Why use an agent?

A recent study conducted by the National Association of Realtors reveals that more home buyers than ever, 89% in 2011, took advantage of the services of a realtor to assist in the purchase of their home, up from 69% ten years earlier.

In many ways, this statistic might seem counter-intuitive, given that now more than ever there is a variety of tools and technology available to home buyers. Web sites line Realtor.com, Truila and Zillow, web based apps and FSBO-dedicated sites are all placing more and more information and knowledge at the disposal of consumers, yet the percentage of transactions involving realtors is on the increase.

For those of us in the industry, this comes as little surprise. The more one delves into the home buying process, the more one realizes it can be a complex transaction. While interest rates remain low, and values have fallen, the overall landscape for home buyers has become more confusing. Short sales and foreclosures are becoming more predominant, and with them a whole raft of complex procedures and regulations that make having a knowledgeable expert on your side even more important.

Each year purchase contracts become more detailed and refined, with increased dates, deadlines and obligations for both parties. And then there is the local knowledge that only a local realtor brings. Pictures on a website can only convey so much. Sooner of later you want someone on your side who knows the market, knows the neighborhood, and know the pros and cons of each property.

Consumers are realizing that with an undertaking as significant and potentially complex as purchasing a home, it makes sense to have an expert on your side.

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Why your own nest is best….

When listing out the reasons why now is a good time to be buying a home, most of us would pretty easily come up with the following: Historically low interest rates make the cost of paying off a mortgage the lowest it has ever been, making owning cheaper than renting. The decline in the housing market over the last few years has created a situation where buyers, for the most part, hold the advantage, as values continue to drop and inventory expands. There are the tax advantages that come with owning your own home. Additionally, the accumulated wealth that comes with the equity appreciation, over time, can make owning your own home a sound long term investment.

These are the tangible reasons. But as is often the case, there are other, less obvious, but no less important reasons, and these are the intangibles of home ownership.

Chief among them is the pride that comes with owning your own home, that doesn’t come with renting. Not only are you making a financial commitment, but also a commitment to the community you live in. Often, the place where we buy our first home is the place we choose to put down roots and start a family. It is also a reflection that your local lender sees you as a person of financial dependability and trustworthiness.

In your own home, you are the boss. You can choose what colors to paint the walls, what flowers to plant in the garden, or whether or not you turn that old shed in the back yard to your painting studio, or a sleep out for when friends come to visit.

Often, it is these intangibles that are the real, meaningful reasons why people elect home ownership over renting.

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Jewel in the mountains

Of all the reasons to love living here in the upper Arkansas River Valley, high on the list must be the little gem of a ski area twenty miles west of Salida, Monarch Mountain.

Averaging 350 inches of snow fall per year, Monarch has been providing skiers, and lately snowboarders, with a classic Colorado snow sport experience since 1939. Widely regarded as the most affordable and family friendly ski area in the state, Monarch offers everything from beginner friendly conveyor-belt lifts servicing the learner’s runs to double black diamonds and backcountry snow cat tours.  All laid on with an unpretentious, laid back atmosphere.

Over the years I’ve chatted with many people while riding the lifts, and am always struck by the number of regulars who live in counties like Summit, Eagle, Gunnison and Vail, places with bigger, more famous resorts, yet chose to do their skiing and boarding at Monarch. They appreciate the lack of crowds, reasonable prices and friendliness of both staff and other users.

While the locals play their part, another reason Monarch enjoys such a great reputation is through the coincidence of geography. Centrally located on the Continental Divide at the junction of the Sawatch and Sangre de Cristo mountain ranges, Monarch picks up snow from storms tracking out of both the north and south-west. This regular snow fall means it is one of a handful of ski areas in the state not reliant on harder, less forgiving man made snow. Skiing or riding at Monarch is skiing or riding the way Mother Nature intended it.

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The year that was…

New Year is not just a time for looking forward, but also reflecting back on the one that was. For many of us, this last year has passed by in a blur. It seems only yesterday, 2011 lay before us like a brand new road, and now suddenly we are speaking of it in the past tense. While we can only use gut feeling to predict the future, a look back at the 2011 market can help us gain a sense of what 2012 holds.

Real estate figures from the Chaffee County Board of Realtors show a market making significant gains in some areas, modest ones in others, matching the feeling of agents in our office that 2012 could well be a productive time for the local market.

