Archive for September 2011
Everything You Need to Know About HELOCs (Home Equity Lines of Credit)
A HELOC (home equity line of credit) works somewhat similar to a credit card, but it is secured and protected by the equity in your home – equity equals the market value of your home minus the balance owed on your mortgage.
Whatever the size of your home equity credit line, you pay interest only on the amount you use. For example, if your HELOC’s maximum is $50,000, you can borrow $5,000 or $10,000, only pay interest on what you borrow, repay that amount and borrow again as long as you don’t exceed that maximum limit.
Keep reading for 5 great tips that will help you hunt down the best home equity line of credit deal for both you and your family.
1. Use a HELOC for ongoing expenses, instead of one-time major expenses.
A Home Equity Line of Credit is great for paying college expenses or covering a multi year home renovation because you can dip in only as you need it. You may also want to have one in place for emergencies if, say, you lose your job or get in an accident. If you’re borrowing for one major expense, you’re probably better off with a fixed-rate home-equity loan.
2. Look for a low permanent rate.
Teaser rates can go as low as 5.25% or even better, but will jump later. Remember, they’re designed to get you in the door. All HELOCs charge a variable rate based on the prime interest rate, plus or minus a profit margin. So, save money by looking for interest incentives. For example, a bank may take off a quarter point if you do your banking there and another quarter if you sign up for automatic payments.
3. Don’t borrow more than 80% of your equity.
Borrowing more will stick you with a higher interest rate. Plus you’ll leave yourself open to having your hard-earned home equity wiped out by a modest decline in real estate prices. Plus, simply stated, the more money you borrow, the greater your longer term risk in being capable of repaying the entire amount.
4. Shop at your home bank first.
Your mortgage lender may offer you a discount since you’re already a customer. They also have most of your records on file already, which means the application process is typically easier and faster. You should still get quotes from at least two other lenders, though, starting with a credit union or local bank. The convenience advantages of staying with your existing lender do not necessarily outweigh other better deals in the mortgage market.
5. Stay away from balloon HELOCs.
Home Equity Lines of Credit have a set term, typically 10 years, where you must repay both interest and principal on what you borrow. However watch out for balloon HELOCs that offer seemingly low-priced, interest-only payments. Your monthly payments will be lower, but you’ll wind up owing the entire remaining principal in a lump sum once the line of credit case comes due. In the worst case of such a scenario, if you can’t repay or refinance, you may have to sell your home.
By: Ray Tolley
How to Calculate Value Added
My definition of value added is the difference between the price your company pays for a product and the price your customer pays — frequently referred to as gross profit. Throw in services and the value added grows in the customer’s mind.
Here’s how this concept looks as a formula:
Your Customer’s Cost less Your Company’s Cost + Services = Value added (GPM)
It’s the sales force’s job to justify to the customer the amount of markup or value added that the company earns over and above the company’s cost. When the sales force fails, they often lose the order to a competitor. Here are a few of the possibilities that could cost a salesperson the sale:
o For whatever reason, your salesperson was simply outsold by the competition. Your competitor was more persuasive, had a better relationship with the customer or presented their case more effectively.
o The competition had a lower price because they negotiated a lower cost from the manufacturer.
o The competition had a lower price because their bid contained less value added than your company offered.
o The competition had a lower price because they were willing to make the sale and earn a lower gross margin.
o The competition offered a lower price plus the customer perceived the competition’s value added to be greater than your company offered.
Customers almost always make buying decisions based on reasons they believe to be the best for their company.
However, it’s the salesperson’s job to make sure that the customer is armed with all of the facts.
Apples-to-apples comparison: This is one of the most effective methods salespeople use to illustrate to the customer that the price on the bottom line of the competition’s quote is not necessarily a valid way to make a buying decision. The customer must scrutinize the items that make up the quote to make sure that each bid received is comparable. If the customer is not willing to do this much analysis, the salesperson is advised to do it for the customer.
