Browsing Posts tagged Orlando Home Prices

Here are a few good snippets from today’s Sentinel relevant to the need for long term letting inventory in our main areas. (Orange, Osceola, Lake, Polk)

From an new investors perspective it highlights a local residential demand for long term rental inventory, for an owner that currently short-term lets their home,  perhaps a look at switching to a long term tenant?

Please call or email us if we can help with any questions or property searches.

Orlando booming rental market means good things

An investor paid cash last month for a four-bedroom, three-bathroom house with a three-car garage in the Lee Vista area and immediately had a pool of potential renters competing to move in.

“I stuck a sign in the yard, put it on the MLS and had two dozen showings within three days,” said real estate agent Bj Edens of Re/Max Town Centre, who handled the property. “Things are crazy out there … I’m expecting it to continue for a little while until we start to see the loan market loosen up.”

Today’s rental market has the hallmarks of the frenzied housing market circa 2006, when buyers were willing to ask, “Where do a I sign?” before they even walked through a property.

But this is no bubble.

This is the beginning of the correction of the market’s radical over-correction.

Ever since foreclosures started rising, so did the demand for rental properties.

Thousands of former homeowners who either ended up in foreclosure or shed their house in a short sale are frozen out of the buyers’ market until they rebuild their credit.

Perfectly credit-worthy people are choosing to rent because they don’t want to gamble on values taking another nose dive.

We’re raising a generation of renters who are scared to buy after watching their parents struggle through the housing bust.

At the same time, housing prices and interest rates are at historic lows.

All of that adds up to one very important fact that points – finally – to a healthier housing market: Investors can get good enough deals on houses and command high enough rents that being a landlord is no longer a losing proposition.

People are starting to make money in the real estate business again. And that’s a step toward normal in an otherwise depressed market.

Scott Hampton owns a company that manages about 500 rental properties and launched a new division that charges would-be tenants a $350 flat fee just to help them find a home.

“The houses go so fast, we’re finding 70 percent of the people sign up for it,” said Hampton of Hampton & Hampton Leasing & Management Inc.

Hampton, who owns the property management company with his wife, said they have hired seven leasing agents who charge fee to help tenants secure a property. People are willing to pay because they often have trouble even getting a returned phone call from landlords who are overwhelmed with multiple inquiries from potential tenants.

Another good sign for housing: as rental rates increase, more people who have good credit and can qualify for loans at today’s low interest rates will find it just makes more sense to buy.

With rents hovering between 75 cents and $1.50 per square foot, a monthly mortgage payment could be cheaper than rent.

“That will definitely be a factor again,” said Maria Rampy Blanchard, general manager of Olde Town Brokers.

She said the number of rental referrals she receives has shot up and that the good properties get snapped up quickly, which allows some landlords to charge a premium.

“The inventory is low,” she said. “They rent out almost immediately, definitely within a 30-day period.”

And then there’s the newest buzz word in the business, and perhaps the biggest sign that good rental properties are in demand – “foreclosure disclosure.”

Some renters are so desperate for a good property at a reasonable rate that they are willing to sign a waiver acknowledging the house is in foreclosure and they could be forced out before the end of their lease.

“We actually have forms for that now,” Hampton said.

Bill’s Bit: “A great time for UK Buy-To-Let investors in Orlando, or convert your existing short term lets to a long term lease?”

Please call us email us with any questions.

But better move quickly – and, of course, carefully!

Happy (bargain) Hunting!

Bill Cowie President

Kissimmee Office 407 396 9914

British-American Chamber of Commerce Advisory Board

Request more information on Florida homes or submit a Custom Property Search Request

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The BRITISH HOMES GROUP Florida
2960 Vineland Road | Info@britishhomesgroup.com or (+1) 407 396 9914

According to the August report from the Orlando Regional Realtor Association existing-home sales in the Orlando area showed a second consecutive month of price gains from a year earlier.

The median price in the core Orlando market was $115,000 – 15 percent higher than August 2010.

Since January of this year, Orlando’s median price has increased by 21 percent.

The median last month for bank-owned sales was $81,750; for short sales it was $96,950.

