Real Estate - Real Estate, Updates, News & Tips

Consumers Turn to Non-Banks for Mortgages

More borrowers are choosing non-banks—financial institutions that only issue loans and do not offer savings or checking accounts—to get a mortgage, The Washington Post reports. It's a major shift in borrower behavior. In 2011, 50 percent of all new mortgage loans originated from the three largest banks: JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo. However, in September 2016, that share plunged to 21 percent.During that time, non-banks emerged

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10 Best and Worst States for Millennial Buyers

Millennials have it rough: They're being slapped with a trifecta of housing affordability, credit accessibility, and employment issues, all of which are hampering their ability to buy, according to new report by Bankrate.com. The toughest state of all for millennial buyers may be California, where affordability is low, inventory is severely limited, and workers ages 25 to 34 face high unemployment.Culling data from the National Association of REL

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Are Transit Hubs the New Mall?

Developers are pouring billions of dollars into giving facelifts to some transit hubs across the country. These improvements are not for expanding traveler capacity but to make these hubs more eye-catching and give commuters a reason to hang out and not just pass through. They're mixing in dining, retail, event offerings, and even the chance to live there.Developers believe that traditional rail and light rail station segments can spur developmen

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Luxury Sellers Aren’t Going to Like This

More high-end home sellers across the country are being forced to offer discounts as the luxury real estate market shows signs of softening, The Wall Street Journal reports."Buyers are very price sensitive," says Donna Olshan, a real estate professional based in Manhattan. "If it's not priced right it's going to sit until the cows come home."Real estate pros and sellers in the luxury market are having to adjust their expectations. In the third qu

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MLS Says It's First to Offer Chinese Translation

MLSListings, a multiple listing service based in Silicon Valley, is staking claim to being the first real estate platform to offer Chinese translation. The MLS says the move was to help remove potential language barriers from the real estate process.MLSListings agents and their clients will now be able to switch between English and Chinese with a click of a button on the platform. Real estate agents also will be able to send translated reports an

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Uneven Economic Recovery Has Real Estate Implications

Stagnant economic conditions for middle-class America continue to put some real estate markets on uneven ground.NAR’s chief economist Lawrence Yun, who presented his latest economic outlook at the 2017 REALTOR® Broker Summit in San Diego, said lifetime wealth is at an all-time high in the U.S. However, this wealth is highly concentrated in the top 10 percent, while middle-income earners’ wealth has seen relatively no gain over the past 16 ye

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Parents May Need a New Mortgage Perspective

Parents are having a tough time saving money. Fifty-one percent of parents recently surveyed say their mortgage was having a “major impact” on their ability to save, according to Bankrate’s Money Pulse survey for February.“It’s probably not as much about the mortgage as it is that stage of life,” says Jonathan Smoke, realtor.com®’s chief economist.Homeowners with children are likely to be in their early 30s to mid 50s and have many

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Owners Are Spending More on Remodeling

Baby boomers may be sparking a remodeling boom. Homeowner spending on remodeling projects is expected to see steady growth through 2025, according to Demographic Change and the Remodeling Outlook, released by Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. Older owners are expected to make up the majority of those spending gains over the coming years too as they adapt their homes to be able to age in place.Expenditures by homeowners over age 55 are ex

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Buyers Are Being Drawn to New Homes

Sales of newly built, single-family homes increased 3.7 percent last month, reaching a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 555,000 units, the Commerce Department reports."We can expect further growth in new home sales throughout the year, spurred on by employment gains and a rise in household formations," says Robert Dietz, chief economist of the National Association of Home Builders. "As the supply of existing homes remains tight, more consumers

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Where Owners Are Most Likely to Stay Put

Americans are less mobile than they used to be. In 2015, only 12 percent of Americans had moved to a new address within the past year. In 1948, the percentage of movers was 20 percent, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.“There are two main determining factors whether people move or not,” says Nathalie Williams, a sociology professor from the University of Washington. “The better people feel their lives are going, the less likely they are

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