Monday, December 15, 2014

Home buyer scam

The people running the following scam have been targeting real estate agents, but they could change their target or try something else with homeowners that are selling their own home.  On a personal note, buyers for items I had on Craigslist tried the same kind of scam.


It is best to be aware of the dangers of communicating with people about your property when they don’t want to see the house.  


Here is the press release from Realcomp, the online service that realtors use.


It has been brought to Realcomp's attention that the following SCAM is actively occurring around the state of Michigan. It usually involves a “Chinese buyer” who sends emails regarding the purchase of a high end property. Below is an article from April 2013 regarding one version of the SCAM. Other scenarios can be accessed via Google that seem to date back to 2010.




Some of the most recent emails are from a Yen Lee or Jiang Jiemin and bank statements are provided to make the buyer seem legitimate. The offer is close to purchase price including a large deposit. The agents in the Tawas area have been receiving these emails.


Please be sure to read the information at the above-referenced link so if you have not heard of this scam, you will be aware of the different scenarios that can be involved. I’ve heard of the email coming from a doctor as well. Here are some other tips:


A buyer from another country, such as China or England, emails you out of the blue and offers to pay cash for a listing sight unseen.  All that he needs is your bank account number so that he can wire his deposit to you or an address where he can send his deposit check.  He may also want you to refer him to a local attorney or financial adviser. It sounds too good to be true but you don’t want to offend him if he is a legitimate buyer.  What do you do?  


Here are some tips compiled from Western Union, Craigslist, Active Rain, and other sources:


1. If the buyer sends you large amounts of funds “by accident”, and asks you to wire the excess funds back to him, never send or wire funds from a check in your account until it officially clears.  Having access to the funds does not mean that they cleared.


2. Ask the buyer questions about his work, family, reason for wanting to buy in this area, how he got your name, etc.


3. Ask for a telephone number and speak on the phone.


4. Even if the buyer sends you verification of funds, keep in mind that scammers can create phony bank statements, passports, and other forms of ID.   Remember that a former state senator in Rhode Island recently pled guilty to charges that he created phony bank statements.


5. If the buyer asks you for a referral to a local attorney or financial adviser, do not provide a name without clearing it with the attorney or financial adviser.  Scammers will use these names to seem legitimate when they try to scam other victims.


6. Before accepting a check that is drawn on a foreign bank, check with your bank to find out whether it will charge a special processing fee and how long it will take for a check drawn on a foreign bank account to clear.  The answer may differ from country to country.

7. Do not provide your bank account number to a buyer whom you don’t know.  Scammers will pretend that they’re going to wire a deposit to your account in order to obtain your bank account number so that they take your funds.

Morris Hagerman is a local real estate agent with Real Estate One in Royal Oak, Michigan.  He serves Berkley and the other Woodward 5 communities, including Ferndale, Pleasant Ridge, Royal Oak and Huntington Woods.  Hagerman is also a member of the Berkley/Huntington Woods Area Chamber of Commerce.  You can contact him by phone at 248-854-8440, email at morrishagermanproperties@gmail.com or visit his web page.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Open House Sunday, December 14, 2014 from 1-3 pm.

Open House on Sunday, December 14, 2014 from 1-3 pm.


henley huntington woods.jpg


WOW! A TRUE TURN KEY MOVE IN HOME. ELEGANCE, CHARM AND CLASS PERSONIFIES THIS HOME. FOR THE TRUE GOURMET COOK, A WONDERFUL COMPLETELY REMODELED KITCHEN WITH GRANITE TOPS, STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES AND EAT IN AREA. THAT IS NOT TOO OFTEN FOUND IN HUNTINGTON WOODS HOMES, A FIRST FLOOR MASTER BEDROOM SUITE WITH A LARGE CLOSET, UPDATED BATH AND A FIRST FLOOR LAUNDRY. OTHER UPDATES ARE; NEW HVAC, ROOF/GUTTERS, ELECTRICAL AND A WATERPROOFED BASEMENT!