The number of foreclosure sales dropped 51 percent compared with August 2010

Short sales and regular sales were each up 32 percent.

At the current sales pace, there is a 4.3-month supply of homes available for sale, also

  • total inventory was down 39 percent from August 2010
  • the number of single-family homes was down 36 percent
  • the number of condo units for sale was down 52 percent
  • pending sales (under contract and awaiting closing) – 9,502 up from 8,945 a year ago
  • the average property sold for 95 percent of its listed price, the same as in August 2010

 

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Bill’s Bit:

If the Orlando property marketplace is indeed turning-around, as so many different market indicators are suggesting, then now could be the perfect time for Florida property investors take full advantage of our “Buyers Market”.

Why not let us help you find your dream place in the Sun?

If you are considering buying or selling a home here in Florida please contact the British Homes Group for more assistance.

Bill Cowie President

Kissimmee Office 407 396 9914

British-American Chamber of Commerce Advisory Board

Request more information on Florida homes or submit a Custom Property Search Request

BHG Logo

The BRITISH HOMES GROUP Florida
2960 Vineland Road | Info@britishhomesgroup.com or (+1) 407 396 9914

Fewer foreclosed homes in Orlando

Here are some numbers on the reducing numbers of foreclosed homes in the Orlando area.

Anyone hoping to buy a foreclosed house in the Orlando area is going to have to look a lot harder than they did a year ago.

There were 656 bank-owned properties listed for sale last week, according to a weekly report from the Orlando Regional Realtor Association. A year ago, there were about three times more foreclosures listed for sale, but many mortgage default cases stalled in the courts when lenders could not produce valid loan documents.

So far the dwindling supply of Real Estate Owned (REO) properties has not noticeably pushed up prices and that’s partly because appraisals are based on sales within the past six months.

The shorter supply appears to be helping families who are considering a short sale…banks have begun to realize that shorts sales maintain value a little bit better and maintain the property in better condition and so there’s less depreciation in the community.

While the amount of foreclosure listings is dwindling, the number of both short sales and regular, nondistressed listings is growing, the report showed.

The report also shows a gap of about 6 percent between the sales price and the final asking price and a gap of about 13 percent between the sales price and the original asking price prior to any price reductions.

The average original list price in Orlando for the last week of July was $216,642, and the average sales price for that week was $189,463.

If you are considering buying or selling a home here in Florida please contact the British Homes Group for more assistance.

Bill Cowie President

www.britishhomesgroup.com

Orlando, Florida

Kissimmee Office 407 396 9914

British-American Chamber of Commerce Advisory Board

Request more information on Florida homes or submit a Custom Property Search Request

BHG Logo

The BRITISH HOMES GROUP Florida
2960 Vineland Road | Info@britishhomesgroup.com or (+1) 407 396 9914

BRITISH HOMES GROUP

April 9, 2010

From today’s Orlando Sentinel – Mary Shanklin

Home prices edge up in March
 
Sales of existing homes in Orlando increased and prices rose about 5 percent from February to March, signaling the approaching April 30 deadline for a federal homebuyer tax credit.

Anxious for a recovery in the recessed market, the association noted that closings for March had increased more than 40 percent from a year ago. And it reported that its members filed 4,662 new sales contracts during March, bringing the area’s pending sales more than 10,000.

“The record number of pending sales confirms the strong increase in demand as buyers try to take advantage of the tax credit before the April 30 deadline,” said the association’s Chairman of the Board, Kathleen Gallagher McIver, RE/MAX Town & Country Realty.  “If homebuyers want this tax credit, they must act now.”

Buyers must have a contract signed by April 30 to qualify for the credit, which is worth as much as $8,000. The sale must be closed by June 30.

Prices, meanwhile, had improved from February to March but were still down 19 percent from a year earlier. The median price for an existing home in the Orlando area last month was $110,000, with “normal” sales prices increasing 2 percent to $166,500 and short sales prices rising 10 percent to $105,000.

Homes of all types spent an average of 92 days on the market before coming under contract in March 2010; a year early they were on the market for an average of 11 days longer. The average home sales prices was 94.36 percent of its list price, up from 92.74 percent a year earlier.

