here, but it seems to be more energetic,” she said. “I love it. I absolutely think it is the best thing we could do.”    

Outlaw Station offers higher visibility for RE/MAX Revolution and a dynamic environment as more businesses locate in the shopping plaza. The plaza is home to Ray’s and High Desert Hair Co., along with Top Pin Archery and South Valley Bank. A new Subway is under construction just across the parking lot.    

RE/MAX Revolution has had some success adapting to a profoundly changed market. Goodsell recently ranked 14th out of 3,000 RE/MAX agents in the four-state Pacific Northwest region in sales. That reflects the agency’s commitment to learning the ropes of handling different kinds of sales in a distressed market.    

Everybody in the office has achieved the status of Certified Distressed Property Expert, noted RE/MAX Revolution principal, Peter Storton. Working with clients to determine the best course of action – short sale, foreclosure or some other avenue – requires knowledge of how to navigate the legal and financial aspects of the sale, but even more important, it requires time and commitment to helping clients with a very tough process.”We see a lot more emotion when there’s a distressed property involved, so we almost have to be counselors,” Goodsell observed.    

There is some activity in the market, despite hard times. Storton said that the second-home market is “a tough market anymore,” and the fact that many sales are contingent upon selling another property makes things complicated. But there are good values out there.    

Goodsell notes that while “the $300,000 to $500,000 market is kind of stuck still,” the under $300,000 market is doing relatively well. “If they’re priced right, they’ll sell,” she said. “If they’re priced for today’s market, they’ll sell.”    

RE/MAX Revolution is focusing on the use of technology – from social media networking to conference room displays of virtual tours to enhance their ability to serve their clients.    

“(We’re) giving people in our community anything they would get in a metropolitan area,” said Storton. Virginia Asson is leading the technological charge for RE/MAX Revolution.    

The name change and the move to Outlaw Station represent a commitment to Sisters.”You get into this business and you go through difficult times,” Storton said. “You either get out or you get in deeper. I’m getting in deeper.”    

RE/MAX Revolution is located at 625 Arrowleaf Trail, Ste. 104. For more information visit http://www.iLoveSisters.com or call 541-549-3333.    

Oregon Home Sales/Ownership Fact Sheet

Thursday, September 1st, 2011

VA Home Loans Benefits to our Oregon Veterans!

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Service members and veterans in Sisters planning to purchase a home have an option unavailable to the general public. It has been almost 70 years since Congress created the VA Home Loan Guaranty Program, which helps the men and women who serve our country finance the home of their dreams. Whether it is a home located in Sisters or outside of town, the VA loan surpasses the benefits offered by a conventional loan

Almost without question, the best part of the VA loan program is the miniscule down payment. Most VA loan borrowers even have the option of paying zero down and decide to finance 100 percent of their home. The VA loan limit in Oregon reaches up to $417,000 and provides veterans, who have experienced many moves and deployments, the opportunity to pay little to nothing down. Other benefits include:

Even after the burst of the housing bubble and the heavy credit crunch placed on consumers, it is still easier to qualify for a VA loan than a conventional loan. About 80 percent of borrowers who qualified for a VA loan did not qualify for a conventional mortgage. In large part, this is a result of more lenient credit and financial standards for VA loans. VA-approved lenders are satisfied with credit scores of 620 and debt-to-income ratios high as 41 percent. Even homebuyers with a foreclosure or bankruptcy in their past can qualify.

However, not every service member or veteran is eligible for a VA loan. Military members who served on active duty for 90 days during wartime or 181 days on active duty during peacetime may qualify. Reservists and National Guard members must have served at least six years before they may qualify. Even surviving spouses may qualify if they have not remarried. 

For more information on the VA home loan program and finding the home of your dreams, contact Sandy Goodsell today!

Matt Polsky is a guest blogger associated with VA Benefit Blog, a blog focused on providing veterans and service members with current news and information on the benefits they have earned through serving our country.

Mortgage Rates Improve

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

Mortgage Rates Improve

Concerns about the pace of global economic growth and continued violence in the Middle East helped mortgage rates improve this week. Very strong demand for this week’s longer-term Treasury auctions was also favorable. As a result, mortgage rates moved lower during the week.

The fighting in Libya continued this week, and violence spread to Saudi Arabia. Geopolitical tensions generally benefit bonds as investors seek out relatively safer assets. Unrest in oil-producing nations has the added impact of pushing oil prices higher. When consumers and businesses must spend more for energy, they have less money to spend on other items. This slows economic growth and can reduce expectations for future inflation, allowing investors to accept lower yields.

