Mortgage And Real Estate News

Showing posts with label investors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investors. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2014

Chinese Investors Love London's Property Market

London has been the most popular destination for Chinese real estate investors in the first half of 2014 with buyers looking for both residential and commercial properties, new research shows.

Efforts to market to Chinese investors is paying off and overall Chinese outbound investment was 17% higher in the six months of the year than over the same period of 2013 at US$5.4 billion.

Read more...http://www.nuwireinvestor.com/articles/chinese-investors-love-londons-property-market-61999.aspx?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Sunday, March 23, 2014

With fewer foreclosures in Valley, some investors leave the market



The house-flipping frenzy is over in metro Phoenix, though a few investors are still able to make it work if they can find the right house.

The dramatic drop in foreclosures across the Valley means there are few houses to be bought cheaply, fixed up and resold quickly for a profit.

“There was the point where we had 11,000 foreclosures in one month,” said Marty Boardman, a real-estate business owner who began investing in Valley houses in 2002. “From what I understand, today the average is around 500 or 600.”

Read more...With fewer foreclosures in Valley, some investors leave the market

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Fewer investors, more houses kill bidding wars


In April 2012, a Glendale house listed for $119,000 sparked a bidding war that drew 95 written offers. The house sold for $140,000.

Many who were able to buy metro Phoenix homes in 2012 and early 2013 are familiar with being outbid before purchasing. But recent homebuyers can attest that aggressive price wars aren’t the norm anymore.

A 30 percent increase in the number of homes for sale and fewer investors has made the housing market less competitive. Over the past two months, several people who had been trying to buy since late last year were able to close deals for Valley homes.

Read more...Fewer investors, more houses kill bidding wars

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Rising home prices in the SW Valley pushing out investors



As warm weather signals the start of the peak homebuying season, Southwest Valley buyers will see higher prices but less competition from cash-wielding investors, experts say.

Plus, there are more signs that the Southwest Valley is shaking off the Great Recession’s housing slump. Homebuilders are buying more lots in communities where the original developer installed utilities and built roads but never built houses.

Read more:  Rising home prices in the SW Valley pushing out investors

Home buyers paying cash declining in metro Phoenix | Insiders

 
Homebuyers using conventional mortgages outnumbered cash purchasers in metro Phoenix during March.

It’s the first time in four years that cash buyers haven’t dominated the region’s homebuying market, according to the latest Wilcox Report.

Last month, 2,188 houses were purchased with home loans, compared with 2,144 bought with cash.
Fletcher Wilcox, real-estate analyst with Grand Canyon Title Agency, said the gap between cash purchases and conventional-loan purchases had been narrowing in recent months. Most cash buyers are investors, and investment activity has been slowing as metro Phoenix’s foreclosures fall and home prices climb.

Read more:  Home buyers paying cash declining in metro Phoenix | Insiders

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Investors buying homes in metro Phoenix at slower pace

Wall Street funds and other large well-funded investors continue to buy houses in metro Phoenix, even though the pace has slowed as sales prices have jumped.

Some of the early investors, who bought in 2009, have flipped the houses for a quick profit, but most of these buyers are holding on to the properties and turning them into long-term rentals.

David Bignoli, president of real estate data research firm Netvaluecentral Inc., recently complted a report on metro Phoenix’s biggest investors. 

Read more:   Investors buying homes in metro Phoenix at slower pace

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Wealthy investors keep buying metro Phoenix homes to rent

Billion-dollar investors backed by Wall Street continue to buy metro Phoenix houses with plans to turn them into rentals.

New York-based Blackstone Real Estate, buying through a Tempe partnership called Treehouse, has spent several million dollars on houses in the region over just the past few weeks. At the end of 2012, almost 25 percent of all the region’s homes were owned by investors, according to an Arizona Republic analysis.

Read more: Wealthy investors keep buying metro Phoenix homes to rent

Friday, March 15, 2013

Short Sales: How Investors, House Hunters Find Real Estate Deals - Investors.com

Boy do we have a deal for you.

It's a message that real estate agents are able to relay to clients more often these days as new rules have made it easier for short-sale properties to hit the market before they are in the foreclosure process.

"Realtors are aggressively peddling them," said Rick Sharga, executive vice president of Carrington Mortgage Holdings. "The buyers' agents are looking for these opportunities for traditional homebuyers or investors."   

Monday, October 22, 2012

Phoenix metro becomes virtual investor's housing market

Buying sprees by billion-dollar hedge funds and real-estate investment firms have investors owning nearly 20 percent, or one out of every five, of the region's single-family houses and condominiums, according to an Arizona Republic analysis of recent sales data.