And, in another indication of how the market has changed during the last year, the current pace of sales translates into 7 months of supply; a year earlier the region had a 12-month supply.

Long road back home

Forecast: Housing prices in Orlando, Miami won’t return to 2006 peak until after 2039.

Orlando’s single-family home prices are unlikely to return to their 2006 peak for the next three decades, according to a newly released survey of more than 370 U.S. cities.

Prices have fallen 60 percent during the past four years in Metro Orlando, one of seven markets not expected to recover until some time after 2039, according to the analysis of Case-Shiller historical home-price trends released Thursday by Fiserv Inc.

The study went on to predict that Central Florida housing prices would fully reach bottom during the second quarter of 2011.

“The difficulty with Orlando and the other markets that got caught up in the housing bubble is that prices fell by more than 50 percent,” said David Stiff, chief economist with Fiserv. “Even if you have average appreciation of 3 percent annually, … it takes 30 years to get back to the peak.”

Another challenge facing Orlando is an oversupply of housing built during the boom, Stiff added. Federal home-buyer tax credits have been attracting buyers in recent months, but that demand may subside once the credits disappear this spring, he said.

Investors are rushing in and purchasing properties in Orlando and other markets, but that kind of activity isn’t likely to further “destabilize” the market – as it did during the housing run-up – because speculators now are largely cash buyers with mortgage payments that reflect local rental rates. Four or five years ago, investors used easy financing and then could not get charge enough in rents to pay off their mortgages.

Sean Snaith, who directs the University of Central Florida’s Institute for Economic Competitiveness, said the Orlando area’s recovery from the housing slump is likely to take some time. But he said the national Fiserv survey may not be taking into account employment forecasts that show relatively strong job creation for the region. The university, he added, foresees Orlando’s job market growing faster than that of other cities in the state.

“A lot can happen in three decades. This is one of the fastest-growing parts of the state. It will still have high growth again,” Snaith said. “We’re in a deep hole – we’re not buried alive.”

Bradley Hunter, a Florida economist for Metrostudy, a real estate research firm, said it’s “fanciful” to even poise the question of when prices will return to the peak of the buying frenzy. Speculating investors drove prices to levels that were inflated far in excess of the rental market and of what buyers could afford based on their incomes.

“I do agree it’s going to be a long time,” Hunter said of the recovery. “Some areas will begin to improve this year and other areas, next year. But getting back to peak levels? That’s asking for a lot, because those were unsustainable and unrealistic.”

Within Florida, the Fiserv/Case Shiller indexes showed Miami, Naples, Punta Gorda and Orlando all taking until at least 2039 to rebound to their peak prices. Other parts of the state would recover sooner: Gainesville, 2017; Jacksonville, 2020; Polk County, 2026; and Brevard and Volusia counties, 2027. The data economists analyzed originated from the Federal Housing Finance Agency and Moody’s Economy.com.

“Nationally, Fiserv Case-Shiller data point to a further, 7 percent decline in home prices through the end of this year, with a prolonged recovery beginning early in 2011,” Stiff said. “In many markets, the emphasis is on the word ‘prolonged.’

Mary Shanklin can be reached at mshanklin@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5538.
 
Thank you again for your business!

Please tell your friends!

Sincerely,

Bill Cowie  President

www.BritishHomesGroup.com
Kissimmee Office: 407 396 9914
Member: British-American Chamber of Commerce

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If you already own a home here and you are considering short or long term renting the home, or if you are considering buying a home (anywhere in Florida) please use one of our contact options below – The British Homes Group

We are located on the NW Corner of 535 and US highway 192 above the Edwin Watts Golf Shop and across the road from the Publix super market. Please feel free to visit anytime Monday through Friday, 9 – 5pm.

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We thought that you might be interested in the following US magazine extract discussing the US property market this coming year:

10 Things to Know About Real Estate in 2010

by Luke Mullins
Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Is 2010 the year to buy a house? It certainly looks that way: After a steep run-up in prices during the first half of the decade, home values have plummeted back to 2003 levels. Fixed mortgage rates are sitting near record lows. And the foreclosure epidemic–while painful for many home owners–has created some wonderful opportunities for bargain hunters. If that’s not enough, Uncle Sam is handing out thousands of dollars in tax credits to nearly all first-time buyers and the bulk of existing home owners who close a purchase by June.

