Feb
12
Please support Team Butterfly Kisses and www.BluePuzzlePiece.com on May 18, 2008 for the Walk Now For Autism 2008 - Chicago
www.walknowforautism.org/chicago/team/ButterflyKisses
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| title | comments | date |
|---|---|---|
| Walk Now For Autism - Chicago May 18, 2008 | 0 | Feb 12, 2008 |
| Current Bank Rates 2/11/08 | 0 | Feb 11, 2008 |
| EJ&E Purchase can affect Real Estate Property | 0 | Jan 17, 2008 |
| Real Estate Sky Won't Fall: Here's Why | 0 | Jun 08, 2007 |
Feb
12
Please support Team Butterfly Kisses and www.BluePuzzlePiece.com on May 18, 2008 for the Walk Now For Autism 2008 - Chicago
www.walknowforautism.org/chicago/team/ButterflyKisses
Click to Learn and Donate
Feb
11
Posted by under For Buyers, For Sellers, For Realty Professionals, General Information
| NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES |
| TODAY | +/- | LAST WEEK |
| 30 yr fixed mtg | 5.55% | 5.47% | ||
| 15 yr fixed mtg | 5.04% | 4.95% | ||
| 5/1 ARM | 4.98% | 4.97% | ||
| 30 yr fixed jumbo mtg | 6.61% | 6.57% | ||
| 5/1 jumbo ARM | 5.58% | 5.62% |
source: bankrate.com
Jan
17
“Recently, the Canadian National Railroad (CN) submitted an application to the federal Surface Transportation Board (STB) seeking approval to purchase the Elgin, Joliet, and Eastern Railroad (EJ&E). The EJ&E line runs through Bartlett, intersecting West Bartlett and Stearns Road west of Illinois Route 59. By purchasing the EJ&E Railroad, CN will be able to bypass the City of Chicago, which will significantly increase the daily number of trains traveling through Bartlett. CN estimates that the average number of daily trains will increase from 5.5 to 23.5 each day.” - www.village.bartlett.il.us
Not only does this increase the amount of train traffic but one has to worry about its cargo. Hazardous Materials can be just one issue.
So how does this affect Real Estate Property. Well, it happens indirectly. 23.5 trains per day is an average at 1 per hour. Even in your sleep you’ll get a train. And these trains aren’t short either. Ever count how many “cars” are coupled together on a freight train. I’m a nerd so I count sometimes as many as 125 “cars” (I think that’s what they call them) Your wait time can be as long as 15 minutes! Who wants to live by that?!
For more information, you can email me at jray@palisochometeam.com and subject line it “EJ&E”
Jun
8
Posted by under Uncategorized
Taken from http://realestate.yahoo.com on 6.8.2007
Now I’m not a fan of taking information from other sites and posting them as if they were my own words. Media sure played a devastating role into the market. Sometimes I feel that people only like to read what they find shocking. Or what’s the point about news, right? Actually I find it humorous that last year the Chicago Tribune put as a headline, “IT’S A BUYERS MARKET!” I’m just glad my clients listened to me the year before that when I said that the market is starting to soften. Realtors, good Realtors, should be able to forecast the market about what’s gonna happen. If you want to know a site that works better than zillow.com check out www.MyHomeSnapshot.com
Well, here’s the article:
Real estate hasn’t made much of a case for itself lately and it’s not getting much help from any of the sub industries, such as builders and mortgage makers. Just in the past few weeks, so called experts from the mortgage industry, the building industry, and the resale real estate industry have all been quoted as saying that the sky is falling.
Nice job guys!
And while real estate’s reputation as the number one investment is on the ropes, the general media and other investment categories have stepped up their attacks on real estate value.
What do you need to know?
1. The Sky isn’t falling.
The real estate market always fluctuates.
Real estate sales prices are largely determined by the principal of substitution and reflect the uniqueness of the property, at a specific point in time, competing against only those other similar properties that happen to be available for sale, at that point in time.
If there are many similar homes available at that time, there will be downward pressure on sales prices. As an expanding population absorbs the excess, competition for a dwindling resource will cause selling prices to escalate.
2. Real estate is unique.
There’s a reason that homes and real estate aren’t traded like commodities on the Chicago Mercantile. They are too dissimilar. Even each tract home has a somewhat different location, orientation, lot dimension, proximity, and view.
3. There is no bubble.
The value of real estate isn’t driven by speculation; it’s driven by its utility. If the economy moves away, such as in the rust-belt, that utility may decline. If high paying jobs are headed into a region, the value of the scarcest of all commodities, real estate will rise.
Increasing development costs absolutely guarantee that new construction will cost more than existing properties are selling for.
This factor alone has caused many developers to mothball projects in the pipeline until shortages again push prices up.
4. Value is a complicated cocktail.
Assessed value, appraised value, market value, replacement value, and selling price all mean something different. When the media says that real estate values are falling, they really mean that the prices people paid for a small number of homes, last month, was less than what a different group of people paid for a different assortment the month before.
5. There is always a baseline of demand.
An increasing population must be housed. There is a natural ebb and flow, not a boom bust. At various times, demand outstrips supply; supply is increased until the surge recedes to baseline or below.
6. There is always a baseline of mortgage defaults.
There will always be unforeseen circumstances that will bring some homeowners into default. Even in good economic times. And even with good mortgage loans. In an appreciating market, they are able to sell in a short period of time. So, in most markets, foreclosure activity has been below the historic baseline.
Now, it could increase, spiking a little to reflect those who can no longer survive on increasing equity and then may level out at baseline again. When the next rapid appreciation cycle begins, and it almost assuredly will, rates may fall back below the newly adjusted baseline.
7. There is no risk.
Save the term risk for high stakes poker in Vegas.
Buying real estate isn’t inherently risky. But it isn’t a get-rich-quick scheme, either. It’s a formula for building long term wealth.
8. Real estate is a great way to build wealth.
You have to live somewhere. If you rent, you are making some or all of someone else’s mortgage payment. But even if you have to work two jobs and barely scrape by to make your own mortgage payment, you are building equity that over time will be quite substantial.
So, perhaps, don’t believe every “the sky if falling” report or article. Educate yourself on the market and happy wealth homeowning!
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