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Red Mountian Ranch (North Mesa AZ.)

I was fortunate enough to Golf Red Mountian Ranch today. It is home to one of the only 12 Pete Dye designed courses in the country. It kicked my butt, but it was a blast.

There are beautiful homes out there and as a Realtor I just instictively have to know how much it will cost for me or my clients to live in a place. Hey it's my job to find this stuff out, right? My research showed

You can get in there in an older home say late 1980s for the high two hundreds and low threes. The homes out there can get up to a million, I think the really nice ones were four hundred to 800K but very nice.

If you are looking for a place like this to move to let me know, I may have justRed Mountain Ranch styleNice Territorial in Red Mountian Ranch seen your next home today!

Phoenix Area Real Estate

Bathroom remodels are in demand more than before. While kitchens are still high on the interest list for buyers and homeowners, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) is reporting that remodeler survey respondents say that a bathroom remodel was one of their most common projects during the first six months of 2010--as much as 61 percent of their remodels were done on bathrooms.

In previous years kitchen remodeling was reported as the most common activity by more than 70%. Most remodelers report they are continuing to struggle, however they expect the rest of 2010 to be a period of stabilization for remodeling, with the first stages of recovery emerging by the end of the year, followed by a robust recovery in early 2011.

No matter which room you're going to remodel, doing your homework and knowing exactly what you want will save you not only money but also potential headaches. Things like checking references and visiting some of the recently remodeled projects are a great way to determine if the company you plant to hire will be suitable for your needs. Neglecting to do this could mean that you bring in the wrong company and, worst case scenario, a simple job turns into months of work and extra expenses.

Here are a few things to consider when remodeling. Some experts say, if you're planning to stay in the home for five years, remodel it how you like. In other words, put in the countertops that make you happy--even if they're not the most popular. Use the color paint that expresses your inner feelings. However, I always say, remember there's a balance. If you remodel and create something that is so unusual, you may run the risk of it not appealing to the masses and therefore you will have to find the few that are searching for that particular look. That doesn't mean you shouldn't design and decorate based on your likes, it's just a matter of considering how the remodel will impact you when it comes time to sell the home and then choosing the best option for you for both short and long term.

Bathroom remodels Are The New Must Have Hot Item

Bathroom remodels are in demand more than before. While kitchens are still high on the interest list for buyers and homeowners, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) is reporting that remodeler survey respondents say that a bathroom remodel was one of their most common projects during the first six months of 2010--as much as 61 percent of their remodels were done on bathrooms.

In previous years kitchen remodeling was reported as the most common activity by more than 70%. Most remodelers report they are continuing to struggle, however they expect the rest of 2010 to be a period of stabilization for remodeling, with the first stages of recovery emerging by the end of the year, followed by a robust recovery in early 2011.

No matter which room you're going to remodel, doing your homework and knowing exactly what you want will save you not only money but also potential headaches. Things like checking references and visiting some of the recently remodeled projects are a great way to determine if the company you plant to hire will be suitable for your needs. Neglecting to do this could mean that you bring in the wrong company and, worst case scenario, a simple job turns into months of work and extra expenses.

Here are a few things to consider when remodeling. Some experts say, if you're planning to stay in the home for five years, remodel it how you like. In other words, put in the countertops that make you happy--even if they're not the most popular. Use the color paint that expresses your inner feelings. However, I always say, remember there's a balance. If you remodel and create something that is so unusual, you may run the risk of it not appealing to the masses and therefore you will have to find the few that are searching for that particular look. That doesn't mean you shouldn't design and decorate based on your likes, it's just a matter of considering how the remodel will impact you when it comes time to sell the home and then choosing the best option for you for both short and long term.

Phoenix Area Real Estate

Will there be a housing shortage? 672,000 new homes were started in April 2010, an annualized rate and less than half the long term run rate needed to meet the nation's natural expected population growth.

