Friday, May 30, 2014

New Listing! ONE LEVEL CONDO RIGHT IN TOWN!

ONE LEVEL CONDO RIGHT IN TOWN!
Sweet! One level condo in the heart of town. 1 bedroom, 1.5 baths. Lovely finishes throughout. Energy efficient RastraBlock construction. Nice back yard. Gas log kiva style fireplace in living room. Slate tile floors. Vigas, beams and corbel accents. Granite tile counter tops. Upgraded stainless appliances. Custom kitchen cabinets with pull out drawers. Smooth plaster walls. Master has a walk in closet with custom storage and a lovely full bath with walk in shower, nice shower doors & tile. Close to shopping. MLS 95322 $184,900








ATTENTION DEVELOPERS 1.37 ACRES! R-4!

ATTENTION DEVELOPERS 1.37 ACRES! R-4!
Attention Developers! 1.37 Acres. Good location, in town. Reasonable price! Zoned R-Four. Town of Taos ran the sewer line across the southern end of this property. Easy access off paved Town Road. Utilities close by! MLS 95317 $102,000





Monday, May 26, 2014

New Listing in Des Montes!

PASTORAL SETTING ~ HOUSE AND STUDIO
Located in glorious Des Montes, right off the Hondo-Seco Road. Home and studio on 2.48 acres in a with a beautiful pastoral setting with irrigation ditch. Wide open grass land with fantastic mountain views! 2958 sq ft, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with a huge 628 sq ft studio space (formerly the garage). Large living room with big picture windows and kiva fireplace. Dining room is just off the living room. Big open kitchen. Light filled wide hall with doors to central, walled courtyard. Large master with walk in closet. 2 additional good sized bedrooms. Wood and tile floors. Fruit trees. Grass. Views! MLS 95260  $485,000






Thursday, May 22, 2014

Forecast for Housing and the Economy Suggests Gradual Improvement through 2015

Forecast for Housing and the Economy Suggests Gradual Improvement through 2015

WASHINGTON (May 15, 2014) – Housing activity was sub-par in the first quarter of this year, dampened in part by severe weather patterns, but an uptrend is expected with healthy underlying demand over the balance of the year and through 2015, according to presentations at a residential real estate forum here during the Realtor® Party Convention & Trade Expo.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the U.S. population has been growing steadily, but job creation has not. “When you look at the jobs-to-population ratio, the current period is weaker than it was from the late 1990s through 2007,” he said. “This explains why Main Street America does not fully feel the recovery.”
Yun said that growth in the Gross Domestic Product slowed in the first quarter, and possibly contracted. “There are no fresh signs of recession, and the second quarter could grow about 3 percent,” he added.
Yun said the home sales-to-population ratio also has been below normal since 2008. Despite a large pent-up demand from years of below-normal home sales, inventory constraints and tight credit conditions continue to impede the market, in combination with strongly rising home prices and higher mortgage interest rates.
Although existing-home sales rose more than 9 percent to nearly 5.1 million in 2013, sales activity retrenched during the past six months. Even with gradual improvement moving forward, they are projected to decline about 3 percent for the year to just over 4.9 million, but should trend up to more than 5.2 million in 2015.
Because of tight inventories and rising sales last year, the median existing-home price rose 11.5 percent to just over $197,000. Home price growth is likely to moderate from more new home construction, with the median price increasing about 6 percent in 2014 to $209,000 and reaching nearly $219,000 next year as market conditions begin to balance.

An upside of rising prices is a recovery in home equity. “Based on our forecast for this year, the median home equity gain over three years is expected to be $40,000,” Yun noted. “A gap between new and existing-home prices from rising construction costs shows that prices are well supported by fundamentals in most of the country.”

He expects the Federal Reserve to end tapering of monetary policy by the end of the year and to hike the Fed funds rates in the first quarter of 2015.

Although the pattern is uneven month-to-month, mortgage interest rates are forecast to gradually rise, with the 30-year fixed rate averaging 4.7 percent this year and 5.5 percent in 2015. “Inevitably, rising mortgage interest rates will hurt housing affordability,” Yun said.

Housing starts have stayed below 1 million a year for the past six years, but need to reach the long-term average of 1.5 million to balance the market. “Because of the prolonged slowdown in construction, we now need 1.7 million housing starts per year to catch up,” Yun said. While improving, housing construction is seen at nearly 1.1 million this year and approximately 1.4 million in 2015.

