When Owning Is as Cheap as Renting

June 6th, 2008

When Owning Is as Cheap as Renting

When the real estate market comes back, it will not be with a sonic boom. It is likely to be subtle, below the public’s radar. The revival will probably begin in the areas hit hardest by the bust: in Florida, Las Vegas, and the honeycombed tracts that flank the broad freeways east of Los Angeles known as the Inland Empire. (Indeed, home sales in Southern California surged 22% from March to April, hitting their highest levels since August.) Why will housing come back? For a reason as solid as floor joists: The entry-level buyer, for the first time in years, is finding that owning a new house is suddenly just as cheap as renting. “Those first-time buyers got locked out by high prices,” says John Karevoll of DataQuick, a research firm that assembles data on the U.S. real estate market. “Now the buying activity that was on hold is starting to come back.”

Credit: KB Home
Credit: KB Home
Two new, smaller homes from KB Home.

In hindsight, the reason for the current malaise is simple: too few buyers. By 2007 more and more people were frozen out of the market - especially the entry-level buyers, who now account for as much as 30% of new-home sales. They’re the twentysomething young professionals who rent until they get married or the first child arrives, and then reach for the American dream of homeownership. From 2005 to 2006 some first-timers rushed to purchase homes they couldn’t afford with the help of exotic loans. But another big group of young consumers steered clear and are finally looking to buy. Now that prices of new houses have fallen as much as 30% in areas including the Inland Empire and the outskirts of Phoenix, they are returning- prompting a turning point in the housing cycle. Call it the New Affordability.

Three factors are driving the New Affordability: housing prices, house size, and the government’s expanding role in the mortgage market. The experience of Richard Murkey, 28, and his wife, Kayla, 25, epitomizes the trend. The Las Vegas residents started shopping in 2006 but couldn’t remotely afford the $300,000-plus prices that modest houses were fetching at the height of the frenzy. “Then, in the middle of 2007, we saw prices dropping, so we started looking again,” says Richard, who sells safety products to construction sites. In January the Murkeys went to contract on a four-bedroom, Tuscan-style house at $246,000, more than $50,000 less than that KB model sold for 18 months before. It gets better. KB Home offered a program called “price protection” that guarantees that if the price of your model falls before the closing, KB will lower your price to match it. Result: The Murkeys got a discount that dropped the price from $246,000 to $213,000.

Nor was financing a problem. The Murkeys obtained an FHA-insured loan at under 6%, with a down payment of just 3%. Their mortgage, taxes, and insurance total $1,400 a month, a mere $200 more than the rent they were paying on their three-bedroom apartment. The FHA’s role is something that housing bears have mostly overlooked: The FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac are now guaranteeing more than 90% of loans to first-time homebuyers. The FHA is providing lending that the private market has stopped making to borrowers with blemishes on their credit records. Both the rates and down payments are extremely low.

Today seven in ten KB customers are getting financing from the FHA. The current rates are below 6%, more than 100 basis points under those on jumbo mortgages not backed by the FHA or Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. (Fannie and Freddie lend less readily to people with past credit problems and hence aren’t as crucial to the entry-level market as FHA financing.) Congress has raised the FHA limit to $729,750 in high-cost areas like Los Angeles through the end of 2008. But even if the limits aren’t extended, virtually all the houses KB sells are priced for an FHA loan.

The houses themselves are being radically downsized to meet buyers’ budgets. At the peak of the last boom, in 2006, KB’s customers craved cathedral ceilings, formal dining and living rooms, and fancy wrought-iron railings on windows and balconies. Today’s buyers, KB found, are willing to trade size and amenities for far lower prices. But they’re extremely specific about what they want to keep. Buyers welcome houses half as big as the models that reigned at the peak, as long as they offer plenty of bedrooms. They also don’t miss the formal living and dining rooms if KB provides a “great room” combining the two in one open space that includes a generous-sized kitchen.

Bargain-hunters are drawn to these small houses, which look just like the behemoths built in 2005 and 2006. In Beaumont, a community of tract homes 70 miles east of Los Angeles, the Seneca Springs community is dotted with 4,000-square-foot, seven-bedroom Mediterranean homes that KB built at the peak. But right next to them the company is erecting new houses with exactly the same 50-foot façades- and a big difference you don’t notice from the street: They’re about half as deep and roughly 2,000 square feet. Those homes preserve the community’s curb appeal by keeping the façades looking similar and sumptuous. But purchasers love that the new homes boast five bedrooms, and they especially appreciate the pricetag: about $220,000, vs. $420,000 for the big neighboring homes built at the peak (and that now sell for around $300,000). Over time this New Affordability may swell the ranks of buyers. “What’s been killing the market is people who are waiting to buy or incapable of getting financing,” says Jonathan Dienhart of Hanley Wood Market Intelligence, a residential real estate research firm.

