Saturday, 23 July 2011
Average closing costs have risen 8.8% from last year
Across the nation, closing costs are on the rise and are up 8.8% over the last twelve months. Origination and title fees on a $200,000 home loan average $4,070 nationally according to Bankrate Inc.’s 2011 Closing Costs Survey.
The four most expensive states are New York with average closing costs of $6,138 followed by Texas at $4,944, Utah with $4,906, and California with $4,832 rounding out the top spots. For the last five years, Texas and New York have taken the top two spots in Bankrate’s survey. Arkansas is the least expensive state averaging $3,378.
Closing costs have jumped nearly 10% over the last year because of fees lenders are now directly charged. “New regulations require more staffing and cost more money,” says Jason Auerbach, division manager of First Choice Loan Services in New York City. Banks are requiring extra employment verification and the like to keep loans in shape for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and although these regulations “have been in place for a couple of years already, the mortgage industry takes them more seriously now. New forms and regulations that are still in discussion are influencing lenders already.”
Bankrate said, “On average, lenders charge about $1,614 in origination fees this year, up 10.3 percent from last year. Origination fees include lender charges for services, such as underwriting and processing.”
“Interest rates get a lot of attention, and rightfully so, but it’s also important for consumers to compare lender fees when shopping for a loan,” said Greg McBride, CFA, senior financial analyst for Bankrate Inc.
New rules (or rules that lenders now take seriously) cost more money to meet, Director of Housing Policy for the Consumer Federation of America, Barry Zigas told Bankrate in their study that it is difficult to determine how much of the additional costs are actually a direct result of regulatory changes.
“It’s ironic to hear that the consumer has to pay more to get a fair product,” Zigas said. “But if it means the mortgage they are getting is more likely to be tailored to their needs, they should be happy to pay.”
States like New York and Texas are accustomed to high closing costs, but should a state like Arkansas with a lower median and rising closing cost average “be happy to pay” or is lending passing on a cost that should have been built in in the first place?
Analysts on both sides make good points, what do you think of the rising closing costs of gifts?
Stewart Lending acquires REO subservicing company PMH Financial

Steward Lender Services (SLS), subsidiary of Stewart Title Company has announced the acquisition of a majority ownership interest in PMH Financial, a full-service REO outsource and subservicing company that provides REO services, short sale management, collateral valuation, subservicing, loan review and due diligence services.
PMH currently has over 100 employees spread across six states and an active inventory of roughly $2.5 billion in real estate assets on behalf of financial institutions, loan servicers and hedge fund investors.
“This transaction represents a strategic acquisition for Stewart Lender Services,” said Jason Nadeau, president and CEO of Stewart Lender Services. “PMH will provide a great deal of synergy with a number of Stewart clients and services. PMH’s senior leadership team has some of the leading REO and servicing executives in our industry. We are very excited to have them join our team.”
Although the two have some clients in common, the overlap that does exist will not lead to any internal competition, according to Nadeau.
“This is an excellent move for our clients and helps to position our company for continued growth”, said Ken Blevins, president and CEO of PMH Financial. “Stewart is a market leader in providing a comprehensive set of default and mortgage origination services. By joining Stewart Lender Services, we can deliver greater value to our clients while offering them an expanded line of related products and services.”
It’s not just tech companies and real estate search companies that are acquiring one another, builders and lenders are as well, marking an era of strengthening internal offering while buying companies that in an extremely successful economy could possibly be unable to be acquired.
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 4:30 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, real estate economy, Real Estate News, REOCategory: News
Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.
Email Tara SteeleMove bets on social media, acquires platform & talent at SocialBios

California based Move, Inc. is the parent company of Move.com, Realtor.com, Moving.com, SeniorHousingNet.com, TopProducer.com and is in joint partnership with Builder Homesite, Inc. to offer Builders Digital Experience. As one of the top real estate companies, Move, Inc. has made a move that expands their offering in a new direction- toward social media.
