Opinion

Oct

8
2009

Real estate's October report card

John Burns

While both the media and stock investors believe that housing has bottomed, they are unaware of the massive supply of homes that are already in the foreclosure process that will certainly drive home prices down even further when they are sold. We have been projecting a "W"-shaped recovery for some time, and we are becoming even more convinced that we are right. The shape of the second leg down is almost completely dependent on the level of government intervention that will take place.

For a number of reasons, banks have not been aggressively taking title to homes and selling them, which has resulted in very few distressed sales in comparison to the actual level of distress in the market. This delay in REO sales, along with historically low mortgage rates and an $8,000 tax credit, has helped to stabilize the housing market -- temporarily.  more...

Oct

6
2009

Stimulus in action

Re: 'Wheels of stimulus spinning in place' (Oct. 9)

Dear Editor:

Since taxpayers will ultimately pay the price for the bailouts paid out to the nation's companies that are responsible for this economic tragedy, wouldn't it make more sense for them to repay something they actually receive in return?  more...

Oct

2
2009

CO2 solutions: cars, not density

A new report by the National Academy of Sciences says there's no evidence that increasing housing density would significantly reduce CO2, reports the Technology Review.

"Urban planners hoping to help mitigate CO2 emissions by increasing housing density would do better to focus on fuel-efficiency improvements to vehicles, investments in renewable energy, and cap and trade legislation now being voted on in Congress, according to the study, released Tuesday."  more...

Sep

30
2009

Credit history is only part of the story

Re: 'Short sales, mods give investors grief' (Sept. 25)

Dear Editor:

I am going through a short sale on my personal residence. The biggest concern I have is removing the debt and stopping the financial bleeding. At this point the concerns over future credit rating or FICO scores are trivial.  more...

Sep

29
2009

WellcomeMat App: Post video on the go

WellcomeMat, the online real estate video site, has launched a new iPhone app.

Using the app you can now shoot off-the-cuff video walkthroughs of your listings on your iPhone 3GS and post them immediately to WellcomeMat, Twitter, YouTube and Facebook.  more...

Sep

28
2009

RESPA's missed opportunity

"The core problem (with the closing process) is that too many Americans sign a mountain of documents they don't understand and pay thousands for services that they've probably never heard of," said Brian Montgomery in 2001, when he was the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's assistant secretary for Housing and Federal Housing Commissioner.

He was commenting on an Urban Institute study that found significant disparities in closing costs even among borrowers with identical credit scores, loan terms and mortgages: "This report proves that the more informed you are, the less you pay. Our common goal should be to increase competition and transparency, and to help take the mystery out of buying a home."  more...

Sep

25
2009

Augmented reality real estate valuations

French company MeilleurAgents.com ("best agents") has released a mobile Android application that displays the value of every single building in Paris (value is displayed in price per square meter). Here’s a quick video demonstrating it in action:  more...

Here come the spammers

Re: 'Social media telemarketing' (Sept. 24)

Dear Editor:

I have to agree with the sentiment Ms. Boardman expresses. It seems like every new wonder is wonderful for awhile. That is, until it is used to inundate us with spam marketing. It is hard to stay one step ahead of the game.

I used to market on Craigslist but have since given up. It was so much of an effort to place a nice HTML marketing page for each of our listings and then delete and update them as permitted by Craigslist. It really didn't do much in the way of getting me any business -- it served as a means to show clients that we were actively marketing their listings.  more...

Sep

23
2009

New site to source REO deals

Brad Geisen, founder of Foreclosure.com, has launched a site to help U.S. banks offload property to agents and investors.

Quicksale.com will handle the marketing, processing, negotiating and closing of sales, and pay agents a commission when they facilitate a sale. According to Geisen, "It short-circuits the entire foreclosure process to ensure the best possible outcome for all parties involved."  more...