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Affordable Housing Plan Implemented by Mayor

Jul 2, 2012 3:06:40 PM Posted By Aon  

What does the new housing marketplace plan mean for the New York City market?

While national pricing trends have favored buying over renting, renting is still more affordable in New York City, its surrounding suburbs and Northeastern NJ. The median property tax for New York is the second highest in the country and asking prices are almost 24 percent higher in certain counties than a typical household gross income

Affordability has been a key factor for all those searching for either a house or an apartment in our current housing market.There has been talk of a “recovery” in the housing market, but some are hesitant to call it that just yet. Improving numbers every year give hope for a full recovery.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg

New York City’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg has taken an initiative to preserve affordable housing. His new Housing Marketplace Plan is essentially a 10 year program that is targeted to preserve housing rather than create it. By 2014, his program will have preserved 165,000 units of affordable housing by preserving 13,500 a year.  The preservation has and will continue to create more low-income units. This may be very important as immigrants will become the key to preserving U.S. housing health in the future. According to the director of research at the University of Southern California’s Lusk Center for Real Estate, Gary Painter, the rising average age of U.S. immigrants will aid in the long term recovery of the housing market. Based on historic models, immigrant communities don’t share households for long causing the demand for housing to rise. Mayor Bloomberg’s attempt to preserve affordable housing in the New York City area may encourage and stimulate the housing market. 





Citation: 
The Real Deal, "Renting remains cheaper than owning in NYC suburbs, too", July 3, 2012, Retrieved from http://therealdeal.com/blog/2012/06/26/renting-remains-cheaper-than-owning-in-nyc-suburbs-too/
The Real Deal, "Is the national housing recovery finally on solid footing?", July 3, 2012, Retrieved from http://therealdeal.com/blog/2012/06/28/is-the-national-housing-recovery-finally-on-solid-footing/
The Real Deal, "City likely to meet New Housing Marketplace Plan objective, says study", July 3, 2012, Retrieved from http://therealdeal.com/blog/2012/06/29/city-likely-to-meet-new-housing-marketplace-plan-objective-says-study/
The Real Deal, "Immigrants are key to long-term U.S. housing health, researcher says", July 3, 2012, Retrieved from http://therealdeal.com/blog/2012/06/27/immigrants-are-key-to-long-term-u-s-housing-health/








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Home Value Survey Sees Sharp Rise in Realtor Optimism

Mar 26, 2012 7:49:14 AM Posted By Aon  

With signs that a real estate recovery may be kicking into gear, a new survey shows a sharp increase in optimism among real estate professionals about the direction of home values.

A survey conducted by home valuation website HomeGain found that the number of real estate professionals who expect home values to increase has more than doubled over just one quarter. Thirty-seven percent of respondents surveyed so far in 2012 said they anticipate that home values will rise in the next six months, up from 15 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011.

"The trend has been stay the same or decrease. And here it flipped for the first time," HomeGain General Manager Louis Cammarosano told AOL Real Estate. He added that since HomeGain began administering the survey in the second quarter of 2009, the percentage of respondents who have expressed a bullish outlook on the market has never risen above 25 percent, and for much of the time, has sputtered around 15 percent.

The spike in optimism about home values follows recent reports that corroborate the view that the housing market is stabilizing. Home sales are trending upward and homebuilders are reportedly more optimistic than they've been in many years. Home prices continue to fall, but a number of industry observers say that price direction isn't necessarily the most important bellwether of a recovery.

Budge Huskey, president and chief operating officer of Coldwell Banker Real Estate, says he sees confidence among real estate agents that he hasn't observed since the housing meltdown. "What is consistently being represented out there today is that there is a sense of optimism in the real estate business that has not been seen in the last five to six years," he told AOL Real Estate.

While cautioning that real estate agents "tend to always be optimists," Huskey stressed that "this time it's based on what we believe to be some clear trends."



Prominent among the hopeful signs, Huskey says, is the state of the housing inventory, which had fallen to 2.3 million homes, or approximately a six-month supply of for-sale homes, as of January. That's the lowest level of inventory since March 2005, according to the National Association of Realtors, which released the statistic.

Meanwhile, total home sales have risen by 13 percent in the last six months, Capital Economics says. And while construction of new homes, dropped marginally in February, they still were at the second-highest level since October 2008, the National Association of Homebuilders says.

A last sign, much ballyhooed by industry optimists, is the state of homebuilders' confidence: The National Association of Home Builders sentiment index reached 28 in February and remained at that level in March. Not since 2007 have homebuilders expressed such confidence in the housing industry.

Despite sprouting green shoots in the market, home prices continue to slide, and even when they do eventually trend upward, many economists say, the increase will be gradual. That fact has led some industry observers to call for a rethinking of what actually constitutes a housing recovery, and to avoid treating price movement as the all-important indicator of a recovery.

Capital Economics, for instance, recently stated that even though prices declined last year (around 4 percent according to various estimates) and mortgage rates are finally ticking up, theeconomic analysis firm still believes that the real estate market is making inroads.

But CoreLogic senior economist Sam Khater advises against buying too much into the hype. "I would be cautious about folks getting too optimistic," he says.

The 1.6 million homes that are in a state of foreclosure are about to hit the market at a faster pace in the wake of an agreement reached between the government and major mortgage servicers over acceptable foreclosure practices, Khater says. That'll drive down prices, he says, as banks begin to push through foreclosures that they previously halted during negotiations of the $25 billion settlement reached last month.

"There's going to be a really long tail to this," he cautions. Still, Khater says that rising sales and the fact that fewer homes are flowing into the "shadow inventory" -- homes in a state of foreclosure -- are positive signs for the real estate market.

Huskey says the next healthy housing era will be a more "traditional market" that will stand in stark contrast to what he calls the "steroid years," when prices rose at an unsustainable pace.

As CNNMoney recently put it, "If you're waiting for home prices to go up, then you're missing signs the troubled housing market has finally turned around."
Real estate professionals also stress that a housing recovery should not be judged from a birds-eye view, since market conditions vary dramatically from state-to-state and city-to-city. In states walloped by the real estate market collapse, real estate agents are significantly more optimistic that home prices will rise in the next six months.

Eighty percent of Arizona real estate agents and homeowners, 75 percent of Nevada agents and homeowners and 51 percent of Florida agents and homeowners told HomeGain that they believe home values will rise in the next six months. The optimism in Florida dovetails with dramatic price gains recently reported by Realtor.com. The online marketplace reports that out of the 10 metropolitan areas that saw the highest price increases in their database in February of 2011, seven were in Florida. Miami median home prices increased by 26.19 percent, the listing service says.

Meanwhile, in states that weathered the housing crisis relatively well, a much higher percentage of real estate agents and homeowners believe that prices will drop. In Connecticut, 60 percent of agents surveyed said that they thought prices would continue to fall.

Follow Teke Wiggin on Twitter (@tkwiggin), follow @AOLRealEstate, or connect with AOL Real Estate on Facebook.








































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FREE SEMINAR MARCH 24TH!!

Mar 20, 2012 12:04:22 PM Posted By Aon  

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