The sluggish recovery in housing starts is impacted by construction costs rising faster than inflation, labor shortages in the building trades, and the difficulty for small local home builders to obtain construction loans. “Onerous financial regulations are preventing small banks from originating construction loans,” Yun said.
Job growth, which is the key to overall economic health, has essentially recovered all of the eight million jobs lost since the great recession. Employment is expected to improve, with job growth rising 1.6 percent in 2014 and 1.9 percent next year, after growing 1.7 percent in 2013; consumer confidence should gradually rise.

The Gross Domestic Product should grow 2.2 percent this year and about 2.9 percent in 2015; GDP grew 1.9 percent in 2013. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, was a tame 1.4 percent in 2013 but is projected to rise to 2.5 percent this year and 3.5 percent in 2015.

Eric Belsky, managing director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, agreed we’re unlikely to see a back-up in GDP. “Growth in the stock market and the recovery in housing along with pent-up demand are major factors driving the economy,” he said.

“There are three federal surveys that measure household growth and that are inconsistent, but we had real growth in 2012 that fell back last year,” Belsky said.  “Even the survey with the strongest household growth shows we’re a million below where we should be, but we’re probably two million below. We could see a notable uptick in household formation later this year.”

Belsky noted there are nearly three million more young adults who lived with their parents in 2012 than in 2007, and the median incomes for all young adults have declined since the great recession.

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, student loan default rates have soared from just over 6 percent in 2003 to nearly 12 percent last year. Student debt is hurting credit scores and hindering the ability of some young adults to qualify for a mortgage; it could be a problem for as many as one in 10 renters who are in their 20s.

The Joint Center for Housing Studies projects household growth to rival or top the annual average pace from 1995 to 2000, and projects 76 percent of the growth over the next decade will be from minority households. The greatest increase is expected to be among households age 65 and older.

According to Fannie Mae, roughly nine out of 10 people under the age of 45 expect to buy a home in the future, but Belsky said mortgage underwriting standards are dramatically tighter, which disproportionately impacts minorities and those with lower incomes.

Dennis McGill, director of research for Zelman & Associates in New York, also focused on trends in housing demand. “Our analysis of Census Data shows an average of only 720,000 housing starts annually from 2010 through 2013, but our projections over the next five years exceed an average of 1.9 million,” he said.

“We won’t ramp up to that level right away, but if you average housing starts for the entire period from 2010 to 2019, it would be about 1.44 million,” McGill said. “There is a strong tailwind to housing starts. We’re starting to see capital come back to single family construction, which is very favorable.”

McGill notes trends in residential electric consumption mirror the growth in households, and also young adult employment, which is driving the growth.

The percentage of 24 to 34 year old married couples has risen since the last recession, but they are delaying a transition to homeownership. Zelman believes that the majority of this recent change has been due to recessionary impacts that should start to unwind.

McGill said their analysis shows the existing-home inventory relative to the number of households in the first quarter of this year is 30 percent lower than the average of the past two decades. In addition, total sales closings in 2013 were 20 percent lower than the 25-year average. “If we don’t bring capacity back to the market, home prices will continue to rise strongly,” he said.

A Zelman consumer survey shows most young adults believe a lack of savings for a downpayment is their biggest hurdle to obtaining a mortgage, but most of them think they need a much larger downpayment than is actually required.

For example, 25 percent believe they need a downpayment of 16 to 20 percent, and another 15 percent believe they need a downpayment of more than 20 percent. However, the actual requirement for an FHA loan is 3.5 percent.

Even with the well-known debt issues, nearly one-quarter of people under the age of 35 are debt free, which is better than the historic average. In addition, the Zelman survey shows that contrary to fears, there is no correlation between student loan debt and household formation. “A lot of this is a recessionary impact that we think is overlooked,” McGill said.

The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

May/June 2014 Market Pulse from NAR

May/June 2014 Market Pulse

A look at the major economic indicators heading into the summer months.


Spring is in the air and so is increased confidence in housing markets. But REALTORS® say tight inventories and hard-to-get credit remain drags on business. Two factors hurting credit availability are federal mortgage rules (qualified mortgage ability-to-repay rules) that took effect at the beginning of the year and increases in FHA premiums. On the plus side, fewer transactions are hitting snags because of appraisal problems.





