Saturday, June 23, 2007

One Of The Largest Ranch Homes In Elbert County!


New Listing!
This is the definition of massive. Imagine 3300 SF up, and 3300 SF in the lower level, on 35 acres, with attached 6 car garage, 2 master suites, 2 kitchens, and impressive finishes throughout. Homes like this in Elbert County (or even homes in Douglas County) are a rarity!!!!!
See more of this home at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

This Blog is dedicated to Parker Colorado Real Estate, Parker Colorado Homes, Elizabeth Colorado real estate, Elizabeth Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado homes, Highlands Ranch real estate, Highlands Ranch homes, Castle Rock real estate, Castle Rock homes, and metro Denver Colorado real estate property listings. Search the Denver MLS directly for properties and homes at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.info/ and access a huge real estate resource at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

A True Pinery Dream Home!


JUST LISTED!
Offering executive elegance with an stunning floor plan, this home features 5 bedrooms, 5 baths, and ample space for any lifestyle with more than 4800 finished square feet. Located on a quiet cul-de-sac in prestigious Pinery Pointe, this home offers an awesome .37 acre fenced lot with a park-like yard, and with quick access to Parker Road as well as The Pinery Country Club. For more info and a virtual tour, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

This Blog is dedicated to Parker Colorado Real Estate, Parker Colorado Homes, Elizabeth Colorado real estate, Elizabeth Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado homes, Highlands Ranch real estate, Highlands Ranch homes, Castle Rock real estate, Castle Rock homes, and metro Denver Colorado real estate property listings. Search the Denver MLS directly for properties and homes at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.info/ and access a huge real estate resource at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Realtytrac is a Sham!





The article below shows just what a joke Realtytrac.com is. They have positioned themselves as THE SOURCE or foreclosure data. And of course with the media wanting to write about anything controversial, they constantly site Realtytrac's data without even questioning the quality. Typical. It shows how foreclosure data is TRIPLED over what is reality when Realtytrac measures it. Will the media stop using them as a source now? I doubt it. Just proves you can't believe everything you read, but people always do.



By David Streitfeld
Los Angeles Times
Sunday, June 03, 2007


As home foreclosures began soaring early this year, Nancy Burns of the Moorpark, Calif., redevelopment department was told to figure out how many homeowners in her city were in trouble.


The answer, she discovered, was 10.


Or 30. Or maybe more than 100.


"I have no clue," Burns said.


She's far from being the only one who's bewildered. The federal government compiles reams of data on home buyers and owners, but it doesn't track how or why people lose their homes. Neither do most state and local governments.


A growing number of private outfits are stepping into this void. But the resulting data are often at odds, making it difficult to gauge the dimensions of the problem.


The conflicting numbers are adding an acrimonious edge to the discussion. That's especially true when the figures come from RealtyTrac, an Irvine, Calif., company that has become perhaps the most widely cited authority in the field.


RealtyTrac's numbers tend to top all other figures because the company counts every step in the foreclosure process - the notice of default, the auction, the house reverting to the lender - separately. One house might be tallied several times as a foreclosure.


This is highly misleading, the company's critics say. A Colorado housing official recently called RealtyTrac's numbers "ridiculous and irresponsible." The Mortgage Bankers Association chastised Congress for depending on the company's data. RealtyTrac's competitors are becoming increasingly vocal about what they see as its overstatements but are sometimes arguing among themselves as well.


"No one is measuring the truth," said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com. "This is a problem when formulating policy."


Some too high, some too low


Zandi takes issue not only with RealtyTrac for numbers he says are too high but also with DataQuick Information Systems, a La Jolla, Calif.-based research company, for numbers he says are too low. DataQuick and RealtyTrac draw their numbers directly from filings in county recorders' offices.


After four years of boom, the market in California last year definitely turned queasy. But RealtyTrac's numbers show a full-fledged crisis, with 142,429 foreclosure filings - one for every 86 households in the state, the company said in a February news release.
DataQuick reported less than a tenth of that total: 12,672 foreclosures.
"The RealtyTrac data is overstated, but no way there were only 13,000 foreclosures," Zandi said.


His own data, based on a random sample of 5 percent of the consumer credit files assembled by data collection company Equifax Inc., show 56,747 first-mortgage loan defaults in California last year.


