Friday, February 10, 2012

What is considered a bedroom?

Little question, big answer... 
The question often comes up in real estate as to what is considered a bedroom.  In fact, sometimes the County records even have it wrong, and the answer lies in fact with local building codes, and health and safety requirements - which can usually be accessed at your City Hall's building department.

Without going into the details of exact dimensions, which of course make a big difference, we can say that the following characteristics have to be there, at the very least:

- there needs to be heat, and electricity
- natural light, and ventilation,
- a smoke (- and possibly a CO) detector,
- a sufficient way to exit directly to the outside of the house (door or window), also called ingress and egress --a little note here, think "firefighters".
- and a bedroom cannot have direct access  to a garage (either a window or a door) because of possible toxic fumes.

There are a few more requirements, like the size of the windows, spacing of the electrical outlets, a minimum of heat, but among all these criteria, believe it or not, a closet is not a must, although it is often considered such by real estate agents ...  A good source of info is always your local building department.
Have more input on the matter, or a story to share?  Feel free to chime in, I love stories...

Francis

useful links

PS: worthy cause: have you considered donating your extra fruits this season (if you have fruit bearing trees)?
contact: FullCircleSunnyvale.org

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Facebook and the Silicon Valley Market....

Everyone is speaking of the effect of the Facebook IPO on the real estate market around here.  This is an interesting article that I wanted to share:
Coldwell Banker "Table Talk".

I have already experienced in all my activity in Palo Alto a definite "tightness" of the market.  Several of the offers that I have placed recently met with many other offers, most of them very strong (like in: - cash! and very much over asking price).

Francis
useful links

PS: worthy cause: have you considered donating your extra fruits this season (if you have fruit bearing trees)?
contact: FullCircleSunnyvale.org

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Silicon Valley Luxury Home Prices Jump in December ...

Silicon Valley Luxury Home Prices Jump in December, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Reports.

Luxury home prices in Silicon Valley moved higher once again last month as the region’s high-end market continued to gain momentum, according to Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, the South Bay’s leading provider of luxury real estate services.

The median sale price for a million-dollar-plus home in Santa Clara County reached $1,471,000, up 8.9 percent from a year ago and 6 percent from November, when it stood at $1,387,000. ....
....Turley said the challenge for the South Bay’s real estate market continues to be a shortage of homes for sale, not lack of buyers.

“I think it’s important for sellers to get the message that the market is getting better in many areas and there are buyers willing to pay competitive prices for homes,” he said. “If you’ve been thinking about putting your home on the market, you shouldn’t wait any longer. It’s time to jump in.”  .....

See the full article on this Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Report.
Francis

Friday, January 27, 2012

Voters place high value on homeownership !

Voters place high value on homeownership.
By an overwhelming margin, American voters strongly value homeownership and would oppose efforts to weaken or eliminate the mortgage interest deduction or diminish a federal role to help qualified home buyers obtain affordable 30-year mortgages, according to a national survey conducted on behalf of the National Association of Home Builders. The survey gauged voters’ attitudes towards homeownership and housing policy issues.
The poll shows that three out of four voters – both owners and renters -- believe it is appropriate and reasonable for the federal government to provide tax incentives to promote homeownership. This sentiment cuts across regional and party line.

Highlights of the survey include:
Two-thirds of respondents say that the federal government should help home buyers to afford a long-term or 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage.

Nearly 75 percent of voters oppose eliminating the mortgage interest deduction.

Sixty-eight percent would be less likely to vote for a congressional candidate who proposed to abolish the deduction.

Ninety-six percent of homeowners are happy with their decision to own, and 84 percent who are “underwater” expressed the same sentiment.

Job uncertainty and saving for a downpayment and closing costs are the biggest barriers to buying a home.

More info on this article from the National Association of Home Builders.

Thanks for reading !
Francis

useful links

Current Mortgage rates

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Housing Taxed to Pay for Extension of Benefits...

Housing Taxed to Pay for Extension of Benefits  .. things that go under the radar if you don't pay attention ...

