Showing posts with label Dallas Real Estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dallas Real Estate. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2015

For 11th Straight Year Texas Ranks as Top State to do Business

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For 11th Straight Year Texas Ranks as Top State to do Business
CEO Magazine’s 11th annual survey of the “Best States to do Business” was released Friday and Texas topped the rankings for the 11th year in a row.  The news had Texas Governor Greg Abbott on cloud nine, saying the state won’t stop at its top ranking.  “Everything is bigger in Texas, and that includes our business climate,” Abbott said. “Despite being the number one state to do business for 11 consecutive years, Texas will do even more to empower businesses and increase economic expansion. That’s why I’m promoting policies to cut the business franchise tax, further rein in regulatory regimes and elevate our higher education system to bolster our workforce so that Texas keeps creating jobs and opportunity.”  In the rankings, Texas was ahead of Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia which rounded out the Top 5. California was once again the worst state for a second year.  The rankings takes into account state GDP, unemployment, domestic migration, state government and state-local tax burden.
-          Dallas Morning News, May 8, 2015

Monday, September 22, 2014

New Report Shows DFW is a Top Market for Home Sellers

New Report Shows DFW is a Top Market for Home Sellers
Dallas-Fort Worth is ranked as one of the best markets in the country to sell a house, according to a new study. Zillow Inc. said the D-FW area is the fourth best place in the country for home sellers.  “Sellers in the Bay Area, Seattle and Dallas have the most negotiating power, with final sale prices largely at or above asking,” Zillow’s report says.  Zillow said that overall home prices in D-FW were up 5.8 percent in August from a year ago and there were about 5 percent fewer houses on the market.  U.S. home values will continue to rise during the year ahead, but at a slower rate than last year, according to Zillow.  D-FW home prices are forecast to increase by about 4 percent in the next 12 months.
http://bizbeatblog.dallasnews.com/files/2014/09/sellers-300x168.jpg
-          Dallas Morning News, September 19, 2014

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Texas Economy Continues to Boom

Texas Economy Continues to Boom
The Texas economy grew faster in the second quarter, thanks largely to the booming energy industry and strong commercial real estate activity, according to a report by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.  Employment growth is a big part of that picture. Texas’ annualized job growth rose from 2.4 percent in the first quarter to 4.3 percent in the second quarter — the strongest pace in nearly nine years. And that happened even though employment growth slowed in May and June.  The state’s job creation is outpacing the nation’s in all major industries except construction, manufacturing and other services in the first half of 2014. The Dallas Fed forecasts 3.5 percent employment growth this year, or 400,000 new jobs.
-          Dallas Morning News, August 11, 2014


