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Denver home prices up for 3 consecutive months
September 30th, 2008 3:55 PM

Denver Business Journal reports: Denver home prices up for third month

Denver home prices had a 1 percent monthly appreciation in May, a 1.5 percent rise in June, and 0.8 percent in July. Not great, but this was the second-strongest showing of any of the 20 metro areas analyzed. Click the link above to see the entire article.

There continue to be signs that we may be near the bottom of the downturn in home prices. Perhaps when the current financial crisis gets settled, the bottled-up demand for new homes will be released.


Posted by Rudy Antle on September 30th, 2008 3:55 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Think It Through, First!
September 25th, 2008 7:43 AM

In his comment to my last post, “Notice to Bottom Feeders”, my friend Gary asked, “So what good is this bailout to me”. He expects it to cost him either in higher taxes or a devalued dollar. (See comments below that post).

I share his concerns. I don’t understand all that has gone on (and evidently neither does anyone in Washington), but even I can see that the only good the bailout might bring is that it might enable our overall economy to stabilize. Then it will take some time to work our way out of this mess.

I mentioned two points in my reply to Gary: something must be done quickly; and whatever is done must not make things worse. Whatever is done, it must be thoroughly debated beforehand to head off disastrous unintended consequences. A personal story illustrates the latter point beautifully.

In 1985 the organization that employed me got itself into financial trouble. Their solution was to eliminate salaries, including mine. That organization employed four Campus Ministers. All of us lost our jobs. We had a long discussion where the four of us (plus my wife whom I had just picked up from the airport) offered suggestions for keeping the ministry alive with a least one position retained (“Have you thought about trying to …”), and kept getting the answer “No, we hadn’t thought of that”.

Finally, my wife Lindsey said, “It sounds like you haven’t thought this through.” The Chairman of the Board that made the decision roared back in anger, “Of course we haven’t thought it through. We only made the decision yesterday!”

Sounds like Washington, doesn’t it?


Posted by Rudy Antle on September 25th, 2008 7:43 AMPost a Comment (0)

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Notice to bottom feeders
September 23rd, 2008 4:00 PM

The Mid-year newsletter for The Genesis Group showing continuing negative trends in the sale of both new and resale homes. To see it, click here The Genesis Group Newsletter.

But also in that newsletter is an article about the current housing market titled The expected decline continues, market rapidly approaching bottom”.

A key sentence: “Despite, or rather because of these negative reports, it is becoming clearer to us that the market is rapidly approaching bottom.”

One of my favorite passages from the Bible is just a phrase that occurs almost 400 times: “it came to pass”. Nothing stays the same. There is no accurate linear projection from this date into the future showing that the direction things are headed now is the direction they will always head. Market has been headed down. It will go up. If it has been going up, it will go down again at some point.

Perhaps it’s true that “the market is rapidly approaching bottom”. I have two things to say about it: “I’m ready for it to change”; and “now is the time to take advantage of the bottom of the market”.


Posted by Rudy Antle on September 23rd, 2008 4:00 PMPost a Comment (2)

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Move or Refinance Now or Later?
September 9th, 2008 5:05 AM

This email came from a client who is doing some repairs and updating on her home for an eventual move—but three to five years away because she sees the market as weak right now. She also had a question about what to do about her current loan.

“Rates - I spoke w/ countrywide, our lender and with our current 7 year ARM expiring 12/09, it sounded like we’d need to wait to see about a better either short term ( 5-7 year ARM) or get a 30 year fixed, even if we stayed in the house another 3-5 years???

Would appreciate your thoughts – thanks.”

My reply:

It sounds like you are on the right track. If you don’t have to move right now, it’s probably better for you to wait until the market shows definite signs that it’s starting back up.

My one caveat is that if you wait 3-5 years in order for the market for your home to be better, the market for your next home will have improved also. For example, right now it is possible to get a brand new home at a lower price than many resale homes in the same subdivision because the builders are hurting so much they are giving huge incentives. In 3 years those incentives will be gone and comparable new homes will be much more expensive. That 3-year old home which could be purchased today will have a lot of equity. In addition, resale homes that are 1-3 years old now will then be 4-6 years old. Your home will 31 years old, and won’t have appreciated as much.

Actually, I have a 2nd caveat: although the market for selling your home is tough right now, the selection you would have as a buyer is extensive. With all you’ve done to your home, it would stand out from the crowd of competitors and go fairly quickly if priced right as well. Then you would have an opportunity to pick up your next home at a good price.

With your plans to stay in your current home longer, though, I’ll address your question about rates. You are on the right track here also. Since your current loan doesn’t adjust for another 15 months, you can afford to wait to get an even better loan at some low point in the roller-coaster ride of interest rates. Unless rates drop dramatically in the next few months, waiting probably will help, not hurt you. You’ve got time to wait for something good to come along.

