Give it a Go, Sell Your Own House


The question relating to the procedure of selling your house in a time recession when property price falls have made it difficult. If you are prepared to spend a lot of energy and learn the tactics of marketing strategy, then you can sell your house in a couple of weeks. Denoted below are some tips that should be adopted before selling.

Avoid using agents to help you in selling your house with their high commissions. You can perform the task of selling by adopting simple strategies of marketing procedures. In tough times do let your insurance lapse if your premiums too high contact A1 brokers

Make your home airy and spacious by removing cluttered furniture. Replace old and damaged furniture and fittings, remove unwanted objects, and improve the style and look of damaged floorings. You must remember that the kitchen and bathroom attracts major attention. Therefore repair all broken and spoilt items like door knobs and also make arrangements for proper ventilation.

The look of the garden can be enhanced by planting small shrubs, maintaining the shape of grass edges and hedges and also installing a new and adorable water feature.

Creative advertisements facilitate in the selling of the house, you can post advertisements by the help of print media to enable a fast house sale. Therefore, now you can sell your property in a less time.

Bryan Ellis’ thoughts on The Virtualization Of The Real Estate Industry

Virtual Real Estate Investing” is a relatively new concept. Everything from using the internet as an avenue to make more money in real estate to online games such as SecondLife seem to be included in the popular definition of this term.

In order to figure out the truth of the matter, I sought out Bryan Ellis of BryanEllis.com, whose experience in the fledgling industry is truly impressive.

When I began using the term virtual real estate investing in the late 1990s, I did so because I saw clear parallels between the strategies used for profiting from physical real estate and those that would create income in the online world, said Ellis.

Bryan Ellis cites the similar strategies one can employe to make money from “virtual property” and “physical property” as a primary parallel of the two markets. “There’s a huge difference between a website and a piece of real estate, but the ways you can profit from them are similar: ‘flipping’, rental/leasing, advertising sales, etc…all of these apply to both markets” he states.

I must admit: Its easy to see the parallels. Consider this: If you own a piece of real estate in a desirable neighborhood, your real estate has value because other people are interested in that location. Likewise, if you own a desirable domain name, others will find value in it because it serves their purposes. So it doesn’t matter if you own physical real estate or virtual real estate – you’ll likely use similar strategies to turn them into money in your pocket.

In our next installment of this series on virtual real estate investing, Bryan Ellis will share the internet analogies to the physical concept of real estate development.

Smelling Blood in the Water

So the statistics are finally starting to emerge, and nobody but the spokespersons for our real estate brokerage industry, our debonair denizens of denial and flagrant fanners of fantasy can gainsay the obvious: the housing market is softening, and it is doing so quickly and rather dramatically. Prices are softening, unsold inventory is rising quickly, and new construction is clearly on the decline. The New York Times pointed all this out in its May 9 Business Section and, as we all know, once the “Old Grey Lady” spots a trend, it’s well underway or, perhaps, very nearly over.

Real estate investors, over the last couple of years, are the equivalent of the late 1990’s high-tech moguls, persuaded beyond any reason that profits were limitless and that the market would, indeed, go up forever. Yes, folks, it’s the tulips again! For those who may not recall 17th Century Holland (all evidence to the contrary notwithstanding, even I can’t remember back that far), irrational and maniacal speculation in tulip bulbs in that era drove the prices up exponentially, until, predictably, the market crashed. I say, “predictably,” even though every time speculative frenzy overtakes society, whether it be a dotcom investment environment “unburdened by earnings” or a frothy real estate market which must go up forever because “they ain’t making any more,” we seem to have to learn the same lesson over and over again.

Is it a lack of intergenerational memory? We certainly don’t have much sense of history, yet most of us know at least something about the Great Depression and Stock Market crashes of the past. Is it mere self-deception, i.e., the determination to think ourselves so clever that we’ve all become real estate moguls? In the late 1990’s, I remember clearly being surrounded at my tennis club by 20-somethings, knee-deep in internet-land, sipping well-aged single-malt scotch, and puffing on expensive cigars, secure and, indeed, smug, in their status as “captains of industry.”

