More Home Buyers Asking for Insurance Loss History Reports From Sellers (C.L.U.E. Reports)

More Home Buyers Asking for Insurance Loss History Reports From Sellers (C.L.U.E. Reports)

 

An increasing trend in Colorado real estate is home buyers requiring home sellers to provide a C.L.U.E. Home Seller’s Disclosure Report as a contingency to purchase contract. C.L.U.E. Home Seller’s Disclosure Reports provide a five-year insurance loss history for a given address, without divulging personal and private information about a property owner.

FOR BUYERS: If the report for your property indicates the owner/home has sustained an insurance loss within the past five years the availability and/or pricing of buyer’s new homeowners insurance policy can be greatly impacted. You might not be able to get a policy or it may come at much higher cost than you are expecting. In addition, if a claim is shown, you can make sure to verify the repairs have been completed, request work receipts, and even have your home inspector evaluate the repairs for you. If the repairs have not been made that raises some flags and you want to share these areas with your home inspector as well.

FOR SELLERS:   You can order this when you list your home (and not wait for the buyer to request it) By ordering the C.L.U.E. Home Seller’s Disclosure Report ahead of time you can be ready should this contingency arise when you receive an offer. In addition, providing this report to potential buyers will make them more comfortable when deciding to make an offer because the loss history is known. This may give your home an advantage over one where the insurance loss history is not known.

The seller’s insurance agent should be able to run this report, or the seller can order one directly online at Lexus Nexus

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Things to consider before buying an investment condo

Things to consider before buying an investment condo

Highlights:

  • House lawyer provides tips on buying investment condo.
  • Condo bylaws, declarations and house rules are crucial.
  • Beware of poor or tyrannical management.

By Harvey S. Jacobs

Special to InsideRealEstateNews.com

Buying and renting out a condo may be the way to go for people who want to invest in property but don’t want the responsibility of owning, renovating and maintaining a single-family house.

Before buying a condo, there are three things you should learn about.

First, you should have a professional home inspector examine the unit’s components and systems.

Second, you need to study the condominium’s financial statements. This examination is designed to determine if it is solvent on a day-to-day operating basis. The financial exam should also assess whether the condo’s reserve account will be sufficient to handle any scheduled and unscheduled repairs and replacements. If the condo does not have sufficient reserves, there is likelihood that you will incur a special assessment. Special assessments can seriously cut into your profits.

Third, you should carefully review the legal documents — including the declaration, bylaws and house rules— that govern your condo unit’s use and ownership.—

The declaration will detail the condo unit’s legal existence and describe the unit’s dimensions.

The declaration also will identify the common elements (such as hallways, lobby, stairway which are used by all condo-unit owners), and limited common elements (such as storage units, parking spaces and balconies, which are generally for one unit’s exclusive use). The declaration also will spell out the percentage interest each unit possesses in the condo association. The monthly condo fees are assessed in proportion to each unit’s percentage interest. The declaration also will reveal if there are any restrictions on your unit’s sale – whether the association has the right to purchase your unit.

The bylaws outline the condo association’s rules of operation for annual meetings, voting, officer elections and the board of directors.

Bylaws also specify whether a unit can be rented, and if so, under what terms. It is critical that you confirm that you are able to rent the condo unit before you buy it. Many condo associations restrict how owners can rent. These restrictions often are approved by unit owners to comply with a Fannie Mae requirement that no more than 50 percent of the units can be investor-owned for one to qualify for financing. Fannie Mae guidelines also require that, to qualify for financing, the association not have too many delinquent condo fees.

The house rules are binding on owners and tenants. They cover things like pet policies, move — in and move-out policies, penalties for noise or other nuisances. You need to become familiar with the house rules. You also need to attach the house rules to your lease and make sure your tenants agree to comply with them. It is a good idea to add a clause to your condo lease that makes your tenants responsible for any fines the condo association imposes on you for their violations.

One of the main benefits of investing in rental condos is that you are only responsible for maintaining the condo unit’s interior. All other systems and components such as the roof, basement, HVAC, commercial plumbing repair, and electrical systems are generally the condo association’s responsibility. You are still responsible for those systems that are contained within your unit.  Another advantage is that when those systems need repair, the board of directors is responsible for making them. Granted, they make those repairs using your condo fees. But you are not necessarily the one who has to find, contract and supervise the repairs.

There also are drawbacks.

