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Flat Fee MLS Brokers Put Pressure on Traditional Commissions

Posted by Justin in Advice, Amelia Island Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Bradenton Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Clearwater Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Cocoa Beach Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Daytona Beach Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Destin Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Englewood Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, FSBO, Flat Fee MLS, Florida MLS, Florida Real Estate, For Sale By Owner, Fort Lauderdale Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Fort Myers Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Fort Waldon Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Gainesville Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, How to Sell, Jacksonville Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Justin Shirley, Key Largo Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Key West Florida Flat Fee FSBO, Lake City Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Lake Placid Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, MLS, Melbourne Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Miami Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Multiple Listing Service, Naples Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, New Smyrna Beach Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Ocala Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Orlando Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Panama City Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Pensacola Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Realtor.com Listing, Sarasota Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Sarasota Real Estate, Sellers, Service, Shirley International Realty Inc., St. Augustine Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, St. Petersburg Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Tallahassee Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Tampa Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Venice Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO, Vero Beach Florida Flat Fee MLS FSBO

 
(When you Flat List with Shirley International Realty, anywhere in the State of Florida, we will also market your home across the top 20 Real Estate Web Search Portals on the Internet.. Our MLS Listing Service is Second to None, & Staged to Sell Your Home While Saving You Money..)

‘Freaky’ side of real estate economics
Flat-fee brokers may put pressure on traditional commissions
Friday, June 23, 2006

By Glenn Roberts Jr.
Inman News

SAN FRANCISCO — Traditional pricing for real estate services is bound to crumble, and flat-fee brokers will likely deliver the deathblow — at least according to Steven D. Levitt, co-author of “Freakonomics,” a book that takes an unconventional approach to economics.

Levitt, who spoke to attendees Thursday at the PCBC builders’ conference and trade show at San Francisco’s Moscone Center, also said that the real estate brokerage industry is in some ways its own worst enemy, as low barriers to entry lead to proportional surges in agent population during housing market booms.

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Flat Fee MLS Listings – Save Money While Selling Your Home

Posted by Justin in Advice, Bradenton Florida Real Estate, FSBO, Flat Fee MLS, Florida Real Estate, For Sale By Owner, How to Sell, Sarasota Real Estate, Sellers, Service, Shirley International Realty Inc.

 
(Shirley International Realty offers the most detailed & highest quality MLS Listings in the State of Florida. Ask how we can put you on MLS, without having to pay high listing commissions. Saving money, while selling your home is our goal in selling real estate..)

Commissions pressured beyond discounting
Savvy buyers, sellers tap new business models for more savings
By Susan Romero
Inman News Features
The competition for listings between so-called “traditional” realty brokerages and commission discounters kicks up a lot of dust, but when the air clears it’s apparent that cut-rate brokerages aren’t the only force putting downward pressure on realty commissions as a percentage of the home sales price.

Fee-for-service brokerages, Internet-savvy buyers, skyrocketing home prices, a dearth of listings in some markets and some sellers’ notion that they can sell their home without paying an agent are among the other factors bearing down on conventional realty pricing structures.

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Foreclosure Aid Focuses on Helping Four States..

Posted by Justin in Advice, Bradenton Florida Real Estate, Buyers, Florida Real Estate, Sarasota Real Estate, Sellers, Shirley International Realty Inc.

 
(
Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve Chairman, told that much more has to be done by the government to fight with the problem of foreclosure. Foreclosure rates remain too high, & more money may be needed for aid.. Statistically, 15-20% of homeowners are suffering from some form of Mortgage problem. 30-year fixed mortgage rates may reach lows of 4.5% sooner, than later..)  

Foreclosure aid likely to help four states most

WASHINGTON – Jan. 20, 2009 – The nation’s foreclosure crisis is centered in four states. But taxpayers across the country will feel the pain of bailing them out.

California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona generated about half of all foreclosure filings nationwide last year, according to RealtyTrac Inc., even though residents in those states hold just a quarter of U.S. mortgages. Since mid-2007, skyrocketing foreclosures in those states have been magnifying the national rate.

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“Green” Home Features Grow in Demand

Posted by Justin in Bradenton Florida Real Estate, Buyers, FSBO, Florida Real Estate, Sarasota Real Estate, Service, Shirley International Realty Inc.

 
(Durability is a key tenet of a good green home plan. A green home plan will strive to use eco-friendly building materials and furnishings and will incorporate leftovers wherever possible. A green home design will make use of materials that are renewable and long lasting.. This is the future of real estate construction..) 

Green home features grow in demand

WASHINGTON – Jan. 20, 2009 – Today’s home buyers are asking for more green features as a means of lowering costs, becoming more environmentally friendly, and adopting a healthier lifestyle.

