Saturday, August 4, 2012

FAST FACTS about the world’s wealthy: The wealthy are back and ready to buy real estate

FAST FACTS about the world’s wealthy: The wealthy are back and ready to buy real estate

If you are seeing an increase in luxury buyers in your market, there are at least two good reasons why.
  1. The number of worldwide wealthy has recovered from the 2008 downturn, when the number of HNWIs plummeted from 10.1 million to 8.6 million in just one year. The current HNWI number has risen to a record 11 million.

    Total wealth controlled by wealthy households has also increased since a five year low point in 2008, rising from $32.8 million to $42.0.

    These statistics from The Capgemini/RBC World Wealth Report for 2012, offer good news for luxury real estate since demand for homes depends heavily upon the number of households who can afford them.

  2. The post-recession affluent are also in a home shopping mood. Research done last year by Barclay's found that 57% of HNWIs want to increase their residential property portfolios in 2012. This buying attitude is most likely a result of lifestyle desires as well as the view that residential real estate is an investment opportunity and smart portfolio play.

    Here’s what one billionaire has to say about buying luxury property now.

    “Trophy (property) assets are probably the most resilient and successful investment options at the moment, and will be for the foreseeable future.”
    --John Caudwell, Billionaire , 2012

FAST FACTS about the world’s wealthy: Where in the world will you find the wealthy?

HNWIs

While three countries – the U.S., Japan and Germany – account for more than 53% of the world’s population of High Net Worth Individuals (HNWI), you will find wealthy households all across the globe.
Look at the distribution by region, and the Asia-Pacific region is home to more HNWI’s than any other region with 3.37 million HNWI. North America is close behind with 3.35 million HNWIs. Europe boasts 3.17 million HNWIs, largely due to increases in Russia, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. The comparable statistic for the Middle East is 2.7 million.


Where are the world’s second home buyers most likely to come from?
Obviously this will differ based on a specific market. For instance, Orlando might get British and German second home buyers, Miami may have many from Latin America, Vancouver may attract Chinese, while Phoenix might attract Canadians. However in sheer numbers, buyers from the following countries top the list of purchasers worldwide:
  • Russia
  • Hong Kong
  • Britain
  • France
  • Switzerland
  • U.S.A.
  • Germany
  • China
  • Singapore
  • Canada

Saturday, July 28, 2012

4 Tips to Determine How Much Mortgage You Can Afford

By knowing how much mortgage you can handle, you can ensure that home ownership will fit in your budget.

Homeownership should make you feel safe and secure, and that includes financially. Be sure you can afford your home by calculating how much of a mortgage you can safely fit into your budget.

Instead of just taking out the biggest mortgage a lender qualifies you to borrow, consider how much you want to pay each month for housing based on your financial and personal goals.

Think ahead to major life events and consider how those might influence your budget. Do you want to return to school for an advanced degree? Will a new child add day care to your monthly expenses? Does a relative plan to eventually live with you and contribute to the mortgage?

Still not sure how much you can afford? You can use the same formulas that most lenders use, or try another of these traditional methods for estimating the amount of mortgage you can afford.

1. The general rule of mortgage affordability

As a rule of thumb, you can typically afford a home priced two to three times your gross income. If you earn $100,000, you can typically afford a home between $200,000 and $300,000.

To understand how that rule applies to your particular financial situation, prepare a family budget and list all the costs of homeownership, like property taxes, insurance, maintenance, utilities, and community association fees, if applicable, as well as costs specific to your family, such as day care costs.

2. Factor in your downpayment

How much money do you have for a downpayment? The higher your downpayment, the lower your monthly payments will be. If you put down at least 20% of the home’s cost, you may not have to get private mortgage insurance, which costs hundreds each month. That leaves more money for your mortgage payment.
The lower your downpayment, the higher the loan amount you’ll need to qualify for and the higher your monthly mortgage payment.

3. Consider your overall debt

Lenders generally follow the 28/41 rule. Your monthly mortgage payments covering your home loan principal, interest, taxes, and insurance shouldn’t total more than 28% of your gross annual income. Your overall monthly payments for your mortgage plus all your other bills, like car loans, utilities, and credit cards, shouldn’t exceed 41% of your gross annual income.

