Monthly Archives: December 2011

Top Articles for 2011

At the end of each year, I include a list of the “Most Read” articles for the past year. Although many of these articles were written in prior years, people are still reading them thanks to Google or Bing search results. As usual, the top articles can be grouped into key categories or topics.

TOP PAGES
 1. Home sales by Subdivision
 2. Videos of My Listings
3. Videos of Local Central Ohio sites

LUXURY PROPERTY
1. Luxury homes sales around Columbus

2. Video tour around Wedgewood Country Club in Powell
3. Hoover Reservoir executive home
4. 2011 Parade of Homes
5. Muirfield in Dublin
6. Hoover Reservoir sanctuary

PROPERTY TAXES
1. Will property taxes affect your choice of homes
2. Property taxes are almost due
3. Graph of updated property tax rates

LOCAL SITES
1. Hayden Run Falls video
2. Havener Park soccer field
3. Interesting sites around Dublin

ARTICLES ABOUT OWNING A HOME
1. Understanding plats and easements
2. Tips for your sump pump drain
3. Fixing an overflowing downspout
4. Inspector’s advice for ice dams
5. Radon testing
6. Solution for planting around tree roots
7. Utility bills importance in selecting a home
8. Which is best – new build vs existing home?

Predictions for 2012

I’m catching up on my Internet reading after a couple of days off for the Christmas holiday. It seems everyone is making their predictions for 2012. There are predictions for the real estate market, for the stock market, for the USA elections, and for the global upheavals.

How’s this … my prediction is that everyone will be wrong.

As we learned in 2011, all these issues are closely tied together. A blurp in one results in a blurp in another. “For every action, there is a reaction.”

Naturally, the people I associate with are most interested in what the real estate market will do. Will it be better, flat or worse? The latest data that I read said that 2011 was the worst year ever. Real estate “experts” are making their predictions. I doubt that their predictions are any more reliable than my predictions would be. There are simply too many variables.

Most of those variables are reliant on the Federal government’s policies, which haven’t been positive for recovery of the real estate industry. I know a lot of Realtors® who are becoming more politically active to help change or fight for programs that will improve the opportunity for our clients to buy or sell their homes.

Realtors® have a unique job where we become more emotionally attached to our clients. Yes, we make our income by selling a home, but we (or at least a lot of us) really care about the people we’re working with and we try to do the best job we can to help them. The politicians, via their policies or increased regulations, have made that job much more difficult in recent years.

While shopping for Christmas groceries, I met a fellow agent and naturally we talked about business. She mainly works with relo clients – those transferring due to a new job or a promotion. Her business is down because (1) companies can’t afford to move employees around the country as they used to do, and (2) employees are less likely to want to move due to the difficulty of selling their current home, especially if it will be at a loss.

She is currently working with a client who has been offered a promotion that requires him to move from Atlanta to the Columbus area. Apparently, the Atlanta housing market is worse than here, so that the severe loss he will incur on his current home versus the price he would pay for a home here, even with the increased promotion pay, has led him to turn down the promotion. The negative implications of that decision, will impact his long-term earning power, plus, it means at least two fewer home sales. I believe the National Association of Realtors® has said that for every 3 homes sold, one job is created. Multiply this Atlanta executive’s thought process by thousands across the country, and you begin to get a feel for the difficulty the real estate market is having.

protestorSo here’s my 2012 prediction: Watch the news … you may see your favorite Realtor® in an upcoming political protest. We’ve been beat up the past few years and we’re “not going to take it anymore”. :-)

Elaine’s 2012 Calendar Now Available

2012 Calendar by Elaine Reese, Real Living HER, Powell OH 43065My 2012 Calendar is complete, mailed and has been received by most. I’m getting good responses again. This is the 3rd year that I’ve made them and have had recipients check to make sure they are still on the list to receive.

It contains local photos that I’ve taken throughout the year with ample space for writing in daily appointments, plus key dates for local housing information.

If you live locally and would like to receive one, just email or call me with your name/address.

(Size when opened is 8½ x 11 but when folded, it fits into a dayplanner)

Home Buyer Alert: Congress wants to increase FHA mortgage fees

In today’s legislation for the “payroll tax cut”, Congress included language that would raise the mortgage fees for an FHA loan. These fees would be for the life of the loan. Congress’ intent is to drive buyers to instead seek to use a conventional loan rather than an FHA loan. For the buyers who do use an FHA loan, they in essence will be helping to fund Fannie and Freddie.