Given the reliance of Realtors (their consumers) on being social, they have acquired SocialBios.com which is just over a year old. SocialBios is a social search platform that allows people and brands to “create a single social hub for their online profiles through interactive ‘About Us’ pages that simplify the discovery of shared connections on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Foursquare and Google without sacrificing their privacy.”
For an undisclosed amount, Move, Inc. has acquired the SocialBios platform and team which will be based in Denver, CO. The SocialBios products will remain “in production and available to real estate professionals.” Although it remains to be seen how Move will integrate the platform into their current offering, Move says development will continue which means there are potentially more products or modes of integration on the way.
“Real estate is inherently a social industry and social media experiences are changing the landscape of how people connect and interact with each other,” said Scott Boecker, chief product officer at Move, Inc. “The convergence of our expertise in search, mobile and now social brings a new element of discovery to our product development process that we think will give our customers new ways to connect naturally with people across all of our brands.”
According to Move, Inc., SocialBios founder Ernie Graham and co-founders Ira McMahon and Andrew Van Tassel have joined the product development team at Move, Inc. where Graham will serve as general manager of Move’s SocialBios brand and head up Move’s social product strategy and development team effective immediately.
“We’re very excited to join Move and the talented team that continually delivers great products and services based on the premise of connection,” said Ernie Graham, general manager for Move’s SocialBios platform. “By using the current SocialBios platform as a springboard and leveraging Move’s product and technology assets, we’ll take the concept of social capital discovery and create new ways to expedite higher quality connections between agents and consumers. We’re looking forward to the road ahead and transcending the traditional boundaries within our industry of how to drive better client-agent relationships.”
Move, Inc. is a product advertiser on AgentGenius.com.
This article published on Monday, July 18th, 2011 at 5:00 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, Inc., move, Real Estate News, real estate social mediaCategory: News
AgentGenius is a rapidly growing real estate social media, tech, news, and opinion site built and designed by and for the on-the-go agent. Our mission is to be a positive force in the industry, led by people inside of real estate. We aim to keep you up to date on trends that we study closely in order to forecast what’s next on the horizon.
Email AGBeat NewsIntegrity in real estate or slime ball Realtors? How to rise above

The phone rings and you are asked if you can show a home to a potential buyer. Do you qualify the buyer or jump in your car and out the door you go? My guess is the less busy REALTORS, and those with less business or new agents would do this.
But, after a few times of being burned… lesson learned. With all the increased activity of agents missing or killed this is also not the smartest thing to do at any time. Never mind that nine times out of ten, this showing isn’t going anywhere.
Most of the time when you receive a call like this, “Hey, I found this home on the internet and would like to see it,” it is from your IDX site or one of the major syndication sites.
Depending on where they found the home, I asked them to give me a minute to see if it is truly available. While they are waiting I qualify them.
Is this the type of home you are looking for?Have you spoken to a lender yet?Are you currently working with a Realtor?Besides trying to find out the above answers, while I search I am trying to engage them to see if it would be a good fit to have one of my Buyer Specialists work with them, while looking up the listing.
When I ask the question of are you working with a Realtor, most will say…”we haven’t signed anything?”
Sometimes I get, “we are working with my Aunt, Brother, Cousin, Friend of my Sister but she lives 45 minutes away and we don’t want to “bother them.” Once I was actually told, “my Realtor told me to call the listing agents to see homes, and then they would write up the offer.”
Ok, but at least they are honest. More times than not you have to pull it out of them, by asking enough questions to get to the bottom of the answer.
Do you still go and show?Do you say call your relative?If it is your listing do you behave differently?I have shown my own listing to a buyer like this, because I feel an obligation to my sellers to get their home sold. If they were honest with me. If it is on a listing that is via IDX, no I don’t. I tell them to have their relative to show it or to have their relative call me and I will be glad to work with them since I live in the area they want to purchase in. Showing homes to buyers that you will not end of working with is a complete waste of time.