If by this time next year you haven’t seen a good deal on rates come along, then start talking with a lender about refinancing. If at that time you still are thinking about moving within 2-4 years, either another ARM or even a 30-year loan would work, depending on what you can do with closing costs. The primary piece of advice I give clients about refinancing is to, in effect, amortize the closing costs of their refinance. Rather than focus on interest rates, work to get lower closing costs for the refinanced loan.

For example, if the new loan will have $4,800 in closing costs, and you will only save about $48 a month (approximate savings on a $150,000 loan with a drop from 6% to 5.5%), it will take 100 months to break even. Staying less than 8 years in the house after that kind of refinance just means you will have used some of your equity needlessly. So, if you do refinance, try to do it with no closing costs, even it if takes a premium interest rate to do it.

Long-winded, but I hope this helps.


Posted by Rudy Antle on September 9th, 2008 5:05 AMPost a Comment (0)

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Mortgage delinquencies decline in Colorado
September 5th, 2008 5:11 PM

Posted by Rudy Antle on September 5th, 2008 5:11 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Rocky Mountain News: “Good news for Denver-area housing market”
August 27th, 2008 1:44 PM

 “The Denver area housing market showed the most appreciation of 20 metropolitan areas tracked by the closely watched S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices from May to June.

The Denver area showed a 1.5 percent gain in that period. Boston, with a 1.2 percent increase, was the only other metropolitan area to show an increase.

Denver and Boston have shown three consecutive months of positive returns. Denver homes showed a 4.7 percent decline from June 2007 to June 2008, the third best of the 20 cities.”

Read entire article here.


Posted by Rudy Antle on August 27th, 2008 1:44 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Builder Sales Down, Resales Up
August 11th, 2008 6:16 PM

In the middle of an article in the Denver Business Journal about Centex Homes putting a hold on its Colorado building operations is some good news. Even though new home sales have slowed and the median resale price last month dropped 10 percent from July 2007 to July 2008, down to $229,200, we’ll take good news wherever it comes from.

“Colorado’s housing market has been soft in recent years, as has the rest of the country’s, and remains challenged, but there have been signs of improvement.

Resales of single-family homes in the Denver area increased 6.54 percent to 4,154 in July from the same month of 2007, according to Metrolist Inc., metro Denver’s Multiple Listing Service. The Colorado Housing Division, which tracks statewide foreclosures, thinks foreclosures hit their peak here late this year.”


Posted by Rudy Antle on August 11th, 2008 6:16 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Beware “Bank Owned” Rental Scam
June 25th, 2008 2:14 PM

A broker in my office who handles a lot of bank owned properties sent out a warning. Some crooks take information from a public site that accesses the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) and use it to scam people looking for a house to rent.

Information about one of her listings showed up as a rental property on Craigslist. A woman called in to the office and said that “she had sent in a rental application complete with her social security number and paid deposit and rent money and wanted access to her new home.”

Banks never rent out the homes they have taken in foreclosure. Some banks have had to evict scammed “tenants” who thought they had legitimately rented a property.

The woman who called evidently didn’t check it out thoroughly. She lost her deposit and rent money, and now her identity has also been stolen. Even more, she didn’t have a place to move to.

If you know people who want to rent a property, pass this along. It may save them some serious hassles.


Posted by Rudy Antle on June 25th, 2008 2:14 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Links to Services for Senior Adults
June 9th, 2008 7:04 PM

Where can you go for information or help specifically designed for Senior Adults? A great resource I've come across is 9News Senior Source.

This web site is being redesigned to help Senior Adults (including empty-nesters, Baby Boomers, retirees, and older adults). Seniors need a Realtor® who is trustworthy and is concerned about his clients' needs on all levels.

If you know of someone who is thinking of moving (whether they are a Senior Adult or that Senior's children or grandchildren) forward this information to them.  Point them also to this page: Seniors Face Housing Choices for some ideas of the factors involved in deciding what to do with their home.


Posted by Rudy Antle on June 9th, 2008 7:04 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Is this “bad news” really good news?
May 19th, 2008 9:05 AM


“The median price for existing single-family homes in the Denver area is down by 6.6 percent in the first quarter, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. “ See the entire article at: 
Denver Business Journal May 13, 2008

This sounds like bad news. However, it could be good news because a drop in the median price could just mean that more of the lower priced homes are selling. If more lower priced homes are selling, those sellers will be able to move up.

For a different perspective, see this article from 5280 Magazine .

Some neighborhoods are not only holding up well, but are appreciating. So, the answer to the question of “How is the real estate market in Denver?” should be changed to “Which neighborhoods in Denver are appreciating, and which are depreciating?”


Posted by Rudy Antle on May 19th, 2008 9:05 AMPost a Comment (0)

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