Place 728 x 90 Ad Here

The Real Estate Bloggers

The Real Estate Bloggers


Home Selling Because Of Divorce Picks Up

Posted: 28 Apr 2011 06:19 AM PDT

AngrycoupleIs it a bad sign of the recovery that couples are doing well enough to afford a divorce? Or is it an economic indicator that needs to be watched?

Either way, when couples get divorced one of the first things to happen is the house goes on the market. And like it or not, this is good for the real estate industry.

Now, as some indicators show that divorces are picking up and that means the homes need to be sold.

A stronger economy, lower unemployment and a housing market that – while still weak – is no longer in free fall are all contributing to a rebound in divorce filings.

“There is huge pent-up demand,” said Marshal Willick, a Las Vegas matrimonial attorney, who has noted an upturn in his business.

During the recession, couples who were out of work or unable to sell their house stayed married to save money. The percentage of the population 15 years and older who counted themselves divorced dropped to 9.7 in 2009, from 9.9 three years earlier, according to the Census Bureau. via The Financial Times

With so many real estate agents desperate for work, there may be an opportunity here for some.

Specialize in divorce real estate. It probably is not very glamorous, but it sure will beat doing short sales.

Spend some time learning the dynamics that happen when divorcing couples need to sell their homes and then specialize in making the process smoother. You do a couple of tough ones and then market your services through the local divorce attorneys in town and odds are you will have a pretty good business at the end of the day.

Thanks for reading this post. If you would like to see more articles like this, please come visit The Real Estate Bloggers. where it was originally published.



Home Selling Because Of Divorce Picks Up

Related posts:

  1. Tennessee Home Burns To Ground Due To Unpaid Fee This really sucks for the homeowner, but I am sure...
  2. 9.6 Percent Drop in Home Sales Nationwide in February 2011 Remember that housing recovery that was supposed to happen this...
  3. Appraisers Values Coming in Too Low To Sell If you are trying to sell your home or are...

Foreclosure Investing Philippines - PNB General Santos City auction slated on May 12, 2011 plus April 2011 issue of the PNB Asset Gazette

Your email updates, powered by FeedBlitz

 
Here are the FeedBlitz email updates for titofofoqueiro@gmail.com



Foreclosure Investing Philippines - PNB General Santos City auction slated on May 12, 2011 plus April 2011 issue of the PNB Asset Gazette


A public auction of PNB foreclosed properties has been slated on May 12, 2011, 2:00pm, at the East Asia Royale Hotel, National Highway, Lagao, General Santos City, Philippines. This public auction includes foreclosed properties located in Davao Oriental, Compostela Valley, Davao del Norte, Cotabato, Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat, and South Cotabato.

PNB General Santos City foreclosed property auction on May 12, 201

Complete list of foreclosed properties for sale

The complete list of PNB foreclosed properties for public auction on May 12, 2011 can be...

This is just an excerpt, read the whole entry here »

 


More Recent Articles





Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 

Irvine Housing Blog

Irvine Housing Blog

Link to Irvine Housing Blog

Great Britian’s housing bubble is just like California’s

Posted: 28 Apr 2011 03:30 AM PDT

Great Britain experienced a housing bubble at the same time the United States did. They are dealing with the same issues we are in the aftermath.

Irvine Home Address ... 19 MOONSTONE #0 Irvine, CA 92606
Resale Home Price ......  $430,000

I could be mean
I could be angry
You know I could be just like you

I could be fake
I could be stupid
You know I could be just like you

I could be cold
I could be ruthless
You know I could be just like you

I could be weak
I could be senseless
You know I could be just like you

Three Days Grace -- Just Like You

The problems associated with the inflation and deflation of a housing bubble are universal. Many countries in Europe experienced a housing bubble in parallel to ours in the United States. Just like us, they have witnessed utter collapse of the low end, lenders permitting squatting at the high end, and rumors of foreign cash buyers coming to save the day.