Single family home sales, the main driver of the market here, increased nearly 20%, from 216 closings in 2010, to 255 in 2011. In line with this increased demand, average days on market declined, from 256  to 236.

Reinforcing the feeling that we are still in a buyer-driven market, the average sales price declined from $278,466 in 2010 to $254,277 in 2011. Interestingly, the list price to sales price ratio remained steady at 93%, reflecting a growing trend among sellers to adjust list prices downward to more accurately reflect market conditions. New loans remained the most popular source of finance, at just over 50%, a reflection of the attraction of continuing record low interest rates. Cash transactions came next at around 33%, with the balance being made up of FHA, seller finance, USDA and VA loans.

Looking ahead, we are confident of a continuation of this trend for 2012. Interest rates are expected to remain low, and as sellers continue to adjust to the market, we look forward to another satisfying and productive year, as buyers continue to be drawn to the benefits of owning property in the best little county in Colorado.

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May all your dreams come true

Well, the sleigh and reindeer are parked up for another year, the elves are taking a well earned rest, and Santa has his feet up in front of the fire at last. At Pinon, as we gaze out our office windows at the beauty of the snow-capped peaks around us, we can also take a deep breath,  wind down 2011 and look forward to a brand-spanking new New Year.

We’re optimists at heart. Despite the best efforts of the media to paint the picture otherwise, there is lots to be hopeful about for the coming year. County-wide, sales tax  revenue is up over last year, reflecting what we are seeing in the real estate market locally. There’s snow in the mountains. That means the ski lifts at Monarch are running, the hotels, motels and restaurants are full, locals are earning and spending paychecks, and snow in the mountains now means water in the river next spring. Our streets are safe to walk day and night, and residents generosity to worthwhile causes knows no bounds.

The mountains continue to soothe and inspire, implacable and real, yet each day different. The sun shines bright in a sky as blue as can be, and through it all the river flows, through our community’s heart and ours too, constant, strong and timeless.

Our wish to you for the coming year is this: may you have the courage to follow your dreams, may each one come true, and may you find your true home, wherever that may be.

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Local is better

Tucked away amongst all the encouraging news currently emanating from the national housing market - existing home sales rising year over year for the fourth month in a row, continued record low interest rates, unsold inventory down to an eight month supply, more first time home buyers entering the market – is one piece of data that should be of concern to everyone – buyers, sellers and those of us in the middle of a real estate transaction, the realtors. That is the continued high rate of contract failures.

Despite these encouraging trends, it seems home sales are still stuck in a narrow range that defies the market indicators, and failed contracts appear to be the leading reason why. This time last year, failed contracts accounted for 8% of those written, now that figure is at 33%.

While having the ability to withdraw from a contract should their position change is an important safety valve for buyers – inspection and loan conditions being two important ones – it seems that an inordinately high number of contract failures are due to loan application and appraisal / underwriting issues.

This is where the value of buyers working with local lenders becomes an important step in ensuring an offer to purchase matures into a successful closing. Nobody understands the nuances of the local real estate market better than local lenders and appraisers. They have a better understanding of what constitutes an effective comparable, how local neighborhoods determine value, which sectors of the market are strong, and the effect that seasonal employment, common here in Chaffee County, has on a prospective borrowers cash flow.

Fortunately, realtors here at Pinon are able to point to a rate of contract failures far below the national average as proof that when it comes to lending, local is better.

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Should mortgage underwriters be energy auditors also?

Didi you know that the average American household spends $2000 annually on energy costs? That’s more than on either taxes or homeowner’s insurance. A new bill before Congress would require mortgage underwriters to recognize this expense when calculating a borrowers ability to service their mortgage.

The aim of the bill, the Sensible Accounting to Value Energy Act (SAVE), a bipartisan effort sponsored by Sens. Bennet (D-Col.) and Isakson (R-Ga.) is to enable borrowers to finance cost-effective energy upgrades as part of their mortgage, while giving lenders a more complete picture of a borrower’s ability to service their mortgage.

While on the surface this might seem like a good idea, there are naturally other issues to be considered. Energy consumption varies widely from household to household, and is often as much a reflection on lifestyle as a home’s energy efficiency. Just ask anyone who has wrestled with their spouse over where to set the thermostat in wintertime. The SAVE Act would seek to work around this anomaly by comparing energy bills from household to household, not borrower to borrower.

