“World's Most Complete Neighborpedia”
Explore:   What's happening in your neck of the woods?

Mike Montague

:: Mike’s website review ::


Every year tens of thousands across Canada will undertake an activity that will traumatize most of them. Yes that’s right, moving. This trauma is greatly reduced when you have an organized plan of attack and clear strategy. One of the least likely sources for straightforward and nerve calming advice on the topic comes from Canada Post who have a website that covers pretty much every aspect of the big move from preparation tips and downloadable checklists to completing your change of address and notifying utility and service providers from your computer. The site is called Smart Moves and I highly recommend you have a look and add it to your favourite bookmark list.

SmartMoves


:: The Barrie spring Real Estate market is warming ahead of the weather ::



The weather in the first week of April is as confused as the Robins and those optimistic drivers who took their snow tires off in March.

The Real Estate market has been about as predictable as the weather has been over the past year. Finally the buzz around my office has returned and my cohorts can once again look you strait in the eye without their voices going up two octaves when they reply on being asked "how's things going?"

It is getting busy once again.

Buyers have left the den, seen their shadows, yes and more importantly they are seeing mortgage rates are at record lows and the neighbourhoods are thick with an abundance of listed properties containing anxious vendors waiting for an offer to come to them.
Average prices are down over last spring and this spring's market is the first one in a dozen or so years where the buyer is in control at the negotiating table.

Now is the time to begin the hunt if you are planning a summer time change of address. If you are serious about a move, go to
HotBarrieListings.com and start receiving instant updates on newly listed properties that match your custom search criteria.

After a long hibernation I am well rested and ready to help you buy your new home. Give me a call.




:: Pictures and more pictures ::

I seem to be taking more recreational than real estate pictures lately but the camera always comes along to the cottage, vacations and when taking the dog for a hike. I have posted some of my more memorable shots to Flickr which have now accumulated to over five hundred images. More pictures than I took in my entire life previous to owning a digital camera.

A generation of budding photographers can never appreciate the patience of waiting until the roll of film was finally used up, finally remembering on a future trip to the drug store; days, weeks or months later, to take the film and drop it at the counter to be developed. Then waiting days more for your finished pictures.

The anxiety and responsibility of not wasting an exposure when there were far more moments still to capture than unused shots left on the camera.

When those pictures finally arrived and you picked them up from the store, part of the thrill was that drug free flashback, triggered memories of frozen moments in captured time. Some (many) of the prints, less than the quality you hoped for when snapping them. Blurred finger blocked subjects, over and under exposed shots, but if you were lucky you ended up with a few gems worthy of placement on the refrigerator or into an album.

Today we click away without cause or concern but with freedom to experiment, be more imaginative and daring. That alone has allowed many to become photography legends in our own minds with the powers to showcase the digital manifestations of our creative eye well beyond range of the refrigerator door.

Take a visit to my 21st Century photo album by clicking on any image below.

Mike's point of view - View my most interesting photos on Flickriver

:: Barrie Real Estate Boxing day Blowout ::

2009 holds opportunity for buyers

If there has been a time over my nine years working as a Realtor where the home buying public has had a financial advantage I can say with absolute certainty it is now and over the course of the next few months.

A snap shot of the Barrie area real estate market and the economy in this first week of 2009 shows us a higher number of greatly reduced property prices than at any time in the past ten years.

Many of the homes I see for sale have been listed for months and as shown in the examples below have continues to lower their prices every few weeks in the hopes of finding a willing purchaser.

Many are selling out of necessity over choice which for the buyer means their is additional room to negotiate prices down even further than the reduced list prices shown.



The efforts of our government to stimulate the economy has given us greatly reduced lending rates which right now are sitting lower than the average of the past ten years. This translates into lower monthly mortgage payments and a greater portion of your monthly payment going towards the principle that pays down the house.

2008 saw record numbers of resale homes listed for sale in Barrie, lower list vs. sale price ratios and longer list to sell times. Many homes that were pulled from the market in the weeks before Christmas will reemerge on the market over the next few months in what is traditionally the high volume time of year. In short we are likely to see even greater numbers of homes for sale in the Barrie area between now and the end of spring which will keep the balance of negotiating power in the hands of the buyers.