“Green features are becoming one of the top three priorities, after price and location,” says Joseph Himali, Washington’s Greater Capital Area Association of Realtors Board of Directors president.

Green features focus on energy efficiency, water efficiency, resource efficiency and indoor air quality and include such elements as Energy Star appliances, low-flow shower heads, carpets and paint with low volatile organic compounds, and building materials procured from local suppliers.

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Federal Bailout Not Fixing Bank “Woes”

Posted by Justin in Advice, Bradenton Florida Real Estate, FSBO, Florida Real Estate, For Sale By Owner, Sarasota Real Estate, Sellers, Shirley International Realty Inc.

 
(President O’Bama takes office today with sights on aiding the US Economy.. The release of the second $350 Billion in Bailout Money is expected to have positive effects on foreclosure rates & mortgage debts. Banks are pitching a strong need for this support..) 

WASHINGTON (AP) – Jan. 20, 2009 – President-elect Barack Obama is taking office at a time the escalating troubles facing major banks around the world couldn’t be clearer.

On Monday, the British government swooped in to boost its stake in troubled Royal Bank of Scotland to almost 70 percent and offered to insure banks against large-scale losses on risky assets in exchange for binding agreements to lend out more money.

It was the second major British bank bailout in three months. Shares of ailing RBS lost two-thirds of their value in Monday’s trading. Shares of other European banks plunged as investors worried that one or more banks could be nationalized after RBS said last year’s losses could reach $41.3 billion – the biggest ever for a British corporation.

In the United States, banks and financial markets were closed Monday for the federal holiday honoring slain civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Officials on both sides of the Atlantic have failed to contain the most severe credit crisis in decades, which has ravaged banks in places as diverse as Ireland, Iceland and Switzerland, along with the U.S. and Britain. 

Now top officials in London, Washington and Brussels are scrambling to figure out how to stop the bleeding. They are trying to find the best way to prod banks into lending out more money, struggling for a solution 18 months after the most severe credit crisis in decades sent investors reeling.

U.S. officials are talking about establishing a new government-backed bank to remove bad loans and other toxic assets from banks’ balance sheets, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said last week. In theory, with those assets gone, banks would be freer to make more loans.

Still, figuring out a successful strategy for how to unclog the credit markets is a vexing challenge for Obama when he takes office. Obama’s top economic adviser, Larry Summers, said on CBS television Sunday that under the new administration, “the focus isn’t going to be on the needs of banks. It’s going to be on the needs of the economy for credit.”

Obama will have a “strong message for the bankers,” adviser David Axelrod said Sunday on ABC television. “We want to see credit flowing again. We don’t want them to sit on any money that they get from taxpayers.”

While the British government moves closer to a full takeover of that country’s banking system, Americans are more leery of such intervention, and that’s likely to continue even with Democrats in charge of the White House and Congress, analysts say.

“We’re much less comfortable with nationalization,” said Simon Johnson, former chief economist to the International Monetary Fund and a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management. “We’re generally more skeptical of the ability to run things better than the private sector.”

The U.S. government has so far provided $192.3 billion to 257 large and small financial institutions in 42 states and Puerto Rico in a financial bailout program that has proven extremely unpopular with the public. Now the government is facing calls to use its power to fire executives at banks that receive government aid.

“What you really need is … a change of management in these banks,” Johnson said. “The banks have been run by incompetent bunglers.”

There is a precedent for the idea of a government-run “bad bank” that would take toxic assets off the books of banks and thus make it easier for them to loan new money: the Resolution Trust Corp., created in 1989 to dispose the assets of nearly a thousand failed savings and loans.

One key question, though, is how much the new bank would pay for distressed assets. Buying assets at too high a price would reward them for taking too much risk. Buying them at too low a price would mean banks will have less money to lend out in the future, said Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Monument Securities in London.

Plus, with the government acquiring billions in potentially bad loans, “it would leave the taxpayer fully exposed to any future losses,” Lewis said.

American officials are considering other ideas to cope with the credit crisis, which started in August 2007 and has proven far more severe than all but the most pessimistic analysts had expected. Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke offered a series of options, including guarantees under which the government would agree to absorb part of the future losses on portfolios of rotten assets, presumably in exchange for warrants or some other form of compensation.

However, some question whether the government should be pressing banks to lend more, calling the tightening of lending standards an inevitable reaction to a period in which they were far too loose.

“Banks are in the business of lending, but they’ve got to lend prudently,” said Bert Ely, a banking industry consultant in Alexandria, Virginia. With the economy contracting, many consumers are inclined to reduce their outstanding debt, Ely said, and don’t want to borrow.