The one thing that really upsets me is the attitude of the licensed REALTOR who has no respect or disregard for agents in other areas… someone in our profession! Seriously, you are telling your relative to call listing agents or agents in the area and go spend an hour or so to show a home, that you will write the offer on?
I know the consumers don’t have a high regard for REALTORS, that has been documented over and over again, but how can another licensed professional not have respect for what we do? Now if you didn’t take the time to qualify them before putting them in your car, then shame on you.
Once, I had a potential buyer call me and request a showing. As I began to qualify her, and look up the listing, I told her give me a minute to look it up and see if it is available. She said, “Oh you’re not the listing agent, well just give me the listing agent information, I want to work with them, I only saw it on your site and thought it was yours.”
Kinda took me back…the raw honesty. Did I give her the name and phone number? You betcha!
How can we expect the public to respect what we do if other licensed professionals don’t? More importantly how do we respect ourselves if we do this? How do you handle calls like this?
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 3:04 pm | Contact the editor Tags: featured, real estate ethics, real estate professionalismCategory: Editorials
RealtyTrac SVP speaks out against national moratorium on foreclosures
In the video above, Rick Sharga, Senior Vice President of RealtyTrac speaks to the current status of the government as their role in housing and especially foreclosures is currently in flux.
Sharga says that the first thing the American government should do about housing is, first “do no harm.” How exactly does the government go about doing that, given how ingrained they are in housing?
Sharga says that government can influence banks for principle balance reductions, but that without job stimulation, there are no buyers and no confidence in the safety to buy.
The government can get involved in financing by not impeding, for example not eliminating the mortgage tax credits which would weaken the desire to buy (the last thing housing needs right now), Sharga notes.
Rethinking the Dodd-Frank provisions is a necessary step, Sharga said. As a nation, it would be unwise to unplug the life support tubes, so this reform must be thought through more fully.
Sharga said clearly and succinctly that he does not support a national moratorium on foreclosures. He said that at best, it is a temporary reprieve for a very small number and that most homeowners at that stage will foreclose anyhow.
A national moratorium on foreclosures would be disastrous, essentially eliminate financing and threaten to damage housing prices, says Sharga. It is a popular but impractical sentiment.
If you read between the lines, Sharga is saying that the current role of government and the role they are attempting to put themselves in for the future, is not much more than a political move and doesn’t do much to move the needle. With Sharga saying that a moratorium that sounds healthy on the surface but doesn’t do much more than stall the inevitable while harming housing.
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 2:46 pm | Contact the editor Tags: featured, real estate economy, Real Estate NewsCategory: Economy, Video
Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.
Email Tara SteeleBuilder confidence up after endless months of decline

With this morning’s news that luxury builder Taylor Morrison was acquired for nearly a billion dollars, it is no surprise as we suspected builder confidence would soon perk up, even if only slightly.
According to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) for July builder confidence is up two points after a three point dip in June, with declining points for the majority of the last year.
The outlooks that rose most were the sentiments on current sales with the highest jump in confidence in sales over the next six months while feelings toward traffic didn’t change.
Although the index is simply holding right now and regional outlooks vary, this is good news for the sector most hard hit by tightened lending.
Regionally, the index rose one point in the Midwest which maintains the lowest confidence of all regions. The West rose three points and follows the Midwest in low levels, and although the Northeast dropped, it is still second highest in confidence beaten only by the South which rose three points and now has the highest confidence level of all regions.
“The improvement in builder confidence in July is a positive sign that the outlook perhaps isn’t quite as bleak as was feared in June,” said Bob Nielsen, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). “While builders continue to confront serious challenges with regard to competition from foreclosed properties that are priced below replacement cost, inaccurate appraisals of new homes, and a very restrictive lending environment for new home construction, select markets are showing gradual improvement as consumers begin to take advantage of very favorable buying conditions.”
