Tuesday, January 22, 2008

If You Area Buyer on the Sideline...




So the Fed just cut the Fed Funds rate by 75 basis points. That will in turn mean lower interest rates...eventually. Also watch the stock market, because the lower it goes the better it is for bonds, and the better it is for interest rates! But if the stock market climbs back then GAME OVER.

What you should be doing right now is have a clear line of communication with a lender! That might mean talking to them every day. That might mean that you might want to make a call on locking in an interest rate soon. Keep watching it closely. DO NOT sit and sit and wait and wait and keep thinking rates will keep going lower. You can try to time the low and look like a genius, but you will never know when it is there either, so good luck.

If you are buying at all this year, or even refinancing, timing is truly everything. In the blink of an eye interest rates could jump back up to 7% like they were as recently as last July.

The difference with a 200K loan at 5% vs. 7% is $270 per month. It can add up to a lot of savings!

When it feels right lock it in!


For more real estate insights, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

New Dream Listing!





Offering superb quality in an unrivaled location, this home features 4 beds, 5 baths, and 3976 SF. This enchanting 1.75 acre lot backing to open space boasts one of the 3 largest lots in the entire Timbers, combining total privacy with picturesque views of Mount Evans, perfectly framed among stately 100 year old Ponderosa pines. This dream home scores a perfect “10” for its combination of views, trees, privacy, and custom amenities.

This home was built for entertaining inside and out. A striking foyer is flanked by a formal dining room with built-in hutch, and a cozy formal living room. The main floor office features a wall of stately Walnut bookcases, with enough storage for any private book collection. A sweeping spiral staircase leads up to 3 generous bedrooms and a loft. The spacious main floor master suite is graced with forest and mountain views via a large bay
window, a see-through fireplace to curl up to, and luxurious master bath, complete with large soaking tub.

If you like large open spaces, the expansive family room is sure to delight, with high vaulted ceilings, a massive wall of windows centered by one of the largest arched windows you will find, and built-in entertainment system suitable for any flat screen TV. The kitchen is a chef’s delight, with large center island, granite counters, 42” hickory cabinets, gas cook top, and large walk-in pantry. You’ll also find artistically painted murals and faux painting throughout the home, giving it a very special look and feel.

If you value outdoor living spaces, off the breakfast nook is a fabulous stone patio with outdoor fireplace, hot tub, built-in Viking gas grill with granite counter, and matching granite table. The cavernous 2486 SF garden level basement with 10’ ceilings is a blank canvas to complete, but already has a well appointed full bath and offers 6 large windows, 3 of which are oversized wood casement windows rarely seen in a lower level.

Other Amenities Include:

-Soothing water feature in front of home
-Surround sound throughout the home
-Oversized 3 car garage...deep enough for the largest trucks
-Solid 6 panel doors
-Horseshoe pit
-New $4,000 water softner system for entire home
-Motorized blinds in family room for the James Bond kind of coolness!
-Security system
-4 ceiling fans


Don’t let someone else live YOUR dream. Come inside and experience this luxurious lifestyle yourself!


For more real estate insights, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Monday, January 21, 2008

Price Reduced so Jump on This One!




Price Reduced! Now only 349,900! This is a great opportunity on this home that features an eat-in kitchen is outfitted with honey maple cabinetry, center island, GE appliances, solid surface countertops with Corian edge, pantry, gas cook top, tile flooring, and refrigerator. The family room has a nice built-in entertainment center that flanks a gas fireplace with built-in surround sound. Upstairs features 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths. The vaulted master bedroom suite is enormous, with loads of windows, ceiling fan, and 5 piece bath with large soaking tub. This home is sure to leave a lasting impression!

Other amenities include:

-Full basement for you to finish to your tastes
-Formal dining room
-Powder room w/pedestal sink
-6 panel doors
-Sprinkler system
-Air conditioning
-Bull-nosed corners
-Large laundry w/sink and maple cabs
-Neutral throughout
-Wood blinds in every window
-Mountain views
-Recessed lighting
-Covered patio
-3 car side-load garage
-Formal dining room
-Graceful arches

For more real estate insights, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Let Me Take You Back To a Time...




And that time was right after 9-11. The world was shocked and the stock market took a dive, consequently dropping interest rates to an all time historic low. That in turn helped fuel a housing boom and price appreciation that will be remembered forever.

I'm watching the news and seeing that the worldwide markets took a dive today, meaning that Wall Street will in turn take a dive again tomorrow morning (after dropping an historic 8% in just the first 3 weeks of the year.) Bad news for the stock market is always good news for interest rates. We are in an interesting point in time where history could repeat itself. As recently as last JULY 2007, we had interest rates topping 7%. Now the averages are in the 5.5% range. Will they go lower? How low can they go? Who knows?