Extremely strong demand for this week’s 10-year and 30-year Treasury auctions reinforced the view that many investors are seeking to reduce the risk in their portfolios. Despite budget deficit concerns, US government-guaranteed securities remain one of the primary “safe” assets for global investors. Demand for the longer-term auctions was well above average from both foreign and domestic investors. Increased demand drives bond prices higher and yields lower.

Also Notable:

  • February Retail Sales rose 1.0% from January
  • Moody’s downgraded Spain’s sovereign debt rating
  • Oil prices remained above $100 per barrel
  • The Dow stock index dropped below the 12,000 level
Compliments of Kathy Kemper-Green
Arbor Mortgage Group-Division of Pinnacle Mortgage Group
Mortgage Advisor

Anti-Flipping Rule

Monday, January 31st, 2011

The Federal Housing Administration has extended FHA’s temporary waiver of the agency’s ‘anti-flipping rule.’  As a result lenders will continue to allow the waiver for the 30 Year Fixed FHA program. See below for details.

With certain exceptions, FHA regulations prohibit insuring a mortgage on a home owned by the seller for less than 90 days. Early last year, FHA temporarily waived this regulation through January 31, 2011.  FHA today posted a notice extending this waiver through the remainder of 2011. This action will permit buyers to continue to use FHA-insured financing to purchase HUD-owned properties, bank-owned properties, or properties resold through private sales. It will allow homes to resell as quickly as possible, helping to stabilize real estate prices and to revitalize neighborhoods and communities.

The extension announced today is effective through December 31, 2011, unless otherwise extended or withdrawn by FHA.  All other terms of the waiver will remain the same. The waiver contains strict conditions and guidelines to assure that predatory practices are not allowed.

To protect FHA borrowers against predatory practices of “flipping” where properties are quickly resold at inflated prices to unsuspecting borrowers, this waiver continues to be limited to those sales meeting the following general conditions:

  • All transactions must be arms-length (no family to family, etc.), with no identity of interest between the buyer and seller or other parties participating in the sales transaction.
  • In cases in which the sales price of the property is 20 percent or more above the seller’s acquisition cost, a property inspection report is required.
  • In cases in which the sales price of the property is 50 percent or more above the seller’s acquisition cost, a property inspection report and second appraisal is required.

On Jan 31, 2011 the following was provided by:
Mitch Wilcox
Mortgage ConsultantResidential, Commercial, Investment, Reverse Mortgages, FHA/VA/USDA

Now Could Be THE Time to Buy a Home

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Sisters, Oregon:  The old adage “There’s no time like the present” might not first come to mind when looking at today’s national housing market. But according to Sandy Goodsell of the RE/MAX Town & Country these homespun words of wisdom are quite appropriate when a closer look is given to individual local markets across the country. Goodsell points out these favorable factors that can contribute to making this, for many consumers, a most opportune time to buy a home:

  • Inventory is up. When the market is hot, new listings can’t replenish the supply of homes fast enough, and that works in the sellers’ favor. In today’s market, the opposite is true, providing more choices for buyers.
  • Sellers are motivated. Homes that in a hot market would have been snapped up in days are now lingering unsold for weeks, even months. Factor in bank-owned properties due to the recent and unfortunate spike in foreclosures and buyers find themselves in an advantageous negotiating position they haven’t enjoyed for years.
  • Interest rates are down. Recent cuts in the prime rate by the Federal Reserve have sparked drops in interest rates, which at the end of January were below 6 percent for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. While banks have tightened lending requirements in the wake of increased loan defaults, homebuyers with few credit problems qualifying to purchase a home they can afford should still have little trouble securing favorable financing terms.

What’s more, a market climate like this especially favors buyers who don’t need to sell an existing property before their purchase, buyers like first-timers and those looking for a second home. This tilts the scale even more towards many buyers.

But regardless of the situation, for every buyer, the key is to work with a real estate professional that knows the local market and specializes in buyer representation – like an agent who has earned the Accredited Buyer’s Representative (ABR®) designation.

Sandy Goodsell is one of more than 50,000 members of the Real Estate Buyer’s Agent Council (REBAC) of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, who have attained the Accredited Buyer Representative (ABR®) designation. As the world’s largest association of real estate professionals focusing specifically on representing the real estate buyer, REBAC is “The Voice for Buyer Representation,” with more than 50,000 active real estate professional members of the organization throughout the world.

QE (Quantitative Easing)

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

Provided by Mitch Wilcox
Mortgage Consultant
Bank of Oregon

 Here is one of the best explanations of QE…..