The shortfall has been masked by a weak economy and that has put a damper on home buying. Once the job market rebounds, however, people will look to have their own homes again. This pent up demand could get unleashed on unprepared markets, causing shortages and rising local prices.

As many as seven million homes are vacant, but not for sale according to the Census Bureau which should provide some cushion to offset demand. That inventory number, however, can can be deceiving for two reasons: People my not want to live in hard-hit areas where the houses are, many of them are beyond repair and in areas many would not stop a car in, let alone live.

Many smaller Home-builders usually ready and able to help absorb additional demand are unable to obtain construction loans or lost their financing in mid project. Hard times have persuaded builders to postpone purchases of land they could prep for future development. That will make it much longer for them to gear up production once the housing market improves.

Phoenix Area Real Estate

The housing tax credit to consumers is expiring June 30th 2010. The National Association of Realtors is asking congress to extend the timelines to close deals and still allow ready and willing buyers time needed to close escrow and qualify for the credit.

The problem is that the banks and the government are involved. Many transactions are foreclosure, short or regular sales all of which take longer now because of the new Reg Z & RESPA laws, getting a loan from origination to closing is taking A LOT longer. It's not going to hurt anyone to extend the timeline for already qualified buyers.

Phoenix Area Real Estate

The HAMP program is a dismal failure. 116,000 loans have been modified out of the millions of applicants who asked for help. I read an article from NPR that recalled the great depression era solution. President Roosevelt created a program called HOLC or Home Owners Loan Corporation. In essence they purchased loans in distress from banks and negotiated new affordable mortgages with homeowners. President Obama has misunderstood the calculus faced by homeowners facing foreclosure, homeowners upside down in their homes have little incentive to save it even with a lower payment. modifications that reduce principal are far more successful than those that just lower the interest rate, the extend and pretend mantra that lenders use in today's mod's often include missed payments, late fees, service charges racking up an even higher principal balance.

In contrast a homeowner with equity to protect will find a way to make those monthly payments. The time for the government to step in is now. The servicers fear that if they lower peoples principal balance, more and more people will stop paying and wait for an offer to be given to them. Many servicers also will not sell those notes at least not at a realistic price so how is the HOLC program going to work? Eminent domain, existing laws allow the purchase of property interests other than the outright ownership of land. If the government could buy these assets either by voluntary sale or by eminent domain for 30 to 50 cents on the dollar there would be ample room to reduce principal balance to make the mortgages more affordable. The new HOLC program like the original could pick and choose the mortgages it buys, it should only be used for primary residences and it should refuse mortgages that homeowners can afford but choose not to pay.

The best part is President Obama could enact this with out any further input from Congress and a portion of the TARP funds (75 Billion) could easily finance such an operation. It should stem off the foreclosure crisis and more importantly, it will cause lenders fearing Eminent domain and losing assets at a deep discount to voluntarily reduce principal balances.

Phoenix Area Real Estate

Winter is here, have home sales cooled off as well? In Arizona sales and rentals are hot! I think we have hit the bottom last fall and it is just a matter of time until the negative inventory out there gets bought up by investors and bargain hunters alike. The first time 8K buyer tax credit is in full swing through April 010 as is the second time primary home buyer credit for $6500.00 Rates are low and inventory is high, it's the perfect storm. If you are looking for a home to buy or rent, drop me a note the shopping is great!

Phoenix Area Real Estate

Short sales, are they doomed to foreclosure domination? Just when short sales were getting easier to do and the CDPE designation was being handed out by the fist-full another curve ball comes in. Does the seller have a sincere hardship? death, unemployment etc. If your house is upside down in value that is not a hardship, unfortunately. It is the way it is, currently. 

I list homes for sale and for lease. I price them correctly, I take great photos. I schmooze the sometimes tenants and I get them to move on, deal with any attorney or management company they have and get it all in writing. I screen the buyers and their lenders and I sent the owners lender every single thing they wanted, sometimes before they even asked for it. I have contacted the HOA after negotiations broke down due to the seller or the managers attitude now and again and pleaded them to offer justice to my client and settle the past due bill even though they sometimes did not deserve it.

