8 Quick Fixes to Increase Home Value

March 1, 2010

Use this list from Realtor Magazine for some quick, easy updates that can help you have your home looking its best in no time! Here’s their list:

  1. Buff up curb appeal
  2. Enrich with color
  3. Upgrade the kitchen and bathroom
  4. Add old-world patina
  5. Screen hardwood floors
  6. Clean out and organize closets
  7. Update window treatments
  8. Hire a home inspector

With just a few quick, easy home upgrades, you could easily add a momentous amount of value to your home! It’s also good to always remember that sometimes you can gain the most value on your home by just fixing a lot of the “little” problems. Some of the bigger projects are not always worth the time and effort for the amount of value you will get out of them!

To read the full article from Realtor Magazine, click here.


February issue of Alice P’s Market Update is online!

February 23, 2010

Check out this month’s issue of Alice P’s Market Update that is now online by clicking here.  This month’s issue includes a feature article from our stager, Kathy Lanning; some great resources and tips for earning rebates and tax credit for purchasing energy-efficient appliances, and a brief look at how interest rates really affect your monthly mortgage payments and 30 years worth of savings.


Top 10 Home Features that Buyers Want

February 10, 2010

At the recent International Builders Show–held in Las Vegas–people saw some trends in homes that were popular across the board. Paul Cardis, CEO of Avid Ratings, lists the Top 10 Trends seen at this year’s show:

1. Large kitchens with islands
2. Energy efficiency, including energy-efficient appliances, super insulation, and high-efficiency windows.
3. Home offices
4. Main-floor master suite
5. Outdoor living space
6. Ceiling fans
7. Soaking tub in the master suite and/or an oversize shower with a seating area
8. Stone and brick exteriors rather than stucco or vinyl
9. Community walking paths and playgrounds
10. Two-car garages, but three-car garages are even more desirable

from Realtor Magazine


Surge in short sale requests unlikely to impact housing market

January 30, 2010

Reprinted from Real Trends

Although short sales are likely to increase in 2010, the jump in these transactions is unlikely to have any real impact on the housing market, according to a new study by Housing Predictor.  While more at-risk homeowners are turning to short sales as an alternative to foreclosure, Housing Predictor says the small number of short sales that are actually approved by banks represent less than 1 percent of all homes facing foreclosure. In the first half of 2009, only 40,000 short sales were completed, according to the most recent data available from the Office of the Comptroller of Currency shows.

In addition, Housing Predictor said only an estimated 8 to 12 percent of all homeowners who request short sales accomplish a completed transaction. Because lenders only write off short sales as a loss when a property is sold, this small percentage of completed transactions leaves a gaping hole in the troubled banking industry’s problem with short sales.


FHA to provide early relief to struggling homeowners

January 28, 2010

Reprinted from Real Trends

In an announcement Friday, HUD said homeowners with mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) who are experiencing financial hardship are now eligible for loss mitigation assistance before they fall behind on their mortgage payments.

Previously, these homeowners were not eligible for such assistance until after they had missed payments. But the Helping Families Save Their Home Act of 2009 signed into law by President Obama expanded FHA’s authority to use its loss mitigation tools for borrowers facing “imminent default.” FHA issued guidance Friday to its loan servicers on how to assist these homeowners before they default.

According to FHA Commissioner David Stevens, FHA has always required lenders to establish early contact with delinquent borrowers to discuss the reason for missing a payment and to evaluate reinstatement options. But now, he says, servicers will have additional options for those homeowners who seek help before they go delinquent, increasing the likelihood that the borrower will be able to retain their home.

Effective immediately, the loss mitigation options of forbearance and FHA’s Home Affordable Modification Program may be used to assist borrowers facing imminent default.  FHA defines a “borrower facing imminent default” to be one who is current or less than 30 days past due on their mortgage obligation, and who is experiencing a significant reduction in income or some other hardship that will prevent them from making the next required payment.

Under the agency’s forbearance program, the loan servicer can agree to postpone, reduce, or suspend payments due on a loan for a limited and specific time period.  FHA-HAMP allows qualified FHA-insured borrowers to reduce their monthly mortgage payment to an affordable level by permanently reducing the payment through the use of a partial claim combined with a loan modification. The partial claim defers the repayment of a portion of the mortgage principal through an interest-free subordinate mortgage that is not due until the first mortgage is paid off. The remaining balance is then modified through re-amortization and in some cases, an interest rate reduction.

The borrower must be able to document the cause of the imminent default, such as unemployment or reduced pay, or a change in household financial circumstances such as a death in the family or serious illness.  FHA said loan servicers are required to document the basis for their determination that a payment default is imminent and retain all documentation used to reach that conclusion. The servicer’s documentation must also include information on the borrower’s financial condition.

Source: Carrie Bay, DSNews.com