Thursday, August 8, 2013

Dallas-area home prices inch ahead of pre-recession levels

Dallas-area home prices inch ahead of pre-recession levels

A strong spring selling market has finally pushed Dallas-area home prices ahead of where they were before the recession.
The gain in the monthly Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index isn’t much — up 1 percent from where Dallas-area prices were in June 2007. That was just before the housing crash and economic meltdown hammered residential values across the country.
The latest Case-Shiller report is another strong sign for the Dallas area’s economy and real estate market, said D’Ann Petersen, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
“Other measures of North Texas prices indicate the same improvement,” Petersen said. “While the North Texas market suffered during the downturn, the depth of the decline was not as bad as many other areas of the country.”
Prices of pre-owned homes in the Dallas area were up 7.6 percent in May from the same month in 2012, Case-Shiller reported Tuesday.
It’s the largest year-over-year percentage gain since Case-Shiller started tracking Dallas home prices in 2000.
At the worst of the housing market downturn in early 2009, Dallas-area prices were off by about 11 percent in the Case-Shiller index.
Both Dallas and Denver in May were about 1 percent above pre-recession price levels.
“This is the first time any city has made a new all-time high,” the Case-Shiller report said.
Fueled by energy
Jed Kolko, the chief economist with online real estate firm Trulia Inc., said both Dallas and Denver have strong economies fueled in part by the robust energy sector.
“And they both had a milder housing crash to bounce back from,” Kolko said. “The places now with the biggest home price increases are those having the rebound off the lowest bottoms.”
The rate of home price growth in the Dallas area in May trailed the 12.2 percent nationwide rise in the index.
The biggest year-over-year price increases were in San Francisco, 24.5 percent, and Las Vegas, 23.3 percent.
While Dallas and Denver are ahead, nationwide home values are still about 24 percent lower in the Case-Shiller report than they were before the recession. The biggest deficits are in Las Vegas, still down 51 percent from the peak, and Phoenix, down 41 percent.
“On a relative basis, I guess it is a big deal as one compares Dallas to all the other major metropolitan areas around the country,” said James Gaines, an economist with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University. “It sure beats still being down by 25 percent or more as some of the cities are.”
The prices in Dallas and Denver really haven’t caught up, Kolko points out.
“Remember, since the peak of the bubble, there has been modest inflation,” he said. “In real terms, prices are still a little lower than they were then.”
Case-Shiller’s index tracks the prices of specific single-family homes in each metropolitan area. The index survey does not include condominiums and townhouses.
Record levels
North Texas home prices have been at record high levels for several months based on sales of houses by real estate agents.
In June, the median price of homes sold through Realtors’ multiple listing services was up 13 percent from a year earlier to $185,820.
Total pre-owned home sales through the first half of 2013 were up 19 percent from the same period a year ago, a new high for the six-month period.
MLS sales prices for pre-owned single-family homes in North Texas last month were about 45 percent greater than they were in January 2009, according to numbers from the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M.
But the types of properties that sell each month, not just overall changes in values, can heavily influence those numbers.
A decline in the number of distressed and previously foreclosed homes on the market has no doubt had a big impact on overall median home sales prices and values. Foreclosure filings this year are running almost 40 percent below 2012.
But not every neighborhood is experiencing a boom in home prices.
“We have seen very little, if any, change in the average sale price of properties,” said Charles Wilmut, who lives in Irving’s Hackberry Creek neighborhood. “It appears the brass ring is out there, but we are not getting it.”
Tim Slavin, who lives in Frisco, fretted for months reading about increasing North Texas home prices while his home’s value continued to lag. He was pleased by a recent appraisal one of his neighbors got.
“The appraisal came back closer to what I bought my house for in 2007,” Slavin said. “I hope the home values continue to improve.”
Improving prices should bring more homes to the market, which will relieve the lack of inventory. The number of homes for sale in North Texas has been at a 20-year low this year.
“There are many homeowners who might have wanted to move up but could not sell their homes without taking a loss,” said David Brown, a housing analyst with Metrostudy Inc. “They are now capable of selling their existing home and purchasing a move-up home.”
S&P Case-Shiller home price index

Source: Dallas News

Monday, March 25, 2013

5 Tasks to sell your home quick


Step 1: Assess The Value Of Your Property

Pricing your home right is the key factor in selling it in a reasonable amount of time. Setting a price too high will make your home undesirable to buyers. Pricing it too low may, in fact, deter buyers who wonder what's wrong with it - or simply not get you a fair price for your property. Now is the time to do your research.

How much should your house sell for? In other words, what's the 'right' price? It's the price at which homes similar to yours in the same neighborhood have sold recently. You can use the free online home valuation service to find out exactly what your home is worth if you plan to sell your house yourself. Alternatively if you plan to sell your house with an agent, a good Realtor can quickly give you a reasonable approximate price based on recent sales in your neighborhood, coupled with the condition and specifics of your house. A Realtor can also make specific suggestions for things you can do to prepare your home to sell for a good price.