Street Number
25528
Street Name
Henley
Street Suffix
Avenue
City
Huntington Woods
County
Oakland
Zip5
48070
Zip4
1410
List Price
$399,000
Beds Total
4
Baths.Lavs
2.1
Sqft Total
3223
Acreage
0.14
Appliances
Dishwasher, Disposal, Dryer, Microwave, Refrigerator, Stove, Washing Machine
Architecture Level
2 Story
Architecture Style
Colonial
Exterior
Brick, Stone
Cooling
Central Air
Exterior Features
Fenced, Outside Lighting, Sprinkler(s)
Foundation
Basement
Frontage Feet
60
Garage Features
Attached, Door Opener, Electricity
Garage Size
1 Car
Heating
Forced Air, Other
Heating Fuel
Gas
Interior Features
Cable Available, Humidifier, Jetted Tub, Security Alarm (rented), Sump Pump
Lot Dimensions
60 x 94
Road Frontage Type
Paved
School District
Berkley
Cit-Town-Village
City
Sewer
Sewer-Sanitary
Short Sale
No
Sqft Total
3223
Sqft Total Bsmt
2071
Tax Amount Summer
6839.08
Tax Amount Winter
312.01
Terms Offered
Cash, Conventional
Water Heater Fuel
Gas
Water Source
Municipal Water
Waterfront Features
Swim Assoc
Year Built
1951
State
Michigan
Porch Type
Porch

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Open house in Berkley Saturday, December 6 from 1-3 pm

Open house this Saturday, December 6, at this spacious classic Berkley colonial! It is in the heart of Berkley and near restaurants and other Berkley attractions.

This winter you could be sitting in front of your cozy gas fireplace, your car tucked away in the garage. Three large bedrooms with plenty of closet space. Plus a bonus room off of the dining room that you can use however you see fit. One and 1/2 baths. Super deep lot 45' by 163' . Partially finished basement for your Man Cave, Kids Cave or Mom Cave! Neutral paint colors, hardwoods under carpeting. Berkley School system.

The open house is this Saturday, December 6, from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm. It is located at 2218 Catalpa, Berkley, Michigan (click on address for Google Map location).

Morris Hagerman is a local real estate agent with Real Estate One in Royal Oak, Michigan.  He serves Berkley and the other Woodward 5 communities, including Ferndale, Pleasant Ridge, Royal Oak and Huntington Woods.  Hagerman is also a member of the Berkley/Huntington Woods Area Chamber of Commerce.  You can contact him by phone at 248-854-8440, email at morrishagermanproperties@gmail.com or visit his web page.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

The 50 best suburbs in America - Berkley, Huntington Woods and Beverly Hills made the list

THE 50 BEST SUBURBS IN AMERICA


The U.S. is full of incredible places to live — cities, yes, but also numerous unique smaller towns and villages that people call home.
After examining data on nearly 300 suburbs, we put together a list of the 50 best suburbs in America. For this list, we considered suburbs with populations between 5,000 and 100,000 within 40 kilometers of the nearest metropolitan area. We also factored in average commute times, median household income, poverty and crime rates, public school ratings from GreatSchools.org, and a measure of housing affordability.
Our list was dominated by the Midwest, or more specifically by Ohio suburbs. This is likely due to several factors, most notably a reasonable cost of living.
Andy Kiersz compiled the data for this list.
Morris Hagerman is a local real estate agent with Real Estate One in Royal Oak, Michigan.  He serves Berkley and the other Woodward 5 communities, including Ferndale, Pleasant Ridge, Royal Oak and Huntington Woods.  Hagerman is also a member of the Berkley/Huntington Woods Area Chamber of Commerce.  You can contact him by phone at 248-854-8440, email at morrishagermanproperties@gmail.com or visit his web page.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Detroit is losing ground in the affordability of housing

Interest.com Study: Big-city housing often unaffordable
By: Reed Karaim, November 14th 2014

(See bottom of this page for details on the 25 largest markets.)

