Brevard County 3rd Quarter Real Estate Update

The numbers are in…and just as our seasons change…so does the real estate market! Sales are up and inventory is down. Most homes are selling in less than 30 days. Here is a break down of the numbers:

From July 1 to September 30, we sold almost 2,400 residential properties in Brevard County. These include single family homes, town homes, condos, 1/2 duplexes, and manufactured homes.

  • 1374 of these properties or 57% of our sales were traditional sales.
  • 605 of these properties or 25% were short sales.
  • 381 of these properties or almost 13% of our sales were REO/Bank owned properties.
  • 1,100 properties sold in 30 days or less
  • 1180 properties were CASH transactions…almost half!

Below is an updated Market Pulse that will show a year to date monthly overview of our Real Estate Market

3rd Qtr Market Pulse

Cocoa Beach Waterfront Pool Home UNDER $100 SqFt

Everyone is looking for a bargain and a “good deal” in real estate…are you interested in purchasing a home at least $65 per SqFt LESS than an average home is selling for?? Here is your opportunity!!!

Since the beginning of the year; the average sales price per SqFt on a waterfront pool home in Cocoa Beach has been $164 per SqFt…

The home at 813 Catalina Rd; which is a waterfront pool home…built in 2007…featuring a 1 bedroom apartment over the 3 car garage…a full house generator…hurricane shutters…and much, much more…is now listed at UNDER $100 Per SqFt!!!

This is NOT a short sale…This is NOT a bank owned property…Just a fantastic opportunity!!!

Below will take you to the YouTube video tour of the home.

Call or Text me at 321-795-1854 or send an email to Eric@EricLarkin.com with any questions or to schedule a private viewing.

How Come My House Didn’t Sell? (part 2)

If you are planning on selling your house…start packing now! Buyers will be focusing on the kitchen, master bath & bedroom, and storage. Help them see how great your home is by removing your “stuff”.
Let’s start in the kitchen:
Remove everything from the counters you do not use day. (Food processors, bread machines, crock pots, etc)
Empty the cabinets of items you use once or twice a year. Start packing now.
Pack up the extras (glasses, plates, storage containers, etc) to help organize your cabinets. YES, buyers will be opening the cabinets. If they are cluttered, that is what they will remember…
Master bedroom & bath:
Keep the bed made. Buy a new comforter that matches the curtains. (Maybe update both)
Keep the top of your dressers clear of everything. Buyers remember clutter.
Bathroom vanities should be kept cleaned & cleared. Buy a basket to keep the items you use everyday in. This will help keep it organized.
Keep nice, clean towels hanging on the towel racks.
Other great items for the bathroom: candles, decorative soaps, air fresheners.

It is worth renting a storage unit for 60-90 days to empty your home of these items and to have your home properly staged. Remember, our real estate market today is a beauty contest and a pricing war…these suggestions will help your home stand out…and get it SOLD!

You are invited to the BNI Beeliner’s Wednesday Mornings

What are you doing to help your business grow? Have you considered networking to help spread the word about your business? This is not a Chamber event (although they are worth attending). This is a BNI meeting with the Beeliner’s; Brevard Counties largest BNI Chapter. We are almost 50 strong…and growing. We work together as a sales team to find referral business for our members. (This is not a leads group). We meet every Wednesday morning from 7-830 at 105 McLeod Street Merritt Island, FL, 32953; The Space Coast Association of Realtors Building.

I joined the Beeliner’s November 2010 and it has changed how I do business. Come and see for yourself; it’s only 90 minutes.

Never heard of BNI? The link below will take you to our Chapter’s website.

http://bniorl.com/fl-orlando-beeliners-bni/index.html

Beach-Time!

One of the reasons we LOVE living in Brevard County is the miles and miles of beautiful beaches we have. With summer here…and a (hopefully) sunny Sunday to enjoy…it is nice to know what to expect before heading east to the ocean, surf and sand. There are quite a few web sites to check on these conditions…I like to visit the surf guru. He has information for most of the Florida coast line. The link below will take you to the Central Florida beaches. What I like most about this site is the tide forecast (who likes to run on the beach at high tide) and there are live web cams so you can see the conditions. (Plus they have an app for my android phone). REMEMBER…always where sunscreen!!!
http://www.surfguru.com/central-florida-surf-reports

How Come My Home Didn’t Sell?