It is entertaining somehow to watch the hordes who will line up in sub zero temperatures to save $50 to $100 off of a TV or computer component at the Boxing day sales each year or will burn $2 worth of fuel while lined up to save 2 cents per litre on a tank of gas.

Right now the real estate climate is such that those people could effectivly save themselves many tens of thousands of dollars on a home right now. Translated into bargan hunder lingo, thats a savings of enough coin to buy a new flat screen tv and a full tank of gas every two or three months for the next twenty five years if they take advantage of the home buying opportunities available this year.




List price January 2008
$339900
Current list price
$299000




List price June 2008
$349000
Current list price
$299000



List price April 2008

$389900
Current list price
$312000



List price April 2008
$324900
Current list price
$259900

Subscribe to HotBarrieListings.com and be kept up to the minute on new listings. (never a line up)
You will also receive email alerts when prices are reduced on active listings that match your search criteria.

Click the link to begin. HotBarrieListings.com

:: Real Estate 2008 - Barrie year in review ::



Discussing the highs and lows of the year as it draws to a close along with preparing plans of action for the next year's market are annual rituals of the Realtor. Another is attempting to forecast the Real Estate market for the coming year in so far as how it will financially enhance or impact on all of us. No one has the crystal ball (snow globe?) that can predict the next year's market with 100 % accuracy but some amongst us are better than others at reading the signs and interpreting the past and present to project on what is to come .

2008 in review
From early in 2008 a suspicion (at least amongst many Realtors) began to manifest itself that home prices which had risen with consistency for each of the previous eight years were beginning to look like they were hitting a plateau.

People moving to Barrie and continuing to work primarily in the GTA have always made up a significant portion of new buyers but prices had increased to a point where in addition to the dramatic increases in gas prices, many of these home buyers were opting to either buy a lesser home or condo within the GTA while others have stayed out of the market completely in 2008.

We also began to see an easing back on price increases for the first time since the early part of the "new millennium". As a result fewer existing home owners were seeing the year over year equity increases that has instilled the confidence in previous years to cash in and buy into a higher priced home now within reach. The trading up buzz was gone and people were instead sitting tight and the lure of the bigger home fell into remission.

Homes typically beyond the average 1st time buyer range ($275,000 and up) were starting to take longer to sell as a result and by early summer record numbers of listings in this price category were accumulating. With this, the shift from a seller controlled market to a buyer controlled market had taken hold. The gap between list price and final sale price on homes over $275000 was growing, further evidence that we were now into a buyer's market.

In spite of the signs, home owners were slow to accept that for the first time in a few years their home did not increase by a five figure amount over last year and in fact may have even decreased some in value over the past 12 months. It was also an adjustment period for many Realtors who got caught up in the whims of ambitious vendors and found themselves saddled with stagnant listings that languished on the market indefinitely only to expire, and often reappear under the banner of another overly anxious Realtor.

One of many examples of market denial amongst sellers this year occurred for me in a listing presentation this spring where a couple insisted on my listing their home for $25,000 more than I had determined it to be worth telling me they had talked to other agents and one of them was willing to list at the price they wanted.

I told them shopping around for a Realtor who agrees to take an over valued listing is much like shopping around for a doctor until you find one who tells you you are at your ideal weight.

It is only in the last quarter of 2008 that the realities of how the overall economy is affecting home values and sales volumes has started to take hold on the majority of Barrie area home owners.

Consumer confidence on the whole went for a slide in 2008 mainly due to uncertainly at a global level in the economy especially during this later half of 2008. We now live in an age of competing 24 hour cable news channels that have created killer bee like colonies of financial experts available to the news networks 24/7. In previous periods of economic challenge, a few minutes of the 30 minute evening news and a blurb in the morning paper kept us as aware as we needed to be on the economy. Today the constant drone of doom and gloom is hard to escape.

The good news is - good news is likely to become a marketable media commodity once again in the new year and the emergence of a fresh (and potentially intelligent) government in the US will certainly account for a major part of that mind shift.