Posts Tagged ‘new homes’

New Homes vs. REOs

During a recent conversation with one of our top producing agents at Elite Properties, Mike Keleshian, he mentioned something that I thought would be worth mentioning on the blog. He said that new homes are lately very possibly beating bank-owned homes as better bargains for home buyers and they are definitely options a home buyer should keep in mind when shopping in this market.

Really?

When one thinks of great bargains in this current real estate market, we tend to think of mainly bank owned homes. While it is true that prices have fallen overall because of the number of foreclosures in the market brought about by the number of bad loans out there, it is also important to remember that prices have fallen for all the homes.

While banks usually price their inventory at rock bottom prices to get rid of it, other homes in the neighborhood are also affected. Their prices have also fallen. (As you probably already know, prices are based on comparable sales of nearby homes. If all the homes in the area are foreclosures and their prices are depressed, the prices of the subject properties fall as well.) So it’s not just the foreclosures that are underpriced – brand spanking new homes have also lost value and are now cheaper than they used to be.

Can a Realtor® Show me New Homes?

Absolutely. In fact, one of the biggest changes that has occurred because of the real estate slowdown is that new homes are now featured regularly in the Metrolist MLS that all Realtors® in the area use. In the past, Realtors® were not welcome in new home subdivisions – and if you can remember the time – home buyers were picked by lotteries and long waiting lists.

Today, the situation is completely different. Home buyers have huge incentives to buy these new homes, whether it be free upgrades or better financing. Some homebuilders are also throwing in luxury vacations and so forth to entice home buyers. Of course, while you’re not really considering a luxury cruise as soon as you buy a new home it is important to know that the home buyers now hold the cards.

What about the Financing Aspects?

If you’re a first time homebuyer in this market, the world is your oyster! Besides the tax credit to first time home buyers, new home builders are now giving you incentives in terms of financing your home purchase. These incentives include a lower interest rate (i.e. lower than what you could get from the bank or any mortgage broker – they discount a point or so) if you use their preferred lender, various upgrades like granite counter tops, landscaping and / or custom paints and so on. Sometimes, builders will even offer to pay a year or two of your mortgage payment.

To compare this with a bank-owned home is to see the advantages of buying a new home right away. Bank owned homes typically need you to jump through their hoops – get pre-approved with their own lender, shorten your timelines to get a loan and various other financing issues. Why not look at new homes and take advantage of the incentives offered to you?

What are the Other Advantages?

I remember attending an appraisal class once and although the emphasis was on how to use comps for Realtors® the appraiser discussing details said something pretty unequivocally – Never compare a new home to a resale home. Why? Simply because it’s a new home!

But besides the fact that some people prefer homes where no one else has ever lived, the fact remains that a new home is something of a novelty for which people will pay a premium. Just from the practical side of things as well it has suffered less wear and tear and less depreciation than a resale home and usually much less than a home that has been foreclosed on someone for non-payment. (Of course, if there were no finances available for the mortgage payment, we can assume there is deferred maintenance on the home.)

It is up to the individual home buyer to decide whether or not he or she prefers a new home subdivision to a resale home, but it is however a choice that should not be ignored if you’re in the market for a home today. There is a host of choices out there and it’s a good idea to at least check each one out before making a decision!

Ask the Realtor – When Are Listings Updated

A reader recently emailed and asked: “Hi, I was wondering if your web page ‘New Houses In Sacramento’ is up to date since I saw them pretty much the same for more than a month.”

OK, busted.  Actually those of you who’ve been reading the blog probably know the answer to this question because periodically I talk about it, but there are actually two sources of listings on this web site.  If you go to the search page, you’re going to have access to listings that are updated once each day, so it’s almost as current as what we Realtors have access to in the MLS.

If you look at some of the other pages where we just have page after page of listings, such as the new homes pages, the condo pages, or the foreclosure pages, you’re looking at listings that are also from the Metrolist MLS, but that are updated manually, so they sometimes get a bit stale.

One thing I would take issue with this reader on length of time involved in this particular case, which has “only” been two weeks.  Yes, I realize, in Internet dog-year time that’s “more than a month” — it’s practically an eternity. 

Time for me to do another round of updating, it looks like.

Sacramento Area Foreclosures, Short Sales, Condos, etc. etc.

We’ve updated our listings database.  It was getting pretty long in the tooth there.

Most people who are users of our web site(s) probably don’t know it, but many of our web sites including this one, our Roseville real estate site and our Elite Properties company site actually rely on two different databases of listings.  When you use our search page, for example, you’re using a listings database that’s our IDX company gets from our Metrolist database.  These listings are updated daily, so when you do a search, you’re looking at listings that are within twenty-four hours of being as current as the ones that we as Realtors® can look at..

In addition to the search tools that our IDX company provides, however, we also wanted to allow you to browse for certain types of listings.  One thing our IDX system doesn’t do, for example, is show you short sales and foreclosures.  Because we don’t have direct access to the database our IDX company uses, we’ve created a second database that we can use in various ways.

For example, our foreclosure search page lets you search for foreclosures and short sales, or browse them by county.  Similarly our new homes section let’s you see homes that have just been built that are listed in the MLS, and our condo pages contain links to condos grouped by price and county.

As we mentioned above, we’ve also used this database on some of our other sites.  Many clients find us through our the maps of listings by zip code that we maintain on our company site.  These maps include zip codes in El Dorado County, Placer County, and Sacramento County.  Within each zip code you can find active listings and get recent market data.  We publish similar data for Placer County only on our Roseville site.

Unlike our IDX system, which is updated automatically on a daily basis, these other resources are updated manually as time permits.

We realize that from a software perspective, that’s not the brightest way to do it.  But if you’ve ever tried to get someone from Metrolist to call you back about a data feed, you probably have a good idea that it’s not half-dumb from an organizational perspective.

The good news is, it’s up to date now.  So as my wife is fond of saying, “Get your red hot houses here!”

Enjoy.

Sacramento Real Estate Listings Updated

I’ve updated our site home lists, including the sections for:

Most of these sections are pretty much “browse only” as of now, but I plan to have a search tool in place for the foreclosures soon — probably some time this week.

A client once told me that it’d be nice to have such a thing for the new homes section as well, so I may tackle that this week as well.

Enjoy.

Listing Pages Improvements

Those of you who do real estate searches from the either our main search page or many of our other search pages have access to listings that are updated six times per week.

I’m not sure why it’s six and not seven.  Presumably it’s to give FTP a Sabbath.  The point is, it’s practically daily, so it’s about as up to date as you can get without calling a Realtor up and asking him.

In addition to the search pages, there are also a lot of pages where you can browse listings, such as our foreclosure pages, the condos pages, and the new homes pages.  These pages are driven by a separate database that we maintain, that we update once per week or so.  We’ve recently improved the import mechanism on these pages to fix a few issues, so we expect these pages to more closely match our MLS (Metrolist) as time goes along.

We just did an import as well, so we’re pretty current as of now.  Enjoy!