Archive for July, 2009

Buying? Selling? Don’t undervalue the home!

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Buying? Selling? Don’t undervalue the home

Here are five things you need to know about getting a fair appraisal.

By Sarah Max, Money Magazine

(Money Magazine) — 1. The new rules don’t guarantee accuracy

After the bust, lenders came under fire for pressuring appraisers to inflate property values. Now banks are largely required to work with independent appraisers, which should help fix the problems that may have led buyers to overpay.

If you’re the owner and want to sell or refinance, however, it’s up to you to make sure your home isn’t mistakenly valued below your sale price or loan limit. That’s because appraisal-management companies tend to hire workers who can get the job done quickly and cheaply, rather than those who know the area best.

“Appraisers say they’re under pressure to crank out reports,” says Albuquerque mortgage broker Walt Vieira.

2. Detective work may pay off

If you’re selling or refinancing, a key factor in your home’s valuation is the recent sales prices for houses that are comparable to yours. But your appraiser may not know if there is some unusual circumstance behind those numbers, such as a divorce or a job relocation.

So ask a real estate agent to help you ID recent comparable sales in your area and try to get the scoop on the circumstances from your neighbors. Most appraisers will appreciate extra information, says Michael H. Evans, a fellow of the American Society of Appraisers.

3. Curb appeal can boost your numbers

Appraisers don’t give out grades for stellar housekeeping, but the appearance of your home nevertheless has some influence on their final number. “We’re only human,” says Evans.

So before the appraiser arrives, prepare your home for the evaluation the same way you would for an open house. At a minimum, mow the yard, shine the windows, tidy the closets, and pick up stray clutter from the floors. “The job of the appraiser is to look at the house through a buyer’s eyes,” says Leslie Sellers, president-elect of the Appraisal Institute.

4. Point out your home’s best features

An appraiser who is under time pressure can’t be counted on to notice and research every detail of your house and neighborhood. So before he gives your home a once-over, hand him a typed list of its best attributes. Key things to note: any recent upgrades or improvements in the house itself, such as custom woodwork or new windows, perks of your particular property, such as striking mountain views or mature landscaping, and the benefits of living in your neighborhood, such as access to top schools or public transportation.

5. It’s okay to fight back after the fact

Request a copy of the final report when it’s done; lenders are required to give it to you. Check for errors in key stats, such as square footage, and make sure that the comments portray your property accurately.

If you find a mistake, call the appraiser directly and ask him to recheck his work. If he’s not willing to make changes, take your complaint to your state’s real estate appraisal board, says Sellers. It’s also worth letting your bank or broker know about your gripe, but remember, under the new rules they can’t meddle with the appraisal directly.  To top of page

MISSOURI 340 – August 4-7 Kayak Race

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
MISSOURI 340 – August 4-7 Kayak Race

     The Missouri 340 is an endurance race across the state of Missouri. Competitors will start in Kansas City and finish in St. Charles. With numerous towns and hamlets, the course offers plenty of opportunity for resupply while enroute. The Missouri River is also incredibly scenic and isolated in some stretches, with wildlife and beautiful vistas to rival any river in North America.
     Participants are allowed exactly 88 hours to complete the course.  There are nine checkpoints along the route where paddlers are required to sign in and sign out. Cutoff times will be associated with these checkpoints based on the 88 hour pace.  For more information – Misssouri River Miles
     BBQ from 11:30 – 4:00 PM at the Lewis & Clark Boat House on Friday, August 7.

Check out more here:

http://rivermiles.com/mr340/

St. Charles County grocery stores team up for food drive

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
07.23.2009 9:00 am

St. Charles County grocery stores team up for food drive

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

A total of 23 grocery stores in St. Charles County owned by Schnucks, Shop ’n Save, Dierbergs and Wal-Mart are planning to participate in a 10-hour food drive on Aug. 1.

More than 350 volunteers will support the “Saturday Jubilee” sponsored by Operation Food Search, SENTralized and the Community Council of St. Charles County. Volunteers will collect donations from shoppers as they leave the various participating grocery outlets on that day. The goal is to collect 50,000 items that will be distributed through Operation Food Search in Wentzville.  

From the press release about Operation Food Search:

“Established in 1981 to address the growing problem of hunger, Operation Food Search  has become the largest distributor of free food in the bi-state area helping to feed the region’s needy.  OFS distributes more than 1.5 million pounds of food and personal care items to more than 300 community partner agencies that in turn feed 120,000 poor people, nearly half of whom are children, each month.

The Wentzville office serves 15,000 people through 26 food pantries in St. Charles County, Warren County and Lincoln County. ”

To learn more about Operation Food Search, visit www.ofsearch.org or call 636-544-3863.  To get involved in the Aug. 1 food drive, register at www.saturdayjubilee.com or call 636-544-3863.