When analyzing whether your investment will generate a positive cash flow each month, you have to factor your condo fee into your mortgage principal, interest and taxes and all other expenses. Another potential negative is that a distress sale in the building can negatively impact all the other units in the condo. So if only one or two owners have financial reverses and have to sell their units at a discount, they will drive your unit’s price down as well. There is always the risk that your fellow owners will vote to prohibit or severely restrict renting the condo units. If that happens, you may have to sell at a time when the market conditions may not be favorable.

Finally, condos often suffer from poor or tyrannical management. Therefore, if you decide to invest in Boulder rental condos, you should strongly consider becoming actively involved in their governance. You should get to know the other owners, consider running for the board and at a minimum, attend every condo meeting.

Harvey S. Jacobs is a real estate lawyer in the Rockville office of Joseph, Greenwald & Laake. @Harvey S. Jacobs 2013

John Marcotte

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Toll Brothers’s model sale is part of a trend

Toll Brothers’s model sale is part of a trend

Highlights:
  • Tolls Brothers is putting a fully furnished model home in Parker on the market.
  • The asking price is about $900,000.
  • The transaction is a microcosm of the overall market.

Toll Brothers has puts its Valmont model on the marker for just under $900,000.

Toll Brothers has puts its Valmont model on the marker for just under $900,000.

In the latest sign of how hot the high-end, new home building market has become, Toll Brothers announced it has put its fully furnished model home on the market in a community in Parker, because almost everything else has been sold at the Estates at Pine Bluffs.

The model home with almost 6,000 square feet, including the finished walkout basement, is priced at just under $900,000.

“The market is very hot and we are going to be see more models going on the market as new home subdivisions sell out,” said Denver-area housing consultant, S. Robert August.

“In 40 years in the business, the market has never been like this,” August said. “The only way to talk about the market from a few years ago was doom and gloom. Builders getting to the point of selling models was inconceivable just a couple of years ago.”

There has been a sea change in the market, he said.

There is pent-up demand from the last seven or eight years,” August said. 
 “Consumers are now more comfortable with their jobs and consumer confidence is high,” August said. “The Denver unemployment rate is the lowest in four years. And, of course, mortgage rates are crazy low.”

Due to the lack of inventory for new homes and resale homes, the biggest problems facing builders is that they need land, he said.

“Many builders won’t be able to come out of the ground with new product for six to 12 months, as they sell out their communities,” August said.

More builders in the Denver-area will increasingly be selling their models, as they sellout subdivisions and begin searching for new land in the area, said Jeff Whiton, president and CEO of the Home Builders Association of Metro Denver.

He noted that Toll, for example, recently announced it is buying 387 lots in Anthem Ranch in Broomfield, expanding its active-adult “Active Living” brand in the Western U.S.

“The ultimate objective of every builders is to sell through their community and go out and find a replacement for it,” Whiton said.

There has been a huge demand for new homes, as prospective buyers have struggled to find resale homes, Whiton said.

There were only 6,798 unsold homes on the market at the end of February, a 32.7 percent drop from the 10,086 at the end of February 2012, according to an earlier report based on Metrolist data by independent broker Gary Bauer.

“There is nothing for sale on the market right now other than mid-rise and high-rise units,” August said.

‘The lack of resale inventory is part of,” what is driving demand for new homes, Whiton said.

“The other thing is that new homes have all the latest gadgets and technology and design,” Whiton said.

“The other advantage of new homes is they are far more energy-efficient than resales homes,” Whiton said. “The homes built today are probably 30 percent to 40 percent more energy-efficient than homes built five, 10 or 15 years ago, much less the older stock of resale homes.”

New home building permits in the metro area last year were up about 45 percent, he said.

“The market basically died after 2007,” Whiton said. “However, we are still down 35 percent or 40 percent from the peak, so we have a long way to go.”

Toll’s model home for sale is the two-story Valmont Craftsman design with 4,246 square feet of space on the first two levels, plus a 1,724-square-foot, fully finished basement.

To learn more, please visit: Estates at Pine Bluffs.

 

John Marcotte

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Luxury home sales soar 50%

Luxury home sales soar 50%

Highlights:

  • Well-heeled buyers snapped up 50% more luxury homes in March.
  • The most expensive sale last month was for $7 million.
  • Total dollar volume is up 46.4%

This 19,555-square-foot home in Cherry Hills Village last month sold for $7 million.

This 19,555-square-foot home in Cherry Hills Village last month sold for $7 million.

Luxury home sales in the Denver area soared by 50 percent in March, compared with March 2012, according to a report released today by Kentwood Real Estate.

The report shows that 48 single-family homes priced at $1 million or more, closed last month, compared with 32 a year earlier.