Step 2: Figure Out How Much It Will Cost You To Sell

If you've never sold a house before, you may not be aware of all the associated costs. You'll need to know about these costs in order to help you adjust the asking price on your house, as well as to help you estimate the profit that you'll realize on the house. If you're counting on the sale of your house to finance the purchase of another, this is especially important. These out-of-pocket costs may include:

    Advertising your home, if you're selling it yourself. This could easily run into hundreds of dollars, depending on the methods you choose.
    Realtor commissions - typically 6% of the selling price.
    Closing costs, including attorney and other professional fees
    Excise taxes on the sale
    Property taxes and any homeowner association fees


Step 3: Take Care Of Any Needed Repairs

If you've been putting off getting the driveway fixed, repairing the roof or any other needed repairs, the time to do it is now, before you put your house on the market. Some repairs, left undone, will prevent your home from selling at all and others will bring your asking price down. Replacing broken roofing tiles, loose gutter shoring and other minor but unsightly problems will make your house that much more saleable.

Step 4: Get Your House Looking Its Best

Selling for the price you want depends on how appealing your house is. Take a good, hard look at your house, inside and out. Trim bushes, mow lawns, plant a flower bed. Something as simple as giving your siding and windows a good scrub down can freshen its look immensely.

Here are some other things that increase the chances of your house selling quickly:

    A fresh coat of paint, or just touching up the trim
    Freshly painted interior walls
    New carpet or flooring in common rooms like the kitchen or bathroom


Step 5: Have A Garage Sale

Get rid of all the accumulated clutter and pocket a little profit at the same time. That collection of kids' bikes in the garage may be a storehouse of memories to you, but to a prospective buyer they're just clutter - and they will make your garage look smaller. Clear away as much clutter as you possibly can. When you're ready to show your house, it should be as close to move-in condition as possible. The more easily a buyer can picture their own family in the house, the more likely they will be to buy.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Northwood Hills, Dallas Texas

Northwood Hills, Dallas, Texas




   
       

           
               
               
               
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
               
               
               
                       

                       
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Homes for sale in Northwood Hills


                       
                       

                        Northwood Hills is a gorgeous tree lined neighborhood conveniently located near Hwy 635 and Hwy 75 between Hillcrest and Coit south of Beltline Road.
                       


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        RE/MAX Premier Properties
            Kim Raine&nbsp
           
            Homes for Sale in Northwood Hills, Dallas, Texas
            214 675 9436 (Cellular)
           
            http://www.kimraine.com
       
       
       
        RE/MAX Premier Properties
            1800 Market Place Blvd., Ste. 140
Irving, TX 75063
           
       
   

   
        Information herein deemed reliable but not guaranteed
           
       
       
            ©2012 Imprev, Inc.
           
       
   


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RE/MAX Premier Properties
Kim Raine 
Homes Available for sale in Prestonwood Area
214 675 9436 (Cellular)

http://www.kimraine.com
RE/MAX Premier Properties
1800 Market Place Blvd., Ste. 140
Irving, TX 75063
Information herein deemed reliable but no guaranteed
©2012 Imprev, Inc.
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RE/MAX Premier Properties
Kim Raine 
Homes Available for sale in Prestonwood Area
214 675 9436 (Cellular)

http://www.kimraine.com
RE/MAX Premier Properties
1800 Market Place Blvd., Ste. 140
Irving, TX 75063
Information herein deemed reliable but no guaranteed
©2012 Imprev, Inc.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Colleyville Luxury Homes

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Colleyville Luxury Homes

Colleyville is nestled in the middle of the DFW Metroplex boasting great schools and community feel
RE/MAX Premier Properties
Kim Raine 
Colleyville Luxury Homes
214 675 9436 (Cellular)
972 403 2040 (AccessLine)
http://www.kimraine.com
RE/MAX Premier Properties
2100 Dallas Parkway, Suite 102
Plano, TX 75093
Information herein deemed reliable but not guaranteed
©2012 Imprev, Inc.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Squeaky Sub Floor -

LOWESREALTORBENEFITS.COM LOWES MOVING LOWES.COM INMAN.COM
DAILY REAL ESTATE NEWS

March 10, 2012


A remedy for a squeaky floor

Carpet replacement is perfect time to drive new screws into joists
By Bill and Kevin Burnett
Inman News®

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Q: Our floors squeak when we walk on the carpets. What can we do to remedy this problem before we replace the carpets in two weeks?

