Thursday, February 16, 2012

Moving to Ogden Utah - What Economist Think

Economist-financial-fantasy-land

Economic and housing marketing outlook

Lawrence Yun phd                                                                            Chief Economist                                                                                     By Lori Fleming

 

Lawrence Yum Economist for the National Associate of REALTOR said “The Rocky mountain regional should have the most growth due to job and way of life with the data looking great on a national level and since Utah was behind the bubble we should be seeing that last effects and start heading upward.” 

 

Looking ahead here are  4 issue we are still facing. 

 

  1. We currently have the best affordable condition - interest rates are great for buyers to obtain great deals on their new house.  You would think people would be rushing in to purchase that new home- But there is no pick up in the market,  causing the market to remain slow and unsure. 

 

  1. National prices have stayed stable for 2 to 3 years - the feeling is everyone believes home values are still falling WHY?   As long as people believe it will still fall they will hesitate, this is  due mostly to news and incorrect local figures. 

 

  1. We currently have the  lowest newly constructed inventory with tons of vacate lots, banks are not willing to lend on new construction feeling they will remain vacant once completed.  Banks are only causing added problems by holding onto the cash and making lending guidelines hard to reach for most builders. The banks have  plenty of cash so that they can with stand any stress test placed before them- cash is not circulating into the economy. Banks are also receiving threats from investor -  if they do loans under lost guideline they will be shut down. The average hard working people are paying higher rates to obtain jumbo loans and are giving up with all the hurdles they are having to jump through. 

 

  1. Fannie  and Freddie are making internal self sustaining loan profits from hedge funds hurting the tax payers ( borrowing money at lower rates) - Fannie and Freddie are still reporting loses but investors are coming back into to picture picking up the REO properties soaking up the bank owned and distress properties and turning the profit on cash transactions. 

 

1980 interest rate were 13% people were entering the market and purchase properties value at less they what they could purchase today for the same purchase price because of todays rates. In 2012 the rates are at an all time low under the 4%  with prices of house also at the best price but where are the buyers....

 

For the past 4 years it has been tough in home sale, which has effected more people then just the REALTORS, if you think about it many things are tight to the Real Estate Market. You have builders, movers, lenders, concrete business, and the oil and lumber industries  just to note a few who are all effected by the lack of money circulating in the market place. Before the market bubble  national there was 1,400,000 realtors, today in  2012 national there a under 1,000,000 reflecting just how the market has changed in this time.

One thing to think about inventory is down 20% due to the uncertainty this will effect the supply and demand causing price to raise and the lack of homes also make it hard for sellers to want to add to the inventory with the fear they will not be able to replace what they currently have . 

 

Builders and new builds are forced to remain low due to the lending guidelines,  banks are not lending on spec homes making it difficult for any new starts. Unless the builders have deep pockets and can fund the project or can get a pre-sold vacate lot will remain vacate. So ask yourself  if you are a buyer how long will these prices remain this low. As demand increase these prices will rise. Now is the time to start your buying process

 

Why is lending so hard to get now days you ask. 

Buyers average credit scores for approved loan have increases which effects the ability to get a loan by this increase of higher credit scores it has effect 15 to 20 % of buyers ability to obtain a loan only allowing high incomes to purchase. This is forcing the rental market up or kids moving back with parents or more roommates in smaller places.

 

Something to think about is this market of unemployment and foreclosure other areas have not remained low. 

  • Food prices up 150%
  • Gas prices  up 197%
  • College tuition up 698%
  •  Medical services up 410%
  • Rents  up 200%
  • Monthly  mortgages 30 fixed rates up 0%.
  • With all the inflation of products or services mortgage rates are the only rates that are in line are below services on a national level.

 

Who are buying  INVESTOR who are paying cash and getting great deals. Where investor were buying gold which is now very expensive, they are looking at a  better way to make a return on there investments. Purchasing bank owned properties fixing them up and flipping them is giving them much more return on their money.  Open the opportunity for new buyers to purchase a home that has be remodeled and restore with little out of pocket repairs for the new buyers. 

 

Right now in North Dakota they have rose to number 3 in growth due to the oil in the state. Working at Mc Donald you would receive a starting wage of $15 to 18 per hour, with Michigan at an all time low due to the automotive business.

 

How is the government trying to recover - 

  • Forcing buyers to have 20% down payment in order to purchase their home
  • Doing away with the mortgages interest dedication -
  • Higher property taxes - 
  • Higher capital gains taxes 

This  will KILL the market and consumer confidence. The National Association or REALTOR along with the local Associations are fighting this to protect the right for the American dream

 

Ronald Reagan -  once said “We will preserve a part of the American dream by protecting the tax deduction..”

 

In the 1940 4 million no downpayment VA  loan for returning World War II  veterans were giving and the world was booming there were very few foreclosures, buyers were proud to own the American dream. With the wars of today we are having returning vets coming home to lower jobs, higher cost and very little benefits. By taking away the VA 100% loan or asking for 20% down will hurt all!

 

The 100% loan worked in the 1940 it could work again today helping the True buyers to achieve the piece of the American Dream

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Police buy cemetery plots to block Josh Powell from being buried next to his boys

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This story hits so close to home with these sweet boys being from West Valley City Utah.  Only a short distance from my home. As a mother I can only image what their grandma is feeling right now. The anger she must have felt when she heard about these boys last moments of life.


I am so glad those little boys are back in the arms of their mother and the fear Josh must feel knowing he will have to face her...all I can say is if I was the mother he would not want to meet me know what he had done to me kids!