“We view the upward movement in the July HMI as a correction from an exceptionally weak number in June that was at least partly attributable to negative economic news and the close of a disappointing spring selling season,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “The strong rebound in sales expectations for the next six months likewise marks a return to trend. Basically, the market continues to bounce along the bottom, with conditions in some locations beginning to improve.”
This article published on Monday, July 18th, 2011 at 3:59 pm | Contact the editor Tags: featured, new home construction, real estate economy, Real Estate NewsCategory: Economy
Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.
Email Tara SteeleFriday, 22 July 2011
Information Overload – What’s Going On in the Short Sale World?
A couple of pretty exciting things happened in the short sale world over the last few days. For one, the FTC issued a statement saying that they will not enforce the MARS ruling against Realtors® and Brokers engaged in short sales. And, in the state of California, Governor Brown signed Senate Bill 458 into law (extending short sale anti-deficiency protections to junior lien holders).
Just as these two changes occurred over the past several days, things happen all the time in the distressed property world. In fact, if you take a long nap or go on an extended vacation, things could be completely different when you get back into the game.
When working with distressed properties, it is vital to be aware of all of the various banks’ policies and procedures as well as all of the different laws and policies impacting short sale sellers.
In addition to reading the articles on Agent Genius, here are some ways to keep up with the volumes of information coming your way:
Subscribe to RSS feeds. Seek out news outlets that report on the distressed property arena and subscribe to those feeds. That way, you can peruse the latest news when drinking your morning coffee (or tea).
Read email from your state Realtor® Association. If you are a member of your state Realtor® Association and/or the National Association of Realtors®, make sure that you subscribe to their emails and newsletters. These associations send regular emails providing the skinny on all things real estate (and all things short sale).
Cruise the Internet. Investigate and select a few distressed property blogs that seem to provide regular and well-respected content. Subscribe to their feeds and dialogue with the authors. When the opportunity arises, ask questions in the comment section of the blog posts.
Get to work. The more active you are in the short sale world, the more personal experience you will have with the different lending institutions’ policies and procedures. Getting out there, listing short sales and negotiating them will provide you with lots and lots of hands-on experience. This hands-on experience will go a long way towards your continued success in the field of real estate.
Photo: flickr creative commons by theseanster93
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 6:00 am | Contact the editor Tags: FTC, MARS short sale rule, short sale news, short salesCategory: Coaching, News, Short Sales
Melissa Zavala is the Broker/Owner of Broadpoint Properties and Head Honcho of Short Sale Expeditor®. Before landing in real estate, she had careers in education and publishing. Many folks say that Melissa is genetically pre-disposed to success with short sales. In fact, last year she and her staff obtained over 500 short sale approval letters! When she isn’t speaking with lien holders, Melissa enjoys practicing yoga, walking the dog, and vacationing at beach resorts.
Email Melissa ZavalaAnother mortgage crisis- robo-signing continues, loans missing, MERS under fire

Is another mortgage crisis among us or is it the same crisis that has supposedly been resolved and rectified? Are all of the pieces that crashed housing still lying around acting as accelerant to the fire that is housing? Possibly.
This week, Reuters’ Scott Paltrow did an extensive study on robo-signing, missing promissory notes and the status of MERS, all of which were supposedly no longer problematic in the American mortgage world.
Recently, we asked who was to blame for the economic crisis? Fingers pointed everywhere with a large group blaming the robo-signing scandal (where banks didn’t manually review documents before foreclosure leading to illegal foreclosures on wrong addresses, homes paid in full and various other mistakes), including state and federal agencies seeking damages.
“The robo-signing debacle is commonly pointed to as a major cause of the economic downturn, as companies like Lender Processing Services (LPS) and CoreLogic, both having recently been sued by the FDIC who says they provided automated inflated appraisals causing banks to make investments on loans they otherwise wouldn’t have, thus taking a major financial hit.”
At the end of 2010, banks nearly unanimously said they were halting robo-signings so that these wrongful (read: illegal) foreclosures would come to a stop. Today, Reuters’ investigation revealed that robo-signatures numbered in the thousands with “known robo-signers” still in action. How can this be?
