2012 looks to be exciting!

Housing May Turn the Corner in 2012: CoreLogic

01/18/2012 By: Carrie Bay

CoreLogic’s chief economist Mark Fleming says housing statistics and the duration of the downturn to date indicate 2012 may be the year the housing market begins to turn the corner.

In the first release of CoreLogic’s new MarketPulse newsletter Wednesday, Fleming explained his rationale for such an assessment.

He notes that housing is an industry with long business cycles. Regional housing recessions have typically taken anywhere from three to five years to find their bottom, and Fleming says the national housing recession has behaved similarly in that it has bounced along a bottom for the past two years.

Fleming points out that housing affordability is rising dramatically due to a combination of home price deflation and rock-bottom mortgage rates. In fact, he says, after adjusting for inflation, this has been a “lost decade” for housing as prices are the same as at the beginning of the millennium.

“The time is right in 2012 for prices to begin growing again,” Fleming said, “and housing affordability will put a floor under any further significant declines.”

Fleming says he will be watching the spring and summer buying season closely for positive signs of demand.

He points out that households are paying off their debts and at the same time accessing credit more easily, with some even adding Home Equity Lines of Credit in the third quarter of last year – the first such movement for these second-lien mortgage products since the financial crisis began.

Fleming cites a quarterly survey by the New York Federal Reserve Bank, which shows total household debt continues to decline. At the same time, consumer sentiment rebounded strongly in the latter part of 2011, posting a six-month high in December – an indication that consumers’ confidence in the strength of the economy is growing, according to Fleming.

Most housing statistics basically moved sideways in the latter part of 2011, but Fleming finds several positives in the numbers. Although market indicators are coming off of very low levels, he notes that both existing-home sales and single-family housing starts have begun to increase, homebuilder confidence is improving, and affordability is at an all-time high.

Putting all of these statistics together suggests that while there is a very long way to go, the housing market is likely to sustain these upward movements in 2012, according to Fleming.

“While we cannot say with a high degree of certainty what 2012 has in store for us, indications based on the latter part of 2011 are that both the broad economy and the housing market are moving toward positive growth in 2012,” Fleming said.

He concedes that some impediments do exist, including slower global economic growth, a recession in Europe, and fiscal and political uncertainty in the United States.

But Fleming says when you look at the big picture, “we are bullish on the prospect of improving economic performance in 2012 from 2011.”

Complete article & source:
http://www.dsnews.com/articles/housing-may-turn-corner-in-2012-corelogic-2012-01-18

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7 Tips of Staging from HouseLogic.com

7 Tips for Staging Your Home.

Published: March 19, 2010 By: G. M. Filisko

Here are some good basic guidelines when “Staging Your Home”

Make your home warm and inviting to boost your home’s value and speed up the sale process.
Warm, neutral-colored paint is key when staging your home.
The first step to getting buyers to make an offer on your home is to impress them with its appearance so they begin to envision themselves living there. Here are seven tips for making your home look bigger, brighter, and more desirable.

1. Start with a clean slate

Before you can worry about where to place furniture and which wall hanging should go where, each room in your home must be spotless. Do a thorough cleaning right down to the nitpicky details like wiping down light switch covers. Deep clean and deodorize carpets and window coverings.

2. Stow away your clutter

It’s harder for buyers to picture themselves in your home when they’re looking at your family photos, collectibles, and knickknacks. Pack up all your personal decorations. However, don’t make spaces like mantles and coffee and end tables barren. Leave three items of varying heights on each surface, suggests Barb Schwarz of www.StagedHomes.com in Concord, Pa. For example, place a lamp, a small plant, and a book on an end table.

3. Scale back on your furniture

When a room is packed with furniture, it looks smaller, which will make buyers think your home is less valuable than it is. Make sure buyers appreciate the size of each room by removing one or two pieces of furniture. If you have an eat-in dining area, using a small table and chair set makes the area seem bigger.

4. Rethink your furniture placement

Highlight the flow of your rooms by arranging the furniture to guide buyers from one room to another. In each room, create a focal point on the farthest wall from the doorway and arrange the other pieces of furniture in a triangle around the focal point, advises Schwarz. In the bedroom, the bed should be the focal point. In the living room, it may be the fireplace, and your couch and sofa can form the triangle in front of it.

