Showing posts with label Newport Beach Ca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newport Beach Ca. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

9 Common Real Estate Myths That Plague Buyers and Sellers

Even though most people are rarely part of a real estate transaction, everyone believes they are an expert.

Mature realtor showing couple interior of house.
While there's a prevailing belief that buying without a real estate agent will save you money, the truth is you're almost always better off working with a pro.

Buying or selling a house is not something most of us do every day. You may do it once a decade, or even once in a lifetime. Despite the fact that most of us enter the world of real estate only rarely, we all think we know how it works, based on the experiences of friends and family members, stories we have heard and things we have read.
But for everything we believe we know about the industry, there are a number of myths that circulate about how real estate actually works. Buying into those can hurt your chances of buying or selling the right home at the right price.
In recent years, technology has radically changed the way homes are bought and sold, and yet some aspects of real estate are the same as they were when your parents bought their last home. If a long time has passed since your last transaction, you may be surprised at how much has changed.
The Internet has made much more information available to consumers, but not all the information is equal, or even accurate. 
"A lot of people, for some reason, they believe what they read on the Internet," says Gea Elika, principal broker of Elika Real Estate in New York and a regional director of the National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents. "Read everything you see on the Internet with a grain of salt." 
The danger with believing everything you hear or read is real estate myths can cost you money when it's time to buy or sell a home. Here are nine of the most common ones that can trip up buyers and sellers:
Set your home price higher than what you expect to get. Listing your home at too high a price may actually net you a lower price. That's because shoppers and their real estate agents often don't even look at homes that are priced above market value. It's true you can always lower the price if the house doesn't garner any offers in the first few weeks. But that comes with its own set of problems. "Buyers are highly suspicious of houses that have sat on the market for more than three weeks," says Nela Richardson, chief economist for the brokerage Redfin. In areas such as San Francisco where multiple offers are common, sellers will actually price their homes for less than they expect to get, in the hopes of getting multiple offers above asking price. However, if you do this in a declining market, the danger is that all the offers will come in at the asking price or lower.
You can get a better deal as a buyer if you don't use a real estate agent. "That's a completely false premise," Elika says. If the house is listed with a real estate agent, the total sales commission is built into the price. If the buyers don't have an agent, the seller's agent will receive the entire commission.
You can save money selling your home yourself. Some people do successfully sell homes on their own, but they need the skills to get the home listed online, market the home to prospective buyers, negotiate the contract and then deal with any issues that arise during the inspection or loan application phases. It's not impossible to sell a home on your own, but you'll find that buyers expect a substantial discount when you do, so what you save on a real estate commission may end up meaning a lower price. It's not impossible to sell your home on your own for the same price you'd get with an agent, but it's not easy.
The market will only go up. In recent years, homebuyers and sellers have experienced a time of increasing home values, then a sharp decline during the economic downturn and now another period of increasing values. "They think that the market only goes up," Elika says. "They don't think about when a correction will come." The recent recession should have reminded everyone that real estate prices can indeed fall, and fall a lot. Economist Robert Shiller created an inflation-adjusted index for home prices dating to 1890 and found that home prices have fallen a number of times over the years, including in the early 1990s, the early 1980s and the mid-1970s.
You should renovate your kitchen and bathroom before you sell. If your kitchen and baths work, a major remodel could backfire. Prospective buyers may not share your taste, but they don't want to redo something that has just been renovated. "You're better off adjusting your price accordingly," says Kevin Brown Jr., president of Praedium Real Estate Services in Pittsburgh and a regional director of the NAEBA. "Most buyers want to put their own spin on things."
You'll earn back what you spend on renovations. If you fix the heating and air conditioning system or roof, you will sell your house more quickly, but you probably won't recoup what you spent. According to Remodeling magazine's 2015 Cost vs. Value Report, the only renovation that is likely to net you as much as you spent is a new front door. You're likely to recoup only 67.8 percent of what you spent on a major kitchen remodel and 70 percent of what you spent on a bathroom remodel on a mid-range home. "Very few things will bring you great returns," says Sabrina Booth, an agent with Redfin in Seattle. "If you're going to do these projects, it's better to do them for your own enjoyment."
All the properties listed in the multiple listing service show up online. Your agent must choose to let the listings show up online. Most do, but it never hurts to verify that yours will.
Open houses sell properties. Homes rarely sell to buyers who visited them during an open house. Agents like open houses because it enables them to find additional customers who are looking to buy or sell homes. If you or your agent choose not to have an open house, it probably doesn't hurt your sale chances – although holding a broker's open house for other agents may be worthwhile.
The agent who shows you homes or lists your home represents your interests. Maybe and maybe not. In about half the states in the U.S., agents may be "transaction brokers" who don't have a fiduciary duty to either the buyer or seller. In many states, a customer has the option of signing an agreement for the agent to represent him as a listing agent or as a buyer's agent. Before you start working with the agent, ask about your options and do some of your own research. Most brokerages require buyers and sellers to sign a form indicating that they understand whom the agent represents.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Most Realtors say short sale process is broken