The banks say it is a technicality, that all homes discovered with flawed paperwork were legitimately under foreclosure. Regardless, robo-signing isn’t over even though banks claimed they were and despite many lawsuits regarding robo-signatures and despite many believing robo-signing is the root of the entire economic collapse.
In yet another report, Reuters unveiled a highly ignored yet highly flammable housing issue. “There are signs, however, that servicers resort to doubtful documents because they have no choice if they are determined to foreclose: To a great extent, originals simply don’t exist. It’s one of the overlooked legacies of the housing boom.”
In a “rush” to get loan packages sold to investors, many banks either destroyed or failed to turn over original promissory notes or mortgage documents, both of which are legally required in order to convey ownership. Many of these banks have since gone under.
“From 2004 through the end of the housing boom in 2006, more than half of all new mortgages were securitized and sold to such pools, known as mortgage-securitization trusts, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.”
That is a substantial amount of paperwork eternally missing, how can many foreclosures be anything but contested if a bank now owning a mortgage can’t even prove they own the loan?
“The result is that trusts may be out many billions of dollars, says Matthew Weidner, a lawyer who specializes in mortgage litigation. If proper procedures are followed now, foreclosures could slow to a trickle. And a cloud would hang over title to millions of homes, potentially further depressing the housing market.”
Reuters’ expose on Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (MERS) is where the cracks in the continuing mortgage crisis begin to show.
With only 50 full time employees, MERS “claims to own about half of all mortgages in the United States, roughly 60 million loans, and is involved in about 60 percent of new mortgages issued.”
MERS was established by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac just over 15 years ago in conjunction with several major banks as a means to expedite the loan recording process as it used to be done through individual county clerk offices which was slow. “The founders went ahead even though no state laws authorized them to bypass the required filing with clerks,” according to Reuters.
Testimony was uncovered from 2009 where MERS employees noted they “did little but maintain the computer database” and that “For a $25 fee, employees of any of the 3,000 loan servicers that belonged to MERS could get themselves designated as a MERS “vice president” or “assistant secretary,” authorized to sign official documents on behalf of MERS.”
This spring, federal regulators included MERS along with 14 lenders as “engaged in unsafe or unsound practices” in transferring mortgages, requiring them to reform even though they still claim no wrongdoing.
Reuters said, “In practice, when servicers needed to create mortgage assignments to replace missing ones for foreclosure cases, their own employees, signing as MERS officials, printed out newminted documents and signed their names to them. MERS has served in effect as an instant teller machine for mortgage assignments. Servicers simply have their own employees sign the needed documents as MERS officials.”
Courts for years have upheld MERS assignments despite homeowners’ challenges of their documentation. Now, several states are noting that MERS doesn’t own the note, therefore, it has no power to transfer to servicers the right to foreclose.
Each of these alone would be enough to threaten housing, but together, there is a real danger looming. Banks have been ordered to reform and claim they have done so, yet robo-signing continues. Foreclosures are occurring at staggering rates and although it is not in dispute whether or not most of them are actual defaults, the fact that original promissory notes are gone forever leaves a huge question mark as to how a foreclosure can hold up in court without a bank being able to prove ownership of the loan? Furthermore, MERS claims to own half of all American loans and courts are beginning to rule that it was never legal for them to transfer the right to foreclose in the first place.
The silver lining is that discovery that the same issues are still at hand that caused much of the deterioration of the real estate sector could possibly lead to resolution of some sort. Without resolution, however, if these three factors remain, the majority of foreclosures) whether in legitimate default or not) will not hold up in court.
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 5:00 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, mortgage crisis, Real Estate NewsCategory: News
AgentGenius is a rapidly growing real estate social media, tech, news, and opinion site built and designed by and for the on-the-go agent. Our mission is to be a positive force in the industry, led by people inside of real estate. We aim to keep you up to date on trends that we study closely in order to forecast what’s next on the horizon.