But while the 2010 outlook appears inviting, there’s one key catch. “You need to have a stable job,” says Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Economy.com. The economy is showing signs of life, but the unemployment rate is already at 10 percent and expected to go higher. And while those mortgage rates are attractive, buying a house makes sense only if you can bank on your income stream. So before you consider purchasing a home, take a hard look at your job, your company, and your industry.

That said, here are 10 things to know about real estate in 2010:

1. Prices to bottom: After more than three years of falling, real estate values have shown signs of stabilization in recent months. At the national level, home prices slid nearly 9 percent between the third quarter of 2008 and the same period this year, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home price report. That’s a notable improvement from the second quarter’s nearly 15 percent annual drop and the first quarter’s 19 percent decline. This improvement will give way to a bottom in home prices–finally!–in 2010, but not before additional declines, Zandi says. Zandi projects home prices will hit bottom in the third quarter of 2010 after logging a peak-to-trough decline of roughly 37 percent, based on the S&P/Case-Shiller national home price index. “That means we’ve got another roughly 10 percent [decline] to go,” Zandi says.

2. Mortgage delinquencies up: Amid falling home prices and a nasty labor market, roughly 1 in every 7 mortgages was either past due or in foreclosure by the end of the third quarter–the highest delinquency rate in the 37-year history of the Mortgage Bankers Association’s National Delinquency Survey. Two factors are expected to drive delinquencies even higher next year. First, nearly 1 in 4 homeowners currently owes more on their mortgage than the property is worth, which increases their odds of default. And secondly, the national unemployment rate–which already stands at 10 percent–will peak at about 10.5 percent in the first quarter of 2010, says Patrick Newport, an economist at IHS Global Insight. Additional job losses mean more borrowers won’t be able to pay their mortgage bills. “The [delinquency] rate is going to stay up there for quite a while because the job market is going to be really weak for a while,” Newport says.

3. Foreclosures move upstream: The number of foreclosure sales will increase to about 1.9 million in 2010, according to Moody’s Economy.com. And while we’ve already seen a growing number of more expensive homes heading into foreclosure, Heather Fernandez, vice president of marketing at the real estate search engine Trulia, expects the trend to pick up steam next year. (Trulia is a U.S. News partner.) “We are poised in 2010 to see a surge of foreclosures from prime borrowers. Hundreds of billions of dollars in option [adjustable rate] mortgages are set to be recast” next year, Fernandez says. Option adjustable rate mortgages allow borrowers to make lower monthly payments for an initial period, after which the payments adjust–or “recast”–higher. For some borrowers, the new payments can be more than twice their initial payments. Combined with other factors, like the loss of a job, a recasting option adjustable rate mortgage can make borrowers more likely to default. “These are [properties] at higher price points [and] potentially in more desirable neighborhoods,” Fernandez says.

4. Mortgage rates to rise: Anyone who purchased a home in 2009 was presented with some extremely attractive mortgage rates. Rates on 30-year, fixed mortgages fell to an average of 4.88 percent in November, down sharply from 6.09 a year earlier. A key factor behind the plunge was a Federal Reserve program, first announced in November of 2008, that purchased debt and mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But the program is slated to expire at the end of the first quarter, and if private investors don’t step up, fixed mortgage rates could jump. (The Fed, of course, could always decide to extend the program.) The unwinding of this Fed program, the improving economy, and mounting concern over government deficits could push rates on 30-year, fixed mortgages to roughly 5.5 percent by mid-2010 and close to 6 percent by the end of the year, says Mike Larson of Weiss Research. “Almost all signs to me point higher,” Larson says.

5. Buyer’s market remains: With prices still falling, mortgage rates remaining historically attractive, and additional homes hitting the market in the form of foreclosures, the dynamics of the real estate market will continue to favor buyers over sellers in 2010. That means those looking to buy a home next year should not feel pressured to act impulsively. “You don’t need to have a sense of urgency, but understand that as time progresses the balance of power as we get into 2010 is going to slowly but surely shift away from [buyers],” Larson says. “It is not going to be a strong seller’s market, but it will be more evenly distributed as the year goes on.” Data from the real estate firm Zillow show that home buyers are already losing the leverage they once enjoyed. While home buyers landed a median discount of 4.6 percent off listing prices in January, the size of the gap fell to 2.7 percent by October. Expect this gap to close further as 2010 marches on.