 

Photographs of Charles Powell, right, and Braden Powell are displayed during their funeral services in Tacoma, Wash., on Saturday.

A sheriff and his sergeant in Washington state have bought burial plots next to Josh Powell's boys in order to block family members from burying him next to them, according to a media report Wednesday.

"The bottom line is, Josh Powell will not be near those two boys," Pierce County Sheriff's Sgt. Ed Troyer said in an interview with a Seattle-area radio program called the Ron and Don Show.

Josh Powell's surviving relatives wanted him to buried at the same cemetery as the two sons he killed, the city manager in Puyallup said earlier Wednesday.

But that does not look like it is going to happen.

Troyer and Sheriff Paul Pastor used their personal money and funds from Crimestoppers Tacoma-Pierce County to buy plots that are on either side of the boys, according to a report on the radio station's website that was confirmed by Troyer on Twitter:

Crimestoppers is soliciting money on its website for the purchase of the plots.

"It's disgusting that a murder suspect would be buried next to his victims," Pastor said in a statement posted on Twitter.

Powell's relatives visited the public Woodbine Cemetery and selected a plot about 25 feet from the boys, City Manager Ralph Dannenberg told The Associated Press earlier Wednesday. They haven't paid for it yet, and any sale is being put on hold because the parents of Powell's missing wife have promised legal action.

"We don't have any rules or procedures regarding refusing plots to anyone," Dannenberg said. "We're going to wait to see what the outcome is in court."

Powell was a suspect in Susan Powell's 2009 disappearance from their home in West Valley City, Utah. He later moved with his sons to near Tacoma, Wash., to be close to his parents. On Feb. 5, he attacked his sons with a hatchet and set his rental house on fire, killing himself and his sons, Charlie, 7, and Braden, 5.

Cops: Josh Powell murder-suicide house was sham set up for social worker visits

The boys were laid to rest at Woodbine on Saturday. Attorney Anne Bremner, who represents Susan Powell's parents, Charles and Judy Cox, says she would seek a temporary restraining order to block Josh Powell from being buried there.

"For him to be buried near those kids is just unthinkable," Bremner said. "For God's sake, for them to lose Susan first, and then the boys, and now this? Just give these people a break."

Powell's sister Alina did not return an email from the AP seeking comment.

Meanwhile, Powell's father, Steve Powell, who is awaiting trial in Pierce County, Wash., on voyeurism and child pornography charges, filed a motion with the court saying he does not wish to speak to the FBI or other law enforcement about his son’s case or the disappearance of his daughter-in-law.

Mark T. Quigley, Steve Powell’s attorney, told the Salt Lake City Tribune that the notice, filed Tuesday, was common in criminal trials to protect rights against self-incrimination. It was prompted by a visit last week in which Steve Powell reportedly rebuffed FBI agents.

"It’s simply a statement to law enforcement that says my client doesn’t want to talk," Quigley told the paper. "That’s [Steve Powell’s] right. I don’t think belligerent has anything to do with it."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Parking a worry at Riverdale splash pad site

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Riverdale City has provide a place for family and friends of Riverdale City to spent time with their kids. I don't think when this was in the works they ever dreamed the amount of people who would be coming from other cities to enjoy what Riverdale  has to offer or that parking would became an issue.

I personally have driven by the park on a hot summer day and have seen for myself the amount of people enjoying this pad.

I am not sure we need to drive people away from this splash pad by limiting the amount of parking. What we need to remember is these people are coming to Riverdale to enjoy not only the splash pad but also are purchasing food and gas as they travel to and from the pad.

From the View of a Realtor, this is a great opportunity to show people what a beautiful city we have and the accommodations we offer to the citizens of Riverdale with the possibilities that they would like to move their families into our city.

Currently there are 35 homes available in Riverdale in the price range of 72,500 to 314,900 out of those 35, 5 of them are bank owned or in a short sale. Riverdale also has a number of homes that are abandon.  Wouldn't it be nice to place good families in these home which would help beauty our city.
Lori Fleming Golden Spike Realty
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By Deanne Winterton

Standard-Examiner correspondent

Wed, 02/15/2012 - 6:23am

RIVERDALE -- The Riverdale splash pad is becoming so popular that parking in the area is becoming a problem, city council members and residents agree.

Some residents are asking for a no-parking zone on the west side of Parker Drive near Riverdale Park.

City officials didn't expect the splash pad to be so popular that visitors consistently struggle to find a parking space.

On busy days, visitors park on the narrow shoulder on the west side of Parker Drive and cross east to the splash pad.

Although Councilmen Braden Mitchell and Don Hunt said they understand that children running across a busy road to reach the park is a safety hazard, reducing parking in the area would likewise be a problem.

"It's a no-brainer. We don't want people who come to visit the park in harm's way" by crossing a busy road, Hunt said.

"But the problem is, we don't have parking."

Councilman Norm Searle said converting the west side of Parker Drive to a no-parking area would eliminate 80 parking spaces.

"I'm not totally sure that prohibiting parking in that area is a good idea," he said. "Ideally, it would be nice to have more parking."

Councilman Mike Staten said city residents get frustrated with the popularity of the splash pad, which draws crowds from as far away as Brigham City. He said people running day care facilities in Brigham City come to enjoy the free venue.

As other cities build splash pads, Mayor Bruce Barrows said, it could reduce the strain on Riverdale's facility.

Other cities in the area that have or are planning to build a splash pad include Harrisville, North Ogden, Pleasant View, South Ogden and Roy, he said.

The council asked staff to review the issue, with the possibility of establishing additional parking spots.