Zandi acknowledges that the actual number of foreclosures is probably a little less than this figure because some defaulting owners manage to save themselves, but says he stands by it as a more accurate representation of reality in the state than anyone else's numbers.
John Karevoll, chief analyst for DataQuick, said Zandi, like RealtyTrac, was miscounting.
"You tell Mark Zandi we will go toe-to-toe with them, address by address, foreclosure by foreclosure," Karevoll said. "My numbers are right. I know they're right."
How do three researchers arrive at such different results? The confusion begins in the county recorder's office. In Los Angeles County, that's a facility that receives 3 million documents a year, not only about real estate but also about births, deaths and marriages. They're filed in no particular order.


"We record over 600 different titles of documents. A notice of default or trustee sale or notice of foreclosure is just one of them," said Kathy Treggs, the manager of public records.
The Palm Beach Post, which since July has used RealtyTrac figures to report local foreclosure filings, recently began hearing similar concerns from St. Lucie County's clerk of courts: Namely, that RealtyTrac's numbers for St. Lucie were too high and tended to fluctuate too much to be trusted.


But while other providers - such as RealEstat.com - have taken issue with the Post's use of the RealtyTrac figures, finding agreement among the disparate sources is difficult. In March, for example, RealEstat reported 888 new foreclosure filings in Palm Beach County, while RealtyTrac reported 774. The county clerk's office recorded 894.
No less inexact but far less controversial are the existing-home sales figures reported by the Florida Association of Realtors every month.


While most consumers believe the figures to be the median price and number of sales for all homes in a given month, the figure is based on a sampling of homes in the Realtors' Multiple Listing Service.


An actual count of the number of homes recorded by the Palm Beach County Clerk and Comptroller's Office as sold typically yields a higher number of sales and a lower median price.
That has neither stopped the media from reporting the Realtors' figure as gospel nor garnered any complaints from local county clerks.


Area real estate experts agree that both the Realtors' home sales and RealtyTrac's foreclosure figures - controversial methodology aside - have proven to be accurate in forecasting the overall decline in the region's residential real estate market over the past year and into the next year.
But the specific foreclosure figures, because of the various ways in which they can be counted and the generally negative bias associated with them, will likely remain the subject of debate.


Foreclosure moment varies


Foreclosure is popularly understood as an event: A homeowner can't or won't pay the mortgage and loses title to his house.


Yet foreclosure is really a process, one that can stretch over a year and vary from state to state.
It officially begins when the lender files a notice of default. This signals to investors that there's trouble with the mortgage, and the homeowner is often courted for a private sale. There's also the possibility the owner can restructure the mortgage with his finance company.
If the borrower can't negotiate a sale or refinance within three months or so, the house is scheduled for a public auction. Many of these homes wind up as the property of the original lender. They are labeled REOs, short for "real estate owned."
Deciding which of these moments constitutes foreclosure has become a matter of interpretation and dispute.


"No one can agree," said Ryan Slack, chief executive of Propertyshark.com, which reported 2,453 foreclosure auctions in Los Angeles County in the first quarter.
RealtyTrac has tried to straddle the line between selling data to investors looking for a profit and presenting broad trends to the media looking for a story.


It started in 1996 in Santa Barbara as an electronic bulletin board for real estate agents, notifying them of REOs that might be suitable for their clients. To promote its listings, the company began issuing news releases about foreclosure trends.


"Every newspaper has a real estate section, and every newspaper reporter has days where he has holes to fill," said RealtyTrac Vice President of Marketing Rick Sharga.
"Our objective was to position ourselves as the de facto resource for foreclosures. That would give us credibility."


RealtyTrac is privately held, and Sharga declined to say how many subscribers pay $49.95 a month for its distressed-property listings. But he said the company had 200 employees, many added in the past six months.


"We're being used by the FBI for fraud detection, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. for hot-spot analysis and predictive modeling, and the Federal Reserve for a nine-state analysis of foreclosure trends in Midwest," Sharga said.


The congressional Joint Economic Committee asked the company for data to bolster a report last month titled Sheltering Neighborhoods from the Subprime Foreclosure Storm.
"We went to a variety of folks, and they had the best numbers, the most useful," committee spokesman Israel Klein said.


The report painted a grim picture, saying "communities are struggling to stem the tide of foreclosures that impose significant costs on families, neighborhoods and cities."
In Atlanta, one out of 23 homes suffered foreclosure in 2006, according to a chart in the report. In Dallas, it was one of 26.


With home prices heading down in 2007 and adjustable-rate mortgages resetting to rates that many borrowers can't afford to pay, the committee concluded that government intervention was urgently needed.


Some counted seven times


The Mortgage Bankers Association points out that RealtyTrac has an incentive to overstate the foreclosure crisis. "Their business model is to market foreclosed properties," said the association's chief economist, Doug Duncan.