I succeed where others have failed. I specialize in listing expired listings and one of the first questions ask is “Do you know why your house didn’t sell?” The answers varies from the agent, the market, the price, or I don’t know…. This question is easier to answer once I have seen the home, however…It is normally the price and how well the home shows…there are simple things you can do to make certain your home stands out from the competition and shows its very best!
I suggest starting at the first impression…the front door…More than likely, the lockbox is there and the potential buyer will have a few extra seconds to see if there is any obvious deferred maintenance.
Clean the entrance area
Paint the front door
Put a new door knob & dead bolt in (this helps with appearance & assures the lock works properly)
Clean the exterior light (s). This could also be replaced/updated with a new fixture
A new door mat helps too!
Next post will discuss the inside of your home.

U.S. Housing Market Finally Reaches a Turning Point

Home valuations will start to climb again while adjacent consumer industries will capture significant new growth opportunities in 2012 and beyond as the U.S. housing market finally turns the corner, concludes a major new study recently released by The Demand Institute. The recovery of the housing market will have far-reaching impacts in the coming years across the U.S. and international markets as U.S. consumers increase their spending on buying, renovating, furnishing and maintaining their homes.

Launched in February 2012 and jointly operated by The Conference Board and Nielsen, The Demand Institute is a non-profit, non-advocacy organization with a mission to illuminate where consumer demand is headed around the world.

The new report, “The Shifting Nature of U.S. Housing Demand,” predicts that average home prices will increase by up to 1 percent in the second half of 2012. By 2014, home prices will increase by as much as 2.5 percent. From 2015 to 2017, the study projects annual increases between 3 and 4 percent. This recovery will not be uniform across the country, and the strongest markets could capture average gains of 5 percent or more in the coming years.

“In these initial years, the prime driver of recovery won’t be new home construction, but rather demand for rental properties,” says Louise Keely, chief research officer at The Demand Institute and a co-author of the report. “This is a remarkable change from previous recoveries. It is a measure of just how severe the Great Recession has been that such a wide swath of Americans had to delay, scale back, or put off entirely their dreams of homeownership.”

“In the long-term, we don’t expect homeownership rates to change,” says Bart van Ark, chief economist at The Conference Board and co-author of the report. “Over 80 percent of Americans in recent surveys still agree that buying a home is the best long-term investment they can make. What will be intriguing to watch is how their aspirations around homeownership are affected by this period of extended austerity.”

Between 2006 and 2011, some $7 trillion in American wealth was wiped out when home prices dropped 30 percent after a dramatic climb in valuations during the housing bubble. Looking forward, the moderate growth expectations for coming years suggest a return to normalcy. As home prices continue to drop and interest rates fall further, first-time buyers and others who remained relatively cautious will be drawn back into the housing market.

“As the U.S. housing market strengthens, almost every consumer-facing industry will be impacted in the coming years,” says Mark Leiter, chairman of The Demand Institute. “Business and government leaders will benefit by fully understanding the nature of this recovery. In doing so, they will be better able to anticipate how consumer demand will evolve and to formulate critical business and policy decisions to lead their organizations.”

Key Findings in the Report
-The recovery will be led by demand from buyers for rental properties, rather than, as in previous cycles, demand from buyers acquiring new or existing properties for themselves.

-Young people—who were particularly hard hit by the recession—and immigrants will lead the demand for rental properties.

-Rental demand will help to clear the huge oversupply of existing homes for sale. In 2011, some 14 percent of all housing units were vacant, while almost 13 percent of mortgages were in foreclosure or delinquent.

-The average size of the American home will shrink. The size of an average new home is expected to continue to fall, reaching mid-1990 levels by 2015.

-Despite the number of Americans who have been hurt financially by the housing crash, the desire to own a home remains strong. In fact, one survey has revealed that more than 80 percent of Americans recently thought buying a home remained the best long-term investment they could make.

For more information, visit www.demandinstitute.org.