Home
Join Inman News!
  • Sign In
  • Shopping Cart
  • Home
  • News
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Community
  • Opinion
  • Columnists
  • Conferences
  • Store
  • About Us

News

  • Free Daily Headlines
  • RSS Feeds
  • Syndication
Home
Date
  • All
  • 2004
  • 2005
  • 2006
  • 2007
  • 2008
  • 2009
  • All
  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec

2 homes, 2 mortgages, 2 much?

By Bernice Ross, Friday, November 20, 2009.

Editor's note: This article incorrectly stated the typical depreciation schedule used by investors for a rental property. Under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System, generally the depreciation schedule is 27.5 years for a residential rental property placed into service after 1986.

DEAR BERNICE: My husband and I just relocated from Los Angeles to Arizona. I rented my condominium in Los Angeles and it's currently costing me about $500 per month over what the tenants are paying me. I bought it back in 2002 and still have equity in it, despite the downturn.

We found a really good deal on a house here in Arizona. The challenge is that it's really hard making the payments on both because my husband is still in school. He will be graduating in May and our income will go up then. I'm wondering if it would be smart to sell my condominium in Los Angeles to make it easier for us to make the house payments. --Liz W.  more...

Some rental investments don't pay off

By Steve Bergsman, Friday, November 20, 2009.
Flickr photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/stuartpilbrow/2942333106/">stuartpilbrow</a>.

Buying foreclosed, or otherwise inexpensive, residential units with the game plan of renting the property for as many years as it takes until real estate appreciation returns has proven to be a time-tested and generally successful investment strategy.

Unfortunately, it's not as easy as it appears and just because a residence, whether a condominium or a single-family residence, can be acquired cheaply, it doesn't mean that a home-rental scheme can be operationally profitable.  more...

PropertyPursuit.com gets new partners

By Inman News, Thursday, November 19, 2009.

A real estate tech company that specializes in agent and broker Web sites and lead management has expanded the reach of its PropertyPursuit.com real estate search portal through deals with Threewide Corp.'s ListHub and publisher Network Communications Inc.'s The Real Estate Book Web site.

First launched three years ago as a national property search site, Delta Media Group's PropertyPursuit.com features about 1.6 million for-sale listings and distributes consumer leads directly to agents and brokers. The site features online profiles for real estate professionals and customizable accounts that can include bios, logos and social networking tools, among other features.  more...

The online real estate 'arms race'

By Matt Carter, Thursday, November 19, 2009.
Flickr image by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/x-ray_delta_one/4081103049/in/photostream/">x-ray delta one</a>.

SAN DIEGO -- Call it the real estate Web portal arms race.

With consumers now expecting to see a comprehensive set of for-sale listings, agents, brokerages, multiple listing services and third-party aggregators are seeking to differentiate themselves from their competitors by pulling onto their Web sites anything and everything from the growing universe of information that might conceivably be connected with a home purchase.  more...

Don't follow me on Twitter

By Teresa Boardman, Thursday, November 19, 2009.
Flickr photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/amidei/3828091901/" target=blank>amidei</a>.

Following me on Twitter is a waste of time. I don't use Twitter the way experts recommend, and some days I am just too chatty. The best practice for using Twitter, according to most, is sharing information and having a "tribe." Many people want to have a lot of followers, but for me that isn't a goal.

There are those on Twitter who tweet links that lead to articles that I almost always read. The way I use Twitter is just wrong. It works for me but it probably won't work for you (unless you want to be just like me, which again is just wrong).  more...

Make real estate a design tool for life

By Tara-Nicholle Nelson, Thursday, November 19, 2009.
Flickr photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/gene1138/2300131257/" target=blank>Gene1138</a>.

Q: I bought my first home about five years ago. Since then, I bought a multifamily home and moved into it, renting out my first home, and then bought another house and that's where I live now. I got a great deal on this house, which is in one of the best neighborhoods in my area, because it needs so much work. Now, with the economy, I'm concerned that I'll never be able to do the needed repairs. It's too broken down to rent, and I couldn't cover my expenses on it, even if I were able to rent it out. In fact, I'm nervous that if we have a big earthquake, my foundation problems will cause major, irreparable damage to the house.

On a lark, I went to look at some new condos and lofts that are being rented downtown -- I loved them, and I could rent one for less than half of what I pay to live in my current home. I believe that real estate is a big part of building wealth, but I'm seriously thinking about selling this house and living in one of those rental apartments. What do you think?  more...

Nonrefundable rental deposits stir debate

By Janet Portman, Thursday, November 19, 2009.

Q: We listed our rental on craigslist, which listed key terms, including a provision that the pet and cleaning deposits were nonrefundable. A couple contacted us and visited the rental, and we agreed orally, with a handshake, to lease to them. It was clear to everyone that the deal was premised on the terms described in the craigslist ad.

Now our tenants are leaving, and they claim that the pet and cleaning deposits should be refundable. The ad is archived, it cannot be edited, and it plainly says they are not. If we do not return these deposits and our ex-tenants take us to court, will we win based on the clarity of the ad? --Charles and Angie G.  more...