I wonder what happened to those guys?

In truth, it is hard to say why we seem to have to keep learning the same lessons over and over again. This is, perhaps, a question better put to sociologists, and not to lawyers and financial people. But the consequences are, as ever, predictable, to those who see the writing on the wall.

In a previous article, I pointed out that the decline in housing values, coupled with other developments in banking, consumer lending and revisions to the Bankruptcy Code all portended very poorly for the American Middle Class. Depending on what happens in this area in the near future, a similar prognosis may, I am afraid, await the Upper Middle Class who also have a great deal of their wealth tied up in their homes.

Until only a few months ago, clients and colleagues were begging me to find them deals in “distressed” properties. There was, at the time, virtually no such thing, because no sooner had someone gotten wind of a property owner with a financial problem, that the bidding war began, raising “distressed” properties fully to market value (there may well have been no such thing as “market value” either). Now I have the very clear sense that those properties may soon be plentiful. Those who have had the sense to “keep their powder dry” and who have the foresight over the next year or two to begin nibbling at opportunities and the patience to hold the properties they acquire, will, in this writer’s opinion, be well-rewarded. Much as the good leavings of the dotcom meal were feasted upon by so-called “vulture funds,” the sharks may soon be smelling the blood in real estate, and might be slowly, oh, so slowly, beginning to circle.

Warren R. Graham
Copyright 2006

Warren Graham - EzineArticles Expert Author

Warren R. Graham is a New York attorney with the Firm of Cohen Tauber Spievack & Wagner LLP. He is a frequent writer on a variety of topics, including legal matters, political and religious affairs. His opinions are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of his firm or its members. Additional information on him may be found at either http://www.ctswlaw.com/templates/page3_attorney.asp?docid=667 or http://warrenrgrahamlegal.blogspot.com

Refinance Questions You Should Ask Yourself

“Many times, people take out a new, larger loan to pay off credit cards, automobiles or even to purchase another home,” says Norm Bour, host of the nationally syndicated U.S. radio program The Real Estate & Finance Show, and an experienced mortgage lender. “Sometimes they need the money to do home improvements or renovations.”

If, however, you want to lower your current loan payments or switch to a different type of loan, you must calculate the benefits before going the re-fi route.

“If someone is going from a fixed loan to another fixed loan, my general benchmark is to see a 1% reduction of interest rates to justify it,” says Bour, who also teaches money-management classes in Southern California. “Sometimes the borrower goes from a fixed-rate loan to an adjustable to lower his payments. Sometimes he does just the opposite-maybe to get away from interest-rate volatility. These are very personal decisions, specific to each individual client.”

You may already know-or suspect-that you will not live in your current home beyond a certain timeframe (perhaps 5 years). If this is the case, why would you even consider a 30-year loan?
“Sometimes, an adjustable-rate loan or a ‘hybrid’-say, a 5-year fixed, then converting to an adjustable-makes the most sense,” Bour says.

Do your homework before trying to qualify for a new loan. You should know:

? The approximate market value of your property, as “loan to value (LTV) is one of the primary factors that control interest rate,” Bour says.

? Your credit score, which will affect your overall ability to secure a loan, as well as the interest rates offered and the options available to you.

In certain cases, refinancing may not yield “a monetary savings, per se,” Bour says. This means there must be “compelling reasons” to secure a new loan, he emphasizes.

“A good loan officer will ask a series of questions to help the borrower identify his best option,” Bour says. The officer should:

? Assess your current monthly cash flow and potential future risks.

? Calculate your monthly savings if you were to refinance.

? Determine how long it will take you to break even.

? Fully explain the different types of loans and interest structures.

? Disclose all closing costs and “hidden” fees (origination fees, escrow, title, underwriting, interest, taxes, insurance, prepayment penalties, etc.).

? Treat you with respect and as an individual-not come up with a one-size-fits-all, cookie-cutter approach to your financial future. Find out more from our huge collection of expert mortgage and refinance collection at: Expert Mortgage Advice

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