Sharga said the mortgage bankers' group had its own agenda.
"Given their clientele, it would not surprise me if their reports represented the most conservative possible interpretation of foreclosure activity," he said.
In Colorado, the state Division of Housing grew so frustrated with RealtyTrac's numbers that it took the unprecedented step of polling its counties itself.


It found 9,254 filings in the first quarter, 44 percent fewer than found by RealtyTrac. Though the Division of Housing number is still relatively high, the report noted that as few as half of filings proceed to an auction in which the owner loses title.


Sharga said that on homes with multiple loans, a single house could account for as many as seven foreclosures. "The nice way to put it is that we count different things and our methodologies are different," he said.


The less nice way to put it is that RealtyTrac is "ridiculous and irresponsible," which is what Colorado Division of Housing Director Kathi Williams said to the Rocky Mountain News earlier in May.


Sharga blamed the media for misinterpreting RealtyTrac's numbers, but he did acknowledge "some tension" with the data on the percentage of households in foreclosure that was used by the Joint Economic Committee. He said the company was working on fine-tuning its figures.
Not fast enough for Williams, who noted last week that the company's April report showed a household foreclosure rate about three times the state's rate.
"We're not even in the same ballpark," she said.


For the best real estate information go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

This Blog is dedicated to Parker Colorado Real Estate, Parker Colorado Homes, Elizabeth Colorado real estate, Elizabeth Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado homes, Highlands Ranch real estate, Highlands Ranch homes, Castle Rock real estate, Castle Rock homes, and metro Denver Colorado real estate property listings. Search the Denver MLS directly for properties and homes at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.info/ and access a huge real estate resource at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Colorado: Home to the Large Home



The article below is very true for us here in Parker Colorado. The larger homes do have more appeal than the smaller ones. But of course its a matter of price point too for most buyers. If I were a developer, I'd be building homes on 1/2 acre lots, with at least 3800 finished square feet and at least 4 beds, 4 baths, and an office, and go up from there.

More Americans - and Coloradans in particular - are living in larger homes, according to a U.S. Census Bureau survey released Tuesday.


Twenty percent of Americans occupied a home with four or more bedrooms in 2005, compared with 15 percent in 1990, according to the bureau's American Community Survey.


Out of all 50 states, Colorado tied with Minnesota for fourth place, with 26.2 percent of residents living in homes with four or more bedrooms, behind Utah, Maryland and Virginia.
Centennial came in fourth among U.S. cities with populations of 65,000 or more, with 52.5 percent of its homes containing four or more bedrooms.


Jeremy Anderson, an associate broker in the Centennial office of Real Estate of the Rockies, said the larger homes are his top sellers.


"Four bedrooms have become a necessity for a lot of buyers," he said.


The homes are in high demand in part because of the growing affluence of baby boomers and because more Americans are working from home, according to several local agents.


"While people's families have gotten smaller over the years, a lot of people have brought their offices home, so they want more space," said Robert Bielenberg of Centennial's Bielenberg & Associates, a Metro Brokers Inc. office.


Andrew and Tatiana Morrell fit that bill.


The couple, who are relocating to metro Denver from Seattle with their 1-year-old daughter, are shopping for a four-bedroom house with at least 4,000 square feet of space.


"We want a house we can stay in for a long time," said Andrew Morrell, a software engineer for Raytheon.


His wife plans to work from home full time.


"We're going to turn one bedroom into a home office," he said. "And we'd like to have a bedroom for guests, like when my parents come down from Wyoming."


But Eric Wittenberg, president and chief executive of Louisville's McStain Neighborhoods,

said he expects escalating energy prices and environmental concerns to eventually curb homebuyers' "bigger is better" mentality.


"Sensitivity to the environment and the cost of energy and gasoline are really weighing on people today," he said. "I think we'll soon start seeing a trend to smaller, more efficient, smarter designs."


The average Colorado family consisted of 3.1 people in 2005, according to the census bureau.
KB Home Colorado recently replaced two of the smaller floor plans at its Parkfield community - a development of about 300 homes near Denver International Airport - with larger four- and five-bedroom layouts because of high demand.


"We've seen this trend here in Colorado for the last four to five years, which is why a lot of our homes have the option for additional bedrooms," KB Home Colorado president Rusty Crandall said.


Colorado's population more than doubled from 2.21 million in 1970 to 4.75 million last year, according to the census bureau. That has led to a residential construction boom that has given the state a higher inventory of larger homes, several agents said.


