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Rowland Fellows, Broker, CDPE, ePro, GREEN, CA BRE # 01435867

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No Time Like The Present

March 23, 2016 By Rowland Leave a Comment

16001364Thinking about buying your first home, or perhaps upgrading from your current place? Thanks to the current economic climate and game-changing technology in the housing market, now is the perfect time to take the plunge.

Low interest rates
Lenders are giving buyers mortgage rates that are extremely enticing—you can get a mortgage below 4.0%. There’s a good chance these are the lowest mortgage rates we’ll see in a long time, which means affordability is at a high.

Prices are on their way up
Mortgage rates may be low, but housing prices are getting higher and higher because of demand—prices increased 5.1% year-over-year in November 2015. If you’re thinking about buying, delaying a few years could lead to a higher purchase price, or getting less home for your money.

A great job market
The United States added 2.65 million jobs in the last year. There’s increasing job security and available work, leading to high consumer confidence.

Technology makes buying simpler and less expensive
Along with listing websites like Zillow and Trulia, there are an increasing number of websites and apps that simplify the process, make it easier to shop around for homes and mortgages, and save you money.

Cheap fuel
Lower gas and energy prices mean more money in your pocket and more purchasing power. The money you’re not putting into your gas tank or toward your utilities can instead go toward saving for a down payment or affording a bigger monthly mortgage payment.

Filed Under: Buying a home

Five Things to Consider Before you Make an Offer

January 12, 2016 By Rowland Leave a Comment

14056614_01So, you’ve found a home you’d like to purchase. Perhaps it was love at 1st sight and you knew that this house was the one before you even walked inside. Or maybe it took a little longer and you had to make a few visits to the home to be sure. Here are five things to consider before we write an offer.

 

  1. Learn more about the community.When you purchase a home, you’re also buying into the neighborhood. Go online and read the local newspapers to gain an overall insight on the area. Drive around the neighborhood and talk to the neighbors. It’s also a good idea to drive past the home at different times of the day so that you can see how quiet or noisy the neighborhood is.
  2. See what amenities are nearby. While you’re driving around the neighborhood, take note of any shops, parks or other amenities that are nearby.
  3. Get a sneak peek at your commute. If you’re moving further away from where you work, try driving the distance from work to the new home and back during your usual commute time. This will give you an idea of how much time you’ll spend on the road once you’re in your new digs. If you want to learn more about our local housing market, call me! I’ll be happy to help you find the right home for you.
  4. Find out if there are additional expenses. Don’t be surprised by unexpected expenses. Find out if there are supplemental taxes, homeowner association dues or other fees associated with the home.
  5. Check out the schools. A good school district may improve your home’s value, regardless of whether or not you have children.
If you want to learn more about our local housing market, call me! I’ll be happy to help you find the right home for you.

 

© 2015 Buffni & Company. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission.

Filed Under: Buying a home

Four tips for a smarter home purchase

November 21, 2012 By Rowland Leave a Comment

The fields of behavioral economics and behavioral finance are a couple of 21st-century mashups, academia-style, blending observations about the often-irrational financial decisions people make with insights from the behavioral sciences, from anthropology to psychology, and beyond.

Though these disciplines originated in the ivory tower, they have, in turn, given birth to a number of findings, insights and even mandates for every home buyer who wants to optimize the dozens, maybe even hundreds, of decisions they’ll face at every point on the path to purchasing a home, from when to buy to how much to offer to what type of mortgage to take.

Here are the four most powerful behavioral econ and finance insights with real estate implications, and how you can apply them to level up your own homebuying decision-making:

1. Observing willpower basics can help you avoid overspending. In real estate, overspending can mean any of several things, but there is one definition that is particularly insidious, and it’s the simplest: spending more than you can truly, sustainably afford.

This happens because, over the years, buyers have grown to conflate their lender’s decision on how much they can spend with their own decision to make about how much they can afford to spend.

It’s like confusing your credit card limit with what is responsible to spend.

Willpower researchers have found that not only does the elusive ability to exercise self-control in the face of temptation actually exist, it can be fostered in some relatively simple ways. This is good news for home buyers in today’s hot market, where multiple offers and a fear of missing out on good deals can create that auction atmosphere that causes otherwise sane and sober spenders to throw every cent they can at their target home.

The theory of ego depletion says that willpower is finite, and can be depleted by putting too many demands on it at once. So, rather than trying to diet, stop biting your nails and start a new cardio regimen all at the same time, most people do better making one willpower-sapping change at a time.

And the same goes with homebuying: If you’ve had a day where you went to great lengths to bite your tongue to avoid snapping at your kids, and you also had to turn down Girl Scout cookies and birthday cake carbs at work all day, it might not be the right night to decide how much to offer on your home. Instead, ask your agent to connect with the listing agent and let them know to expect an offer in the morning.