Click to read the report.

In order to get a conventional loan, a buyer must have a 20% down payment, so choosing between an FHA vs a conventional loan isn’t simply an either/or choice. This legislation would put funding of Fannie & Freddie on the backs of mainly first-time buyers or lower-income buyers, who may lack a substantial down payment.

The legislation hasn’t been approved yet as Obama has 60-days to sign it. Home buyers who are thinking about buying in 2012 and who lack 20% down, should keep track of this legislation and perhaps seriously consider purchasing prior to this legislation going into effect to avoid the additional FHA fees.

NAR Reveals Housing Sales Lower Than Reported Due To Errors

This week the National Association of Realtors announced that the data they’ve been releasing on home sales has been flawed – mainly understated – by possibly as much as 20% lower than previously reported. They said they will recalculate the data going back to 2007. The national news/business TV shows have reported on this because it will mean the housing decline will be much worse than earlier thought. So be prepared when you hear more about it.

NAR indicated a problem with areas where an agent might belong to two MLS’s and posts their listing in both MLS’s. Denver and Colorado Springs were mentioned, but there are high population areas – East Coast – where an agent needs to belong to more than one MLS in order to capture all potential buyers. When that ONE house sells, its sale is recorded in both systems so the sale is overstated.

The NAR also said there may be a problem with new-builds being double counted since they sometimes are listed in the MLS but the builder reports the sale as well. We have that issue here, since builder spec homes are often placed in the MLS. Even if the builder hasn’t put the home in the MLS, the agent who sells the home can enter it in after the sale in order to record a sale for that agent. Again, this would result in double counting for any report that has obtained data from the builders as well as the MLS.

Our own local Board (CBR) often issues reports by zip code. I’ve previously written why that is not a good move because many of our zip codes cross school district lines. Home buyers tend to want to buy homes according to the schools. To illustrate how the data can vary, let’s consider Powell’s zip code – 43065 – which primarily is southwest Delaware County, but it also extends down into Franklin County in the Smokey Row/Hard Rd area. There is a wide difference in the homes and prices in the entire zip code.

For Jan-Nov 2011, in the entire zip code of 43065 (excluding short sales, REO’s, foreclosures, condos), there were 377 homes sold at an average price of $347,114. But if we view it by the four school districts found within the 43065 zip, here’s how the numbers shake out:

  • Olentangy SD: 265 homes at average sale price of $394,425.
  • New Builds in Olentangy SD: 8 homes at average price of $438,264.
  • Buckeye Valley SD: 43 homes at average price of $291,400. (mainly an area around & part of Scioto Reserve)
  • Dublin SD: 24 homes at average price of $285,285. (primarily Shawnee Hills and Summit View Woods in Franklin County)
  • Worthington SD: 45 homes at average price of $154,717. (Franklin County around Smokey Row/Hard Rd)

This is why I don’t use the NAR or CBR data for any of my reports on this blog. There are just too many misleading nuances. Real estate is local and if one doesn’t know about or understand the specific points of a given area, the public can really be misled.

Powell ranked #5 for Quality of Life in the Midwest

Powell OH 43065 welcome signLast July, I wrote that Powell is the Crown Jewel of Delaware County. According to an article in Business First, a group called On Numbers has analyzed 955 Midwest communities to rank them for “Most Favorable Living Conditions“. In determining a community’s ranking, the group considered: (1) healthy economy, (2) light traffic, (3) moderate cost-of-living, (4) impressive housing stock, and (5) strong educational system.

Powell received a rank of **5**!! Glad to know that others have recognized the benefits that we already know. Dublin was the only other local suburb to make the Top 10, and it was ranked 9.

Rankings of other local central Ohio suburbs:

Ranked 11 to 50: Bexley (36), Arlington (39), Worthington (47)

Ranked 51 to 100: Hilliard (60), Westerville (84)

Ranked 100 to 200: Gahanna (106), Pickerington (143)

Ranked 200 to 400: Grove City (305), Delaware (310), Pataskala (329), Marysville (356)

400 plus: Reynoldsburg (482), Columbus (650), Whitehall (916)

NOTE: I did not see New Albany in the list on Business First’s web site. I may have missed it, but am surprised if it wasn’t somewhere in the list.