About Me

My photo
I am a Licensed REALTOR dedicated to providing the highest level of service to buyers and sellers. I strive to be known by other real estate agents as a true professional and a pleasure to do business with. My mission is to treat each and every client as an individual and to always put that client's needs first. My goal is to get the job done with as little hassle as possible. I am aware that most clients want even more than just a no hassle transaction, what they really want is someone who will listen to their needs and desires. That is what I am great at! I have been an Arizona resident for over 22 years and am deeply familiar with most every area across The Valley. I specialize in servicing Mesa, Gold Canyon, Apache Junction, Gilbert, Higley, Queen Creek and Chandler. Most importantly, I am a full-time, full-service real estate professional. Our real estate market is ever-changing and working with an agent like me who is embedded in the industry on a daily basis will ensure a winning experience when buying or selling your next home.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Economists Ponder Future of Home Prices

When will home prices go back up again?

Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal say that home prices won’t hit bottom until the second half of 2009 at the earliest and some say the downward trend will continue until 2011 or 2012. After that they may rise again, but not nearly as fast as they have in the last decade. Instead they will rise just a little faster than inflation and stay in line with increases in household income.

William Wheaton, a professor of economics and real estate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says he expects house prices to increase at a rate roughly 1-percentage point higher than inflation over the long term.

Celia Chen, director of housing economics at Moody’s Economy.com is more optimistic, expecting home values to rise an average of 4 percent per year over the next couple of decades.

Demographer William Frey predicts that growth will continue in coastal and Southern cities while populations in rustbelt areas like Michigan, Ohio, Western Pennsylvania and Upstate New York will continue to decline.

The great unknown is the impact aging baby boomers will have. While retirees in the past have often headed for warmer and suburban areas, boomers have tended to confound expectations. They could well show a propensity for staying put or moving to urban areas for the cultural life or to be near friends and family, shunning sun-dappled retirements communities.

Source: The Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty (12/02/08)

NAR-Backed Rate Buydown Gains Traction

An effort by the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® to spur home sales through a mortgage-interest rate buydown appears to be gaining traction.

Reports in major news media like the Washington Post and Wall Street Journal today quote sources familiar with a meeting between U.S. Treasury officials and NAR in November in which the buydown proposal was discussed.

"Treasury officials told the REALTORS® that the [buydown] plan could be a more effective way to help home owners than focusing solely on borrowers who are struggling to meet their monthly payments," the Washington Post story says.

Under the Treasury plan, lenders would sell newly issued mortgage-backed securities to the government provided the interest-rate on the loans collateralizing the securities was no higher than 4.5 percent. Although NAR supports a buydown, it does not take a position on how low interest rates should go.

To pay for the plan, Treasury would issue bonds at 3 percent, creating a 1.5-percent spread that it could use for buying the securities. Those securities would then be purchased by secondary mortgage market companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are under federal conservatorship.

NAR has been calling for a buydown and other measures to help stimulate housing sales as part of a four-point plan it showcased at its annual meeting in Orlando last month.

To date, tens of thousands of REALTORS® have sent letters to their members of Congress asking for quick action to help housing, which is widely considered a crucial first step to a broader economic recovery.

Other parts of the four-point plan include making 2008 high-cost conforming loan limits, which are now $729,750, permanent, and improving the home buyer tax credit by expanding it to all buyers, not just first-timers, and eliminating the repayment requirement.

Some analysts have calculated that an interest-rate buydown could help as many as 2.5 million households.

"We strongly encourage the Treasury to move quickly with its plan to lower interest rates to encourage current buyers to act rather than continue to wait," said NAR President Charles McMillan in a public statement on the Treasury's most recent action with the plan. "We are pleased to see that the leadership of the Treasury Department is seriously considering the actions we discussed to lower interest rates. The result of such action will help the nation’s economic recovery and bring stability to the housing market."

Source: REALTOR® Magazine Online

Mortgage Rates Take a Big Dip

For the week ended Dec. 3, Freddie Mac reported the lowest interest on 30-year fixed home loans since late January.

The rate came in at an average of 5.53 percent, down from 5.97 percent the previous week and 5.96 percent a year ago; while 15-year fixed mortgages settled at 5.33 percent compared to 5.74 percent last week and 5.65 percent in the year-earlier period.

Borrowing costs for short-term loans also were lower, with one-year adjustable-rate mortgages dipping to 5.02 percent from 5.18 percent a week ago and 5.46 percent a year ago.

Five-year hybrid ARMs, meanwhile, fell to 5.77 percent from 5.86 percent last week and 5.75 percent during the same period of last year.

Source: Realty Times (12/05/08)

You can find great local Mesa, Arizona real estate information on Localism.com Shielamarie Suttle is a proud member of the ActiveRain Real Estate Network, an online community to help real estate professionals grow their business.