That's double the number of rentals considered normal in metro Phoenix in 2000, according to housing-market analysts.

Although it is too soon to gauge the impact of such a large increase in rental properties, the jump in investor-owned properties has the potential to change the character of neighborhoods, influence the options available to other homebuyers and ultimately alter the trajectory of the region's housing recovery.

Read more: Phoenix metro becomes virtual investor's housing market

Monday, May 28, 2012

Big profits for home-flippers signal Phoenix-area rebound

In another sign that metro Phoenix's housing market is slowly recovering, hundreds of homes across the region sold by banks after foreclosure or through short sales are being flipped by investors for almost double the price they paid just a few months earlier.

With metro Phoenix's median home price steadily climbing this year, speculators have seized on an opportunity to make fast profits and are selling houses across the region at prices not seen since the beginning of the housing boom in 2003-04.

Home prices have climbed as the supply of houses for sale has shrunk. The number of homes for sale in the Phoenix area is half of what it was last May, and the median price is up by an astonishing 30 percent since then.

Lenders clearing inventories of foreclosure and short-sale homes, coupled with a shortage of other homes for sale, have led to a rapid increase in home prices this year. And the bounce in prices has given cash buyers a chance to make hundreds of thousands of dollars flipping homes.

Real-estate experts say that's also good news for homeowners who have been battered by falling prices for six years due to record foreclosure homes flooding the market and selling for bargain prices. Now that foreclosures have dropped and home prices have started to rebound, many more homeowners may be able to sell for a profit again.

Also, investors are fixing up homes before reselling them for higher prices, which improves neighborhoods and nearby home values, said Mike Orr, real- estate analyst with Arizona State University's W.P. Carey School of Business.

"Investors fixing and flipping homes are adding to the supply of homes for sale that the regular buyer wants," he said. "This is good for the market and good for home values."

The trend has unfolded fast. Foreclosures started steadily falling last year, and lenders began moving to sell the homes they had already taken back and close short sales.

Most of the flipped houses are getting at least minor renovations and upgrades and selling to people who intend to live in them, another sign that regular buyers are returning to the market in big enough numbers to push prices higher.

A sample of the jaw-dropping price run-ups:

An east Phoenix home bought through a short sale for $218,000 in September sold in late February for $560,000. The home was completely remodeled, but the price was still an eye-popping 156 percent more than the investor paid.

A home in Chandler, built in 2005, sold through a short sale in November for $255,000 and was then flipped by an investor for $410,000 in March -- a 61 percent profit in five months.

A former foreclosure home in central Glendale was bought for $131,000 in January and flipped in mid-April for $243,000, an 85 percent jump. The investor added stainless-steel appliances and replastered the swimming pool at the ranch-style home.

In Goodyear, a 2,000-square-foot home in the Estrella Vista community was purchased from the lender for $88,000 in January. The investor repainted the home, put in new carpet and resold it for $188,000 in mid-April for a 113 percent gain.

"There are hundreds of recent examples of foreclosure or short-sale homes that have sold to investors who have been able to resell them quickly for much higher prices," said Tom Ruff, managing director of AZ Bidder, a Phoenix-based online foreclosure-auction firm.

He said these deals are giving metro Phoenix's housing market a huge boost and aiding in its recovery.

Ruff, who has been researching the trend and created a database of thousands of sales, said the market has been building toward this trend for the past year.

A slowing of foreclosures means fewer bargain homes on the market, while at the same time demand for homes has jumped as investors and regular buyers try to purchase at the bottom of the market.

It's now clear metro Phoenix's housing market hit bottom last fall, according to the experts.

Foreclosure auctions

Investors looking for bargains on foreclosure homes fight for them at daily auctions in front of Maricopa County's courthouse.

Lenders foreclose on homes in Arizona through trustee-sale auctions, where buyers must pay cash, make the winning bid and take the home "as is." Many of the investors making the most money are buying at the auctions.

In an effort to save money and avoid having to take the house back, fix it up and pay a real-estate agent to market it, banks are making more deals with investors at foreclosure auctions. Bidding wars are common among investors, who know what shape a house is in and what they can spend on it to still make a profit.

Those homes are providing buyers with the biggest profits:

In a central Phoenix historic district, a home built in 1925 was purchased at a foreclosure auction in late February for $281,000. Less than a month later, the home was resold for $361,000.

