You are here: Benchmark Home » Archives for bmadmin » Page 4

Author: bmadmin

Average U.S. Households Almost Out of Financial Distress

The Consumer Distress Index, published by CredAbility, found that the average U.S. household is under less financial stress these days, most likely due to factors such as added jobs and the mild winter weather this year.

Overall, U.S. households scored 69.9 out of 100 points, with a score under 70 indicating a state of financial distress. While still 0.1 points shy of beating the non-distress category, the score is an improvement from the previous quarter’s 67.6.

Also, 69.9 is the highest score since the 2008 third quarter and the 2.3 point increase from the previous quarter is the highest quarterly jump in seven years.

The index measures financial distress by taking into account five categories: employment, housing, credit, how families manage household budgets, and net worth.

“At long last, the average U.S. household is on the verge of moving out of financial distress,” said Mark Cole, chief operating officer of CredAbility and author of the index.

Cole added that while finances are still tight, so long as gains in employment and housing continue, the financial health of the average U.S. household will further stabilize.

CredAbility started measuring distress among households in the 25 largest metro statistical areas (MSAs) for the first quarter of 2012.

The five MSAs in the most financial distress were Tampa-St. Petersburg (57.9), Detroit (60), Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach (61.5), Atlanta (62.6), and Los Angeles, (62.7). All five areas lag the nation in employment and housing, accounting for their low scores.

The MSAs under the least amount of distress were Washington, D.C (74.1), Boston (73.1), Minneapolis-St. Paul (72.4), Honolulu (71.8), and Dallas-Fort Worth (70.1).

One common characteristic of the six most distressed MSAs was they all had financial distress scores under 50 in the employment category, with Los Angeles at the bottom with a score of 39.5.

Among the 50 states, the most distressed were Nevada (61.66), Georgia (64.04), Michigan (64.75), Mississippi (65.06) and Florida (65.70).

The states in the least amount of distress were North Dakota (84.01), South Dakota (80.21), Wyoming (79.21), Nebraska (79.18), and Vermont (77.75).

Overall, 28 states scored 70 or above during the first quarter.

Article courtesy of DSNews.com. CredAbility is a nonprofit credit counseling and education agency.

Higher Home Prices Expected by Consumers in 2012

Higher home prices are expected by 33% of consumers over the next year.

Fannie Mae’s monthly housing survey indicated 5% more people expect home prices to increase this month over the 27 percent surveyed last month who thought prices would increase this year.

Nearly half of consumers expect higher rental prices as well, the highest number registered by Fannie Mae since its monthly tracking began in June 2010. Americans’ rental price expectations for the next year continue to rise, reaching their record high level for the Fannie Mae survey this month.

The percentage of respondents who say it is a good time to buy rose by three points to 73 percent, the highest level in more than a year, while the percentage of respondents who say it is a good time to sell rose one point to 14 percent this month.

Consumers’ confidence about their own finances is stabilizing, with 44 percent expecting an improvement over the next year.

Higher Mortgage Rates Expected

There is an increasing share of consumers expecting both higher mortgage rates and home prices over the next 12 months.

Doug Duncan, Vice President and chief economist of Fannie Mae says, “Americans’ rental price expectations for the next year continue to rise, reaching their record high level for our survey this month.”

Duncan says, “Some may feel that renting is becoming more costly and that home ownership is a more compelling housing choice. Conditions are coming together to encourage people to want to buy homes.”

While the “sales of existing homes in January and February marked the strongest start to a year since 2007,” according to the combined Housing and Urban Development (HUD)/Treasury statement. “Data on home prices changed little from the previous month – marking a fifth month of seasonal lows.”

For further Fannie Mae survey findings, visit the Fannie Mae Monthly National Housing site.

Home Remodels That Don’t Pay

Before you jump into a major renovation project to give a house your special flare, consider how long you’re likely to live in the house.

A lot of people get into trouble by moving into a home they’re only going to be in for a relatively short period of time, and they start remodeling and building additions that are sort of on their fantasy list, but they’re not going to be there long enough to really enjoy.

Here are four reasons to “remodel with caution”, especially if you want to maximize your chances of a profitable sale later on.

1. High maintenance – If your upgrade requires too much work to maintain, buyers may view it as more of a problem than an asset. A prime example is an in-ground swimming pool, which can cost a small fortune to maintain and keep clean.