 References to QE (Quantitative Easing), and “QE2″ (the 2nd round of QE; the Fed has already used “QE1.”) have been made in financial reports via media sources. What is QE? Why does it matter to us as consumers? Why is this a hot topic?

First, a couple of definitions specific to the financial markets:

Quantitative: A specific amount of money being created. Easing: Reducing pressure on Banks and other financial institutions.

Ordinarily, the central bank (The FOMC, “The Fed”) uses its control of interest rates, or sometimes reserve requirements, to indirectly influence the supply of money. In some situations, such as very low inflation or deflation, setting a low interest rate is not enough to maintain the level of money supply, or to stimulate the economy as desired by the central bank,  so quantitative easing is employed to further boost the amount of money in the financial system. This is often considered a “last resort” to increase the money supply with the overall goal of stimulating the economy.

Here’s how it works: 

  1. The first step is for The Fed to “create more money” by crediting its own account. This money is literally created out of nothing by electronically crediting the Fed account.  The Fed can then use these funds to buy investments such as corporate and government bonds, agency debt, and mortgage backed securities (MBS) from financial firms such as banks, insurance companies, pension funds, and other financial institutions.
  2. These asset purchases create excess capital reserves for these financial institutions for lending and investment use via additional account deposits.
  3. The increased money supply is designed to stimulate lending and the economy overall.

Does it work?

The risks:

  1. Hyper-inflation could result if QE is more effective than desired.
  2. It may be that QE is not effective enough if banks sit on the capital and do not lend.

Has QE been used before? Was it effective?

The US, UK, Japan and the Eurozone have all implemented QE in one form or another over many years, with mixed results. For certain The Fed feels it has to do something, and the economic stimulus tool belt is getting smaller every day.

Why QE2?

The first round of QE employed by The Fed had limited success. While interest rates remain at historical lows and some mortgage refinance activity is occurring, The Fed apparently wishes to drive rate down a bit more. Whether this actually happens remains to be seen. The equities market investors (stocks mostly) will have their say in this as a flight to equities could occur if the strategy is not effective. This would result in higher MBS yields which of course raises mortgage rates; MBS managers would need to get those investors back with higher yields. And the beat goes on….

U.S. Existing Home Sales Hit Record Lows in July

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

U.S. existing home sales for July dropped 27.2% from June, bringing sales to an annualized rate of 3.83 million (down from 5.26 million in June) – the lowest level since 1999, according to a National Association of Realtors report released today. The months supply of inventory jumped from 8.9 in June to 12.5 in July.

“After the homebuyer tax credit deadline, contract signings have been notably lower, and a pause period for home sales is likely to last through September,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. ”Thanks to the homebuyer tax credit, home values have been stable for the past 18 months despite heavy job losses.”

National median sales prices fell slightly to $182,600 down 0.6% from June.

Note: The July RE/MAX National Housing Report on 54 metro areas, confirms the NAR findings, with a 30% drop in sales from June, a 27% drop from last year, and a 1.3% increase in prices from 2009.

July 2010 Existing Home Sales            
  July 2010  June 2010 1 Mo Diff  July 2009 1 Yr Diff
National 3.83M 5.26M -27.2% 5.14M -25.5%
           
Northeast 620K 960K -29.5% 889K -30.3%
Midwest 800K 1.23M -35% 1.19M -33.3%
South 1.54M 2.01M -22.6% 1.92M -19.8%
West 870K 1.17M -25% 1.13M -23%

All Housing Types:
1. July Inventory: 3.98M, +2.5% from June, -12.9% from July 2009 
2. Months Supply: 12.5 months, up from 8.9 months in June

July Practitioner Survey:
1. Distressed properties made up 32% of all sales (unchanged from June)
2. First-time buyers purchased 38% of all homes sold (down from 43% in June)
3. Investors accounted for 19% of all sales (up from 13% in June)
4. All-cash deals were 30% (up from 24% in June)

Mortgage Interest Rates:
1. July 2010 = 4.56% (July 2009 = 5.22%)
2. June 2010 = 4.74%
3. May 2010 = 4.89%
(National average commitment rate from Freddie Mac)

Updated 8/24/10

The Uncertain Return to Normal Times in Real Estate

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

Real Trends – June 2010

COMMENTARY

The Uncertain Return to Normal Times

After years of hearing how home prices are plummeting and foreclosures are mounting, consumers want to feel hopeful about the housing market — but maybe they’re being too optimistic.

In a presentation to the National Association of Real Estate Editors in Austin, Texas Stan Humphries, Zillow.com’s chief economist, pointed to four myths he said consumers are latching onto as they try to make sense of recent housing statistics.