Saturday, May 17, 2014

Forecast for Housing and the Economy Suggests Gradual Improvement through 2015

WASHINGTON (May 15, 2014) – Housing activity was sub-par in the first quarter of this year, dampened in part by severe weather patterns, but an uptrend is expected with healthy underlying demand over the balance of the year and through 2015, according to presentations at a residential real estate forum here during the Realtor® Party Convention & Trade Expo.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the U.S. population has been growing steadily, but job creation has not. “When you look at the jobs-to-population ratio, the current period is weaker than it was from the late 1990s through 2007,” he said. “This explains why Main Street America does not fully feel the recovery.”
Yun said that growth in the Gross Domestic Product slowed in the first quarter, and possibly contracted. “There are no fresh signs of recession, and the second quarter could grow about 3 percent,” he added.
Yun said the home sales-to-population ratio also has been below normal since 2008. Despite a large pent-up demand from years of below-normal home sales, inventory constraints and tight credit conditions continue to impede the market, in combination with strongly rising home prices and higher mortgage interest rates.
Although existing-home sales rose more than 9 percent to nearly 5.1 million in 2013, sales activity retrenched during the past six months. Even with gradual improvement moving forward, they are projected to decline about 3 percent for the year to just over 4.9 million, but should trend up to more than 5.2 million in 2015.
Because of tight inventories and rising sales last year, the median existing-home price rose 11.5 percent to just over $197,000. Home price growth is likely to moderate from more new home construction, with the median price increasing about 6 percent in 2014 to $209,000 and reaching nearly $219,000 next year as market conditions begin to balance.
An upside of rising prices is a recovery in home equity. “Based on our forecast for this year, the median home equity gain over three years is expected to be $40,000,” Yun noted. “A gap between new and existing-home prices from rising construction costs shows that prices are well supported by fundamentals in most of the country.”
He expects the Federal Reserve to end tapering of monetary policy by the end of the year and to hike the Fed funds rates in the first quarter of 2015.
Although the pattern is uneven month-to-month, mortgage interest rates are forecast to gradually rise, with the 30-year fixed rate averaging 4.7 percent this year and 5.5 percent in 2015. “Inevitably, rising mortgage interest rates will hurt housing affordability,” Yun said.
Housing starts have stayed below 1 million a year for the past six years, but need to reach the long-term average of 1.5 million to balance the market. “Because of the prolonged slowdown in construction, we now need 1.7 million housing starts per year to catch up,” Yun said. While improving, housing construction is seen at nearly 1.1 million this year and approximately 1.4 million in 2015.
The sluggish recovery in housing starts is impacted by construction costs rising faster than inflation, labor shortages in the building trades, and the difficulty for small local home builders to obtain construction loans. “Onerous financial regulations are preventing small banks from originating construction loans,” Yun said.
Job growth, which is the key to overall economic health, has essentially recovered all of the eight million jobs lost since the great recession. Employment is expected to improve, with job growth rising 1.6 percent in 2014 and 1.9 percent next year, after growing 1.7 percent in 2013; consumer confidence should gradually rise.
The Gross Domestic Product should grow 2.2 percent this year and about 2.9 percent in 2015; GDP grew 1.9 percent in 2013. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, was a tame 1.4 percent in 2013 but is projected to rise to 2.5 percent this year and 3.5 percent in 2015.
Eric Belsky, managing director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, agreed we’re unlikely to see a back-up in GDP. “Growth in the stock market and the recovery in housing along with pent-up demand are major factors driving the economy,” he said.
“There are three federal surveys that measure household growth and that are inconsistent, but we had real growth in 2012 that fell back last year,” Belsky said.  “Even the survey with the strongest household growth shows we’re a million below where we should be, but we’re probably two million below. We could see a notable uptick in household formation later this year.”
Belsky noted there are nearly three million more young adults who lived with their parents in 2012 than in 2007, and the median incomes for all young adults have declined since the great recession.
According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, student loan default rates have soared from just over 6 percent in 2003 to nearly 12 percent last year. Student debt is hurting credit scores and hindering the ability of some young adults to qualify for a mortgage; it could be a problem for as many as one in 10 renters who are in their 20s.
The Joint Center for Housing Studies projects household growth to rival or top the annual average pace from 1995 to 2000, and projects 76 percent of the growth over the next decade will be from minority households. The greatest increase is expected to be among households age 65 and older.
According to Fannie Mae, roughly nine out of 10 people under the age of 45 expect to buy a home in the future, but Belsky said mortgage underwriting standards are dramatically tighter, which disproportionately impacts minorities and those with lower incomes.
Dennis McGill, director of research for Zelman & Associates in New York, also focused on trends in housing demand. “Our analysis of Census Data shows an average of only 720,000 housing starts annually from 2010 through 2013, but our projections over the next five years exceed an average of 1.9 million,” he said.
“We won’t ramp up to that level right away, but if you average housing starts for the entire period from 2010 to 2019, it would be about 1.44 million,” McGill said. “There is a strong tailwind to housing starts. We’re starting to see capital come back to single family construction, which is very favorable.”
McGill notes trends in residential electric consumption mirror the growth in households, and also young adult employment, which is driving the growth.
The percentage of 24 to 34 year old married couples has risen since the last recession, but they are delaying a transition to homeownership. Zelman believes that the majority of this recent change has been due to recessionary impacts that should start to unwind.
McGill said their analysis shows the existing-home inventory relative to the number of households in the first quarter of this year is 30 percent lower than the average of the past two decades. In addition, total sales closings in 2013 were 20 percent lower than the 25-year average. “If we don’t bring capacity back to the market, home prices will continue to rise strongly,” he said.
A Zelman consumer survey shows most young adults believe a lack of savings for a downpayment is their biggest hurdle to obtaining a mortgage, but most of them think they need a much larger downpayment than is actually required.
For example, 25 percent believe they need a downpayment of 16 to 20 percent, and another 15 percent believe they need a downpayment of more than 20 percent. However, the actual requirement for an FHA loan is 3.5 percent.
Even with the well-known debt issues, nearly one-quarter of people under the age of 35 are debt free, which is better than the historic average. In addition, the Zelman survey shows that contrary to fears, there is no correlation between student loan debt and household formation. “A lot of this is a recessionary impact that we think is overlooked,” McGill said.
The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Monday, May 12, 2014