Email AGBeat NewsWall Street executives crashed the economy says FCIC, DE, NY and now CA

When the Federal Crisis Inquiry Commission wrapped up their report last week, Wall Street executives came out as the culprit and news outlets went wild. We took a closer look and asked if it could be any of the many who were involved ranging from politicians to NAR to LPS.
The Attorneys General in New York and Delaware have pressed to seek criminal charges for Wall Street executives individually rather than continue the route of suing banks and corporations. Now, California’s Attorney General joins the ranks of those seeking to penalize those who allegedly knew of the risks involved yet chose to drive their companies and investors into the ground.
Because California represents a disproportionate number of homeowners harmed by the crash, the addition of this state strengthens the probe for political reasons but mostly because of the sheer number of individual cases they are able to point to.
Subpoenas have already been served by New York and Delaware to 13 financial firms, according to the LA Times, including Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.
The FCIC findings have not launched any official Department of Justice investigations and no charges have been made yet in regard to the report but analysts suspect they are coming which could potentially strengthen the states’ cases.
Bankers claim they are attempting to settle but with dozens of federal agencies, state agencies and individuals coming after them, they say settling is impossible as it could open them up to double or even triple jeopardy.
While this sentiment makes sense, some believe it to be a convenient excuse in light of massive governmental disorganization with no clear leadership. Perhaps the FCIC report will organize the movement to punish whoever is responsible for the housing crash, but for now agencies pursue bankers who say they want to settle but claim they cannot.
This article published on Monday, July 18th, 2011 at 6:00 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, mortgage crisis, real estate economy, Real Estate NewsCategory: Economy
Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.
Email Tara SteeleTuesday, 19 July 2011
Facebook ad pricing up yet spending is down – digital ad trends

Facebook advertising cost-per-click (CPC) rose 22% in the second quarter of 2011, as more advertisers have come online as was always Facebook’s plan for financial growth. The earliest adopters saw the lowest price when there were the fewest members and as the number of reachable members rises, so will the price.
Efficient Frontier’s 2011 Global Digital Marketing Performance Report says that Facebook CPCs are expected to reach 80% growth by the end of 2011.
Efficient Frontier notes that brands actively seeking fans on Facebook are “on course to double their fan base Year on Year (YOY) by October, demonstrating an increasingly competitive marketplace for consumers’ attention.”
That said, the dollars spent were up 8% in the second quarter but dropped 17% from the first quarter of 2010 with Efficient Frontier suspecting advertisers are focusing on their return on investment (ROI) over volume. We suspect an alternative reason could be that advertisers are diversifying their digital ad spends to include niche target sites rather than the standard Twitter/Facebook duo.
According to Efficient Frontier, comments on Facebook have a viral effect. “An analysis of 10 million fans managed by Context Optional demonstrated that for every brand post, there was an average of 100 comments in response. However, brands with more fans received additional interactions. For every 17,000 additional fans generated, the brand received one more comment per post. This demonstrated that there is a viral effect to having more fans as this creates more direct responses (from existing fans) and also indirect responses (from friends of fans).”
The study found that Facebook spends are mostly incremental. “Facebook constitutes approximately 5% of search budgets, though for some advertisers this can peak at 25% during time-sensitive, offer-led promotions.In the entertainment category there are some large advertisers who solely advertise on Facebook. This hints that there are new advertising budgets from the gaming and dating sectors going to Facebook, which would not have gone into Search otherwise.”
Lastly, the study revealed that Bing/Yahoo! gained a stunning 3.4% points of spend share from Google since Q4 2010. “Bing’s continued focus on higher quality and higher monetized traffic is paying off. Last quarter it was noted that the ROI on Bing/Yahoo! was better than Google. Bid management technology such as that used by Efficient Frontier has enabled advertisers to take advantage of that by moving budgets as appropriate.”