Many REO buyers hit financing snag

By Tom Kelly, Thursday, November 19, 2009.

Remember when lenders were content to sell foreclosed homes to any qualified buyer? Their popular message was "we're in the lending business, not in the real estate business."

With the large number of REOs (real estate owned) overwhelming most mortgage lenders and driving many others out of business, it's curious that some are making stringent demands on how foreclosed homes are financed.

A few lenders are even requiring that they supply the financing for any foreclosed property in their portfolio.  more...

Get-out-of-lease-free card?

By Robert Griswold, Thursday, November 19, 2009.
Flickr image by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/imbrandon/2092991180/sizes/o/">holtsclawb</a>.

Q: I have been a tenant in a rental home for the last few years. A few months ago I signed a new 12-month lease but I just bought a new home and will be moving in next week. My lease doesn't expire for eight more months but I couldn't pass up this great opportunity to become a homeowner. Unfortunately, I can't afford to pay the rent and the new house payment. How can I break my lease?

A: In most residential leases, there are no provisions for the tenant to unilaterally break or terminate the lease because he or she purchased a home. A lease is a binding legal contract, and the landlord entered into this agreement with the understanding and expectation that you would stay for the duration of the lease. Often the landlord will even give you favorable terms such as a lower monthly rent based on this long-term lease. So to tell your landlord that you are moving next week and don't want to be responsible for the balance of the lease term is not likely to receive a positive response from your landlord.  more...

IPhone app stores house-tour info

By Inman News, Thursday, November 19, 2009.

A new iPhone application from developer a la mode lets agents take notes, voice memos and photos during home tours that reflect their clients' likes and dislikes about a property, which can be outputted as a PDF-formatted report.

The reports generated by a la mode's TourNarrator iPhone app frees clients from having to take their own notes during home tours, reducing the need for second showings and helping buyers make more confident decisions, the company said.  more...

A real underwater threat for homeowners

By Inman News, Thursday, November 19, 2009.

If there seems to be a rising tide of properties subject to flood zones, that is no illusion.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency, four years into a flood-map modernization process that wraps up in 2010, reports an increase in properties identified at risk of flooding, and this upsurge presents landowners with new decisions.

In communities that voluntarily participate in floodplain management, relatively affordable flood insurance is available through the National Flood Insurance Program.  more...

Fannie: 'Recovery is here'

By Inman News, Thursday, November 19, 2009.

The deepest and longest recession since the Great Depression appears to be over, Fannie Mae economists say, projecting sales of new and existing homes will jump 11 percent next year and that national home prices will stabilize, remaining essentially flat.

The mortgage guarantor's monthly housing forecast projects 5.96 million home sales in 2010, with sales of existing homes growing by 10 percent, to 5.46 million. New-home sales are expected to rebound even more sharply in 2010, growing by 24 percent to 498,000.  more...

Construction plan falls outside the 'zone'

By Tara-Nicholle Nelson, Wednesday, November 18, 2009.

In the case Cimino v. Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of Woodbridge, Christine Cimino purchased a 5-acre parcel of undeveloped land in an area where a lot was required to have 2 acres of contiguous non-wetland a specific setback requirement in order to get a building permit.

More than 20 years prior to Cimino's purchase of the property, a prior owner had applied on three separate occasions for the parcel to be zoned a buildable lot. While the surrounding land was subdivided into buildable lots, the inland wetlands agency denied each of the prior owner's applications to approve this particular parcel. The rest of the parcels became numbered lots, while the remaining parcel was labeled "Remaining Land of ____, Trustee." It was transferred along with a neighboring lot until purchased from the owner of the neighboring lot by Cimino.  more...

Appraisal rules draw more fire

By Matt Carter, Wednesday, November 18, 2009.

SAN DIEGO -- It's a message Realtors have heard before: Market conditions, not new rules for appraisals on loans slated for purchase or guarantee by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, are most often to blame when valuations come in at less than the agreed-upon sales price.

But after making that case at the National Association of Realtors' annual conference in San Diego, a panel of officials with Fannie, Freddie and their federal regulator were faced with a procession of frustrated agents and brokers who said the rules have had, and continue to have, unintended and serious consequences for their business.

For the most part, those who are responsible for implementing the code -- which could remain in place for almost a year -- stuck to their position that falling home prices, not the code, are largely to blame for problems Realtors perceive with the appraisal process.  more...

Housing starts, permits dip in October

By Inman News, Wednesday, November 18, 2009.

The rate of U.S. housing starts fell an estimated 30.7 percent year-over-year in October, with building-permit authorizations down about 24.3 percent, the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development reported today.

The seasonally adjusted annual rate of starts fell to 529,000 in October, which is about 10.6 percent below the September estimate -- the rate is a projection of the monthly total over a 12-month period, adjusted for typical seasonal fluctuations.  more...

« first‹ previous123456789…next ›last »

 

 
  • ©2009 Inman News
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Syndication
  • Membership
  • Contact Us
  • Press Release Submission
  • Submit a Tip
  • Privacy
  • Legal