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New Paltz, NY

2009 REALTOR of the Year

Barbara Korabel: Real Estate Agent in Highland, NY

This past Friday I received my fifteen minutes of fame and it really felt good, No, it felt G R E A T! I was at the Ulster County Realtors Recognition Lunch and had received a few awards for my work as Chairman of the Education Committee and I was happy with that.

Nothing could have prepared me for what was to come nor did I ever imagine that my heart was going to race at a speed I've never known. Lunch was great and they handed out a few awards before. Now it was time for the big ones to be announced. I was just there to congratulate my fellow Real Estate Agents.

I was seated comfortably when the board President started to read a description of the next person to receive the last award. I think he did mention what it was for but that is all kind of a blur to me. He started to give a detailed description of the background and experience and I started to think that it sounds like me. The further he described this person the more my heart started to race and I said to myself either I'd better get my hearing checked or he is talking about me.

When he announced my name as Realtor of the Year it had to top the best feeling I've ever had. Wow this is really happening to me and that's probably what I said to the audience of about 100 of my peers. Then I said something like I wanted to thank everyone for my Academy Award and how speechless I was and that someone should take a picture because that wasn't going to last very long.

Imagine a real estate agent not having anything to say? It happened and now the words won't stop. This makes up for all those customers who came, went and spent some of my valuable time without any compensation. Life is good!

Finally someone talking about a 4% mortgage rate

04-02-09
sandy reid
sandy reid: Real Estate Sales Person in New Paltz, NY

Finally someone talking about a four percent mortgage rate

http://www.foxbusiness.com/video-search/m/21829995/4-5-mortgages-a-possibility.htm

This is a link from Fox Business News.

We need to get everyone included in this. Refinancing, new homes, homes in trouble. If we want to get a real stimulus going we need to do just what they are talking about in this video.

We, as Realtors, need to talk about this to everyone we can talk to. The gentleman in this video , a banker is talking about how the banks are at capacity in the filings of refinancing. Sooooo maybe you will need to hire some more people to fill the need to respond to all these refinancings and new home purchases with a mortgage rate of 4%. Imagine giving jobs to people to help people move money. What a concept.

What do you think?

OK, SO WHO'S RIGHT AND WHAT CAN YOU BELIEVE THAT YOU READ

03-25-09
sandy reid
sandy reid: Real Estate Sales Person in New Paltz, NY

A couple of days ago I copied an articfle which I thought was not only interesting but positive for our industry. Now I see this article which I have copied also which leads me to this question:

JUST WHO CAN WE BELIEVE WHEN IT COMES TO STATISTICS?

The existing home sales data which was released to the market earlier was a "half empty, half full" set of data. The market seemed to take it as just full and left the empty part behind.

Home resale rates rose 5.1% in February to an annual rate of 4.72 million, according to the National Association of Realtors. In the same breath, the organization said 45% of the activity was foreclosures or short sales. Because of the huge discount that most buyers get when they buy homes in foreclosure, the average price of a house fell 15.5% to $165,400.

The increase in the rate of home sales was viewed by many as the beginning of a bottom in the housing market. The slide of nearly three years has been blamed for a great deal of the collapse in the banking and credit systems.
But the rise in sales does not represent a bottom at all. It is more likely that any movement of buyers into the market will cause desperate sellers to offer homes at lower and lower prices rather than hold onto houses that they cannot afford and may not make money on even if they could hold them for another decade.

Most data that the government and national business associations will put out over the next several quarters is likely to appear two-edged, at least at first. Housing prices cannot go to zero, so, at some point, the rate at which home values are dropping will slow. Resale rates may go up, but buying homes which have been in foreclosure for months is an incorporeal piece of information. If buyers start to purchase homes on the normal economic basis of being a transaction between private buyer and private seller then the market will have something to celebrate.

The rise in the dual nature of data is where the analyst's ability to forecast gets more difficult. When unemployment, consumer confidence, GDP, manufacturing, and capital expenditures are all falling simultaneously, it is hard to find optimists, but they will grab even the slightest bit of ambiguous information and claim that the recovery is underway.

In the next quarter, the rate at which people are losing their jobs may slow, but average wages will probably drop sharply at the same time. The effect of fewer people losing jobs while those who are working make less is no clear sign that the economic world is getting better. GDP numbers which are significantly influenced by dangerous trends in inventories like the Q4 2008 figure defy clear interpretation.