2. Overdressed – Luxurious features can be a nice selling point, but only if they blend in with rather than stand out from what the neighbors have. Having the nicest home in the neighborhood can be a bad thing when it’s time to sell. A prime example would be upgrading the kitchen in a starter home to look like the kitchens in high-end home magazines.

3. Too Personal – Making a “Cookie-Cutter House” conform to your own unique taste. Any time you deviate, no matter what how minor the improvement is, from what is a fairly traditional, single-family house, you run the risk of improving in a way that will not lend itself to recouping your investment at re-sale time.

4. Unpopular – If no one else on the block has a room like the one you’re adding, or all the other houses boast the very feature you’re getting rid of, watch out. For example, although converting your two car garage into an office or bedroom can be a less expensive way to add square footage and create more living space, it can have drawbacks. Potential homebuyers might miss the covered parking more than they welcome the additional room, especially if all other homes in the neighborhood have garages.

This final tip for whatever type of home renovation you might be considering: Before you do anything to your house, live in it for a while. Prioritize the projects you want to complete, then go back in a few months and see if your list has changed.

How You Can Honor "Mikey" Monsoor – Medal of Honor Recipient

We’ll never forget what he was like- how his charisma and dogged never-quit attitude continued on throughout all the hardships of battle.

On September 29th, 2006 “Mikey”, made the ultimate sacrifice when he laid his life down for 2 other members of our platoon.  When the grenade was tossed on the roof, it hit Mikey in the chest and landed on the ground right in front of him.  Mikey had an out- he could have taken cover and dove for the door behind him; Instead hey yelled, “Grenade” and dropped down on it, saving our two brothers to his right and left.

Amongst each other, we wonder what each of us would have done in that instant.  We’d all like to think we’d make as noble a sacrifice as Mikey did, but in that instant, instinct takes over and really there’s no way to know.  No one would have thought less of him had he dove for cover.  The instinct to protect yourself is natural.  But he didn’t.  Instead his Act of Valor is one we’ll all remember forever.  For this, Mikey was awarded the Medal of Honor, our Nations highest award for Military Valor.

The timing and circumstances that lead to the events on that fateful day rattle around in my head over and over again but I know Mikey gave me a second chance at life.  I know others in our platoon feel the same way- especially those who were closest to the blast.

It leaves me wondering…no challenging myself…constantly, “Andrew- what have you done today to EARN THIS?

I look at my two sons who have the chance to be raised by their father and I know that the highest and best way I can honor Mikey and his Act of Valor is to ensure that, not when my time comes to die, that I lay in wonder for what more I could have done- what more I could have done for my God, for my Country, for my Community, for my Family.

We can ALL honor Mikey and the men and women who have served and sacrificed for our Country by giving ALL WE CAN, no matter our vocation or occupation- we can ALL make a difference in our OWN way and you can too.

In THEIR own way this week, VFW Post 2082 in Lemon Grove, CA has renamed itself in honor of Michael Anthony Monsoor that his Act of Valor- what he represents for our freedom will live on and perhaps inspire a new generation of Americans to stand tall for our freedoms and way of life.

 

Andrew Paul, Branch Manager at Benchmark Mortgage San Diego, is a former Navy Seal and San Diego VA Loan Specialist. He understands DFAS, HOSTILE FIRE PAY and IMMINENT DANGER PAY. He has a family too and values the importance of owning a home to know your family is safe and secure while you’re away earning a living and defending freedom.

US Home-Buying Season Finally Signaling a Recovery

WASHINGTON (AP) — Five years after the U.S. housing bust sent sales and prices plunging, the spring home-buying season is pointing to a long-awaited recovery.

Reduced prices, record-low mortgage rates, higher rents and an improving job market appear to be emboldening many would-be buyers. Open houses are drawing crowds. A wave of foreclosures is leading investors to grab bargain-priced homes.

And many people seem to have concluded that prices won’t drop much further. In some areas, prices have begun to tick up.

Interviews with more than two dozen potential buyers, sellers, brokers, Realtors and economists suggest that confidence is up and that sales will move slowly but steadily higher.

“The biggest challenge that we’ve had over the past four years is fear — fear that the economy is collapsing, that property values are collapsing, that the world is coming to an end,” says Mark Prather, a broker at ERA Buy America Real Estate in La Palma, Calif. “The fear factor is all but gone.”