St. Charles firefighters tickled pink for breast cancer awareness

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

07.23.2009 2:23 pm

St. Charles firefighters tickled pink for breast cancer awareness

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Don’t be surprised if you spot a St. Charles firefighter clad in a pink uniform this October. The department will be wearing them all October to show support during breast cancer awareness month.

Already, the department has begun selling pink T-shirts with its logo sporting the phrase, “Rescue the girls one shirt at a time” for $15 each to raise money for breast cancer research.

Department spokesman Dan Casey says St. Charles firefighters already have raised more than $5,000 selling the shirts. They will be sold at upcoming festivals on Main Street in St. Charles. For information on the campaign, call the department at 636-949-3252

Read more here:

http://www.stltoday.com/blogzone/chas-beat/st-charles/2009/07/st-charles-firefighters-tickled-pink-for-breast-cancer-awareness/

New Home Sales jumped by the largest amount in 8 years!

Monday, July 27th, 2009

WASHINGTON – New home sales jumped in June by the largest amount in more than eight years as buyers took advantage of bargain prices, low interest rates and a federal tax credit for first-time homeowners.

The figures released Monday were another sign the housing market is finally bouncing back. Data out last week showed home resales rose 3.6 percent in June, the third straight monthly increase.

The Commerce Department said new home sales rose 11 percent in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 384,000, from an upwardly revised May rate of 346,000.

Buyers are rushing to tax advantage of a federal tax credit that covers 10 percent of the home price or up to $8,000 for first-time buyers. Home sales need to be completed by the end of November for buyers to take advantage.

“The window of opportunity is closing,” said Bernard Markstein, senior economist for the National Association of Home Builders.

June’s results were the strongest sales pace since November 2008 and exceeded the forecasts of economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters, who expected a pace of 360,000 units. The last time sales rose so dramatically was in December 2000.

Sales have risen for three straight months. The median sales price of $206,200, however, was down 12 percent from $234,300 a year earlier and down nearly 6 percent from $219,000 in May.

There were 281,000 new homes for sale at the end of June, down more than 4 percent from May. At the current sales pace, that represents 8.8 months of supply — the lowest level since October 2007. If that number falls to just over 6 months, analysts say, builders will feel more comfortable ramping up construction.

Payne Family Homes – 2009 Professional’s Choice Nominee!

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

 

 

Payne Family Homes is a 2009 Professional’s Choice Nominee!

The 2009 Professional’s Choice Award is sponsored by the Home Builders Association of St. Louis and Eastern Missouri and recognizes outstanding new homes, condominiums and special projects in the St. Louis community.

 

w   Builders must be members of the Home Builders Association to be nominated.

 

w   Nominees are judged on basis of overall excellence in workmanship.

 

w   Judges are professional inspectors.

 

w   Professional’s Choice judging takes place the week of August 10-14. Winners are announced to the public in early October in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and Suburban Journals New Home Folio and on the HBA Web site at www.stlhba.com.

 

w   For a complete list of entries log on to the HBA Web site at www.stlhba.com.

 

 

 

The Stars of Summer – Saturday, 7/25/09 @ 8:30 PM

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

 

The Stars of Summer

Saturday, July 25, 8:30 PM

Broemmelsiek Park, Astronomy Area

Join members of the Alliance for Astronomy and the Astronomical Society of Eastern Missouri to view far-away places and discover secrets of the universe. This month’s focus is Saturn, Jupiter, and the moon.

Getting there:

From Highway 40/61, exit at the WingHaven Blvd (Highway DD) interchange and go south on Highway DD for approximately four miles. Turn right on Schwede Road to the park entrance. An additional entrance is located on Wilson Road for the dog park and small fishing lake.

Find the neighborhood that’s right for you!

Monday, July 20th, 2009
Find the neighborhood that’s right for you
The community that you choose to call home can make a big difference in your
quality of life. Finding one that fits your family’s lifestyle and needs is
just as important a factor as square footage and number of bedrooms. When
searching for your home, think about finding the right neighborhood first.
Create a checklist of things that are important to you. Here are some
suggestions:

— Quality of the school system. Standard & Poor’s hosts a website at
www.schoolmatters.com that allows parents to research/compare schools within a city and state.

— Getting to work. If you want to spend less time commuting and more time at
home, consider a location closer to your workplace.

— Property taxes and fees. Depending on what city or county the neighborhood
resides in, the property taxes you pay may vary. Also, many neighborhoods have
Homeowner’s Association fees that help pay to maintain common areas.

— Average housing costs and history. Look at the median or average cost of
homes in a given neighborhood to determine what a house might cost in that
area. Also, look at the history of the community to make sure the values of the
homes have grown.

— Age of development. Determine what kind of neighborhood you are most
comfortable living in. If you are a younger family, newer developments may
provide the chance to meet others that share your life experiences and
interests.