The total dollar volume was $76.114 million, 46.4 percent higher than the $51.994 million in March 2012, according to the analysis, which used Metrolist data for sales in the “core” counties of Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, Elbert and Jefferson counties.

“It was an awesome month,” said Sandy Weigand, a top broker in the Kentwood-DTC office.

“It was a good month for closings, and not just under contracts.”

Weigand said she thinks well-heeled buyers increasingly are becoming comfortable with the idea of buying their dream home.

I think people are finally saying, “Enough is enough,” Weigand said. “There is a lot of pent-up demand. People are feeling more secure in their jobs right now and big companies and corporations are making money again.”

Also, buyers want to take advantage of historically low interest rates, she said.

“A lot of buyers are paying cash and putting loans on their homes later,” Weigand said. “However, the $2 million to $3 million buyers are not going to buy their new home until they sell their less expensive home and have the cash to move up”

However, with an increase in homes priced in the $1 million range, “It has a good snowball effect on homes in the $2 million to $3 million range.”

Indeed, Weigand said she is starting to see bidding wars for the home in the $1 million to $2 million range, although they are not as fierce as in the lower price range.

While the overall market is suffering from the lowest inventory of unsold homes on record, it is not as pronounced at the high end, she said.

 

Another look at what $7 million buys in today’s market.

“It was my listing that bought it, although we had one other party interested in buying it that came very close to putting it under contract,” Weigand said.

Weigand decline to name the buyer.

Public records, however, show it was bought by Dale Francescon, an owner of Denver-based Century Communities, one of the largest home building companies in the area.

In 2010, his brother, Rob, paid $7 million for a nearby home that previously had been owned by Mike Shanahan, the former coach for the Denver Broncos.

Weigand said custom home builders are not yet constructing spec homes in that lofty price range.

“What I am seeing is that some customer builders who own lots are now placing signs on their property saying they will do build-to-suits,” she said. “That is a move in the right direction.”

Kentwood reported there are 523 single-family homes priced at $1 million or more are currently on the market. Of those, 125, or 23.9 percent, are under contract.

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Light Rail expansion to boost home prices

 Light Rail expansion to boost home prices

Highlights:

  • The W Line, the first leg of FasTracks, opens April 26. 
  • Homes near the light-rail line can expect double-digit appreciation.

By Melissa Olson

Special to InsideRealEstateNews.com

When the West Rail Line opens later this month, nearby homeowners not only can look forward to hopping the first completed FasTrack’s light rail line, but can also expect double-digit home appreciation in the next few years.

“Generally, homeowners close to light rail stops can expect to see their values increase by nearly five percent in the first year, 10 to 11 percent in the second year and between 15 and 16 percent in the third year following the opening of (a light-rail) line,” according to Gary Bauer, an independent Realtor.

Bauer was one of about 110 Realtors who recently rode the 12.1-mile West Rail Line, or W Line, which is scheduled to open on April 26. (The “West Corridor” or “West Rail Line” is the name of the infrastructure itself, while “W Line” is the name of the operational service on the infrastructure.)

The sneak preview of the line on Wednesday was sponsored by the Denver Metro Association of Realtors. The line connects Denver Union Station to Golden.

“The Denver Metro Association of Realtors (has been a longtime supporter of the RTD expansion and we’re extremely excited to be able to arrange previews like this for our members,” said Dave Pike, DMAR president.

“Realtors are a crucial part of Denver’s economy,” Pike said. “It’s important they have the local expertise needed to anticipate opportunities for buyers and sellers throughout the metro area. By organizing events like today’s pre-opening ride on the RTD West Line, DMAR members are able to get invaluable experiences that ultimately help in counseling their buyers and sellers.”

Voters approved the $4.7 billion FasTracks in 2004. The West Line cost $707 million and is expected to serve 20,000 commuters each day.

Lakewood Mayor Bob Murphy was one of the speakers to address the Realtors. He discussed the virtues of what are known as transit-oriented developments near light rail stations.

Murphy said a 1,300 unit mixed use development near the Federal Center has drawn international interest and the “horseshoe” portion of the line is anticipated to be a major commuter hub.

Other future development include a new arts district that will be established north of West Colfax Avenue, a railroad restoration and exhibit museum and student housing opportunities.

The RTD Light Rail Station on the W Line.  Photo Credit: http://www.kristalsellsdenver.com

The RTD Light Rail Station on the W Line. Photo CreditKristal Kraft

RTD will provide 5,600 parking spaces along the W Line along with $2 million invested by the City of Lakewood to improve bike paths and public art installations planned for the stations, neighborhood walk-up stations, which will make the daily commute much more amenable.