So what lessons can we apply from the past to today?

Number one, don't even think you can time the bottom. Can you time an interest rate bottom? No better than you can guess the Powerball numbers! Last time interest rates bottomed out at 5% for all of about 1 week. And most people just thought they would just go lower (its human nature.) It didn't happen. What you should be doing right now is have a clear line of communication with a lender! That might mean talking to them every day. That might mean that you might want to make a call on locking in an interest rate soon. Keep watching it closely. DO NOT sit and sit and wait and wait and keep thinking rates will keep going lower. You can try to time the low, but you will never know when it is there. When it feels right lock it in!

Number two, if you are lucky enough to be buying right now, and you have been watching prices slowly drop, and are waiting to see the prices drop further because of the looming recession, then you might be in for a big dissapointment. You will probably not get your cake and eat it too (low interest rates AND a steal of a price on a home.)

A. Colorado is not in bad shape compared to most of the country, because our valuse haven't tripled in the last 3 years.

B. There is a cetain % of the market that simply CAN'T drop their prices much...they simply don't have the equity to work with. And, as interest rates drop, more buyers come off of the sidelines and buy too, thus creating more demand and stopping or severly slowing the price declines. Investors are bound to come back into the picture to take advantage of the low rates, fueling more demand. The supply and demand equation will become more balanced, and could even make prices RISE AGAIN! That house you have been watching and watching and waiting to drop their price even more just might be gone one morning when you wake up. Then you may have to see 30 more houses to find one that you like as much. Recession or no recession, people will buy homes to take advantage of the low rates.

Its first come, first served in Real Estate. Think about taking some action!

For more real estate insights, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Monday, January 07, 2008

Only 40 Billionaires Own Homes in Aspen!

Aspen's 2008 economic outlook: Will the rich keep spending?


Brent Gardner-Smith - Aspen Daily News Staff Writer
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Wed 01/02/2008 07:00AM MST

For Aspen's gold-plated economy to continue to purr along in 2008, thousands of wealthy people will need to once again decide to build or buy large expensive homes, entertain lavishly in those homes, purchase luxury goods such as jewelry and art, and continue to spend freely in the local resort marketplace.

While there are signs that some Americans may now be hesitating before making such decisions, there may be other off-setting factors, including the fact that even Aspen's real estate prices may now look like a bargain to European consumers.

Designing, approving, building, selling, buying, maintaining and using large luxury homes in Aspen, Snowmass Village and Pitkin County is the main economic engine for the Roaring Fork Valley.

And one of the leading indicators for that sector of the economy is real estate sales.

It appears as if 2007 will have produced the second largest sum of real estate sales in Pitkin County, just behind 2006.

In 2006, a record $2.4 billion worth of real estate in Pitkin County changed hands.

Through November 2007, there was $2.3 billion in real estate sales recorded, according to Land Title Guarantee Co.

And it appears as if 2008 may bring about a slight chill to the local market, which is still very robust, if not surreal.

Consider that just five years ago, the amount of annual real estate sales in Pitkin County was "only" $1.2 billion.

"We've seen a weakening in the numbers of sales and in dollar volumes compared to where we were in 2006," said Randy Gold, the president and owner of Aspen Appraisal Group Ltd., who recently completed a year-end analysis of the Aspen and Snowmass Village real estate markets. "2006 will probably remain the record year, but so what? It doesn't mean that 2007 was bad and it doesn't mean that 2008 will be bad."

What it may mean, however, is that the rapid increase in the value of local real estate may slow this year.

"Most areas of the market are going to be relatively restrained with respect to appreciation," Gold said.

Conventional wisdom among local real estate brokers is that prices for local real estate don't really ever drop much, they just stop going up as much as they were.

"If history is a guide, even if the Aspen market slows down or flattens, significant price decreases - and specifically 'deals' - will be minimal or unlikely except in rare individual circumstances," writes Tim Estin, a broker with Mason & Morse Real Estate, in what he calls The Estin Report. "If there is in fact a cooling off trend, it should be regarded as a healthy sign. A slowdown is a cyclical interval consistent with Aspen's history of rapid price appreciation followed by market lulls, but not fall-offs."

Estin notes that the external factors that could slow down the market include "credit and debt market problems (that) have led to a reduction in the availability of large mortgages, high oil prices, Iraq/Iran, stock market volatility (and) recession fears."

Philip Verlager, an economist who lives in Aspen's West End, says there are also some other international economic factors that could shape Aspen's local economy in 2008.