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 12:03 am | Contact the editor Tags: facebook, facebook marketing, featured, real estate social mediaCategory: New Media
AgentGenius is a rapidly growing real estate social media, tech, news, and opinion site built and designed by and for the on-the-go agent. Our mission is to be a positive force in the industry, led by people inside of real estate. We aim to keep you up to date on trends that we study closely in order to forecast what’s next on the horizon.
Email AGBeat NewsNew home builders gain some lost ground- permits, starts up

News of builder confidence rising is good news for the new home sector, as is new data released today by the U.S. Commerce Department that housing starts nationally rose 14.6% in June, marking the best pace of housing production since the beginning of this year.
Multifamily housing starts skyrocketed 30.4% while single family housing starts rose an impressive 9.4% in June, outpacing recent months. Nationally, starts improved in all regions, jumping 35.1% in the Northeast, 25.3% in the Midwest, 10.6% in the South and 5.4% in the West.
Building permit issuance is an economic indicator we look at as a preview of future building activity and with a 2.5% rise in permits issued in June, although it is the highest jump since December 2010, the low increase does show a tempered growth rather than a single month of good confidence and a building bubble.
Permits rose in the Midwest by 5.2%, the South rose 5.5% and the West rose 1.4% with the Northeast as the only region to decline, as it dipped 10% in June.
“The latest housing production figures show broad-based gains on both the single-family side and in multifamily apartment construction, where we know that demand has been increasing due to the influx of renters in the market,” said National Association of Home Builders’ Chief Economist David Crowe.
“Going forward, we expect to see a gradual upward trend in new-home production through the end of this year as consumers begin taking advantage of the buyers’ market, though not without some bumps along the way,” Crowe said.
What are you seeing in your area? With builder confidence, permits and starts up a bit in single family homes and up considerably in the multi-family sector, what are you seeing in your area? We are hearing a lot of reports of new subdivisions and existing subdivisions firing back up.
This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 1:36 pm | Contact the editor Tags: featured, new home construction, Real Estate NewsCategory: News
Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.
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Sunday, 17 July 2011
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Visit www.KristenDarkenwald.com Kristen Darkenwald, from http discusses how after talking to several small business owners, they are not sure how to take their business online, but they know they should. Kristen shares some Small Business Online Marketing tips and some simple ways to get started. The first step in small business online marketing is to have a website. While many business owners think the only way to do this is to hire someone to design a site and pay thousands of dollars, Kristen gives a simple, affordable solution. You can simple do it yourself by using a wordpress self hosted blog. She does advise hiring a graphic designer to either use your current logo, or to design a business logo for you and use this logo as part of a customized blog header. The Second small business online marketing tips is every business owner must be building a database. For Small Business Online Marketing this is done by using an autoresponder, such as aweber. Kristen also reveals the upcoming trend is mobile marketing, which used to be only an option for large corporations due to expense, Now is available to small businesses. Building a database of cell phone numbers is going to be very important for any small business online marketing efforts. Mike Koenig of Traffic Geyser just released their extensive Mobile Marketing Platform, Monster Follow Up. Which indicates that the mobile marketing trend is now available to small business in affordable options. The two Small Business …
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A fully automated way to integrate the best social networking sites for automated content distribution and social networking publicity.
The Social Networking Business Plan
Thursday, 9 June 2011
Save Big Bucks On Car Insurance With A Free Quote
Ready to save big bucks (10-40%!) on your car insurance? Just take a few minutes to fill out the form below and you’ll get quotes from our premier insurance providers. You will get quotes from some of the biggest names in the business (Farmers, Progressive and others) and a few of the smaller companies too that can really save you money.
Get Quote
Save Big Bucks On Car Insurance With A Free Quote
Ready to save big bucks (10-40%!) on your car insurance? Just take a few minutes to fill out the form below and you’ll get quotes from our premier insurance providers. You will get quotes from some of the biggest names in the business (Farmers, Progressive and others) and a few of the smaller companies too that can really save you money.
Get Quote