Back in March I wrote Ireland’s housing bubble: like ours, only worse. And back in December I commented on how Spain shows how to keep house prices inflated. Both of those countries inflated enormous housing bubbles that caused a massive mis-allocation of resources and the construction of 20 years worth of housing product, much of which may be abandoned. Thinks weren't quite as bad in Great Britain, but the fallout there is very similar to our experience here in California.

The 'other' housing market, where house prices have regressed 60%

By Jeremy Warner, Assistant Editor 6:00AM BST 21 Apr 2011

An apartment on London's Hyde Park recently changed hands at an astonishing £136m.

Even the row of terraced houses in North West London where I live has managed to put the housing crash behind it; these relatively modest late Victorian properties again sell at record prices.

Yet stray beyond London and the South East, and you see an altogether different picture, one that goes largely unrecorded by the established indices for measuring the UK housing market – Halifax, Nationwide, Rightmove and so on.

The prime areas of London, similar to our coastal communities, continue to trade at or near the height of the bubble (when they sell at all). The subprime areas like Riverside County have been knocked back 60%, and they show no signs of improvement. There is a parallel between Great Britain's experience and our own.

To see this "other" housing market, I've been to Newcastle and its surrounding areas in the North East, the region that gave birth to the folly of Northern Rock.

Like all property markets, prices in the region are highly calibrated. There remain sizeable pockets of prosperity, where values, though still significantly off, have held up reasonably well. As in many parts of London, it's easy to imagine from these relatively well to do districts that there never was much of a housing crash.

It's impossible for me to say what is causing Britain's high end to hold firm. Ours is held up by shadow inventory, low transaction volumes, and large down payments. The same is likely true in Great Britain.

Unfortunately, they are more the exception than the rule. Little more than a stone's throw from these posher areas lies a tale of catastrophic decline and value destruction to match the very worst the sub-prime crisis has managed to produce in the US. Tens of thousands of houses in the North East alone will have fallen in value by 30-60pc since the peak, and by the look of it, still have further to go.

Many can neither be sold nor let. You've heard about Britain's chronic shortage of housing stock, one of the factors which allegedly underpins the value of domestic property in the UK. Well, there's little sign of it here in Newcastle and the rest of the North East. Row upon row of properties that used to house workers in the region's once proud industrial tradition of shipbuilding, coal and steel lie half boarded up or otherwise derelict.

Does that conjure up images in your mind of some of the high desert communities in California?

Yet believe it or not, these very same houses and flats were until three years ago as much a part of the British property bubble as everywhere else – perhaps more so in some cases.

Over a seven year period, prices for a typical two to three bed house or flat were chased all the way up from the low teens to well in excess of £60,000. New build subject to mortgage fraud would fetch £125,000 or more. Today you'd be lucky to get half. Prices are fast regressing all the way back to where they came from before the bubble began.

Just like California's bubble, prices went up 250% in a very short period of time, and crashed nearly back to their starting point.

Typical of this phenomenon is Benwell, located on the hillside that tumbles down to the Tyne in Newcastle's West end. A scene of grim degradation, it stands as a lasting reminder of the policy failures and illusory prosperity of Brown's Britain. Pumped up on a sea of credit, make work public expenditure and benefit payments, prices rocketed from 2000 onwards.

That sounds like Sacramento.

First came the local money, chasing the apparently mouth watering yields that housing benefit could offer to buy-to-let landlords. Then having exhausted the possibilities down south, in came the London investors. In the final hurrah came the Irish, their pockets overflowing with loans from their now hopelessly bust banking system.

Foreign cash buyers are always the last to the party, and they always endure the biggest losses.

Many of these investors will already be in substantial negative equity, but still they refuse to adjust their price expectations to the all too dire reality. So they hold on in the hope they can find the tenants to pay the mortgage and that prices will eventually recover. Denial is the order of the day.

Sound familiar?