Here’s how that works. If your gross annual income is $100,000, multiply by 28% and then divide by 12 months to arrive at a monthly mortgage payment of $2,333 or less. Next, check the total of all your monthly bills including your potential mortgage and make sure they don’t top 41%, or $3,416 in our example.

4. Use your rent as a mortgage guide

The tax benefits of homeownership generally allow you to afford a mortgage payment—including taxes and insurance—of about one-third more than your current rent payment without changing your lifestyle. So you can multiply your current rent by 1.33 to arrive at a rough estimate of a mortgage payment.

Here’s an example. If you currently pay $1,500 per month in rent, you should be able to comfortably afford a $2,000 monthly mortgage payment after factoring in the tax benefits of homeownership.

However, if you’re struggling to keep up with your rent, consider what amount would be comfortable and use that for the calcuation instead.

Also consider whether or not you’ll itemize your deductions. If you take the standard deduction, you can’t also deduct mortgage interest payments. Talking to a tax adviser, or using a tax software program to do a “what if” tax return, can help you see your tax situation more clearly.

Read more: http://buyandsell.houselogic.com/articles/4-tips-determine-how-much-mortgage-you-can-afford/#ixzz21y94aNoj

Are Your Neighbors Growing Marijuana?

Your next-door neighbors may look like normal, law-abiding citizens, but you never really know what they’re hiding beneath their homes — like a large-scale marijuana grow operation, perhaps?
One such operation was uncovered in the idyllic town of Bainbridge, Ga., at the home of contractor Johnny Davis and his daughter, Audrey Stanley. Located nearly 15 feet below the ground was a full-scale marijuana grow house, concealed by a hidden entrance inside a nondescript shed.

With a flip of a switch, a custom-made hydraulic table inside the shed moved aside to reveal stairs which lead down to the underground grow house.

“I’m sort of mechanically inclined myself, and I thought it was pretty ingenious they way they did it,” Decatur County Sheriff Wiley Griffin told WTXL.

Over 160 marijuana plants were found in the grow house, with the potential to produce hundreds of thousands of dollars in profits. Davis is said to to have been growing the illicit plants for about a decade.

Unfortunately, the incident doesn’t stand alone. Also this year, firefighters in California’s Riverside County discovered a massive pot-grow operation in a burning, vacant home in Reche Canyon. When the blaze was put out, authorities discovered that nearly three-quarters of the 4,000-square-foot home’s first floor was being used to grow pot. At that point, most of the marijuana had already been destroyed by the flames.

Then there was the landlord in the sleepy town of Workingham, near London, whose tenants used his house and garage to grow over 200 marijuana plants, worth thousands of dollars. After the bust, the “420-friendly” renters left the landlord with over $15,000 worth of damages to the home — including removed floorboards, holes in the roof, and dismantled fixtures (see right).

Such examples are only a small handful of what some might say is a “budding trend” of home pot-growing operations — now more than ever, apparently. The vast inventory of foreclosures and otherwise vacant homes in states hit hard by the housing crisis have proven to be fertile ground for large-scale marijuana farms and “pot gardens.”

In one raid in 2011, police in Las Vegas uncovered 61 plants in a foreclosed four-bedroom home. In another nearby home, they confiscated 878 plants worth approximately $2.6 million. In Nevada alone — which suffered greatly from a run-up in speculative buying during the housing bubble — there were 153 recorded grow operations and 13,000 plants found.

So what are some telltale signs that your neighbors are running a large-scale marijuana operation right under your nose? Police officer Craig Woolnough says to watch out for strong smells, regular buzzing noises (which could indicate the presence of fans or heaters), windows that are warm to the touch, and people coming and going at all hours. Also, suspicious landlords should monitor electricity usage as “drug cultivation requires high levels of power.” Turns out growing the green isn’t so green after all.




Read more: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2012/07/05/are-your-neighbors-running-a-hidden-marijuana-operation/#ixzz21y8BsqdV

Natural Swimming Pools: 9 Myths Busted



Do you like the idea of a natural swimming pool but get squeamish thinking about mud between your toes and tadpoles clinging to your hair? Environmentally friendly, chemical-free natural swimming pools have low ongoing maintenance costs and are healthy alternatives to conventional pools. They’re fairly common in Europe but less so here in the U.S., largely because of misconceptions. Follow along as we bust some common myths about these beautiful outdoor features.