The latest survey of California Realtors shows growing dissatisfaction with the short sale process.


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More Realtors described closing short-sales as ”difficult” or ”extremely difficult” than in a similar survey late last year, according to the California Association of Realtors’ latest Lender Satisfaction Survey.



The more than three-fourths– 77% — of Realtors who said closing short-sales were tough was up from 70% in December, according to the C.A.R. survey.



The survey was a follow-up to one conducted in December 2010. The majority of those surveyed dealt with short-sale transactions, in which homeowners negotiate with lenders to accept less than what is owed on the mortgage. The questions focused on the agents’ most recent transactions.



Most of the Realtors surveyed dealt with Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and JPMorgan Chase in their most recent short sales, according to C.A.R.



“Despite promises by lenders to improve their short-sale processes, clearly, they are not doing enough,” said C.A.R. President Beth L. Peerce. “Instead of helping struggling homeowners who need to sell and willing home buyers who want to buy, lenders have created man-made roadblocks that have caused real estate gridlock and hindered a desperately needed housing recovery.”



Reasons given for the dissatisfaction:



Two thirds — 66% — of Realtors cited slow response time to a short-sale package.

55% cited poor communication with lender representatives.

51% cited repeated requests for documentation.

More than 15% indicated that the lender foreclosed on the home before the short-sale could be completed.

Two-thirds — 67% – said it took more than 60 days for lenders or servicers to return a written response on the approval or disapproval of the short-sale agreement submitted.

43% said it took the lender more than 5 days to return any form of communication.

Less than 20% said lenders responded “within one business day” or less.

Overall satisfaction: 75% were “not satisfied” or “not at all satisfied,” up from 67 percent in December.

And nearly eight in 10 — 78% — said they were “not likely” or “not at all likely” to refer buyers to the lender for future home purchases.

C.A.R. also recently asked members, through its website, shortsalescalifornia.org, which lender is easiest to work with:



40% said Wells Fargo is easiest

23% said Bank of America

17% said JPMorgan Chase

11% said Citi

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Legendary surf shop might close because of Newport Beach zoning laws

The Frog House surf shop, the second-oldest surf shop in Orange County, might have to close its doors because of residential zoning laws.

The shop has been at its Newport Shores location since 1962. A few years later, in the 1970s, the land was zoned for residential-use only.

Because the business was already on the land, it was deemed a legal non-conforming use, City Atty. David Hunt said, meaning that they were openly using residential land for commercial use but the city did not pursue removal.

In 2006, Newport Beach was updating its general plan, which included taking action on zoning restrictions. Two years later, an ordinance passed that required the city to take action on Frog House and three other nonconforming properties in residential areas.

"[In 2008] the choice was that the commercial uses in residential uses have a year to abate or apply for appropriate modifications or permits, or they would have to leave their location," Hunt said.

Although the public has had access to the ordinance since 2008, Hunt said that the city did not contact Frog House directly when the change happened.

But, Hunt said, there are options for Frog House that wouldn't result in closing.