5. Add color to brighten your rooms

Brush on a fresh coat of warm, neutral-color paint in each room. Ask your real estate agent for help choosing the right shade. Then accessorize. Adding a vibrant afghan, throw, or accent pillows for the couch will jazz up a muted living room, as will a healthy plant or a bright vase on your mantle. High-wattage bulbs in your light fixtures will also brighten up rooms and basements.

6. Set the scene

Lay logs in the fireplace, and set your dining room table with dishes and a centerpiece of fresh fruit or flowers. Create other vignettes throughout the home—such as a chess game in progress—to help buyers envision living there. Replace heavy curtains with sheer ones that let in more light.

Make your bathrooms feel luxurious by adding a new shower curtain, towels, and fancy guest soaps (after you put all your personal toiletry items are out of sight). Judiciously add subtle potpourri, scented candles, or boil water with a bit of vanilla mixed in. If you have pets, clean bedding frequently and spray an odor remover before each showing.

7. Make the entrance grand

Mow your lawn and trim your hedges, and turn on the sprinklers for 30 minutes before showings to make your lawn sparkle. If flowers or plants don’t surround your home’s entrance, add a pot of bright flowers. Top it all off by buying a new doormat and adding a seasonal wreath to your front door.

Read more at http://buyandsell.houselogic.com/articles/7-tips-staging-your-home/#ixzz1hDmzurqn/

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DECEMBER – 2011 Newsletter by Jamie Maze

DECEMBER – 2011 Newsletter by Jamie Maze

Check out my eNewsletter for December 2011. Lots of great information for Central Ohio real estate, as well as info on the national level.

http://jamiemaze.housingtrendsenewsletter.com/?newsletter_id=280

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Study Finds 38% of Homes Purchased in 2011 Bought with Cash

http://www.dsnews.com/articles/study-finds-38-of-homes-purchased-in-2011-bought-with-cash-2011-12-23

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Top Reasons to Sell Your Home in the Winter

This is a great article from my most recent newsletter on reasons to sell your home in the winter:

http://jamiemaze.housingtrendsenewsletter.com/Top-Reasons-to-Sell-Your-Home-in-Winter-HT211-580-3317

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Distressed Homes in Central Ohio Continue To Decline

3Q-2011 Lender-Mediated Properties Report

Posted: 10/27/2011
Columbus Board of REALTORS®

Third quarter saw yet another decline in the number of distressed properties for sale in the central Ohio area. The 2,423 distressed homes on the market during the third quarter of 2011 is down over 11 percent from the first of the year and down almost 37 percent from inventory levels during the third quarter of 2010 according to the 3rd Quarter Lender-Mediated Properties Report released today by the Columbus Board of REALTORS®.

According to the third quarter 2011 report, the number of new lender-mediated listings is also declining. The 1,948 distressed properties listed for sale during the months of July, August and September is down 24 percent from the 2,562 distressed properties listed during the third quarter of 2010.

“Over one-third of the homes sold this year have been lender-mediated, “said Rick Benjamin, 2011 President of the Columbus Board of REALTORS®. “So, the lower inventory levels are a direct result of the increased sales of distressed properties this year.”

Of the 5,667 homes sold during the third quarter of 2011, 30.3 percent (1,717) were considered distressed properties. Year-to-date, 35.4 percent of the total sales have been lender-mediated. During 2010, distressed property sales made up 29.3 percent of the total sales during the months of January through September.

“The lender-mediated inventory is down to levels seen in early 2009, from a peak of almost 4,000 late last year,” added Benjamin. “Although we’re not out of the woods yet, it goes without saying that we’re relieved to see fewer distressed properties being added to the market.”

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Children’s Miracle Network

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Welcome

Welcome to my new website! It is definitely a work in progress, but feel free to come back as often as you like for current information on the market in Central Ohio. Real estate in Columbus is local & it is different from other parts of the country, so don’t get caught up in the national news. Ask me! I can give you current and relevant information to make an educated decision in your real estate investments.

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