Source: KB Home/FORTUNE Graphic

During the bubble KB lost its way. Building big, pricey homes wasn’t a mistake- that’s what the public wanted. The real problem was that management misread the future: It bought the illusion that the frenzy would last, and gorged on overpriced land. Management’s grandiose thinking also pushed KB into splashy new businesses far from its traditions. KB began in 1957, when Broad, then 23, recognized that he could lure legions of first-time buyers from their Detroit garden apartments if he could build houses more cheaply than his competitors. His rivals were erecting classic houses with basements. Broad saw basements as an anachronism: Homeowners no longer needed cellars for storing coal. So his new company, Kaufman & Broad, erected houses on a concrete slab and used part of the savings to offer his suburban commuters a popular new feature, the carport. Broad’s $13,700, three-bedroom starter homes carried the same monthly cost as a two-bedroom rental. “It was all about affordability,” says Broad, “just like it is again today.” By the early 1960s Broad had moved Kaufman & Broad to California and expanded into the thriving Sunbelt markets that, along with the Golden State, are still KB’s main turf, chiefly Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, and Florida. Then as now, KB built not only starter homes but also their cousins, inexpensive houses for customers moving up.

how to purchase a house

May 25th, 2008

First Time Home Buyer Program

First time home buyer 

Thinking of buying a home for the first time? Well you should be, though housing prices have proved to go up and down overall they are probably still the best and #1 way to build wealth…They say at any given time of purchase that real estate prices will double over the course of 10 years. Quick math will tell you that if you spent $250,000 on a home you will make an additional $25,000 per year just by paying your monthly mortgage payment which in some cases is about what you would be paying for rent. Below is a step by step guide in purchasing a home for the first time and don’t be afraid to let the professionals work for you, that’s what there here for. Just be sure to research who you are dealing with because like anything else you may run into the wrong person who doesn’t have your best interest at heart. Real estate and mortgage professionals can make plenty of money on a transaction with out having to take advantage of a buyer/borrower so get to know who you are dealing with.

 The First Step:

Click Here to Get Pre-Approved Florida Mortgage Pre-Approval

It is important to get pre-approved to know exactly how much your income will allow you to spend. In today’s day and age most home purchase loans will be written through the FHA which is all full Doc loans. The advantage of using the FHA for your new home loan is because you will be able to get up to 97% financing and with a down payment assist program get your down payment paid for and in some cases your closing costs too.

Once you are pre-approved for up to a certain dollar amount now it is time to find a Realtor or a participating seller on your own.

 The Next Step:

Finding the right seller is important, be clear when you are working with a realtor to let them know you are using a down payment assist program that will need some seller participation to help get the deal closed (down payment assist programs often require the seller to contribute the money for you through a down payment program like Ameridream). So be sure to structure that in your offer so that the sellers know up front, that he will need to help you if he wants to sell. We are in a market now that sellers are eager to sell so trust me they will help if they can.

 Last:

Bring that contract back to the mortgage person that we recommended and they will finish the process for you…Which are finalize your loan and apply for your down payment assist for your new or First time home purchase.

 

If you need more help, I will be happy to help you with the process and depending on your area I may have inventory to sell.

 

Please call me directly at 561-350-0617 Anthony Crupi

 

Happy house hunting and be sure to find the very best deal…

 

Company’s that can Help You….

 

Nationwide Title Company

FHA First time home buyer

Nationwide Mortgage Company

SaveSouthFlorida.org

April 3rd, 2008

SaveSouthFlorida.org has been created to help the south Florida people, business and real estate. South Florida has been a great place to live for many years but due to recent housing changes, businesses leaving, taxes rising it has been come more difficult to live.

People have been priced out of their homes due to many reasons, for one our economy did not keep up with our house price increases and now they can not afford them. Some of made money in real estate and now have not only lost it all but owe more then what here homes are worth.

The state of Florida has tried to help with property tax cuts and home insurance regulation but was it to late. Florida Businesses are going to fight these tax breaks because they will only hurt them and in return that will only hurt the floridaian. Florida needs help!

At SaveSouthFlorida.org we are ecouraging you to speak out and voice your opinions because we feel if enough people get behind the good of Florida we will have whyat we once did a place where poeple were flocking to again because of the better life.

Use our comments section to get your word across…it will not go un-heard!