— Neighborhood amenities. If you have children you might enjoy a community
swimming pool or playground. Empty-nesters might prefer a clubhouse that
provides social activities. Individuals who are in retirement age may be more
interested in maintenance-free living that includes lifestyle amenities such as
a golf course.

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How will St Louis Housing be Different in the Next 10 Years?

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Pat Sullivan, EVP of the St Louis Association of Home Builders writes on the association’s LinkedIn page today:

July 15, 2009 – Payne Family Homes

There are many subcomponent topics of this question. How many homes compared to the past? What will people be able to afford? Will ideas like co-housing spread? Smaller lots and home sizes? Will the life of a home–said by some experts to typically be maybe 75 years–become longer or shorter? Homes will definitely be “greener” but how much so? Will neo-traditional or “new urbanism” styles with grid street patterns and garages that you enter from rear alleys be more than trendy and dominate and replace the cul-de-sac and curvi-linear street patterns of the majority of housing the past 50 years? The trend for aging boomers seems to be for them to stay put as they age and not head off for the sunbelt…will 50+ housing communities become a much larger share of the market in St. Louis? And will they demand aging-in-place housing styles with more universal design standards? And will those be the buyer’s choice or, as many advocates want, mandated by codes for all newly-built living units?

There can be a lot of opinions offered on such questions. Demographers say that there will be 1,532,000 new household formations per year in the U.S. from 2009-2013. That far surpasses the rate of household formation from 2004-2008, which was 1,170,000 per year. The nation needs about 1.5 million new homes per year, experts say. In 2009, we’ve been building at an annualized rate of maybe 500,000. So there would seem to be a potential new housing boom coming. Some wonder, though, whether the future households will have the same buying power as in the past. Will they be able to afford as much home? Many suggest that the loss of manufacturing jobs and other high wage, middle-income jobs could herald an era where new housing will need to be available at lower prices for the country’s households of the future. And will housing values appreciate rapidly or slowly when the current downturn ends?

Newly-built housing is facing more mandated regulatory cost proposals at this time than at any time in my 30 years in the industry. From emerging code requirements for residential sprinklers and energy efficiency to increased OSHA oversight to dramatically escalating land and soil protection requirements, all levels of government are combining to force the base price of all housing much higher than anything I’ve ever seen before.

One of the best ways to get a great perspective on the status of the housing industry–new for-sale, rental and remodeling–is to read “The State of the Nation’s Housing 2009″ issued by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University which you can read on-line or download for free at www.jchs.harvard.edu/son /index.htm . What do you think?

At Payne Family Homes, we are seeing prospects realize that component costs stand to increase in the future as Pat Sullivan suggests in the piece above.  With our new and lower Base Prices, a nice selection of home sites and low interest rates you owe it to yourself to come see what we have to offer you in any of our six oustanding St Charles County locations.

CNN Money: Top Things to Know About Buying a Home

Monday, July 13th, 2009
 

 

 

Top things to know

1. Don’t buy if you can’t stay put.

If you can’t commit to remaining in one place for at least a few years, then owning is probably not for you, at least not yet. With the transaction costs of buying and selling a home, you may end up losing money if you sell any sooner – even in a rising market. When prices are falling, it’s an even worse proposition.

2. Start by shoring up your credit.

Since you most likely will need to get a mortgage to buy a house, you must make sure your credit history is as clean as possible. A few months before you start house hunting, get copies of your credit report. Make sure the facts are correct, and fix any problems you discover.

3. Aim for a home you can really afford.

The rule of thumb is that you can buy housing that runs about two-and-one-half times your annual salary. But you’ll do better to use one of many calculators available online to get a better handle on how your income, debts, and expenses affect what you can afford.

4. If you can’t put down the usual 20 percent, you may still qualify for a loan.

There are a variety of public and private lenders who, if you qualify, offer low-interest mortgages that require a down payment as small as 3 percent of the purchase price.

5. Buy in a district with good schools.

In most areas, this advice applies even if you don’t have school-age children. Reason: When it comes time to sell, you’ll learn that strong school districts are a top priority for many home buyers, thus helping to boost property values.

6. Get professional help.

Even though the Internet gives buyers unprecedented access to home listings, most new buyers (and many more experienced ones) are better off using a professional agent. Look for an exclusive buyer agent, if possible, who will have your interests at heart and can help you with strategies during the bidding process.

7. Choose carefully between points and rate.

When picking a mortgage, you usually have the option of paying additional points — a portion of the interest that you pay at closing — in exchange for a lower interest rate. If you stay in the house for a long time — say three to five years or more — it’s usually a better deal to take the points. The lower interest rate will save you more in the long run.

8. Before house hunting, get pre-approved.

Getting pre-approved will you save yourself the grief of looking at houses you can’t afford and put you in a better position to make a serious offer when you do find the right house. Not to be confused with pre-qualification, which is based on a cursory review of your finances, pre-approval from a lender is based on your actual income, debt and credit history.

 CNN Money