The law signed by President Obama two weeks ago to extend the payroll tax cut and maintain Medicare payments and unemployment benefits uses increases in the fees charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to guarantee mortgages to help offset its costs. The law also uses funds from premiums charged for insurance on FHA loans. As a result, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to increase their guarantee fees effective April 1 and will remain in effect through September 30, 2021.


The National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) opposed the increase in fees to pay for non-housing-related purposes. Lenders who choose to pass this increase on to borrowers will likely increase the rate offered to a borrower by .1 percent sometime before April 1. Analysts estimate the increase in cost over 30 years to be between $4,000 and $5,400 on a $200,000 loan, or $11-15 per month.

Well, it's always better to be informed..
Francis


Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Refinance Program for Underwater Borrowers - more info...

To add more info to one of my previous blogs ( "Refinancing problems? Here is a suggestion" ) on the refinancing options for people owing more than the value of their home, I'd like to reproduce the information I just received from Joan Fischer from First American Home Buyers Protection (a home protection plan company), which originates from DSNews.com (Authors: Krista Franks and Carrie Bay).
A little long, but of great interest for some people.

Francis

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Rental market is tight here in the Silicon Valley

I have been exposed to the rental market recently through 2 properties that I have put on the market for rent locally, one in Palo Alto, and one in Redwood City.  (Not all agents deal with rentals BTW...).

I have experienced first hand what has been known for a while now: that the rental market is difficult in the Bay Area (for renters), and prices have gone up since last year - if I had to guess I would say by about 10% easily.  In each instance these properties had several applications within a few days of being on MLS.

Several reasons can explain this increase:
- a better economic outlook in the Valley, leading more people to come here than people leaving the area, (which, incidentally, is also tied to registration in some schools such as the French-American schools and the German-American schools of the Bay)
- a significant number of people loosing their home (i.e. short sales and foreclosures) who find themselves renters suddenly,
- a relative lack of new construction - although there are some new projects being built around which will  somewhat address this penury.

Although this is true in general nationwide, it is more accute in Cities like San Jose, as described in this recently published article in the Business Journal, which goes over a few of these figures and facts.

Thanks for reading !
Francis

Useful links

Latest Mortgage rates

Monday, January 2, 2012

Appraisal problems in the real estate world ..

Appraisals have always been a large part of the normal real estate transaction: 
while a sales price is negotiated between the seller and the buyer, the bank has its say: they will lend to the buyer a percentage of the lower of the two figures: negotiated sales price, or appraised value. 

If they do not think that the property is worth the negotiated price, they will lend less.  But the thing is that real estate is not an exact science, and if you have 2 appraisals done on a property by two different appraisers, they will come up with 2 different values. With the crisis the way it has unfolded, appraisals have become very stringent, very conservative.  Let's just say that the banks are a lot more careful with how they lend money.

It is apparently a big problems for builders too:
one out of three builders reported losing signed sales contracts during the preceding six months because appraisals on their homes were less than the contract sales price, according to a survey by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

Builders claim that due to faulty appraisal practices, brand new homes with upgrades get compared to distressed properties that have been sitting vacant and in disrepair. The result, in many cases, has been that the new house gets appraised at less than the cost of construction.

According to the NAHB survey, 60 % of respondents reported they were experiencing appraisals coming in below their contract sales price. Of those reporting that they had encountered this problem, 53 % said the appraisal amount was actually less than the cost of building the home.

This has some very real consequences:
In normal times, housing accounts for more than 17 % of the nation’s GDP. Constructing 100 new homes generates more than 300 full-time jobs and $8.9 million in local, state and federal tax revenue that supports local schools and communities across the land.
More than half of the single-family builders and developers surveyed by NAHB indicated they had decided to put any new construction or land activity on hold until the financing climate improves.

One last word to buyers and sellers alike: unless the property sold is very desirable, and the buyer does not need a loan, this appraisal question may influence the outcome of the real estate transaction.
Francis Rolland


Mortgage rates