Middle-income families are unable to afford the median-priced home in just over half of the country's 25 largest cities, and in the least affordable metropolitan areas, they aren't even in the game.
Those are the results of Interest.com’s 2014 Home Affordability Study, an annual look at how the cost of buying a home stacks up against income and expenses in the nation’s metropolitan areas.
“The bottom line is that buying a decent home remains a difficult or unobtainable dream for Americans in too many of the nation’s largest cities,” says Mike Sante, Interest.com’s managing editor. "In those cities with the least affordable housing, the failure of paychecks to keep up with rapidly rising housing costs is reaching crisis proportions.
"In the least affordable cities, it's not uncommon for families to spend 50% or 60% of their income on housing costs. I've even had San Franciscans tell me that they must devote 70% of what they make to keep a roof over their head — and they were renting. Owning is out of the question."
Last year’s study found a dramatic shift in the housing market as prices, recovering from the depths of the real estate crash that accompanied the Great Recession, soared in many cities.
Nationally, they jumped by 12%, and the increase was even larger in the top 25 markets, with home prices rising 15%.
This year’s study found something resembling sanity returning to the market. Across the country, home prices were up just 4%, while in the 25 biggest cities they climbed 6%.
Yet incomes couldn't come close to keeping up, rising just under 2% nationwide and just over 2% in the big cities.
“Affordability would improve at a faster pace if wage growth would pick up,” says Adam DeSanctis, economic issues media manager for the National Association of Realtors. “We’ve seen an improvement in job growth, but wages have remained somewhat static.”
To conduct our annual study, Interest.com gathers city-specific data on median home prices and incomes, average property taxes and insurance costs, as well as consumer debt and mortgage rates, from the most reliable sources we can find.
The U.S. Census Bureau, National Association of Realtors, National Association of Insurance Commissioners and Experian, one of the three major credit reporting agencies, all provide information.
We then use two of Interest.com’s online calculators to determine how much a family earning the median income in each city can afford to spend on a house and how much a family would have to earn to afford that city’s median-priced home.
(The median household income is one where half the households earn more and half earn less; the median home price is where half the homes sell for more and half sell for less.)
We then assign each city an:
Affordability Grade, with a "C" indicating that someone making the median income can afford the median-priced home.
Paycheck Power Rating, which is the percent the median income exceeds or falls short of the income required to buy a median-priced home.
For the second year in a row, no city qualified for an Affordability Grade of A. (We don't grade on the curve.) Only three cities, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Atlanta and St. Louis recorded a B.
Minneapolis ends up in the top spot by virtue of its Power Paycheck Rating, which at 23.22% edges Atlanta’s 21.62% and St. Louis’s 20.46%. No other city had a rating within 6 points of those three.
Herb Tousley, director of real estate programs at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis, says a combination of factors work in the Twin Cities' favor.
One is a median income of $67,194, which is nearly $15,000 higher than the national average and also significantly above the average for the 25 biggest cities.
“We’ve got a pretty diverse economy here, a lot of medical tech, a lot of corporate headquarters,” Tousley says, “so a fair number of people have a higher income.”
The metropolitan area also has a large base of homes that fall within the range of those making a median income. “We have a big tranche of what I call middle-class, middle-priced homes,” says Tousley.
Tousley and Emily Green, president of the Minneapolis Area Association of Realtors, both note that the city avoided the extreme real estate boom and bust that hit the Sun Belt and California over the past decade.
Yet the Great Recession made many potential buyers super-cautious, which has kept the Twin Cities housing market from overheating, according to Green, an agent with Sandy Green Realty in Minneapolis.
“We’re seeing (working) couples, first-time buyers, that are targeting homes they can afford on one income,” she says.
Atlanta, which led our 2013 ratings, has seen its affordability grade fall from an A to a B+ to a B over the past three years.
It was hurt in this year’s study by sharply higher home prices — a 16% increase that was more than three times the national average.
Ennis Antoine, president-elect of the Atlanta Board of Realtors, says prices have been pushed up by a tight supply of existing homes for sale.
“We have barely four months of inventory,” Antoine says. “A healthy supply for us would be six months.”
Antoine believes the supply has been constrained by homeowners whose properties have only recently regained enough value that they are no longer underwater on their loans. “They have stabilized, and they don’t want to move yet,” he says.
Even though St. Louis’ median home price climbed 9.74% to $149,900, housing in the city remained among the cheapest in the country, ahead of only Detroit and Pittsburgh.
That, combined with a median income slightly above the national average, gave the city its solid rating.
One characteristic the Twin Cities, St. Louis and Atlanta all share is open space for new home construction, which keeps the prices of existing homes down.
The cities that fare the worse in Interest.com’s study are the opposite, hemmed in by oceans or oceans and mountains.
As it was in 2013, San Francisco is the least affordable city in our study. It has a median home price of $769,600, the nation’s highest. A family earning the city’s median income could only afford a home worth $355,703, less than half that price.
The yawning gap between home prices and the capability of representative working families to afford a home earned the San Francisco our lowest Power Paycheck Rating and an Affordability Grade of F.
San Diego, Los Angeles, New York and Miami are all coastal cities that also recorded an Affordability Grade of F.
Miami and Florida’s other big city, Tampa, which received an Affordability Grade of D, are both hurt by median incomes that, at $46,946 and $45,880 respectively, are the lowest of the major metropolitan areas.
Median-priced homes in places like San Francisco and New York are likely to remain beyond the reach of all but the wealthiest families for the foreseeable future.
But for the rest of the country, the experts believe the slowdown in rising prices that marked 2014 is a good sign for the future.
Price increases are expected to remain modest in 2015, while mortgage rates are expected to rise by a point or so from current rates.
After the roller-coaster ride home prices have been on the last seven years, the changes are expected to have only a moderate impact.
"You’re not going to see the double-digit price growth we saw earlier,” says DeSanctis. "It’s going be at a more healthy pace, which will keep affordability at a preferred level, even with interest rates likely rising.”