"We even have a few designs that have an optional sixth bedroom," Crandall said, adding that he's seeing an increase in multigenerational families looking for larger homes.


Staff writer Julie Dunn can be reached at 303-954-1592 or jdunn@denverpost.com


For more information about new homes and larger resale homes, please go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

This Blog is dedicated to Parker Colorado Real Estate, Parker Colorado Homes, Elizabeth Colorado real estate, Elizabeth Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado homes, Highlands Ranch real estate, Highlands Ranch homes, Castle Rock real estate, Castle Rock homes, and metro Denver Colorado real estate property listings. Search the Denver MLS directly for properties and homes at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.info/ and access a huge real estate resource at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Monday, June 04, 2007

Home Buyers Not Getting Benefits of Internet Use?




WHaaaaat? Are you kidding??? The article below just makes my blood boil. Everyone on earth seems to be looking for ways to reduce Realtors' commissions. Everyone on earth seems to think our jobs are soooo easy and we are soooo overpaid. The people that write these stories are idiots. Realtors deserve every dime they earn. I won't go into the big debate here...if anyone wants to call and chat then please do. The thing that the Internet has changed in Real Estate is that it has improved the process of searching for homes. And that is a good thing for the public, but that doesn't make a Realtor work less, and that doesn't make a Realtor less liable in a law suit. Does it shorten the process? Not really. It just enables the public to see more homes before they make a decision. It has truly opened up the process so people can weed out more homes to find what they want. Most of my buyers use me to look at 30-40 homes with me before they make a decision. Is that easy to do? It may look easy being performed by a professional, but it isn't. BUT it certainly beats the silly books that agents used to use to get information for buyers. Does it mean that Realtors should be paid less? Are you kidding???


One final comment on discount brokers, and losers that need to rebate commissions to get business because they don't have any...if they were so great these days then why doesn't everyone use them? Why hasn't their market share grown in the last 5 years? Because they DON'T GET THE RESULTS OF A TRUE PROFESSIONAL REALTOR, and everyone knows it.





By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABERTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS


WASHINGTON - State laws and real estate agents’ business practices are preventing consumers from getting the full benefit of the competition that the Internet was expected to bring to the real estate industry, federal regulators said Tuesday.


In a new report from the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice, regulators said that discount brokers and other rivals to traditional agents have been limited in their ability to use the Internet to reduce fees and improve service.


The Internet now is a more important tool than yard signs for advertising homes for sale, the report said. In 2006, 80 percent of home buyers used the Internet while looking for a house and only 63 percent who said they looked for yard signs, according to a study cited in the report.
Yet, the report says the ‘‘sweeping benefits to consumers as cost savings and service enhancements that the Internet and other technology advances has brought to other industries’’ has not occurred in real estate. The report cited outdated state laws and business practices that hamper consumers from saving more money and time while looking for a home to buy.


A sharp increase in real estate agents’ fees - brokers earned $60 billion in commissions in 2005 - reflect the run-up in residential property values and underscore the importance of competition, the report said.


The median real estate agent’s commission increased 25.5 percent to $11,549 between 1998 to 2005, the report said. The FTC and DOJ called for more study of commission rates and fees and how they are affected by housing market conditions and regulation.


Technological innovations that would improve competition are available, the report concluded. For example, fee-for-service brokers offer specific services, such as listing a house on an online multiple listing service, for a flat fee.


Discount brokers provide start-to-finish services but offer rebates or price reductions on some services. Yet some states still ban rebates in real estate, whether by law or regulation, though not Colorado. In addition, some real estate groups discriminate against fee-for-service listings by keeping them off national Web sites.


FTC and DOJ recommend that states repeal the laws and regulations that limit competition, and both agencies are doing what they can to counteract anticompetitive behavior in the business.
Pat Combs, president of the National Association of Realtors, said the real estate industry is ‘‘fiercely competitive.’’


To utilize the Internet to search for homes, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/ to search the Denver MLS yourself. Then call a Realtor to SAVE YOU TIME and show you 40 homes...but don't expect him to get paid less just because you started your search on the Internet without him!

This Blog is dedicated to Parker Colorado Real Estate, Parker Colorado Homes, Elizabeth Colorado real estate, Elizabeth Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado homes, Franktown Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado real estate, Lone Tree Colorado homes, Highlands Ranch real estate, Highlands Ranch homes, Castle Rock real estate, Castle Rock homes, and metro Denver Colorado real estate property listings. Search the Denver MLS directly for properties and homes at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.info/ and access a huge real estate resource at http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/