Several employers, such as St. Anthony’s Hospital in Lakewood and DaVita in downtown Denver, sought locations with easy access to the new stations as well as other commercial development projects, bringing thousands of employees to Lakewood each day.

“This will have a very positive impact on the City of Lakewood and homeowners within two to three blocks of the light rail line,” Bauer said.

It also will be great for those on the West side who work in downtown Denver who want to leave their cars at home, he said.

“Downtown commuters will really see the value of these investments,” added Bauer.

Completed eight months ahead of schedule, the W Line has been undergoing trial runs and emergency responder testing.

“The completion of the W Line is really a great example of collaboration among the various agencies needed to make this a reality,” Bauer said.

The W Line features 11 new stations, and will be the first light rail line to run through neighborhoods with 20 at-grade crossings.

“As a Denver native, I am thrilled to witness the transportation vision our local government leaders set into motion several decades ago, said Anthony Rael, a Realtor with RE/MAX Alliance who rode the rail line.

“The new RTD light rail West Line is the latest great achievement in our community and will really create high demand for Lakewood homes,” Rael added.

“Easy access from Lakewood to downtown Denver is a key factor for homebuyers.”

Melissa Olson has more than 20 years of experience in marketing and public relations, spanning a number of industries.  As the marketing director for the largest multiple listing service (MLS) in Colorado, she produced monthly housing reports and analyses for metro Denver over the past eight years. 

 

 

John Marcotte

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March home sales sizzle, but inventory fizzles

March home sales sizzle, but inventory fizzles

  • Inventory levels hit a new low in March.
  • Every other metric was strong.
  • The average price of a single-family home rose 12.5% 

A snapshot of the housing market. Source: Metrolist.

A snapshot of the housing market. Source: Metrolist.

March was a strong month for the Denver-area resale home market, with double-digit gains in contracts, closings and sale prices, according to reports released today.

However, the inventory of unsold homes fell to a new recorded low of 6,682, a 1.5 percent drop from the previous low of 6,786 in February, according to the reports released by independent broker Gary Bauer and Metrolist.

It was only the fourth time since Metrolist began keeping full-year records in 1985 that the inventory had fallen from February to March.

On the other hand, there were 5,328 homes placed under contract in March, a 12.2 percent increase from the 5,328 in March 2012.

Closings, which reflect homes placed under contract in prior months, were double the contract activity.

There were 4,333 closings in March, a 24.7 percent jump from the 3,475 in March 2012. From February to March, contract activity was up 18.7 percent and closings soared 46 percent

The low inventory and strong demand resulted in higher

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Home inventory lowest on record

Home inventory lowest on record

  • Home inventory levels today are lower than in 1985.
  • The market low was 6,786 in February.
  • Mortgage rates in 1985 were about 13%. 

In 1985, when the Denver-area had a million fewer people than it does today, consumers had two and a half time the number of resale homes to choose from.

In February 1985, there were 17,308 unsold homes on the market, compared with an inventory of 6,786 homes last February, according to Metrolist. Metrolist, owned by local Realtor groups, collects residential sales data and publishes it on the Multiple Listing Service, or MLS. Metrolist is expected to release its March report as early as today.

Last February had the dubious distinction of having the fewest number of homes on the market since Metrolist was launched in the mid-1980s.

Prior to Metrolist, real estate data was compiled by McGraw Hill. That information is not readily available, although one long-time broker recently said he doesn’t recall inventory levels this low even in the 1970s.

This is the sign of the new economy,” said independent broker Gary Bauer, who compiled the historic Metrolist data at the request of InsideRealEstateNews.com.

“We are living in a different environment today than we had in the past,” said Bauer, who also is the current chairman of Metrolist.

Despite rising prices in the Denver area, many home owners remain unwilling or unable to put their homes on the market, he said.

“Quite frankly, a lot of people who should be right-sizing are not putting their homes on the market,” Bauer said. “There is no sense of urgency among homeowners to put their houses on the market.”

February’s inventory level fell 32.7 percent from February 2012, when there were 10,086 homes on the market. Since 1985, on average, there were 15,599 unsold homes on the market in February.

In 2012, there were an average of 10,085 homes on the market each month, a 37.7 percent drop from the average of 16,187 in 2011, the biggest percentage drop in Metrolist’s history.

