Friday, June 27, 2014
JUST LISTED!!!
Sunday, June 22, 2014
Saturday, June 21, 2014
New to the Beverly Hills housing market
This Craftsman home, set on a roomy three-quarter-acre lot, has the rolled roof edges, deep overhangs and protruding rafter tails characteristic of the style developed by brothers Charles and Henry Greene. Originally built for Packard dealer Earle C. Anthony, the shingle-clad house was moved from Los Angeles to Beverly Hills in the early 1920s by silent-film star Norman Kerry. Inside, the Anthony-Kerry House retains its wood interiors, beamed ceilings and built-ins.
Location: 910 N. Bedford Drive, Beverly Hills 90210
Asking price: $8.995 million
Year built: 1909
Architects: Greene & Greene
House size: Four bedrooms, five bathrooms, 4,565 square feet
Lot size: 33,968 square feet
Features: Foyer, oversized living room with fireplace, formal dining room, updated kitchen, office/library, sleeping porch, clinker-brick garden walls, detached garage with living quarters above, swimming pool, mature landscaping
About the area: Last year, 369 single-family homes sold in the 90210 ZIP Code at a median price of $3.425 million, according to DataQuick. That was a 13.2% price increase from 2012.
Www.mikedronge.com
Friday, June 20, 2014
3 major real estate forecasters turn bearish
Declining affordability, waning demand from investors and tight credit are among the headwinds that are tripping up the housing recovery, Bloomberg reports.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Home Sales Slip In May as Thin Inventories Push Prices Higher
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Many potential homebuyers don’t realize they don’t need a big down payment
On average, consumers believe they need 11 to 15 percent in equity to buy a home, Boyle said, citing figures from a Zelman & Associates survey of renters and people who live in the homes of oth“It’s a wakeup call to the housing industry that we have more to do to let the next generation know they can get a conforming, conventional mortgage with a down payment of as little as 5 percent (sometimes with as little as 3 percent coming out of their own pockets),” Boyle wrotAbout 4 in 10 respondents estimated the minimum down payment required was at least 15 percent of the purchase price, including those in the prime “first-time buyer”
Many potential homebuyers overestimate the size of the down payment required to finance a home purchase, according to Fannie Mae exec Christina Boyle.
On average, consumers believe they need 11 to 15 percent in equity to buy a home, Boyle said, citing figures from a Zelman & Associates survey of renters and people who live in the homes of others.
“It’s a wakeup call to the housing industry that we have more to do to let the next generation know they can get a conforming, conventional mortgage with a down payment of as little as 5 percent (sometimes with as little as 3 percent coming out of their own pockets),” Boyle wrote.
About 4 in 10 respondents estimated the minimum down payment required was at least 15 percent of the purchase price, including those in the prime “first-time buyer” demographics between 25 and 34.
Freddie Mac’s purchase of mortgages with down payments under 10 percent more than quadrupled between 2009 and 2013, Boyle noted, and the latest stats for 2014 show that more than 1 in 5 borrowers who took out conforming, conventional mortgages this year put down 10 percent or less.