The lenders are asking for full or partial repayment instead of allowing the short sale more and more often. There needs to be a way to give a short sale the same terminating effect a foreclosure has if necessary because there will be more and more homes that need to be sold due to speculators dumping them. Many times the second lenders are refusing to settle for a reasonable amount due to cash out refi or purchase money seconds. Or that the borrower can still make the payments but just no longer chooses to? Based on that question, your circumstance the bank is lately, not so quick to forgive you. Perhaps an arbitration board can be assembled and can review the files and demand the lenders perform case by case and force them to cram down and accept the settlements, right now they are blowing good deals apart because no one can force them to do anything. In a foreclosures a person it seems, can just walk away and let the home foreclose and all bets and debts are off. That leaves foreclosures to only the REO agents and the profiteers, not good for anyone but them.

To you homeowners who want to stay in your home and just want to make it affordable, my freind and associate Mr. Kevin Hardin and his team at Mortgage Mediation Group have assembled a program called a HEFI. Home Equity Fractional Interest. Their site is www.equidebtsolutions.com it offers principal mortgage reduction to the homes current value and offers the lender(s) a shared interest in the appreciation in the home. It is a novel concept at a minimal price and seems quite a good solution to a very bad situation that is mounting in many primary homes. Let them know I sent you!

Phoenix Area Real Estate

For years I have served as the President for my HOA. Some people love you and still others, will hate you. I live in a resort where not only is there my association but there is a master association as well.

The resort over the course of ten years has overly watered the grass on their side of the fence and all but destroyed it. They recently sent my group a threatening letter saying we are to foot the bill for the repairs of the fence they destroyed, to the tune of almost 10 grand.

Being a REALTOR and the President, I know my ccnrs better than the people who wrote them. There is no way we are paying for a wall that a for profit organization destroyed all on their own. I have two members on the board right now who, well lets just say if they had fought in WW2 we would be speaking German in this country today. So not only do I have to worry about the master and their collective B.S. I have to worry about the two of the four other members who 'serve" with me on the board.

My point is this, if you do not like what your HOA is doing, get involved and serve. Luckily for my community it is not in my DNA to be bullied by big corporations or anyone for that matter, who think they can bend the rules and the law into their favor, I say 'fix your own damn wall!"

Phoenix Area Real Estate

Can you be too close to a listing? I recently found out an old friend and client who I literally "willed" their home into a closed escrow because they wanted it sooo badly in 03 was now in trouble. Well fast forward six years later.

The wife called me and advised me that they were divorcing and what could be done about the house? I spent hours and hours on the phone with them in September counseling them separately on what to do, plans were hatched and scrapped over and over. They decided to try a loan mod since the husband wanted to remain in the home or they would have me short sell it.

I checked in the mls to see what it would appraise for about a week ago so I could advise my clients how things were looking. It was under contract and listed with another agent, not only that but the husband had bought another house in the West valley.

I felt betrayed, I was truly upset after all I had gotten them into the home ownership driver seat in the first place right? I advised them how to do exactly what they did and they did it with someone else! Then I realized, I do not need to list and sell every client's home in the valley. I am glad he was able to buy a home and I am glad his wife found a suitable rental. In my profession often we give away things for free, albeit advice, support or help of some sort.

I am glad I was able to be there for them in the time they needed me and who knows, maybe the spirit of giving is awakening in all of us?

Contact Information

Photo of Shane M. Higginbotham Insurance Agent/ REALTOR GRI Real Estate
Shane M. Higginbotham Insurance Agent/ REALTOR GRI
John Hall & Associates
11211 N. Tatum Blvd. Suite 200
Phoenix AZ 85028-3078
602-391-7777
602-953-4000
Fax: 602-522-0598

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