“That’s great data,” said Lane Hornung, CEO and founder of 8z Real Estate, a sponsor of InsideRealEstateNews.com

“Even for an industry practitioner who is immersed in the market daily, these macro historical stats are eye-opening,” Hornung said.

“The numbers succinctly capture what’s driving our market —the fundamental and chronic shortage of inventory,” continued Hornung.

Indeed, Hornung is concerned it the market is becoming overheated.

“I am reluctant to use the “b” word, as in bubble, but we are seeing some market dynamics reminiscent of the mid-2000s and we all know how that one turned out,” Hornung said.

“Let’s hope we can avoid a similar outcome and that today’s lending standards keeps speculative buying to a minimum. In the mean time, more inventory please.”

Patty Silverstein, chief economist for the Metro Denver Economic Development Corp. and the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce, said it “continues to amaze me of the incredibly low inventory levels we are experiencing the Denver area.”

Her research shows that the Denver-area population has grown almost 60 percent since 1985, when there were about 1.8 million people in area. Also, a 30-year fixed rate loan in 1985 was hovering around 13 percent, while today a well-qualified borrower can lock-in such a loan around 3.8 percent or lower.

“I really do think as home prices solidify, and with the spring selling season coming on, more people are going to put their homes on the market,” said Silverstein, who also is principal of Littleton-based Development Research Partners.

Still, inventory levels aren’t going to be returning to historic levels anytime soon.

“Let’s face it. Even if we have more sellers, there is no way we are going to see another 10,000 homes come on the market,” Silverstein said.

The average home price of a home sold in February was $302,745, almost 12 percent higher than a year earlier, according to Metrolist.

When you have this amazingly low supply and strong demand, guess what happens? Prices go up,” Silverstein said. “It is the law of supply and demand at work.”

Peter Niederman, CEO of Kentwood Real Estate, described the statistics “as a real eye-opener. To think that we have less inventory now than we did 28 years ago is simply staggering.”

Inventory levels are down 78.7 percent from the peak in July 2006, when there were 31,989 on the market.

“To see a 79 percent drop from peak to trough in less than seven years is even more staggering and more amazing,” Niederman said.

“That is just mind-boggling to see such a huge drop in such a relatively short time period.”

Niederman said he is frequently asked why there are so few homes on the market.

One reason, he believes, is that “a lot of homes were purchased at the height of the market in 2005, 2006 and 2007.”

Many of those homeowners still cannot sell their homes for a profit, especially after the expenses of selling, such as paying the brokerage commissions.

“They still have negative equity,” Niederman said. That is, they owe more than their net selling price.

“What I think will happen is that if the average sale price goes up another 6 percent or 8 percent this year, all of a sudden the people who bought at the top of the cycle will be able to sell their homes, giving consumers more choices,” Niederman said.

New home builders also are helping to meet some of the demand, said Chris Mygatt, president of Coldwell Banker Residential in Colorado.

“Certainly, this is a heyday for builders,” Mygatt said.

“The problem is, all along the Front Range, they can’t entitle land and build homes fast enough to meet demand. They also are grappling with rising commodity prices and labor shortages.”

Since the Great Recession, which started in late 2007, construction employment has dramatically dropped in the Denver area, Mygatt noted.

“In the coming months, I think we are going to see a big jump in construction employment, which is good news for the entire economy,” Mygatt said.

He said he would like to see home values rise by no more than 5 percent to 7 percent in 2013.

“If we get double-digit increases, that is not sustainable,” Mygatt said. “We then run the risk of getting hyper-activity in the market and that is not going to end well. We need more inventory to keep downward pressure on prices.”

Mygatt said if someone said in 1985 that consumers would have 10,000 fewer home choices in 2013, no one would have believed it.

“It is simply amazing we can have a million more people and thousands fewer choices for home buyers,” Mygatt said.

He also thinks that few consumers, unless they are house hunters frustrated by the lack of choices and unhappy with being out-bid for their chance at the American Dream, are aware of the extent of today’s supply shortage.

“For one thing, we as Americans have very short attention spans,” Mygatt said.

Hornung said it is critical to the health of the Denver-area housing market that inventory levels increase.

“Our market is wildly out of balance,” Hornung said.  “We desperately need new listings to satisfy demand and return to a more balanced, and frankly, a less zany market.

 

Boulder homes sales continue to be on the rise!

 

John Marcotte

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U.S. Housing Prices to Continue Stabilizing in 2013

U.S. Housing Prices to Continue Stabilizing in 2013

 BMO Economics commented recently that higher equity and home values must be providing some much-needed comfort to U.S. consumers, following the release of the S&P Case-Shiller home price index for June which showed a more-than-expected rise of 0.9 per cent, seasonally adjusted.

