Showing posts with label queen creek az. Show all posts
Showing posts with label queen creek az. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Slight Drop in Rates Pushes Loan Demand Up

A drop in mortgage rates last week helped to push mortgage applications higher, the Mortgage Bankers Association reports. Total applications – for both refinancing and home purchases – increased 1.6 percent week-to-week on a seasonally adjusted basis for the week ending June 19. Overall volume is nearly 11 percent higher than one year ago.
Broken out, refinance applications increased 2 percent last week and are up about 4 percent from a year ago, MBA reports. Meanwhile, applications for home purchases—viewed as a strong indicator of future home buying activity—rose 1 percent from the previous week, and are 18 percent higher than they were a year ago.
"The 18 percent [annual] gain in purchase application volume is yet another sign of growing strength in the housing market following this week's stronger numbers on new and existing home sales," says Michael Fratantoni, MBA’s chief economist.
Mortgage rates offered a slight relief to borrowers last week. MBA reports the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage last week dropped to 4.19 percent; it was averaging 4.22 percent the week prior. But the drop was likely short-lived and there were signs of lenders moving rates higher Tuesday, CNBC reports.
Source: “Weekly Mortgage Applications Rise 1.6%,” CNBC.com (June 24, 2015)


Monday, May 18, 2015

12 Most Popular New-Home Amenities in 2015

Master bedroom walk-in-closets and a laundry rooms are the top features that builders are most likely to include in a new home this year, according to a survey of builders conducted by the National Association of Home Builders.
"Both features speak to improving organization and storage characteristics of new homes," according to NAHB on its Eye on Housing blog.
Greater energy efficiency amenities also were ranked more important, with low-E Windows coming in No. 3 on the most likely amenity list on new homes. Energy-Star rated appliances and windows as well as a programmable thermostat also rated high.
The following were ranked as the most likely features and amenities to be included on an average single-family home in 2015:
  1. Walk-in closet in master bedroom
  2. Laundry room
  3. Low-E windows
  4. Great room (kitchen-family room-living room)
  5. Energy-Star rated windows
  6. Ceiling height on the first floor of 9 feet or more
  7. 2-car garage
  8. Programmable thermostat
  9. Granite countertop in the kitchen
  10. Central island in the kitchen
  11. Bathroom linen closet
  12. Front porch
On the other hand, the features identified in the survey as the most likely to be included in new homes this year are:
  1. Outdoor kitchen (cooking, refrigerators and sinks)
  2. Laminate countertops in the kitchen
  3. Outdoor fireplace
  4. Sunroom
  5. Two-story family room
  6. Media room
  7. Two-story foyer
  8. Walking/jogging trails in the community
  9. Whirlpool in the master bathroom
  10.  Carpeting as the flooring on the main level
Source: "What Builders Are Building," National Association of Home Builders Eye on Housing Blog (May 13, 2015)


Thursday, April 23, 2015

Landlords Say They're Raising Prices Again

CEOs of the largest companies renting out single-family homes say they plan to raise rents up to 5.7 percent this year Investors are switching their focus from buying properties to optimizing the revenue from the thousands of properties they bought, taking advantage of the increased demand for rental homes, Bloomberg reports.
“In the 2015 rental season, we’re really seeing the ability to move rents,” David Singelyn, chief executive officer of American Homes 4 Rent—the largest publicly-traded single-family landlord, with about 35,000 homes—said at a recent conference in Miami Beach, Fla.
Large-scale investors—those who purchase at least 10 properties a year—have spent about $68 million snatching up 528,000 single-family rental homes since 2011, according to a report last month by Haendel St. Juste, a Morgan Stanley analyst. Now the CEOs of Silver Bay, Starwood Waypoint, American Residential Properties, and Blackstone Group all say they plan to raise rents this year.
“We are focusing aggressively on rent bumps,” Stephen Schmitz, American Residential Properties CEO, said during a panel discussion. “There’s a supply imbalance in some markets. The same thing that keeps occupancy high also drives rents.” Schmitz says they plan to bump up rental rates by 4 percent on renewals and up to 5.7 percent for new tenants.
Source: “U.S. Single-Family Landlords Are Raising Rents, CEOs Say,” Bloomberg (April 21, 2015)

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Price Jumps Are Leading to More House Flips

More investors are flipping properties again, a trend that started last year and is building momentum across the country, according to Auction.com's First Quarter 2015 Real Estate Investor Activity Report.
Investors lately are showing more interest in purchasing a home to flip than renting it out. In fact there was a 6.5 percent quarter-over-quarter increase in favor of flipping in the first quarter of 2015.
"It seems clear that the unusually low inventory of homes for sale has led to higher home prices, which makes it challenging for investors to rent homes out at a rate that’s profitable, and still affordable for tenants," says Rick Sharga, Auction.com's executive vice president. "So in states like California, Washington, Nevada, and Arizona a large number of investors have decided that the best opportunity today is to meet the demand of prospective home owners by buying, fixing, and re-selling investment properties."
Survey respondents indicated a preference toward flipping over a rent-to-hold strategy in every state Auction.com conducts live auction events. The West and Midwest had the largest margins of investors favoring flipping over renting. The five states that had some of the largest numbers of investors in favor of flipping over renting were Nevada, California, Washington, Idaho, and North Carolina.
However, the preference depends on investor profile, Auction.com’s survey found. Survey respondents who said they were making a one-time purchase still tended to prefer a hold-to-rent strategy. On the other hand, survey respondents who identified themselves as full-time “real estate investors” and those who work on behalf of another investor showed a preference toward flipping.
Source: Auction.com