The current U.S. rescue program has come under heavy criticism from lawmakers unhappy that the Bush administration provided billions of dollars to banks to shore up their finances, but did not impose enough restrictions to make sure they would increase their lending.

Many lawmakers are pushing the incoming Obama administration to devote more of the money to halting a tidal wave of mortgage foreclosures, and to impose more limits on the compensation of top executives working at the banks receiving the money. The incoming administration has pledged to revamp the rescue program to address objections from lawmakers.

Last week, new cracks appeared among the two largest U.S. banks.

Citigroup Inc. last Friday reported an $8.29 billion loss in the fourth quarter and announced it was splitting itself in two. Bank of America reported a $2.39 billion fourth-quarter loss, hours after ironing out a deal for a fresh $20 billion government lifeline to digest troubled brokerage Merrill Lynch.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press, Alan Zibel (AP Business Writer). Associated Press Writers Robert Barr and David Stringer contributed to this report from London. All rights reserved.

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Florida Commerical Real Estate – 2009 Predictions

Posted by Justin in Advice, Bradenton Florida Real Estate, Florida Real Estate, For Sale By Owner, Sarasota Real Estate, Shirley International Realty Inc.

 
(Commerical Real Estate has always showed to be a more steady market than the Residential niche.. There is less inventory available & more savvy consumers performing the transactions, creating a market than is less volatile & effected by economic downtowns.. However, in this economy, there will still be a shift of power between tenant and landlord.. Read on..)

NEW YORK – Jan. 5, 2009 – The balance of power between landlords and tenants will shift dramatically in 2009.

For landlords, this promises to be a year of intense competition, more bankrupt tenants, and tightfisted lenders. For renters, it looks like a time of abundant choices and tiny – if any – price increases.

From apartments to shopping malls, office towers to dockyard industrial space, the commercial real estate market will be marked by rising vacancy rates and weak to no rent growth. And the choke hold on credit could push many property owners that need to refinance into foreclosure.

Nearly 40 percent of real estate investors need to refinance part of their portfolios this year, according to more than 1,100 investors surveyed in October by Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services and National Real Estate Investor magazine. The investors also expect prices to decline 15 percent on average this year.

“It’s hard to be an optimist right now,” said Dan Fasulo, managing director of research firm Real Capital Analytics. “We’re at the point where there’s another potential systemic failure that the industry is trying to avoid.”

Real Capital identified more than 1,000 large commercial properties nationwide, representing $25.7 billion, that are already bank-owned or the landlord is in default. But there are another $80.9 billion, or more than 3,700, properties that could potentially fall into trouble this year, the firm estimates.

Last month, a commercial real estate trade group appealed to the Bush administration for a slice of the $700 billion bailout of the financial services industry. The Treasury Department has yet to make a decision whether to include commercial property loans.

If the government doesn’t come to the rescue, industry experts expect lenders to step up in aiding troubled property owners by offering maturity extensions or other workouts.

“Lenders don’t want to run malls,” said Victor Calanoog, research director at Reis Inc.

The crunch isn’t just affecting landlords that need to refinance. Acquisitions have all but disappeared following a bang-up 2007. Fasulo said just 50 large office properties traded hands nationwide in the month of November, the lowest level since the early 1990’s when the industry was in a severe recession.

Falling real estate prices will only make it harder for landlords to refinance. Owners with less than 30 percent equity in a property will have to pay higher interest rates – if they can get a loan at all.

Failed retailers like Linens ‘n Things and Mervyn’s have left many shopping mall owners with dark storefronts. Retail vacancy rates are forecast to climb to 11 percent this year, says Hessam Nadji, managing director at Marcus & Millichap. He also expects rents will decline between 4 and 6 percent as property owners contend with more tenant bankruptcies, store closures and fewer retailer expansions.

General Growth is the poster company of retail woes. Earlier in the decade, the company piled on debt to fund an aggressive acquisition program. Now, it’s on the hook and desperately needs to refinance to shore up its books. Many of its properties are so far still healthy, Fasulo points out, but General Growth’s chances of refinancing diminish as retail fundamentals soften.

Office properties won’t escape the recession unscathed either. Nadji expects office vacancies to rise to almost 18 percent by the end of the year, up from an estimated 15 percent at the end of 2008.

Some major financial centers, including Boston, New York, and Charlotte, N.C., will see much higher vacancies.

Already, the Manhattan office market is reeling from the financial carnage. In the last three months of 2008, nearly 2.4 million square feet of so-called “shadow space” or sublease space, came onto the market, according to real estate services firm FirstService Williams. Half of that came from the financial services industry.