“This represented the fifth straight monthly gain, and lands the index 0.5 per cent above year-earlier levels – the first positive reading in nearly two years,” says Jennifer Lee, senior economist, BMO Capital Markets. “This report is very good news, and shows that prices are getting support from the pickup in demand for housing as well as fewer distressed homes on the market. It also represents a much-needed boost given the release of the consumer confidence index for August, which shows a drop of 4.8 points.”

A look at individual areas provided further encouragement, according to Lee.

“Eighteen of the 20 metro areas saw home prices rise in June, the most since 2006. On a year-over-year-basis, thirteen areas are now able to say that home prices have grown, including Phoenix, Miami and Minneapolis.”

Lee noted that U.S. housing prices are likely to stabilize further in 2013, with demand improving on firmer job growth and easier lending standards.

Source: http://www.harrisbank.com 

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Suburban Blight & the Affordable Housing Conundrum

Suburban Blight & the Affordable Housing Conundrum

As the urban revival in some American cities pushes out lower-income earners to the nearby suburbs, many of those edge cities are struggling to redefine their purpose—and identity—in a new economy.

According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, nearly half (47%) of the nation’s 1,700 “first-tier suburbs” are vulnerable, meaning the area’s poverty rate is rising while its population and property values are declining. In a sense, these first-tier suburbs are experiencing what many urban centers experienced in the 1960s and ’70s as higher earners moved away and were replaced by lower-income families.

At the National League of Cities’ Congressional City Conference in Washington, D.C., last week, officials from such distressed suburbs said one of their biggest struggles is with low-income and public housing. It’s the easiest type of housing to build from a federal grant perspective, but some local officials say they’re becoming oversaturated with it. Additionally, social services in these suburban communities are struggling under the weight of the new population as more lower-income residents move in.

“The rise of suburban poverty in the suburbs…really deepens our challenge at a time when we are fiscally least prepared to deal with it,” David Sander, a councilmember in Rancho Cordova, Calif., a suburb of Sacramento, told a room packed with his counterparts from across the country.

Providing enough affordable housing for lower-income earners isn’t the only challenge that suburban communities face. An Urban Land Institute study on Baltimore and Southern California suburbs found a strong correlation between new affordable housing and communities that continue to decline economically.

“One of the conclusions was, if you are a first-tier suburb interested in turning yourself around, be extremely cautious about adding too much affordable housing,” Sander said.

Lastly, engaging residents who are invested in the suburban community is key. In doing so, city officials need to shift from thinking of their residents as customers to thinking of them as community partners.

“You can make your dollar go a lot further if you can get citizens actively engaged in helping you promote the city’s vision,” Sanders said.

Liz Farmer is a finance writer for Governing Magazine. You can view this original post at Governing.com

 

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Home Buyer Age Impacts Home Size Preference

Home Buyer Age Impacts Home Size Preference

young_couple_big_house A recent study from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) shows variations in home buyer preferences with regards to home size when it comes to age, race and ethnicity.

NAHB’s “What Home Buyers Really Want,” surveyed more than 3,600 home buyers across the country on various characteristics of new homes. Based on the results, the median desired home size is 2,226 sq ft. However, a closer look at the data broken down by buyer characteristics shows significant differences in how large a home different types of buyers want. Age plays an important role in a buyer’s preferences, with the amount of space requirements dropping steadily as the age of the buyer increases. Among those younger than 35, the desired home size is 2,494 sq ft, compared to 2,065 sq ft among those 65 and older.

“The building industry wants to know how much space buyers want in their homes” says Rose Quint, NAHB’s assistant vice president for survey research, and one of the study’s authors. “This study provides us with new insight into the home size preference of home buyers as a whole, but also across different demographic groups.”

Race and ethnicity also impacted home size preferences, with minority buyers desiring more space than White, non-Hispanic buyers. White, non-Hispanic buyers report wanting about 2,197 sq ft, while Asian buyers desire 2,280 sq ft, Hispanic buyers want 2,347 sq ft, and African-American buyers prefer 2,664 sq ft.

The primary reason for the reversal in home size actually built has to do with buyers’ ability to access credit. Due to overly stringent mortgage lending requirements in recent years, the less financially-solid buyers have been shut out of the market. As a result, homes built in the last few years, largely reflect the preferences of those who are still able to obtain credit and put down larger down payments.

For more information, visit www.nahb.org

 

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