A: What perfect timing! You can put an end to the squeaking by screwing the subfloor to the floor joists after you remove the old carpet and pad, but before the new carpet is installed. You'll need to do a little work before the carpet layers show up, but you'll have a quiet floor when all's said and done.

Your first order of business is to expose the subfloor by taking up the old carpet and pad.

First, remove all the furniture from the room. Take a pair of pliers and pull the carpet from the tack strip in one corner of the room.

Tack strip is nail-impregnated 1/4-inch-by-1-inch wood strips nailed around the perimeter of the room. The points of the nails in the strip are angled toward the wall. The carpet is hooked on the nail points, allowing the carpet to be stretched flat. Once the carpet is free from a corner, it's a simple matter to pull the rest of it from the perimeter of the room.

The easiest way to remove old carpet is to cut it into strips. Roll the old carpet from the wall. Cut the backside with a utility knife into 2- or 3-foot-wide lengths, roll them up, duct-tape the rolls, and it's off to the landfill or better yet, the recycler. The carpet installers should dispose of the old carpet as part of the price of the new installation.

Next, remove the pad. Carpet pad is light. It's usually 5 feet wide, so there's no need to cut it. Just pull it up, roll it and carry it away. The pad is stapled to the subfloor. Remove the staples or pound them flat with a hammer. Removal of the old carpet and pad is usually part of the installation price of the new carpet. It's worth a try to ask your carpet layer for a credit if you're doing it yourself.

You're three-quarters of the way there. With the floors bare, it's easy to locate the floor joists. Simply look for the nail heads in the subfloor. This will give you the location of the floor joists. If the distance between joists (nail heads) is 16 inches or up to 19 1/2 inches for engineered joists, the subfloor is probably 3/4 inch thick. If it's wider (not likely, but possible) the subfloor can be up to 1 1/2 inches thick for a 36-inch span. The 3/4-inch-thick subfloor takes a 2-inch screw. A thicker subfloor takes a 3-inch screw.

Use a heavy-duty drill to drive Phillips-head wood screws through the subfloor into the floor joists. Drive the screws approximately 8 inches apart. To make the job easier for you and the drill, we suggest that you predrill holes before screwing the subfloor down.

Use a drill bit slightly smaller than the screw and keep the hole short of the length of the screw. In other words, if using a 2-inch screw, drill only a 1 1/2-inch-deep hole. This ensures that some of the screw gets full purchase on the joists. It also has the added benefit of making sure the screw is hitting the joist.

Test your job by walking on it before the carpet installers show up. Once the new carpet is down, you'll not only have a fresh look, but a silent floor.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Dallas Home Prices to Climb in 2012

After almost five years of declines, Dallas-Fort Worth home prices will edge up in 2012, according to a new forecast. The D-FW area will be among the top 10 home price gainers this year, according to a report by California-based housing analyst Clear Capital.
Overall home prices in D-FW should rise 5.8 percent by the end of 2012, Clear Capital predicts. That's higher than the nationwide forecast of a 0.2 percent price gain. About half of the 50 major U.S. cities in the Clear Capital forecast are expected to have price gains this year. "Our projections show that the current balance the market has found will continue through 2012," Clear Capital research director Alex Villacorta said in the report.

The largest price increases are forecast for Orlando, Fla., and Bakersfield, Calif. - both over 11 percent. Those markets have been among the hardest hit during the housing downturn.
Along with D-FW's increase, Clear Capital also predicts a 3 percent price gain in Houston. Major declines of home prices are forecast this year for cities including Atlanta, down 14.4 percent, and Los Angeles, down 10.3 percent.