Opponents counter that  promoting efficient energy consumption falls in the domain of local government working in tandem with local building codes, not mortgage underwriters. While it would seem that adding another layer of complexity to the already labyrinthine process of mortgage underwriting might make both lenders and borrowers nervous, any debate that focusses attention on energy consumption, and how we as individuals, communities and a nation confront the twin specters of rising energy costs and dwindling natural resources, seems to be a debate worth having.

For more on this story, read here.

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Mortgage – Interest deduction may go away

As law-makers in Washington grapple with the twin issues of rising national debt and falling tax revenues, one of the proposals on the table before the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction is the elimination of the mortgage-interest deduction provision in the current tax code.

Fall scene near Salida, Colorado.This provision allows home owners to lower their tax liability by claiming the interest they pay on their mortgage as a tax deduction. Proponents, such as Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, argue that the deduction effectively lowers the cost of home ownership, in his opinion one of the cornerstones of a stable, democratic society.

Others studies counter that the deduction conversely inflates the cost of housing by as much as three to six percent, and favors those with the ability to buy larger, more expensive homes, and is to the detriment of those in lower income tax brackets.

It would seem that if Congress is to make any moves to repeal the mortgage-interest deduction, it is likely be phased out over time, and be offset with a universal tax credit. This would assist all level of income earners equally, while still yielding significant savings for the Federal Government – the current deductions cost Uncle Sam approximately $100 billion per year.

Regardless of the outcome of the debate, now is still a great time to buy a home. Prices are continuing a steady decline, and interest rates are at all time historic lows. It seems buyers looking in Chaffee County are taking advantage of these factors. According to Chaffee County MLS figures year to date, 2011 is seeing a modest increase in sales volume over 2010. It would seem things like quality of life and value for money never go out of fashion.

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No news is good news

When I first came to Salida, some twenty years ago, like many I was struck by the small town charm and atmosphere. Writing a letter to friends back in New Zealand ( no email in those days ) I described Salida as the kind of town where I expected to bump into Andy Griffith wearing a sheriff’s uniform.

This sleepy, leafy charm was reinforced by reading through the headlines in the local newspaper, The Mountain Mail. While the lives of others living in larger metropolitan areas take place to the background noise of dramatic events and conflicts, here in Salida our concerns are generally of a more mundane nature.

Right now, with an election looming in November, ballot issues are beginning to dominate the headlines, in particular a County sponsored initiative to increase taxes to offset loss of revenue that is affecting the County’s ability to maintain traditional services.

Cristo’s Over The River project is never far from the front page also, and I cannot think of a single event that had caused as much controversy in the time I have lived here. In 1994 I took some folks from Cristo’s team down the Arkansas River where they set up weather stations to ascertain the best locations to drape the fabric over the river, so this project has been in the pipeline a long time.

Opponents state negative impact on wildlife, disruption to their daily lives – particularly traffic congestion on the Highway 50 corridor, and lack of access to the river for fly fishing and other recreational pursuits as reasons for opposing the project. Proponents point to the overall boost to the local economy such a major event will have on the region, as well as shining the international spotlight on the Arkansas valley as reasons to proceed.

And then there was last week’s early season snow storm, which brought significant snow to the mountains, and allowed residents to awake on Saturday morning to a winter wonderland. As is typically the case here, the snow in town melted off pretty quickly, but the mountains retain their covering, boding well for the coming ski season.

So, while our headlines here may lack the attention-grabbing aspects of other media outlets, in a way that is the point of why we choose to live here. Long may it remain so.

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Pinon Owner / Broker recognized as Realtor of the Year

Susan Dempsey-Hughes, owner / broker of Pinon Real Estate Group, was recently voted by her peers as Realtor of the Year for the Chaffee County MLS district.

Susan is a native of Palm Beach, Florida, and like many residents of this valley, came here for what was intended to be a short time but wound up falling in love – both with the community, and her husband Zach, whom she met while kayaking in 1996. They have two young daughters, Isabelle ( Izzy ) and Margaret ( Maggie ).

Initially working as a river guide and kayak instructor, Susan gained her real estate license in 2002, and rapidly became one of the area’s top producing brokers. She joined Pinon Real Estate Group in February 2008, and became owner / broker in January 2010.

“I am humbled at the recognition, especially satisfying as it came from my peers,” says Susan. “I look on it more as an acknowledgement of all the good work our company does in the community. I feel privileged to work with the people I work with, and to live where I do.”

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