"They can seek an extension of the abatement period, which is a temporary extension determined by a hearing officer, or they can ask the City Council to amend the zoning," he said.

Read the full Daily Pilot story here.

-- Joanne Clay

Posted via email from eWaste Disposal and Recycling

Monday, September 27, 2010

Convicted Bank Robber Arrested in Donald Bren Check Heist

A convicted bank robber has been arrested on suspicion of being behind a bank and identity fraud case involving Donald Bren that made national headlines last month.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles alleges Moundir Kamil, who was dubbed the “Give Me More Bandit” for his part in a series of 2003 bank robberies, stole the identity of Bren as well as a $1.4 million federal tax refund check made out to the billionaire earlier this year.

Bren, owner and chairman of Newport Beach-based Irvine Company, is the county’s wealthiest resident at an estimated $12 billion.

Kamil is alleged to have set up a series of bank accounts under Bren’s name at the Cerritos branch of Pasadena-based East West Bank, according to a complaint filed in federal court in Los Angeles.

He’s charged with depositing Bren’s check and withdrawing nearly $1.1 million before authorities learned of the scheme.

Charges

Kamil was arraigned earlier this month in Los Angeles and charged with felony bank fraud. Bail was set at $50,000, according to court records.

The Business Journal broke the story of the crime in early August.

News of the bizarre theft went on to get national exposure as questions arose about how a 40-something suspect—who listed his occupation merely as “smoke shop” operator and looks nothing like the 78-year-old Bren—could make off with the identity and money of OC’s most prominent businessman.

The refund check Kamil allegedly stole was the result of overpayment of estimated quarterly taxes by Bren.

When and how the suspect managed to get the check wasn’t stated in the initial complaint, nor is it mentioned in the government’s updated charges for Kamil, which were filed on Sept. 13.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles could not elaborate on the case.

Officials for Newport Beach-based Irvine Co. also declined to comment.

There’s no known connection between Bren and the suspect.

At the time of the complaint, the unknown suspect was referred to as FNU (for first name unknown) and LNU (for last name unknown), “A.K.A. ‘Donald Bren.’”

“Mr. Bren was the victim,” a representative of the Secret Service’s Los Angeles bureau told the Business Journal at the time.

IRS officials and bank fraud investigators also were involved in the case.

While Bren shuns publicity, the media exposure arising from the crime helped authorities in their search for a suspect.

Bank surveillance photos of the suspect first ran in the Business Journal’s story.

They subsequently were shown by a number of other area and national media outlets, including the Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register, as well as in local news shows.

A few days after the news broke, a jail guard in Santa Ana called federal authorities saying he recognized pictures of Kamil “as being his former ward,” Secret Service agents said in a court filing.

Pictures from Kamil’s driver’s license matched the surveillance photos, according to agents. He was arrested and indicted shortly after.

Suspect Background

The suspect was born in 1969 and lives in Fountain Valley, according to court records. He counts a history of local bank crimes but never got away with close to the haul he’s alleged to have walked off with in the Bren case.

Kamil was arrested in late 2003 and tied to nine local bank robberies, most of them during a spree occurring that year targeting OC and Los Angeles banks.

A total of $32,634 was reported stolen in the robberies, which included thefts at Bank of America branches in Corona del Mar and elsewhere in Newport Beach and a Wells Fargo in Costa Mesa, among other locations.

Investigators dubbed the bank robber the “Give Me More Bandit.”

Kamil reportedly demanded more money from tellers than he initially got, according to reports at the time of his arrest.

The man threatened tellers with a weapon but never showed one, according to police reports. As in the Bren case, the release of surveillance pictures helped identify Kamil as the suspect in the 2003 robberies, police said at the time.

According to court records, Kamil pled guilty to six counts of bank robbery as part of a 2006 judgment and commitment order. He was sentenced to 30 months of prison time, most of it served prior to the 2006 judgment, and three years of supervised release.

His probation ended in June 2009, according to court records.

Posted via email from Newport Beach California 92663