London is always first in and out of any housing market downturn. The trend then ripples out from the capital, with regions such as the North East lagging London by a year or two. If that relationship holds, then you would indeed expect prices in the regions soon to be chasing London higher again. Regrettably, it's more than likely broken. Even if the banks were prepared to fund another rip-roaring property boom – they are still scarcely in any condition to do so – the fundamentals in regions such as the North East are most unlikely to support it.

Our banks aren't limited like Britain's banks are. With the direct government backing of mortgage-backed securities and the ability to sell them to investors, we are fully capable of inflating another housing bubble. That's one of the reasons the debate over the qualified residential mortgage in Washington is so important. If we get that legislation wrong, we will inflate another housing bubble at taxpayer expense.

Highly dependent on public sector employment and handouts – which are being severely cut – there appears nothing to stop the free fall in prices. Ever optimistic, one estate agent in Blyth, on the coast south of Newcastle, insists that with the advent of the prime Easter selling season, things are picking up. Buy-to-let investors from London are back, he says, in part because low interest rates are driving them into riskier assets in the search for income and capital gain. "They know a bargain when they see one", he says, pointing to the recent sale of a property at half its bubble peak. In the real world, prices have in fact taken a further lurch downwards.

realtor bullshit also appears to be universal.

A little further south still, at Dean Bank, Ferryhill, it's the same depressing scene of boarded up housing and decline. Even the warm spring sunshine fails to make a dent in the oppressiveness of it all. A woman is grilling meat on a disposable barbecue in her front door porch. "I've been in this town a long time. It always was s*** and it still is. But my mortgage broker is a good man. He'll look after me", she says, generously offering a sausage sandwich. Somehow I doubt it.

Talk about misplaced trust. Yikes!

But let's not single out the North East. To a greater or lesser extent, you find much the same story around all the major regional cities of Northern England. It's still the same rubbish property with the same down at heel tenants, but in the past ten years the prices have been up like a rocket and now they are falling back down again like a spent stick.

It's hard to know what's going to rescue districts like these. With the anaesthetic of abundant credit and public money now largely gone, many areas of Britain are simply returning to the way they were before the New Labour boom began. It's as if it never happened at all.

It's hard to say what will happen to many of our subprime areas. There was no reason for prices to go up in many of these areas, so there is no reason to believe prices will recover in many of them. How long will it take prices to come back in Fresno. Forever is my guess.

George Osborne's hoped for private sector recovery threatens entirely to bypass areas like these. For the North East, the somewhat underwhelming programme of supply side reforms he announced in the Budget is unlikely to make any significant difference. Better education and training may lift things in time, but it all costs money, which is in short supply. Eventually, incomes might slip to levels that make the region competitive with emerging markets, but that's hardly an outcome to aspire to.

Everywhere's hurting right now, yet few places are hurting more than the North East. The collapse in low end property prices is only one outward sign of it. Public policy must focus like a lazer on these forgotten badlands, or risk permanently entrenching an ever more divided society.

Public policy is failing to address many downtrodden areas in California as well. Of course, with the wide range of very serious problems facing California, it isn't likely that much money or attention is going to be focused on the problems in rural areas. Most will be left to rot.

Just a little Ponzi

If there is a proper way to utilize the stupidity of lenders, it is demonstrated by the owner of today's featured property. He bought the property with a minimal down payment, he refinanced to get his money back out of the deal, then he left it alone to see what happened. By withdrawing his down payment, he eliminated his risk of loss, and by keeping the mortgage equity withdrawal to a minimum, he kept his cost of ownership as low as possible. He still gamed the system and left the bank to eat the losses, but he did it in the wisest way possible. His only real loss is his credit score.

This property was purchased for $436,000 on 8/23/2003. The current asking price makes this a 2003 rollback.

The owner used a $391,964 first mortgage, and a $44,036 down payment at purchase. On 11/4/2004 he refinanced with a $462,500 first mortgage and a $60,500 HELOC.