The four myths:

1. The housing recession is over. It’s not, Humphries said. He estimates the bottom in home prices won’t come until the third quarter, at least from a national perspective. Doug Duncan, chief economist at Fannie Mae, agreed with that estimation.

2. After markets hit bottom, prices will rebound to boom levels. Not going to happen, at least for a while, Humphries said. “Once we hit bottom, the bottom is going to be a long and flat affair across the markets,” he said. “What we’re going to see once we hit bottom is the second phase of the housing recession… that second phase is one of being flat.”

3. The worst of the foreclosure mess is behind us. More wishful thinking, according to Humphries. He estimates foreclosures will peak later this year, then remain elevated for a while. Rick Sharga, senior vice president of RealtyTrac, an online marketplace for foreclosure properties, said he doesn’t envision foreclosure activity stabilizing until late 2011.

4. The tax credits saved the housing market. With or without a tax credit, those who bought would have done so anyway, Humphries said. “The biggest impact [in home sales] we believe were low prices… low interest rates and the unsung factor here is the ramped up lending by the Federal Housing Administration.”

Snap survey shows declines in most markets in May

Comment on the future

I recall that in the first quarter of 2010 there was consensus among leading economists that rates would rise after the Fed/Treasury stopped buying mortgage backed securities. Without these purchases rates might rise to 6 percent or higher. So today, we have sub-5 percent mortgages. What happened?

Europe happened. The debt crisis evidently drove many in the world to once again park their money in U.S. debt instruments, raising the supply of capital and lowering its costs. So, why did the smartest people in the world not know this was happening only three to four months before it exploded to the short term benefit of American money supply?

And how does it affect our view of the next six months or year or three years as far as forecasting the housing market? Well it should give all pause as to just how well anyone can predict what will happen to housing and mortgage markets. So it is with our business. The Winter Soldiers are pursuing that time honored tradition of “hoping for the best and preparing for the worst.” It is likely we have seen the “worst” that housing has to offer. It is likely that housing is in the intermediate stage of the birth of a solid rebound. But May retail sales were totally unexpected from all accounts and the declines in May written contracts are another sign that continues to flash ‘yellow’ – proceed with caution. That is likely the best course of action at this time.

Surge in Pending Home Sales Continues

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Pending home sales have risen for three consecutive months, reflecting the broad impact of the home buyer tax credit and favorable housing affordability conditions, according to the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator, rose 6.0 percent to 110.9 based on contracts signed in April, from an upwardly revised 104.6 in March, and is 22.4 percent higher than April 2009 when it was 90.6. That follows gains of 7.1 percent in March and 8.3 percent in February.

Pending home sales are at the highest level since last October when the index reached 112.4 and first-time buyers were rushing to beat the initial deadline for the tax credit. The data reflects contracts and not closings, which usually occur with a lag time of one or two months.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said this second round of surging sales from the tax credit extension looks as strong as the original tax credit. “There were concerns that only a small pool of buyers were left to take advantage of the tax credit extension. But evidently the tax stimulus, combined with improved consumer confidence and low mortgage interest rates, are contributing to surging sales,” he said. “The housing market has to get back on its own feet and now appears to be in a good position to return to sustainable levels even without government stimulus, provided the economy continues to add jobs.”

NAR expects a net of 1 million additional jobs in the second half of this year and about 2 million in 2011.

“The home buyer tax credit brought close to 1 million additional buyers into the market, which is now helping the trade-up market and has significantly improved the inventory situation. This stabilized home prices more quickly and has preserved about $900 billion in home equity; in turn, that is keeping additional households from going underwater and risking foreclosure,” Yun said.

Pending Home Sales Index by region:

  • Northeast: jumped 29.5 percent to 97.9 in April and is 24.5 percent above a year ago.
  • Midwest: rose 4.1 percent to 104.2 and is 17.9 percent above April 2009.
  • South: slipped 0.6 percent to an index of 123.9, but is 31.3 percent higher than a year ago.
  • West: increased 7.5 percent to 107.9 and is 12.0 percent higher than April 2009.

“A big concern surfacing recently is insufficient time to close the deal at the settlement table. Under normal circumstances, two months would be enough time from contract signing to settlement date,” Yun said. “However, the recent housing cycle has brought long delays related to the short sales approval process by banks, and from ongoing appraisal issues.”

He added that there could be a sizable number of home buyers who responded to tax credit incentives, but may encounter problems meeting the settlement deadline by June 30. Because of these market challenges, NAR has asked Congress to provide flexibility on the deadline for closing.

Source: NAR

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: 379,000

  • Avg. Days on Market: 69

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