Sublease space is often offered at below-market rents, which pressures other landlords to lower their rents. Nadji expects rental rates for office space to fall between 4 and 6 percent this year.

Industrial properties should fare a tad better than retail, but the recession is taking its toll on the manufacturing sector. Last month, manufacturing activity shrunk to its lowest level in 28 years. No industry – from bakeries to cigarette-makers – reported any gains in new orders, production, employment or prices.

Nadji expects the industrial vacancy rate to fall to almost 13 percent and rents to decline between 3 and 4 percent.

Compared to those ugly numbers, the apartment market looks quite attractive. The vacancy rate is expected to rise to roughly 8 percent by the end of the year and rents will be flat, Nadji said.

In fact, the dismal housing market is helping apartment owners. Foreclosures are driving many homeowners back into rental apartments. At the same time, plenty of renters who could afford to buy a home are waiting for housing prices to stabilize.

One sliver of hope for the industry is the lack of overbuilding during the last boom. High construction and labor costs kept a lid on rampant development, and, in many areas, homebuilders often outbid commercial developers for land.

But the welfare of commercial real estate trails the rest of the economy, so landlords might not get any relief for another two years.

“If the economy recovers late this year,” said Robert Bach, chief economist at Grubb and Ellis Co. “Our industry will still have a ways to go before it will recover.”

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved, J.W. Elphinstone (AP Real Estate Writer).

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Florida Mortgage Rates Fall to Record Low

Posted by Justin in Advice, Statistics


(Mortgage Rates are constantly changing.. They even consistently fluctuate from morning to afternoon..)

WASHINGTON – Jan. 5, 2009 – Rates on 30-year mortgages fell to a record low for the third straight week and borrowers took advantage of the drop, sending new applications soaring.

With the Federal Reserve on the verge of pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into the devastated U.S. housing market, mortgage rates have plunged to the lowest level since Freddie Mac started tracking the data in April 1971.

Low rates are a great opportunity for borrowers with solid credit and plenty of equity in their homes. But those in danger of foreclosure are still sidelined, and defaults are expected to keep rising in the coming months.

Freddie Mac reported Wednesday that average rates on 30-year fixed mortgages dropped to 5.1 percent this week, down from the previous record of 5.14 percent set last week. It was the ninth straight weekly drop. The survey was released a day early due to the New Year’s holiday.

Mortgage rates have plunged by about 1.3 percentage points since late October, Freddie Mac said. For a borrower taking out a $200,000 loan, that means a savings of more than $170 in monthly payments, according to Frank Nothaft, the mortgage finance company’s chief economist.

Meanwhile, mortgage applications last week remained at the highest level in more than five years, the Mortgage Bankers Association said.

The trade group’s weekly application index was essentially unchanged for the week ending Dec. 26. Applications surged earlier this month to the highest level since July 2003, when refinancing activity boomed at the peak of the housing market.

More than 80 percent of applications came from borrowers looking to refinance at more affordable rates, the trade group said.

Interest rates have plunged since the Federal Reserve pledged last month to buy up mortgage-backed securities in an effort to bolster the long-suffering housing market. The Fed, starting early next month, will buy up to $500 billion in securities guaranteed by the government-controlled home loan giants Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, a federal agency.

“It’s a huge number,” said Derek Chen, an analyst at Barclays Capital, who noted that mortgage rates are still high when compared with yields on long-term Treasury debt.

With the Fed and Treasury Department buying up a significant portion of the new mortgage securities issued by Fannie and Freddie next year, that gap, or spread, could narrow.

If that happens, mortgage rates could fall further, possibly as low as 4.5 percent, Chen said.

The average rate on a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage dropped to 4.83 percent, the lowest point since March 2004. That rate was 4.91 percent last week, Freddie Mac said.

Rates on five-year, adjustable-rate mortgages rose to 5.57 percent, compared with 5.49 percent last week. Rates on one-year, adjustable-rate mortgages fell to 4.85 percent, from 4.95 percent last week.

The rates do not include add-on fees known as points. The nationwide fee for 30-year, 15-year mortgages and five-year adjustable rate mortgages averaged 0.7 point last week, compared with 0.5 point for one-year adjustable-rate mortgages.

Meanwhile, home prices dropped by the sharpest annual rate on record in October and there are no signs the housing pain is over.

The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city housing index, released Tuesday, fell by a record 18 percent from October last year, the largest drop since its inception in 2000. The 10-city index tumbled 19.1 percent, its biggest decline in its 21-year history. Prices are at levels not seen since March 2004.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press, Alan Zibel (AP Real Estate Writer)

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