Myth #1: They’re Expensive

Natural pools cost about the same as traditional swimming pools — construction costs start at about $50 per sq. ft. However, because there are no chemicals to add, yearly maintenance costs are hundreds of dollars less. With natural pools, adds Mick Hilleary of Total Habitat in Bonner Springs, Kan., folks tend to add extensive landscaping to complement the natural look.





Myth #2: Natural Pools are a Lot of Work
You’re building a natural ecosystem that basically takes care of itself. Monitor chlorine? Nope. Balance the pH? Relax. The most you’ll have to do is skim fallen leaves off the surface. There aren’t any filters to monitor, either, so you don’t have change out anything. Bonus: No electricity needed to run the filter system.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

HOAs: What You Need To Know About Rules


If you live in a newer suburban community or planned unit development, you—like some 59.5 million other Americans, according to the Community Associations Institute—are probably a member of a homeowners association. It’s also a good bet that you haven’t given your HOA much thought until you have a problem. Since HOAs make and enforce the community rules, it’s smart to understand what you can do if you can’t or don’t want to follow them.
HOA facts
Each HOA, a volunteer group of neighbors who manage common areas of a subdivision, creates its own covenants, conditions, and restrictions. These CC&Rs cover resident behavior (no glass containers around the pool), property management (no fences higher than 8 feet) and common responsibilities (fee schedules and fines for non-compliance).
Average annual dues for a homeowners association is $420, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. And there’s value in the fee. A 2005 study, which appeared in the Cato Institute’s Regulation magazine, compared a group of Washington, D.C., area HOA properties with similar homes without community benefits—a total of about 12,000 homes. The HOA house values were found to be .54% higher. That’s $1,067 on the average U.S. home value of $197,600.
When you don’t like the rules
Some boards can impose what some homeowners believe are invasive, silly, or elitist rules. In 2008, some news outlets reported on a homeowner in an upscale gated community in Frisco, Texas, who was threatened with fines for parking his new Ford F-150 series truck in his driveway overnight. The board made exceptions for several luxury brands, but his mid-range truck was ruled “not classy enough.”
Even if you disagree with the rules, keep paying your dues. HOAs have broad legal powers to collect fines and fees and regulate activities. If you don’t respond to letters from the board, property manager, or a collection agency, the HOA can and will turn to small claims court or file a lien against your property.
You can handle some issues, if they don’t affect the CC&Rs, with a phone call. For example, adding recycling to the garbage collection route is a budget, not a rules, issue. Call the board member who oversees trash collection to find out if there’s leeway in the budget. Also, the board might find a way to add a service by cutting back on something else.
If you want to do something that’s against the rules—like flying the American flag in your yard—start by making a written request for variance, using the appropriate HOA form in your CC&R documents. A variance gives you permission to be the exception to the rule. Submit your request to the board and property management company.
Help your cause by seeking a compromise: That you’d like to fly the American flag, but only on national holidays.
Don’t expect a quick solution
Some HOA boards meet as little as twice a year. If the board decides the issue is worth pursuing, it may require a community vote. If it passes a majority, the board will adopt it. Board members also may consult the HOA attorney to see if there’s a legal liability if they rule against you.
If you don’t get a timely response, request a hearing and resubmit your request for variance with as much support for your cause as possible.
If the board rules against you without a community vote, you can appeal the ruling with a petition signed by a majority of other homeowners.
But if you fly your flag without permission, expect to get fined. Fines can range from a nominal $25 to a painful $100 or more depending on the issue. Your CC&Rs will indicate the fine schedule—per day, per incident, etc. Interest for nonpayment can accrue, and the HOA can sue you in small claims court.
If you feel the ruling or the fines are unjust, the last resort is to hire an attorney and sue the HOA, as a flag-flying couple did in 1999. They battled their HOA in court for nine years before the case was settled in their favor.
Become the rule-maker
If you don’t like the rules, the best way to change them is to become part of the process.
1. Know your CC&Rs, annual budget, and employee contracts. Do you see areas where expenses can be cut? Are service providers doing their jobs?
2. Volunteer for a committee or task. If the board needs to enforce parking rules, for instance, you can volunteer to gather license plate numbers of residents’ vehicles. In addition, put your professional expertise to work: Assist the board with data entry, accounting, or website design.
3. Stand for election to the board. When a position becomes open, the board notifies the members, and you can put your name forward. New board members are elected at the annual meeting by member majority vote. Many boards are three to nine members large, with terms of one to two years.
Involvement drawbacks
As a board member, be prepared to spend two to four hours a month reviewing property management reports, monitoring budgets, or talking to other board members and residents. Most boards meet quarterly; small boards only meet twice a year, for a couple of hours.
Accept that you might become less popular if homeowners don’t like your decisions. In the worst case, you could be sued, along with the rest of the association.
Involvement benefits
But their are rewards. You’ll feel more in control of your community’s fate. You may find that some rules you didn’t support have merit after all. But most of all, you’ll know you’re doing all you can to protect your quality of life and your home’s value.


Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/home-thoughts/hoas-what-you-need-to-know-about-rules/#ixzz21Jws7weT

8 Tips for Finding Your New Home

A solid game plan can help you narrow your homebuying search to find the best home for you.

House hunting is just like any other shopping expedition. If you identify exactly what you want and do some research, you’ll zoom in on the home you want at the best price. These eight tips will guide you through a smart homebuying process.


1. Know thyself

Understand the type of home that suits your personality. Do you prefer a new or existing home? A ranch or a multistory home? If you’re leaning toward a fixer-upper, are you truly handy, or will you need to budget for contractors?

2. Research before you look

List the features you most want in a home and identify which are necessities and which are extras. Identify three to four neighborhoods you’d like to live in based on commute time, schools, recreation, crime, and price. Then hop onto REALTOR.com to get a feel for the homes available in your price range in your favorite neighborhoods. Use the results to prioritize your wants and needs so you can add in and weed out properties from the inventory you’d like to view.

3. Get your finances in order

Generally, lenders say you can afford a home priced two to three times your gross income. Create a budget so you know how much you’re comfortable spending each month on housing. Don’t wait until you’ve found a home and made an offer to investigate financing.

Gather your financial records and meet with a lender to get a prequalification letter spelling out how much you’re eligible to borrow. The lender won’t necessarily consider the extra fees you’ll pay when you purchase or your plans to begin a family or purchase a new car, so shop in a price range you’re comfortable with. Also, presenting an offer contingent on financing will make your bid less attractive to sellers.

4. Set a moving timeline

Do you have blemishes on your credit that will take time to clear up? If you already own, have you sold your current home? If not, you’ll need to factor in the time needed to sell. If you rent, when is your lease up? Do you expect interest rates to jump anytime soon? All these factors will affect your buying, closing, and moving timelines.

5. Think long term

Your future plans may dictate the type of home you’ll buy. Are you looking for a starter house with plans to move up in a few years, or do you hope to stay in the home for five to 10 years? With a starter, you may need to adjust your expectations. If you plan to nest, be sure your priority list helps you identify a home you’ll still love years from now.

6. Work with a REALTOR®

Ask people you trust for referrals to a real estate professional they trust. Interview agents to determine which have expertise in the neighborhoods and type of homes you’re interested in. Because homebuying triggers many emotions, consider whether an agent’s style meshes with your personality.

Also ask if the agent specializes in buyer representation. Unlike listing agents, whose first duty is to the seller, buyers’ reps work only for you even though they’re typically paid by the seller. Finally, check whether agents are REALTORS®, which means they’re members of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. NAR has been a champion of homeownership rights for more than a century.

7. Be realistic

It’s OK to be picky about the home and neighborhood you want, but don’t be close-minded, unrealistic, or blinded by minor imperfections. If you insist on living in a cul-de-sac, you may miss out on great homes on streets that are just as quiet and secluded.

On the flip side, don’t be so swayed by a “wow” feature that you forget about other issues—like noise levels—that can have a big impact on your quality of life. Use your priority list to evaluate each property, remembering there’s no such thing as the perfect home.

8. Limit the opinions you solicit

It’s natural to seek reassurance when making a big financial decision. But you know that saying about too many cooks in the kitchen. If you need a second opinion, select one or two people. But remain true to your list of wants and needs so the final decision is based on criteria you’ve identified as important.


Read more: http://buyandsell.houselogic.com/articles/8-tips-finding-your-new-home/#ixzz21Jw7vLXD