Friday, February 12, 2010

Thinking of purchasing your dream home? Good information for you.

4 reasons to sell now ORLANDO, Fla. – Feb. 9, 2010 – Selling a property in this tough market can seem like a challenge. Here are four factors that actually make this a good time to post a For-Sale sign:

• Sell low and buy low. Because all property values are down, the loss on the property a homeowner sells is really only a paper loss because the next property he buys also will be a bargain. If he buys smartly, when prices come back up in a few years, he’ll be in better shape.

• Downpayment help is widely available. While nothing-down loans have disappeared, it’s easy to find downpayment assistance for lower-income and first-time homebuyers. Programs vary all over the country, but one good way to find them is to search online for “downpayment assistance programs” and the name of your region.

• Your Uncle Sam has money to share. Besides the $8,000 first-time homebuyer tax credit and the $6,500 move-up credit, there are an array of energy tax credits that can make home improvements pay off in cash.

• Good help is available. Really talented real estate practitioners, contractors and designers are available and eager for business.

Fed’s plans bode well for homebuyers WASHINGTON – Feb. 11, 2010 – Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Wednesday he doesn’t expect the central bank to sell its huge trove of mortgage securities anytime soon, easing fears the move would raise borrowing costs for home buyers.

“I currently do not anticipate that the Federal Reserve will sell any of its security holdings in the near term, at least until after policy tightening has gotten underway and the economy is clearly in a sustainable recovery,” he said in testimony prepared for a congressional hearing Wednesday that was postponed due to a snowstorm.

But Bernanke provided his most detailed blueprint yet for draining the massive reserves of cash the Fed pumped into credit markets after the financial crisis.

That cooled the markets. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 20.26 points at 10,038. The Fed’s purchase of $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities has pushed down mortgage rates and stoked home sales.

But some fear the massive liquidity will spark inflation. Bernanke said the most drastic option – selling securities – isn’t imminent, and interest rates will stay low for “an extended period.” Conrad DeQuadros of RDQ Economics doesn’t expect the Fed to raise rates until next year. The Fed plans to end purchases of mortgage securities by March 31. Economists such as DeQuadros say that will lead to modestly higher mortgage rates.

Bernanke reiterated that the Fed has other tools to drain reserves from credit markets to stave off inflation. It could boost the interest rate it pays banks to keep excess cash at the Fed, and offer a “term deposit” that would pay an even higher rate for a bank to park cash for a longer period. Both would discourage lending. The Fed also could sell its securities with an agreement to buy them back in the future. Such reverse repurchase agreements, or “reverse repos,” would temporarily siphon cash from markets.

Bernanke said under a possible scenario, the Fed would use various tools to remove small amounts of cash from credit markets, then increase the interest rate it pays on bank reserves to reclaim larger amounts. But if cash must be withdrawn rapidly, it would also offer term deposits and conduct reverse repos.

Bernanke said the Fed plans soon to raise the discount rate it charges banks for emergency loans, a rate it lowered amid the financial crisis. Economists say that does not herald higher interest rates for consumers.

“It’s consistent with the Fed saying … the crisis is past us,” says James O’Sullivan, chief economist of MF Global.

Please let me know what type of property your thinking of, where in the Keys you'd like to be and your price range and I will work to find just the right property for you.

Rob Skeel , Realtor- e-Pro - Cell --305-393-6300 Email--rob@robskeel.com
Century 21 Keysearch Realty--877-660-4637
Web Site-- www.RobSkeel.com

YOUR FLORIDA KEYS REAL ESTATE CONNECTION

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Real Estate Information regarding Fannie Mae & Future Interest rates

Fannie to offer closing cost aid on foreclosures WASHINGTON – Feb. 1, 2010 – Fannie Mae, the largest provider of residential home funding in the United States, announced on Friday that it would start to pay closing costs for buyers of foreclosed homes in its inventory. Buyers of qualified properties will get up to 3.5 percent in closing costs or an equivalent amount for the purchase of new appliances.

Fannie wants to clear out the nearly 50,000 properties it has in inventory – listed on HomePath.com, the Web site created by Fannie Mae last year to sell the growing number of foreclosed homes. The offer is available to any owner-occupant who closes on the purchase of a property listed on HomePath.com before May 1, 2010. Applicable properties can be found on HomePath.com, along with property descriptions, photographs, community and school information, and more.

In addition, some Fannie Mae-owned properties are eligible for special HomePath Mortgage and HomePath Renovation Mortgage financing, which offers qualified homebuyers the ability to purchase with as little as 3 percent down.


© 2010 Florida Realtors®

It’s not if interest rates will rise but when COLLEGE STATION, Texas – Feb. 1, 2010 – According to Dr. Mark Dotzour, chief economist for the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University, mortgage interest rates are low right now but don’t expect that to last. When the government quits buying mortgage-backed securities, rates will head up and away.

Dotzour says that mortgage rates were low at the end of 2009 because “the global consensus among bondholders appeared to be that inflation will remain low in the United States for an extended period. This caused the ten-year U.S. Treasury rate to fall to between 3.2 and 3.6 percent for much of the second half of 2009.”

With extraordinary levels of federal deficit spending, Dotzour says it is unlikely that the low-inflation scenario will be popular when the economy starts to rebound. Consumers should expect mortgage rates to rise when signs of improvement appear.

A second factor contributing to the low mortgage rates is the Federal Reserve Bank’s unprecedented purchase of nearly all the mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2009, he adds. Totaling more than $1 trillion for the year, this program has been extended through the end of March 2010.

“The Fed has never done this before in its history,” says Dotzour. “They are doing this to stimulate the economy by keeping mortgage rates as low as possible. When the Fed stops buying these securities from Fannie and Freddie, mortgage rates are likely to increase, and possibly quite abruptly.”

How far will rates go up when the Fed terminates its buying program? Dotzour says that question is difficult to answer precisely because this has never been done before; but many experts think that rates could move up one-half to 1 percent.

“The combination of extraordinarily low mortgage rates and current price levels are making homes extremely affordable to American families. In fact, national and Texas housing affordability indices indicate that homes are more affordable than ever. But this will not last. When the economy recovers and the Fed stops purchasing mortgages, rates will rise.”

© 2010 Florida Realtors®

YOUR FLORIDA KEYS REAL ESTATE CONNECTION

Rob Skeel , Realtor- e-Pro - Cell --305-393-6300 Email--rob@robskeel.com
Century 21 Keysearch Realty--877-660-4637
Web Site-- www.RobSkeel.com