Home prices in the D-FW area have been falling since mid-2007, down about 9 percent since then. Nationwide, home prices are down more than a third. "Dallas hasn't fallen very far and is hanging in there," Villacorta said in a recent interview. "The positive year [2011] you have is outperforming the nation."
Through the first 11 months of 2011, the median price of homes sold in North Texas through real estate agents' multiple listing services was flat compared with the same period of 2010.

Ted Wilson of Residential Strategies said that since the supply of homes on the market in North Texas is falling, it makes sense that prices would inch up. "The tighter supply of housing should help to boost prices," Wilson said. Local data shows that prices in D-FW are rising slightly in affluent areas. But prices were still falling in 2011 in low- and moderate-price neighborhoods that have seen large numbers of home foreclosures.

Clear Capital estimates that in the fourth quarter of 2011, more than 28 percent of the homes for sale in North Texas were previously foreclosed properties. That was higher than the nationwide rate of just under 25 percent of distressed properties on the market.

North Texas home prices will be negatively affected if large numbers of additional foreclosed homes hit the market, said Dr. James Gaines, an economist with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University. "2012, though, will generally be an up year, but the up won't be all that remarkable and still not what we might call a full-on recovery," Gaines said. "That will take several more years to get to."

By STEVE BROWN
STEVE BROWN The Dallas Morning News
Real Estate Editor
stevebrown@dallasnews.com
Published: 09 January 2012 06:46 AM

Sunday, March 7, 2010

HOME BUYER TAX CREDIT EXPIRING SOON!! TIME TO BUY!!

Homebuyer Tax Credit Expiring Soon
March 4, 2010
Potential home buyers still have time to take advantage of the $8,000 first-time home buyer, or the $6,500 repeat buyer tax credits, as long as they act quickly. The credits expire on April 30, 2010.

“It’s not too late to take advantage of the home buyer tax credit,” said National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Chairman Bob Jones, a builder and developer in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. “There are plenty of existing homes on the market, and even though the move-in ready newly constructed homes inventory has dwindled, builders may still be able finish a home in time.”

The IRS provides an additional two months beyond the deadline to close the deal. Buyers who sign a sales contract by the April 30 deadline are still eligible if they close the sale of the home by June 30, 2010.

More people than ever before are eligible for a home buyer tax credit, NAHB estimates that close to 70% of all potential buyers should qualify for some form of a credit.

“First-time” buyers don’t have to be buying their first home ever; they are defined by the IRS as those who have not owned a principal residence in the past three years. Repeat buyers may be eligible for a new $6,500 credit, as long as they have owned and lived in their current home at least five consecutive out of the past eight years.

The current credits also increase the income limits, enabling single taxpayers with incomes up to $125,000 and married couples earning up to $225,000 to potentially qualify for a full credit.

“If you’ve been considering buying a home for any reason, the home buyer tax credit, in addition to historically low interest rates and competitive home prices, make it an ideal time to buy,” said Jones.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Gov't extends deadline for refinance program

By ALAN ZIBEL
AP Real Estate Writer

Latest News
Gov't extends deadline for refinance program
Lawmakers question Obama loan help effort

Rates on 30-year home loans rise to 5.05 pct

UK mortgage loans at 8 1/2 year low in January

Mortgage delinquencies tick higher in 4th-qtr 2009

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The government is giving homeowners another year to refinance their loans under a little-used program designed to help borrowers whose homes have plummeted in value.

The Obama administration effort, known as Home Affordable Refinance Program, had been scheduled to end on June 10 but will now run out on June 30, 2011, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said Monday.

The program allows borrowers who owe up to 25 percent more than their homes are worth to refinance to lower interest rates.

It was originally projected to help 4 million to 5 million homeowners with loans owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. So far, it has helped around 220,000, according to the Treasury Department.