Recently analysts covering the manufacturing sector said that so many factories are shut here and overseas that the businesses are eating through inventories. That is being interpreted as good news because once inventories move close to zero, factories will have to increase production to replace them. That analysis glosses over two possibilities. The first is that the economy is bad enough that inventories may not drop at expected rates. Low demand may cause them to decrease much more slowly. That could push back a renewal of manufacturing activity for months. It is also possible that some factories will simply be out of business and the sources of goods for replacing dwindling inventories will have gone away. The normal supply chain in some industries may be severely disrupted in a way that will take several quarters to repair. Retooling or replacing factories is unlikely to be a quick process.

From the middle of last year until a month or so ago, the interpretation of almost all economic information was negative because the data was unidirectional. That is changing. There are sign posts which point in two directions. It is likely that neither road sign is entirely right. In many cases both are wrong and making predictions about how the recession is going actually becomes more difficult and not less.

Are we bottoming out?????

03-24-09
sandy reid
sandy reid: Real Estate Sales Person in New Paltz, NY

As per Ken Sweet of Fox News on Monday March 23, 2009:

The number of existing homes sold in February unexpectedly rose last month, an industry trade organization said Monday, as distressed home sales continued to remain the dominant force in the nation's impaired housing market.

According to the National Association of Realtors, the number of homes sold rose 5.1% to a seasonally-adjusted rate of 4.72 million units in February up from 4.49 million annualized units.

The jump in sales was much better than what economists had predicted, who were expecting existing home sales to fall to 4.45 million units. The data helped boost stocks broadly, pushing the Dow Jones Industrial Average up nearly 300 points.

While the increased sale of homes is a welcome sign to Wall Street -- as many believe that the housing will eventually lead the nation's economy out of this recession -- the bulk of February's sales were distressed purchases. The average price for a home sold was $165,400, down 15.5% from a year ago.

"Because entry level buyers are shopping for bargains, distressed sales accounted for 40% to 45% of the transactions in February," said NAR's chief economist Lawrence Yun in a statement.

As it has been for the past couple months, existing home sales were stronger in the West than the rest of the nation -- primarily in the struggling housing market of California. Existing home sales in the region were up 2.6% from a month ago to 1.2 million annualized units, and are up 30.4% from a year ago.

In the Northeast, sales rose 15.6% to an annualized rate of 740,000 units and are down 14.9% from a year ago. In the Midwest, sales were basically flat -- up 1% -- to 1.04 million units.

In the struggling Southern market, existing home sales rose 6.1% to an annualized rate of 1.74 million units, according to the trade organization.

I read posts of Realtors in California and several feel that their market is bottoming out. We are usually about three months behind California as per my oberservations so can that mean that we are bottoming out and on our way to leveling off?

What do you think? This weekend our office's phone was busy and we had walk ins. A great sign.

The sure sign of spring!!!

03-23-09
sandy reid
sandy reid: Real Estate Sales Person in New Paltz, NY

I know Spring officially is here on March 20th. Other than the date I am so happy to be seeing true signs of spring. Our office calls have picked up and walk ins, those wonderful walk ins are back. People look for Robins, I look for walk ins.

This has been an especially hard winter. Not just the snow and cold and ice and sleet. The economy has created a river none of us have walked into before. But I have hope, thanks to the walk ins. I would like to take some time to thank them and to tell them just what they do for this real estate person.

Like the first crocus who push their cute faces out to the sun early walk ins are the adventurers of real estate. You know they have been thinking and planning this and they are as excited as I am for the adventure. They are ready with information, maps and a beautiful pre approval. They have driven up, or driven over tested the local B&B's, motels or campsites, have enjoyed an early breakfast and are "ready for the hunt".

I am ready as well. I know my inventory. I have all the resouces to help my new clients to have a positive real estate experience and I am excited as I have gotten what the walk in and the Realtor wait for---

THE HOPE OF A NEW LISTING!!!!! A home that will match someone. A place that when you bring your new client/custiomer there you know it fits as they run their hand along the mantle of the fireplace or stand on the deck looking happily out at the landscape. There are not too many great feelings like the feeling of success when you have been the matchmaker of a person or persons to a home.

Walk ins, call ins, web site newbies, I love them all. Welcome. You're right on time.