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Anyone can buy a lovely home if they will pay 100% over listing price.
Stop the damn complaining.
Anyone can buy a lovely home if they will pay 100% over listing price.
Stop the damn complaining.
Anyone with cash that is. Banks won't finance if the appraisal doesn't match the purchase price.
This one is too hard even for me to pass up.
1.) If you can get in on the flipper action, go for it.
2.) If you have $2 million laying around, good for you.
3.) If you like the idea that your mortgage will be packaged into ROI investment vehicles for the already super rich, bend over!
(Gee, remember I'm just a blonde, but wouldn't they want higher house prices? for their investment vehicles?)
the scarcity of new home construction as causes, among other things
And therein lies the solution.
Step 1) Buy one of these lots. Yes they are not exactly in Marin but close enough.
http://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Rafael/91-Sunny-Oaks-Dr-94903/home/28564339
http://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Anselmo/56-Indian-Rock-Rd-94960/home/51591334
http://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Anselmo/56-Indian-Rock-Rd-94960/home/51591334
Step 2) Build a house on it. The delta between buying an existing house and the lot is about $1-1.2M so that's your budget for the project. That will build a LOT of house!
Step 3) Move in and be happy.
Step 2) Build a house on it. The delta between buying an existing house and the lot is about $1-1.2M so that's your budget for the project. That will build a LOT of house!
This is for the well off only. Unless you have 1.2 million lying around, don't you need to get a construction loan for that? On top of a mortgage for the land itself? And where do you live while you are building a house?
Step 2) Build a house on it. The delta between buying an existing house and the lot is about $1-1.2M so that's your budget for the project. That will build a LOT of house!
This is for the well off only. Unless you have 1.2 million lying around, don't you need to get a construction loan for that? On top of a mortgage for the land itself?
If the buyers don't go too crazy with the plans they should be able to build a nice home for far less than $1.2M
I estimated in this thread that a 2000 sqft custom home with all the trimmings can be built on an existing empty lot for about $725k. That includes lot clearing, leveling and some excavation. Of course YMMV.
Getting the cash together may indeed be a problem if they are first time buyers. If not they may be able to HELOC their current residence.
Assuming they have at least 20% down for their $1.4M rejected offer they should have at least $280k in cash and can manage $7k/mo for housing.
And where do you live while you are building a house?
http://www.theprovidentbanklending.com/Construction.asp
Looking at this provider of construction loans it appears the pay schedule for the loan is set up to accommodate this question. Looking at a 20 year 4.451 APY loan for $1.1M (price of lot and house - down payment) the first year payments are $4125/mo ramping up to $6959/mo for the next 19 years. If they plan well and select a good contractor they should be able to finish the project within a year. It would be better to get a small lot loan to buy the land, then the big construction loan when they are ready to break ground.
http://www.marinij.com/marinnews/ci_24952013/marin-homebuyers-struggle-dearth-homes-market
JOSH MORGAN and Tony Sananikone of Piedmont have been trying to buy a home in Marin for nearly a year, making offers on properties from Corte Madera to San Rafael, but their efforts have only resulted in "getting the pants beat off us," Morgan said.
Morgan is only one of many frustrated buyers caught in a two-year drought in the number of homes on the market. Experts cite the lack of foreclosed homes for sale, homeowners waiting for prices to go up even further and the scarcity of new home construction as causes, among other things.
The problem can be self-perpetuating, agents said.
"People hesitate to sell their homes because they don't know how they would fare when they become buyers," said Eric McFarland, an agent with Pacific Union. "Inventory is so low, when good properties come on the market it gets competitive, with multiple offers." So potential sellers don't list their homes, further limiting the number of homes for sale.
While the multiple-offer situation has eased in recent months, Morgan is all too familiar with multiple bidding from other buyers competing for the same place.
"A house went on the market in San Rafael for $1,300,000. We offered $1,425,000, but there were 10 other offers, and it went for $1,650,000," said Morgan, who is a banker.
In December 2010, there were 952 homes on the market in Marin. By December 2013, the number was down to 283, a 70 percent drop, according to data from Bay Area Real Estate Information Services, a multiple listing service.
There were 2.3 months of inventory available in December 2013, meaning that if no new homes went up for sale, it would take just a little more than two months to sell every home on the market. Normal inventory in Marin is about four months' worth.
"In the fourth quarter of 2010, 25 percent of all the properties for sale in Marin were in contract," said Patti Cohn, an agent with Pacific Union. "In the fourth quarter of 2013, it was 52 percent. The percentage of all homes on the market that sold was 28 percent back then, versus 60 percent now."
One of the reasons for the low supply could be that "homeowners may simply be hoping that house prices will continue to rise, allowing them to recover lost equity," said John Krainer, a senior economist in the economic research department of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
"It is well-documented that house price changes are persistent," meaning that price rises are likely to be followed by more rises, Krainer said. Those homeowners who don't have to sell right away "can potentially take advantage of this. They may want to wait and gamble that the increases will continue, allowing them to sell later at a higher price."
Data collected in April 2013 by real estate sites Zillow and Corelogic shows a correlation, with the phenomenon, "though not necessarily causation," Krainer said.
"Counties that experienced large increases in house prices over the past year also experienced relatively large declines in inventories available for sale," Krainer said. The median price in Marin zoomed by as much as 26 percent month-over-month in 2013.
A local agent echoed Krainer's analysis.
"I think people are just hoping if they wait a little bit longer that their home will be worth a little more," said Alva Falla, an agent with Coldwell Banker.
Another factor:…..
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