He didn't even manage to steal $100,000 from the lender. He is a lightweight by Irvine standards.

Irvine House Address ...  19 MOONSTONE #0 Irvine, CA 92606     

Resale House Price ...... $430,000

House Purchase Price … $436,000
House Purchase Date .... 8/28/2003

Net Gain (Loss) .......... ($31,800)
Percent Change .......... -7.3%
Annual Appreciation … -0.2%

Cost of House Ownership
-------------------------------------------------
$430,000 .......... Asking Price
$15,050 .......... 3.5% Down FHA Financing
4.78% ............... Mortgage Interest Rate
$414,950 .......... 30-Year Mortgage
$93,089 .......... Income Requirement 

$2,172 .......... Monthly Mortgage Payment 
$373 .......... Property Tax (@1.04%)
$67 .......... Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)
$90 .......... Homeowners Insurance (@ 0.25%)
$477 .......... Private Mortgage Insurance
$225 .......... Homeowners Association Fees
============================================
$3,403 .......... Monthly Cash Outlays

-$354 .......... Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)
-$519 .......... Equity Hidden in Payment (Amortization)
$27 .......... Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)
$74 .......... Maintenance and Replacement Reserves
============================================
$2,631 .......... Monthly Cost of Ownership 

Cash Acquisition Demands
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$4,300 .......... Furnishing and Move In @1%
$4,300 .......... Closing Costs @1%
$4,150 ............ Interest Points @1% of Loan
$15,050 .......... Down Payment
============================================
$27,800 .......... Total Cash Costs
$40,300 ............ Emergency Cash Reserves
============================================
$68,100 .......... Total Savings Needed

Property Details for 19 MOONSTONE #0 Irvine, CA 92606
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beds:  3
Baths:  2
Sq. Ft.:  1500
$287/SF
Property Type: Residential, Condominium
Style: Two Level, Other
Year Built:  2001
Community:  0
County:  Orange
MLS#:  S653707
Source:  SoCalMLS
Status:  Active
On Redfin:  24 days
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lovely two story Home with elegant exterior stonework. Recessed lighting, Tiled flooring through out, Kitchen with Corian countertop Ceiling Fan Plantation Shutters, Upstairs Laundry hook-up, Roman tub and Dural sink in master bath, Walk-in closet. Fabulous amenities include assoc park. Close to school, shopping centers, Freeway 5 and Toll Road 261. 


real estate home sales


architecture 4 us

architecture 4 us


Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC-office

Posted: 27 Apr 2011 07:15 AM PDT

Last Haiti’s earthquake should be a very bad disaster, destroyed a lot of buildings. Many people lost their houses. Nowadays, a lot of communities, company, etc try to donate or just share a new concept of house to the victims. One of them is an architectural firm from Miami, NC-office. The architect wants to support the re-development, especially on the relief area, in Haiti.

Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 1 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office

The concept of this sustainable home design is to create a modular house with minimal area needed. A house is formed from four 8 ft x 8 ft modules, which act as a room for each module.  The enclosed area is divided by a bathroom/kitchen core into a sleeping quarter and a living/dining area. A porch is also included in one of the modules. The “L” shape of this sustainable house provide a garden area for the house. The shape also allows the housing unit to be repeated in a small community.

Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 3 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office

The sustainable construction is formed using 4 in x 4 in “H” beam steel, and column. The structure is designed to have good strenght against wind and earthquake. The module is considered to be a rigid box which sits on a series of masonry walls, that compromise the land contour. The exterior skin is from Magnum Board panels. Some windows are provided with special arrangement to provide better view from inside to outside. They are not covered by glass, but using sliding solid panels, mosquito nets, and decorative metal grills for security.

Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 6 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office

To fulfill the energy requirement, the sustainable building design is completed with 1 kW solar system. Water source is from rainwater, which is provided by an integrated rainwater system. The house is also completed with composting unit for the toilet. The area for lumbings, electrical conduits, etc are centralized to minimized the distance, optimizing the system. The windows also provide air circulation.

Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 1 150x150 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 3 150x150 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 6 150x150 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 8 150x150 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House 10 150x150 Modular and Sustainable Haiti Mountain House by NC office

ref

Re: Video Email - FYI - Take another look. Price reduction for those that just want Video Email


Video Email - Take Another Look - Awesome for Realtors to connect with Clients.   Great for any business. Earn Instant Pay as others see and buy... Watch The Video.  from Kathy Mason  (I'm a realtor too.  Love it and don't mind the residual instant pay either)   925.787.0889   http://Videos.RealEstate-Place.com  
Click here if you are unable to view this image.

to unsubscribe click: youvegotvideos@gmail.com and type "Remove"
Have a Wonderful Day !







--
Kathy Mason
VIDEO COMMUNICATION
925.787.0889
KathyMason.TalkFusionService.com



Foreclosure Investing Philippines - Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction slated today

Your email updates, powered by FeedBlitz

 
Here are the FeedBlitz email updates for titofofoqueiro@gmail.com



Foreclosure Investing Philippines - Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction slated today


A total of 250 tax delinquent real properties from Caloocan City are set to be disposed through public auction today, April 28, 2011, at 1:00pm, at the Bulwagang Katipunan, 3/F Caloocan City Hall, A. Mabini St., Caloocan City, Philippines.

The tax foreclosure auction sale is to be conducted by virtue of Section  260 and 263 of RA 7160, otherwise known as the Local Government Code of 1991.

Complete list of Caloocan City Tax Delinquent Real Property

Please refer to the complete list of Caloocan City’s Tax Delinquent Real Property that are scheduled for public auction below.

Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction page 1 (JPG)

Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction page 2

Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction page 2

Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction page 3

Caloocan tax delinquent real property foreclosure auction page 3

Source: Philippine Star, April 20, 2011 issue, page B-9 to B-11

Yes, this is scheduled for public auction today! Sorry I was not able to post this sooner as I just found this list this morning.

To our success and financial freedom!

Jay Castillo

Real Estate Investor

PRC Real Estate Broker Registration No. 3194
Blog: http://www.foreclosurephilippines.com
Follow me in Twitter: http://twitter.com/jay_castillo
Find us in Facebook: Foreclosure Investing Philippines Facebook Page

Text by Jay Castillo and Cherry Castillo. Copyright © 2011 All rights reserved.

Full disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

PS. The think Rich Quick 3.0 Seminar and Workshop of Trace Trajano is only 1 day away. register now to save Php1,000 from the walk-in price. I am still offering my exclusive bonus for TRQ attendees. Click here for more details.

PPS. Don't be the last to know, subscribe to e-mail alerts and get notified of new listings of bank foreclosed properties, public auction schedules, and real estate investing tips. Mailbox getting full? Subscribe through my RSS Feed instead.

Related posts:

 


More Recent Articles





Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 
 
Real Estate © 2010 Template design by Vida de bombeiro . Powered by Blogger.
Vida de bombeiro Recipes Informatica Humor Technology Curiosidades Mensagens News Tecnology Curiosity Car News Saude Video Games Mister Colibri Diario das Mensagens Eletronica Rei Jesus News Esportes Noticias Atuais Pets Career Religion Fashion Recreation Business Education Television Programming Motosport Tech Arts Fashion Business Computer Academics Sport Design Photography Travel Ebooks Music Politic Science Education Gadget Games Ecology Fish Flowers Sociology Home Soccer Downs Center Handicraft Education Show Music Show Fashion Health Freak Drag Home Toscas Noticias dos Times Futebol Central do Coração Science Livros Politics Music Business Women Law Downloads Saude Downs Computer Downs World Tele News Wireless Tech Arts Fashion Business Computer Academics Sport Design Photography Travel Ebooks Music Politic Science Education Gadget Games Ecology Fish