Prather says the number of prospective buyers who contacted his company last month was about 35 percent more than a year ago.

The spring buying season got an early lift-off from an uncommonly warm January and February — a winter that was the best for sales of previously occupied homes in five years. Permits to build houses and apartments rose in February to their highest level since 2008.

“People feel much more confident,” said Steve Brown, co-owner of real estate company Irongate Inc. of Dayton, Ohio, who says sales jumped more than 16 percent for the first two months of 2012 over the same period last year. “There’s no question there’s a good feeling in the marketplace.”

Some analysts detected a slight uptick in prices for February and March. CoreLogic, a real estate data firm, says prices for homes not at risk of foreclosure — about two thirds of the market — rose 0.7 percent in February. It was the first increase in four years. Price gains occurred both in some hard-hit areas, such as Phoenix, and some still-thriving areas like New York and Washington.

In Miami, the average sales price has surged 14 percent in the past year, according to Trulia, a real estate data firm. In Phoenix, the average is up 13 percent, in Pittsburgh 9 percent.

Earnings reports Friday from two big banks suggested that more people are taking out mortgages. JPMorgan Chase issued 6 percent more mortgages from January through March than it did a year ago and got 33 percent more applications. Wells Fargo issued 54 percent more mortgages and received 84 percent more applications.

Still, few think the housing industry is nearing a return to full health. For that to happen, a robust job market would be needed. More hiring would give more people the money and job security to buy. That would help boost sales and prices.

Such areas as Atlanta, suburban Las Vegas and central California show few signs of recovery. And in some others — from Seattle to Cleveland — home prices have continued to slip. The average has dropped 9 percent in Seattle over the past 12 months and 7 percent in Cleveland.

But in many parts of the country, including thriving areas of Boston, Dallas and Seattle, confidence is rising along with prices. Among the reasons:

  • Hiring has strengthened. Each month from January through March generated a solid average of 212,000 jobs. Unemployment has sunk from 9.1 percent in August to 8.2 percent. More job security tends to embolden more people to invest in a home. In Dayton, for example, the University of Dayton is hiring for a new engineering research center, General Electric is hiring hundreds of contractors and the nearby Wright-Patterson Air Force Base are expanding.
  • Loans remain cheap. The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is 3.88 percent. That’s just above the 3.87 percent reached in February — the lowest since long-term mortgages were first offered in the 1950s.
  • Homes are more affordable. Nationwide, home prices are down 34 percent since 2006.
  • Americans are more confident. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan’s survey of consumer confidence rose in March for a seventh straight month to its highest level in 13 months.

Also fueling interest are signs that home values are finally stabilizing. One factor that had slowed purchases after the housing boom ended in late 2006 was fear that a home would lose value soon after its purchase.

But the price declines slowed toward the end of 2011, according to the Wells Fargo/Case-Shiller home price index. And CoreLogic says the average price nationally rose slightly in January and February.

“Unless prices went down, I don’t think we would have ever been able to afford a home,” said John Henschel, 37, an information technology consultant who will move with his family into a five-bedroom house in Wheaton, Ill., in May. “But we feel like prices aren’t going to go back down. We’re confident. So why not?”

When the landlord on their Chicago apartment told them he was selling it, Henschel and his wife decided it was time to buy. The home they bought for nearly $450,000 could have fetched more than $570,000 six years ago, according to housing website Zillow.com.

On a rainy Saturday this month in long-struggling Riverside, Calif., 12 families visited a three-bedroom house priced at $199,999. Ten others stopped by in the first hour of the next day’s open house. By the end of the weekend, two buyers had made offers.

“We’re seeing more buyer activity this spring than we’ve seen in probably four years,” said Liane Thomas, the broker who was showing the house.

Prices in the area could rise in coming months because the supply of homes for sale in Riverside is down — from nearly 19,000 last year to 13,000 in February.

Many potential buyers are hunting for deals in places that were especially hurt by the housing bust. In Sarasota, Fla., which boasts wide sugar-sand beaches, condos are selling for an average of $325,000, compared with more than $550,000 at the height of the boom, said Marc Rasmussen, a broker.

Homes nearing foreclosure account for nearly half of all properties on the market, according to the Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse survey. That compares with 10 percent in healthy economies. Many are receiving multiple offers because their prices have plunged.