Similarly, avoid letting yourself get too hungry or binging on sugary treats during the stress of your house hunt; willpower requires brain glucose, so super-hungry house hunters or those on a sugar rush/crash cycle are liable to make poor decisions at offer-price decision time.

2. Ditch the herd. Everyone wants to buy low and sell high, especially when buying a home. The challenge is that we all have an innate fear of missing out on both bargains and profits. Our inclination to act on this fear is exacerbated when we hear stories of the steal that our cousin got on a foreclosed home at the bottom of the market, or the cash that is being thrown at our next-door neighbor at the top.

Think about it: When prices are cheapest, and on the decline, demand is low and is hard to drive upwards, because people are afraid to buy a home when they think the price might continue to decline. And the opposite is true: When home prices are rapidly ascending, demand is high, and tends to snowball even higher, as people afraid of missing out on value increases and others afraid of being priced out of the market frantically join the herd and buy, buy, buy!

This is precisely why it’s foolish as a home buyer to try to time the market just right. Best practice is to buy when the time is right for you, your family, and your finances, then to get educated about market dynamics and use them to inform your strategy on how you execute your purchase, like what price range and area to target, how much to offer and when to lock your interest rate.

3. Overconfidence and real estate are a deadly combination. Behavioral finance researchers and theorists have devoted a lot of attention to overconfidence: the tendency of some investors and financial professionals to overestimate their ability to pick stocks, trade profitably, or otherwise succeed at a given task. In the realm of traded assets, overconfidence cause all sorts of simple, yet potentially catastrophic, behaviors, like making excessive trades, which has been correlated to big time losses over time.

And overconfidence is just as deadly in real estate: Homebuyers who incorrectly gauge their own bargaining power, future finances or fix-it prowess can and often do end up in what my mom would call “a world of hurt.”

•Lowball offers or other negotiating strategery (no typo) can result in lost home after home, all while prices go up and your energy and enthusiasm go down.
•Making mortgage obligations with overly optimistic hopes for your future income or the home’s appreciation is exactly what got the last generation of homeowners in trouble.
•And buying a major fixer when you have no money to hire a contractor and you’ve never even had any interest in owning, much less swinging, a hammer? It’s a recipe for disaster. Didn’t you ever see “The Money Pit”?

4. Don’t let loss aversion make you forget what you can truly afford. There is an interesting imbalance in most of our brains, when it comes to our financial decisions: We are more afraid of losing money (and financial opportunities) than we are attached to acquiring gains. That is, our fear of loss is much, much greater than our emotional attachment to potential profits.

In homebuying, this most often manifests when house hunters lose their minds and cut the purse strings entirely to secure a hot home in a hot market. This is the same mindset that has kept homeowners stuck in homes in depressed markets: Some unemployed and underemployed homeowners have even forgone great job offers in other areas, committed to spending what might be dozens of years in the very worst local economic markets, all to avoid short-selling the place and taking a loss.

People do very, very scary things out of loss aversion, from simply (but devastatingly) overextending themselves to buy homes they can’t afford without endangering their financial well-being, to taking mortgages they knew would adjust problematically in 12 months. What’s even more dysfunctional, though, is avoiding the “loss” of a target property by taking gifts and loans from relatives who you know upfront will be less than cheerful givers and who you know upfront will never let you hear the end of it.

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is an author and the Consumer Ambassador and Educator for real estate listings search site Trulia.com.

Filed Under: Buying a home

Five ways to help your agent find your dream home

November 7, 2012 By Rowland Leave a Comment

The vast majority of home buyers like — even love — their agents; in the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®’ most-recent survey of home buyers and sellers, more than 96 percent of those who recently bought homes said they liked their agent, and 85 percent said they would work with that agent again.

But, as always, there are exceptions to this rule: Buyer-agent combos that seem to be full of friction.

In those exceptional cases, a common complaint is that buyers feel their agent simply doesn’t understand or listen to them, as evidenced by the disconnect between their vision for their home and the homes the agent shows them. And no one likes to be misunderstood, especially when trying to get professional help making wise decisions about the financial, location and brick-and-mortar property characteristics that will shape many areas of one’s life for years to come. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Buying a home, Real Estate Tips

8 Tips for Finding Your New Home

January 17, 2012 By Rowland Leave a Comment

By: G. M. Filisko

Published: February 10, 2010

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

 

 

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? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Buying a home

How to Assess the Real Cost of a Fixer-Upper House

January 15, 2012 By Rowland Leave a Comment

By: G. M. Filisko

Published: August 24, 2010

When you buy a fixer-upper house, you can save a ton of money, or get yourself in a financial fix.

 

1. Decide what you can do yourself

TV remodeling shows make home improvement work look like a snap. In the real world, attempting a difficult remodeling job that you don’t know how to do will take longer than you think and can lead to less-than-professional results that won’t increase the value of your fixer-upper house.

  • Do you really have the skills to do it? Some tasks, like stripping wallpaper and painting, are relatively easy. Others, like electrical work, can be dangerous when done by amateurs. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Buying a home

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