"The key question will be the amount of bonuses awarded to people working on Wall Street," Verlager wrote in an e-mail interview. "My guess is that the cash flow over the next year to the people working at investment banks will be down sharply. ...

"Further, the Hollywood types will have less to spend due to the writers' strike. This will put serious downward pressure on prices.

"A key factor will be the unwillingness of banks to lend. I know that many buyers pay cash. However, most cash buyers then borrow. These loans will be cut," Verlager wrote.

Brian Hazen, a broker with Coates, Reid and Waldron who sold more than $100 million in local real estate in 2007, said he has seen a change in potential buyers' attitudes over the last several months due to the downward pressure on home prices in the United States.

"If their home markets are very soft, it can't but help affect how aggressive they might want to be on purchasing second or third homes," Hazen said. "We've had a pretty soft fourth quarter, frankly. There was a loss of momentum."

But while U.S. buyers might be hesitating, some European buyers may see the Aspen market as a bargain due to the current exchange rate, where a Euro is now worth $1.45 (U.S.).

"We could see Europeans and Asians grabbing up Aspen property on the cheap," Verlager wrote.

Gold agrees.

"With the dollar being so weak, there is no question that we are a great buy for a European buyer," he said.

Another factor that could play into Aspen's economy is the growth in the number of very wealthy people in the country and Aspen's popularity with the upper-upper crust.

"Billionaires have done especially well over the past decade," writes Robert Frank, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal who writes "The Wealth Report" and who recently published "Richistan, A Journey Through the American Wealth Boom and the Lives of the New Rich." "The total wealth held by the Forbes 400 has more than doubled since 1995, from $439 billion to more than $1 trillion today."

And the demand for luxury goods - and experiences - appears to be growing.

For example, worldwide demand for champagne has been very strong in 2007.

"If a country's economy is in good shape, there is a good chance that its champagne sales are also growing," notes the Western Europe Food and Drinks Insight information service.

Champagne sales in the United States have been increasing by 10 percent a year since 2005.

And the Financial Times reported on Dec. 27 that orders for Rolls-Royce luxury automobiles are very strong and that cars coming out of the plant in West Sussex, England, were pre-sold through 2009.

Locally, Gold estimates that there are now at least 40 billionaires who own property in Aspen or Snowmass Village and that they have been changing the perception of what exceptional local properties are worth.

"These guys can afford to get whatever they want, and they do," Gold said. "Their influence is being felt at the very upper end of our market."

There were at least three local single-family homes sold for more than $20 million in 2007, including one for $36.5 million, which set a new benchmark.

As an illustration of how much money a billion dollars really is, Gold said that if a millionaire spent a dollar a second - or $3,600 an hour - their money would be gone in just over 11 days. But if a billionaire spent one of his billion dollars every second, their money would still last close to 30 years.

But even billionaires can be price sensitive.

In a Dec. 21 Wall Street Journal column entitled "Predictions for the Rich in 2008," Robert Frank said he was predicting moderation by the rich.

"Don't worry: Conspicuous consumption will continue and we'll still have plenty of oversized boats, homes, planes and parties to make fun of. Yet between the volatility in financial markets, political rhetoric about inequality, concerns about the environment and a bubble in art and collectible prices, I think we'll see a slowdown in spending and price increases at the top."

As the question of whether Aspen's gold-plated economy is bulletproof, the real threat may not come from events related to Wall Street and the global economy, but from events much closer to home.

"The great threat may not be the financial situation, unless it turns into a real disaster," said Philip Verlager. "Instead it may be the demand for labor and the difficulty of finding people to provide these services."

If a billionaire buys a home, he or she is likely to expect a high level of service, from maids to cooks to drivers to ski instructors, Verlager noted.

And if more and more of those service providers can't find their way into the country or decide that commuting through Aspen's daily traffic jam is not worth it, can the resort keep its free-spending "high-maintenance" clientele happy?

"We compete with the Vails and the St. Moritzs and many other really nice places," Verlager said. "And there are lots of towns across the world that were once the playgrounds of the rich. These people are finicky and to remain competitive, we need a really skilled work force."

bgs@aspendailynews.com

For more real estate insights, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/

Some Ways to Protect Your Home





Here is a good article with some common sense tips for basic protection of your home:

(Or why you need a fire extinguisher and a water-heater check.)

By Jan Thomas
Special to The Post
Article Last Updated: 12/22/2007 11:24:14 AM MST


(The Denver Post)With just two days until Christmas and nine days until the new year, the last thing most homeowners need is a lengthy list of things to check in their homes.