Affordability Grade (1)


Paycheck Power Rating (2)


City
2012
2013
2014
2012
2013
2014
Atlanta
A
B+
B
40.00%
24.92%
21.62%
Baltimore
C
C
C+
7.61%
-8.36%
10.68%
Boston
D
D-
D-
-11.62%
-16.54%
-15.10%
Chicago
C
C-
C-
2.60%
-1.16%
-0.74%
Dallas
C
C
C
6.68%
0.83%
1.16%
Denver
C
D+
D+
4.34%
-4.59%
-5.59%
Detroit
A
B
C+
45.32%
16.87%
14.02%
Houston
C
C-
C-
5.20%
-1.90%
-1.42%
Los Angeles
D-
F
F
-12.52%
-30.31%
-31.70%
Miami
D-
F
F
-12.59%
-24.56%
-25.88%
Milwaukee
D+
D
D
-2.94%
-8.22%
-6.77%
Minneapolis
A-
B
B
32.20%
23.86%
23.22%
New York
F
F
F
-29.71%
-35.82%
-31.99%
Philadelphia
C
C-
C
2.89%
-1.31%
1.15%
Phoenix
B+
C
C
23.53%
8.32%
7.53%
Pittsburgh
C+
C+
C+
13.64%
11.33%
13.49%
Portland
C-
D
D+
-0.39%
-8.41%
-5.06%
Sacramento
B-
D+
D
15.68%
-3.41%
-7.50%
St. Louis
B+
B
B
23.49%
17.94%
20.46%
San Antonio
C-
D
D+
-0.55%
-4.88%
-4.30%
San Diego
F
F
F
-25.90%
-37.71%
-38.23%
San Francisco
F
F
F
-32.76%
-47.93%
-45.64%
Seattle
C-
D-
D
-0.63%
-13.36%
-9.03%
Tampa
D+
D+
D+
-3.03%
-4.47%
-2.66%
Washington
C+
C
C
14.38%
2.80%
7.19%

  1. An Affordability Grade of C means someone making the median income can afford the median-priced home.
2. The Paycheck Power Rating is the percent the median income exceeds or falls short of the income required for a median-priced home.