NEW LISTING! WEIMER AREA!

HOUSE AND GUEST HOUSE! WEIMER AREA
Fantastic location for this Weimer area home! Close to the hospital and town. Solar orientated house on 1.5 acres with a beautiful setting and views! Main house is 1781 sf ft with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with built in dining area, spacious kitchen with work island, a wonderful solar patio room and cozy loft in living area. Super high efficiency radiant wood stove makes this home warm and snug in the colder months. The very charming guest cottage is 480 sq ft with one bedroom, kitchen and bath. The two are connected by a decorative wall and wonderful garden gate. Easy care xeriscape landscape with drip irrigation. Lots of possibilities here. MLS 95163  $399,000










Saturday, May 10, 2014

NEW LISTING! AFFORDABLE AND CONVENIENT!

ROOM FOR EVERYONE! GREAT VIEWS TOO!
Wonderful 4 bedroom home conveniently located on the corner of Lower Las Colonias and Sugar Lane. 1.1 Acres. 1633 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Great mountain views. Welcoming front porch and entry. Open living room and dining area. Galley style kitchen with wood cabinets, nice counter tops and stainless appliances. Laundry room off kitchen. One bedroom is at the front of the house and would make a great office. The master suite is spacious with a bonus room and full bath. Property includes storage shed, private well and septic system. MLS 95159  $239,900









Tuesday, May 6, 2014

NEW LISTING!

A PRIVATE PARADISE - GRACIOUS ADOBE HOME
Conveniently located between the Town of Taos and the charming Village of Arroyo Seco, on the way to the Taos Ski Valley! The surrounding fantastic views are captured in this gracious 3002 sq ft, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. A southwest style gate greets you and leads you into a courtyard paradise with gardens and trees and flagstone paths. Dramatic, front, gallery style entry hall opens to the large living room with high ceilings, kiva fireplace and tall picture windows that frame the mountains perfectly. Open kitchen and dining area with access to the back walled patio and portal perfect for outdoor dining and grilling. The kitchen features a cook island, custom wood cabinets and gorgeous granite countertops. The master suite is quite spacious with great views, a dramatic kive fireplace, a sumptuous bath and walk in closet with built ins. The second bedroom also has a wonderful attached bath and walk in closet and could be a second master suite. The third bedroom is spacious and has fantastic windows and light. Additional features include: A functional laundry room. Skylights. Smooth plaster walls. Vigas. Easy care tile floors. Attached 2 car garage with storage. Ample guest parking. MLS 95125 $649,000