6. Modification plan could be modified: While the Obama administration has put nearly 700,000 borrowers into temporarily restructured mortgages, it had found permanent fixes for just 31,382 struggling homeowners through November. What’s more, critics have identified two key shortcomings of the government’s $75 billion antiforeclosure plan. First, the program isn’t much help for borrowers struggling to stay in their homes as the result of a job loss. And the rickety labor market is a key factor behind rising delinquencies. At the same time, the plan does not sufficiently address the issue of negative equity–owing more on your home loan than the property is worth–which also works to increase foreclosures. “The current modification program does not address negative equity and is therefore destined to fail,” Laurie Goodman, a senior managing director at Amherst Securities Group, told a congressional committee in written testimony on December 8. “It must be amended to explicitly address this problem.” Zandi says the government may move next year to overhaul the modification program in two ways: improving troubled borrowers’ negative equity positions by writing down some of the mortgage principal, and helping to turn troubled homeowners into renters.

7. FHA lending standards may increase: While banks have jacked up lending standards in the face of mounting delinquencies, mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration–which come with a minimum down payment of just 3.5 percent–have remained accessible to a wide swath of borrowers. The FHA guarantees nearly 30 percent of new-home purchase mortgages today, up sharply from just 3 percent in 2006. But the rapid growth has occurred alongside an increase in mortgage delinquencies. As a result, the FHA’s reserves have dipped below congressionally mandated levels. The development has put pressure on the Obama administration to beef up its requirements for agency-backed home loans. In early December, the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced that it would make several changes to FHA mortgage requirements: raising up-front cash requirements, boosting minimum credit scores, and perhaps charging more for insurance premiums. Additional new restrictions may be in store. Taken together, the developments could work to choke off the supply of mortgage credit to borrowers who can’t get financing elsewhere.

8. Tax credit available through June: On top of lower prices and cheap mortgage rates, Uncle Sam is offering an additional incentive to get buyers into the market next year. In early November, President Obama signed a bill extending and expanding a popular tax perk for home buyers. The legislation gives qualified first-time home buyers a tax credit of up to $8,000 if they close the purchase of a primary residence by the end of June. Meanwhile, qualified current home owners are eligible for a credit of up to $6,500 when they buy their next principal residence. But while the tax perk may make a home purchase more tempting, would-be buyers should make sure they have the job security and financial wherewithal to handle the transaction before going ahead. “Don’t let [the home buyer tax credit] be the thing that drives you to act,” Larson says.

9. Markets will vary a great deal by region: The performance of the national housing market is much less important that the dynamics of your local market, and sales and pricing trends will vary a great deal from one area to the next in 2010. “There will be geographic pockets where the values will still continue to decline, and there will be geographic pockets where they increase,” said Dale Siegel, a mortgage broker and the author of The New Rules for Mortgages. That means anyone interested in buying real estate next year can’t just read the national headlines. Instead, find a good blog that covers the local housing market and consider speaking with a real estate agent with experience in the area. Check out online listings–pay close attention to pricing and inventory trends. And make sure to head out to open houses to get a firsthand feel for the market.

10. Mobile maps can help: Advances in technology have enabled would-be home buyers to increase the efficiency of their searches. For example, Zillow’s iPhone app allows home buyers to see the estimated values and listed prices of the properties they pass on the street. The app, which is free, has been downloaded more than 830,000 times. Trulia has unveiled a similar product that allows users to find nearby open houses as well. “If you are sitting in a neighborhood having brunch on a Sunday, you can very easily pull up your phone [and] walk into open houses,” says Trulia’s Fernandez.

Copyrighted, U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved.

Best in ’10!

Bill Cowie, Director
www.britishhomesgroup.com

P.S. 2010 might be the year to take advantage of the current unprecedented “buyers market” here in the Sunshine State of Florida!