In Phoenix, a foreclosed home offered for $77,000 that had been vandalized received 21 offers last month at or near the asking price — roughly the price it sold for. The average time a home sits on the market in Phoenix has dropped from 114 days last year to 90 days, according to the Cromford Report, a data research group.

In suburban Washington, D.C., Rory Obletz and his wife have been saving to buy after renting for six years. Obletz, 27, failed in two previous bids for single-family homes. He’s hoping a third bid — about $10,000 above the asking price of $399,000 for a home in Silver Spring, Md. — will succeed this month.

“One home we went to, it was under contract by the time we walked out of the house,” Obletz said. “If you really want to get something, you don’t have a lot of time to think about it.”

It isn’t just bargain-hunting families seeking homes. Investors are increasingly buying single-family houses, fixing them up and re-selling them or converting them into rentals.

Investors are out-bidding many first-time buyers on cheaper homes in particular. Sales of homes between $100,000 and $250,000 have jumped nearly 19 percent over the past year. For homes between $250,000 and $500,000, sales are up 13 percent.

More expensive homes, from $500,000 to $750,000, whose sales tend to contribute the most to the U.S. economy, are up a smaller 6.7 percent.

For buyers seeking to move up to a bigger home or to relocate, the toughest challenge is often selling the home they’re in. According to CoreLogic, about 11 million homeowners are “underwater” — they owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth.

Yet for first-timers like Obletz, who have been saving and watching as homes have become more affordable, the time feels right.

“Rent is a little more expensive, and we have the money, so we might as well jump on it,” he says.

_

By ALEX VEIGA, AP Real Estate Writers.

Veiga reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press Writer Tamara Lush in Sarasota, Fla., contributed to this report.

Survey Shows Home Prices and Rent Rates Expected to Increase

We report on Fannie Mae’s Quarterly National Housing Survey every ninety days. Fannie Mae also does a monthly survey covering different aspects of the housing market.

Here are some record numbers we found interesting in Fannie Mae’s March report (emphasis added).

  • Thirty-three percent of respondents expect home prices to increase over the next 12 months, the highest level over the past 12 months.
  • The percentage of respondents who say it is a good time to buy rose to 73 percent,the highest level in over a year.
  • Forty-eight percent of respondents think that home rental prices will go up, the highest number recorded to date.
  • On average, respondents expect home rental prices to increase by 4.1 percent over the next 12 months, the highest number recorded to date.

Doug Duncan, chief economist of Fannie Mae, capped the report off by stating:

“Conditions are coming together to encourage people to want to buy homes. Americans’ rental price expectations for the next year continue to rise, reaching their record high level for our survey this month. With an increasing share of consumers expecting higher mortgage rates and home prices over the next 12 months, some may feel that renting is becoming more costly and that homeownership is a more compelling housing choice.”

This article is courtesy of our friends at Keeping Current Matters

The Survey Shows Americans Continue Aspiring For Homeownership

Quarterly National Housing Survey Shows that Americans of All Backgrounds Continue to Have Strong Aspirations to Own a Home

Attitudes About Homeownership as an Investment, Financial Constraints, and Mortgage Accessibility May Stand in the Way of Americans’ Purchase Decisions

Pete Bakel | 202-752-2034

WASHINGTON, DC – Fannie Mae’s (FNMA/OTC) latest quarterly National Housing Survey focuses on the state of homeownership aspirations among Americans across all demographic groups. The survey finds that despite the recent housing crisis, most Americans continue to believe that owning their home is preferable to renting it. The data also indicate that while financial constraints and employment concerns may be keeping potential homebuyers on the sidelines in the near term, future improvements in employment and personal finances, a pickup in interest rates in response to stronger economic growth, and stabilizing home prices may move Americans to act on their aspirations in coming years.

  • Across all education levels, Americans say owing makes more sense than renting.  This belief is held consistently across all demographic groups.
  • Nearly two-thirds of current renters say that they will buy a house at some point in the future.
  • Non-financial factors such as safety and quality of local schools continue to be the top reasons for buying a home across all income groups.
  • African-Americans and Hispanics are more likely to cite various benefits, such as buying a home as a way to build wealth, homeownership as a symbol of success, and civic benefits.