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Federal report says that D-FW home prices were up last year

Federal report says that D-FW home prices were up last year
11:04 AM CST on Thursday, February 25, 2010

By STEVE BROWN / The Dallas Morning News
stevebrown@dallasnews.com
Prices of homes purchased in the Dallas area rose by a smidgen in 2009, according to a federal report released Thursday.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency said that Dallas area home sale prices were up 0.43 percent at the end of last year compared with a year earlier. Nationwide, prices were down 1.2 percent in the same period.

Unlike other home price comparisons, the federal housing study only looks at home purchases financed with mortgages held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – the big government-owned loan investors.

Dallas was one of three top 10 U.S. metro areas that had home price gains in 2009, according to the federal index.

Washington, D.C., had the biggest price increase at 10.55 percent, followed by a 3.71 percent increase in Houston.

Among major cities, the biggest price declines last year were in Miami, down 12.86 percent, and Phoenix, down 12.03 percent, according to the FHFA.

The quarterly federal housing index is different from the recently released Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, which tracks the values of actual houses over time. The Case-Shiller index does not look at new home prices, which are included in the federal price measure.

Case-Shiller said that Dallas-area home prices were up 3 percent at the end of 2009 compared to a year earlier.

Dallas home prices are up about 12 percent during the last five years, the FHFA report said. And since 1991, overall home prices here have risen by more than 74 percent.

The country’s 10 largest home markets averaged a 3.7 percent price drop since 2004, according to the federal index But since 1991, home prices in the top 10 U.S. metro areas are up an average of 96 percent.

Top 10 U.S. home markets
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac tracked price changes in major markets based on loans they hold.
City One-year change Five-year change Since '91
New York -2.47% 4.15% 149.58%
Los Angeles -0.04% -14.89% 81.99%
Chicago -8.41% -8.21% 88.95%
Houston 3.71% 21.63% 103.49%
Atlanta -2.63% -7.86% 66.08%
Washington, D.C. 10.55% -2.37% 130%
Phoenix -12.03% -16.5% 94.2%
Riverside, Calf. -5.69% -37.18% 37.86%
Dallas 0.43% 12.04% 74.43%
Philadelphia -0.66% 12.54% 115.37%
SOURCE: Federal Housing Finance Agency

Thursday, February 25, 2010

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Dallas-area home prices turn positive in Case-Shiller index 8:31 AM CT
09:05 AM CST on Tuesday, January 26, 2010

By STEVE BROWN / The Dallas Morning News
stevebrown@dallasnews.com
Dallas-area home prices turned positive for the first time in more than two years in the closely-watched Case-Shiller Home Price Index.

Residential values in the Dallas area were up 1.4 percent in November from a year earlier – the best performance of the 20 cities tracked in the monthly survey, which was released on Tuesday.

Prices were down 5.3 percent for all the cities in the index from a year ago.

“Looking at the annual figures, four markets – Dallas, Denver, San Diego and San Francisco – finally entered positive territory, something we haven’t really seen in at least two years,” Standard & Poor’s David M. Blitzer said Tuesday in the report.

Other major U.S. home markets weren’t so lucky. Charlotte, Las Vegas, Seattle and Tampa all hit new low points in the survey.

And Dallas-area home prices fell by 0.6 percent on a monthly basis in November from October, Case-Shiller said.

“On balance, while these data do show that home prices are far more stable than they were a year ago, there is no clear sign of a sustained, broad-based recovery,” Blitzer said.

Still, the Dallas numbers are in line with a string of recent reports that show residential values in the area are leveling off.

For all of 2009, median home sales prices in North Texas were unchanged from 2008 levels, according to statistics from the North Texas Real Estate Information System.

And other reports show slight gains in home prices in the Dallas area.

Dallas home values bottomed out in the Case-Shiller last March when prices were down 5.6 percent on an annual basis.

Until the latest report, the last time the index was positive for Dallas was in September 2007 when annual values were up 0.5 percent.

Case-Shiller tracks the prices of typical single-family homes located in each metropolitan area. The index does not include condominiums and townhouses. It only covers pre-owned properties – no new construction.

The Case-Shiller researchers compare sales of specific properties over time