Last November, a north Phoenix house was grabbed at a foreclosure auction for $150,200. The investor renovated the 3,000-square-foot home, redoing everything from the plumbing and electrical to the kitchen. It resold for $319,000 in March.

A house in the north Scottsdale golf community Troon Village sold at auction in December for $628,000. The buyer was able to flip the property by March for $850,000 without having to put much more money or work into remodeling it. The original owner paid $771,500 for the 4,000-square-foot upscale home with three bedrooms, four bathrooms and a negative-edge pool.

Orr said the strong resale market for investors who buy homes directly from lenders at foreclosure auctions will continue at least for the rest of the year as Valley home values continue to rise.

But Orr, who also publishes the "Cromford Report," an online daily real-estate analysis, said that will make it tougher for buyers to find inexpensive foreclosure homes for sale by lenders because they are selling at the auctions.

"The model for flippers works best when prices are rising, even though they have to work hard to find the right homes to buy," he said.

However, housing analysts say the current big jumps in prices on former foreclosure homes won't last for long because the number of foreclosures is falling. The number of metro Phoenix homes taken back by lenders in April was 1,650, the lowest level since late December 2007.

Can it last?

Although flipping homes for profit is reminiscent of the boom times in metro Phoenix, those golden days are a long way off for regular homeowners.

But real-estate experts say a rising number of people who were underwater on their mortgages last year are seeing they suddenly have equity in their properties.

Metro Phoenix's median resale-home price has climbed 23 percent since August from a 12-year low of $112,000 to $138,400 last month.

Today's metro Phoenix home prices are nowhere near boom levels. The area's resale median reached a record high of $253,000 in May 2006, according to Information Market, a real-estate research firm. But home prices are now rising fast. This year alone, the median has climbed 15 percent.

Experts say what will help the housing market continue to recover is if regular homeowners see they can make a profit and sell. That is beginning to happen now.

Last month, a 1,600-square-foot south Scottsdale condominium bought by an investor in January for $125,000 in a normal transacation -- not a foreclosure or short sale -- sold for $238,500 in cash. The owner who sold the condo in January paid $100,000 for it in 1994.

"When the typical homeowners see they can sell for a profit, supply will increase and the housing market will truly recover," Orr said. "But it will be awhile before all the great deals go away.''

by Catherine Reagor - May. 25, 2012 11:16 PM The Republic | azcentral.com



Big profits for home-flippers signal Phoenix-area rebound

Investors buy $180M 1 day in area commercial real estate

Metro Phoenix's commercial real-estate market had a banner day on May 11. Investors closed on deals worth more than $180 million for warehouses, apartments and vacant land.

The Black Creek Group of Denver bought two warehouses, one leased to Amazon.com, in Phoenix's Riverside Industrial Complex. It paid nearly $132 million for the buildings located on nearly 100 acres, according to the commercial real-estate foreclosure research and data firm Vizzda.

The second-biggest deal on May 11 was the $41 million sale of the Scottsdale Gateway apartments. Also closed that day was the $7.4 million purchase of 2,400 acres of land in the Buckeye development Elianto.

The region is drawing both more residential and commercial development, and prices are rising for all types of real estate. Do the big deals that closed on May 11 signal the commercial market is roaring back? Experts say no, particularly for the office market.

Apartments have been popular among investors since metro Phoenix's rental market rebounded more than a year ago, and vacant residential land is becoming a popular purchase again as homebuilding in the area begins to increase. The industrial buildings purchased were a good buy because of the tenants. Home Depot is leasing the other warehouse purchased.

But still, $180 million invested in metro Phoenix's commercial real-estate market in one day is worth noting.

Mortgage-scam complaint filed

The Arizona attorney general has filed a complaint against a Surprise woman in another scheme to take advantage of struggling homeowners.

The state prosecutor has filed a lawsuit against Rosa Galope alleging she defrauded homeowners looking for help in obtaining mortgage modifications to avoid foreclosure.

"The economic crisis has created a number of vulnerable consumers who are often targeted for predatory schemes," Attorney General Tom Horne aid.

The lawsuit alleges Galope charged thousands of dollars in up-front fees for mortgage-loan modification and foreclosure help, and then later claimed the money was donated to her church, Nation to Nation Ministries. The lawsuit also contends Galope told her clients not to communicate with their lenders and to send her any mortgage payments.

Galope is accused of keeping the funds from her clients and endorsing checks made payable to lenders and cashing them at a local check-cashing store.

by Catherine Reagor - May. 18, 2012 02:51 PM The Arizona Republic | azcentral.com




Investors buy $180M 1 day in area commercial real estate

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