But perhaps it's necessary. According to some experts, December is the perfect time to give your home a thorough once-over and check for leaks, fire hazards, security gaps and other problems that could make 2008 a rough year if they materialize.

"December is probably your last, best chance to check for problems before real winter hits," said Frank Lesh, 2007 American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) president. "We have to think about homes as being machines. They're made up of components that break and wear out."

Some suggestions are routine: Clean the gutters, drain outside water lines, recaulk and weather-strip windows and doors.

Yet others are more unusual: Test the electrical-circuit shut-off switch. Bleed hot-water radiator valves.

Those who can't bear to add one more item to their to-do lists can hire out the work. Although most inspectors conduct inspections the old-fashioned way, some now use infrared cameras to identify problems that may not be visible to the naked eye.

"It's expensive — hundreds and hundreds of dollars — depending on how qualified the person is," Lesh said. "It can be overkill, but sometimes it's great."

Inspection reveals problems

Stephanie Williams was expecting a positive result when she opened her 112-year-old, trilevel City Park West Victorian to appraisers from the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies. Chubb includes infrared home scans in the appraisal services offered to its customers. Chubb does not insure Williams' house.

Appraisers Jeff Van Pelt and Emery Legg gave Williams high marks for maintenance, but she scored lower on easy-to-fix issues such as an uncovered swamp cooler that was a conduit for winter air, insulation gaps in the nursery and a hard-to-pin-down leak in the upstairs bath.

The biggest problems, however, were the home's lack of fire extinguishers and a disabled smoke detector. According to the appraisers, most claims are fire-related. Fire prevention is taken seriously.

"We don't usually grade, but if I had to grade this home right now, I'd give it a C-minus," Van Pelt said.

A $100 investment and a few hours of elbow grease would raise the score to a B+ or higher, he said.

That's good news for Williams. Her home includes several 19th-century earmarks, including original oak floors, leaded glass windows, pocket doors separating the living and dining rooms, and built-in oak furniture, including a dining-room hutch and oversized medicine cabinet.

She plans to make the recommended enhancements before offering the home for rent early next year.

Don't be a skinflint with hoses

Like ASHI, Chubb includes home-inspection tips on its website. Mark Schussel, a spokesman for Chubb, suggests focusing on three risk areas: fire, water and security.

"The leading cause of water damage in homes is hoses. There are hoses that connect from the toilet tank to your water supply, hoses under your sink," Schussel said. "They deteriorate, and they can wreak significant damage, particularly when people aren't home. We've had claims in the hundreds of thousands of dollars related to a simple $5 hose."

His recommendation: Replace plastic or rubber hoses with the metal variety.

"Don't be foolish and not spend a few dollars that will keep you from significant losses each year," he said.

Common-sense strategies such as adequate lighting and a central alarm system are important to keep burglars away.

As minor as these details may seem, they may be what stands between your home and a long claims process with your insurer. More importantly, they help reduce the likelihood of losing expensive or irreplaceable items.

ASHI recommends using a certified inspector.

Since preparedness doesn't guarantee disasters won't strike, adequate homeowners insurance is a must. A 2007 Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies Division of Insurance report shows homeowner (HO-3) annual premiums for "masonry homes" in Denver ranging from $800-$3,079. Premiums for "frame homes" ranged from $830-$3,302.

Chubb wasn't included in the report, but Schussel doesn't think insurance should be the primary reason people risk-assess their homes.

"All this stuff is really beyond insurance," Schussel said. "You don't want to go through the hassle of replacing stuff, and there's an emotional attachment to some possessions."



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What to check
Here's a list of some of the things the American Society of Home Inspectors looks for when checking out a home. Homeowners can check these things on their own as part of routine seasonal or annual maintenance.

Foundation and masonry: Check for dampness and leakage after wet weather; keep under-floor crawl-space vents open as weather and climate permit.

Roofs and gutters: Check for damaged, loose or missing shingles, blisters; clean gutters, leaders, strainers, window wells and drains.

Exterior walls: Check siding, shingles and trim for damage, looseness, wrapping and decay.

Doors and windows: Check caulking for decay around doors, windows, corner boards and joints; check weather-stripping.

Electrical: Trip circuit breakers every six months and Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters (GFCI) monthly; check condition of lamp cords, extension cords and plugs.

Plumbing: Check for leaks at sinks and house traps and sewer cleanouts.

For ASHI's full maintenance checklist, contact a local ASHI inspector through www.ashi.org or 800-743-2744.

Source: American Society of Home Inspectors.

For more real estate insights, go to http://www.coloradodreamhomes.net/