“In spite of the impact of the housing crisis on home values and homeownership rates across the country, Americans by and large still hope to become homeowners,” said Doug Duncan, vice president and chief economist of Fannie Mae. “Some may not be financially positioned to own a home in the near future, but Americans may begin to revisit that aspiration as employment and household balance sheets improve over the coming years.”

“A point of concern for the industry is that some consumers find the mortgage shopping process difficult to navigate,” Duncan continued. “If potential homeowners avoid the process because they believe it to be too complex, we will likely see a continued impact on homeownership rates.”

Overall, certain groups (renters, those with lower levels of education, people with lower incomes, African-Americans, and Hispanics) cite potential difficulties in getting a mortgage. Specifically, those renting today are most likely to cite poor credit, complexity of process, and bad economic times as major reasons not to buy a home.

  • Renters are consistently more likely than mortgage borrowers to think it would be difficult for them to get a home.
  • African-Americans and Hispanics are more likely to indicate that getting a mortgage is difficult, regardless of income level.
  • Groups with lower levels of education are more likely to say it would be difficult for them to get a mortgage than groups with higher levels of education.
  • Renters cite financial reasons as the major factors for not buying a home.
  • Hispanic and African-American renters are most likely to cite bad economic times and overall complexity of process as major reasons not to buy a home.
  • Lower income Americans also are consistently more likely to cite income and credit history as obstacles to getting a mortgage, and are less confident they are getting adequate home loan information.
  • Hispanics are less confident than other groups about receiving information they need to choose the right mortgage.

Moreover, attitudes about homeownership as an investment, financial constraints, and mortgage accessibility may mean that more Americans choose not to act on their aspiration for homeownership, thus potentially leading to lower homeownership rates.

  • The margin of Americans believing homeownership has the highest investment potential has declined over the past several years.
  • At the same time, the perceived safety of owning a home as an investment has trended downward, reaching a low of 63 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011.
  • In turn, groups with higher levels of education and higher incomes are more likely to think buying a home is a safe investment.

The fourth-quarter 2011 National Housing Survey focus on the state of homeownership aspiration is based on more than 3,000 interviews from October 3, 2011 to December 20, 2011 among homeowners and renters to assess their attitudes toward owning and renting a home, confidence in homeownership as an investment, the current state of their household finances, views on the U.S. housing finance system, and overall confidence in the economy. Data findings for this topic also are based on similar surveys conducted throughout 2011, 2010, and in December 2003. Interviews were conducted by Penn Schoen Berland, in coordination with Fannie Mae.

For more detailed findings from the survey, click here.

Fannie Mae exists to expand affordable housing and bring global capital to local communities in order to serve the U.S. housing market. Fannie Mae has a federal charter and operates in America’s secondary mortgage market to enhance the liquidity of the mortgage market by providing funds to mortgage bankers and other lenders so that they may lend to home buyers. Our job is to help those who house America. Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/FannieMae.

Mortgage Application Are Up: Here’s How to Select A Lender

I had an interesting conversation with a young professional the other day. He told me that he only had four more days to select his lender and that his dad’s business partner told him to call me.

He lived outside of our market so I wasn’t sure if he wanted me to do his loan or just help him find a lender so I simply asked him what criteria he was using to make his decision.

With no hesitation, he simply said rate and closing costs.

Ironically I had just finished reading an article where they estimated that over 70% of the time a borrower closed at a higher rate than initially quoted. When I asked him if he was aware of this he said YES.

Isn’t it odd that a majority of consumers select their lender based on data that they know to be erroneous over half the time?

Rate and closing costs are obviously a key component, but let’s be real. If you aren’t working with someone you can trust and someone who knows what they are doing, does it really matter what they quote you?

Marty Preston, Branch Manager of Benchmark Mortgage in Lexington, Kentucky, is a consistent Top Producer and one of the country’s premier mortgage lenders. Marty is also a nationally known speaker and a major force in the national mortgage banking scene.

How Home Builders Are Appealing to Multiple Generations

What are home builders thinking about? Multi-generational communities designed to meet the needs of Baby Boomers, Gen X and Gen Y families all living in close proximity.

MarketWatch recently showed how home builders are appealing to the various generational families in the market for a new home and how they are meeting all their different needs.

What are your thoughts on generational living? Can you foresee a time when you may have your parents living with you?