Service Factors
And then there are measurable service factors that may not be obvious to the customer:
o Return policy.
o Terms of Sale.
o Restocking charge.
o Delivery capability, size and capacity of
equipment, etc.
o Accuracy of deliveries.
o Manufacturing or assembly capability.
o Services the respective salespeople personally perform.
o Quality of estimates.
o Quality of material.
o Accuracy of billing.
o Installed sales capability.
o Incidences of backorders.
o Timeliness of pickups material to be returned.
How effective is your sales force at justifying your company’s value added? Perhaps how to communicate value added would be a good topic for an upcoming sales meeting. Do you measure your service levels? When you do measure them, the amount of value added is a lot more obvious to your customers and prospects.
Just remember, it’s the purpose of the sales force to impart upon customers and prospects the VALUE that both the sales force and the company provides.
In many cases, the VALUE a salesperson offers is equal to the SIZE of the problems he or she is able to help the customer solve. Added value is not always related to the product; many times it has to do with the salesperson’s ability to help the customer accomplish one or more of the following:
o Make more money.
o Solve annoying problems, the bigger and the more annoying the better.
o Become more successful.
Suggestion: Make sure that your sales force focuses its attention on more than product and price. Salesmanship involves a lot more than quoting.
By: Bill Lee
Add Equity in Home Addition – How Do You Add Equity in Today’s Real Estate Market?
Use caution when planning a home addition. This is always good advice but it’s especially true in a slow real estate market.
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One of the first questions to ask yourself is whether you want an immediate equity benefit (for a quick resale) or if you can wait for a better market. For the purposes of this discussion, I’ll assume you’re looking for the quickest equity bump. This means that we’ll focus on the few home additions that usually work the best.
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The most important factor to bear in mind is to make your investment of money go as far as possible. Fewest dollars in for the maximum value out! That should be your strategy when trying to build equity.
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The Most Effective Strategies for Building Equity in a Home Addition
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It should be noted that a home addition is different than a basic remodel. With remodels there is normally no square footage added to the home. This article focuses upon adding more house to your house! This usually means more foundation and roof-line.
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Through my years of experience, these are traditionally top home additions that provide an equity bump with the fewest dollars invested.
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1) Adding a Master Bath or Expanding the Kitchen
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Yep, these could be listed separately but I’ve chosen to categorize them together for brevity’s sake. Kitchens and baths are the two most popular remodels. They also rank at the top of home additions. A house without a master bath is at a great disadvantage for resale purposes and a small kitchen suffers as well.
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2) Adding Curb Appeal With Size
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There are many ways to add curb appeal and most don’t involve adding square footage to the home. However, when you have a house that makes no statement because of its size, you’ll often greatly enhance its appeal and value with a more impressive frontage. This can be a case where size does matter!
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3) Convert the Smallest House to the Biggest House
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Catching up to the established neighborhood values is the most trusted way to gain equity fast. Starting with a smaller home and then doing an addition that brings up closer to the bigger homes (usually NOT the biggest) allows you to feel secure the added value will be there. Never “push the envelope” with values. Stay away from creating the biggest home on the block and go with what is proven to exist already.
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FINALLY
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Professional help by way of home-building coaches, architects, engineers, designers and more can keep you on the straight and narrow. Better planning, more information, and thorough preparation will help you avoid wrong decisions and costly mistakes. I applaud your seeking of knowledge. Keep up the good work!?
By: Mel Inglima
What it Takes to Sell a House Fast in Today’s Foreclosure Saturated Real Estate Market
In today’s real estate market the challenge for homeowners who want to sell their home quickly is that they must compete with banks and other mortgage lenders who have taken back many homes via the foreclosure process. These foreclosed homes are then placed on the open market in a given community and are frequently being offered at eighty percent or less of their appraised value. This is having a significant downward effect on house prices. But, there are things you can do if you want to sell your house for cash today.
The residential real estate price challenge: Foreclosure homes weigh on market
America’s housing market is currently staggering under a glut of unsold home inventory because of the biggest foreclosure crisis to hit the country since the Great Depression of the 1930′s. There are many reasons why the country is in the middle of a foreclosure crisis, and other articles can provide the background for the downturn. Some topics to explore include: adjustable rate mortgages, subprime mortgages that swiftly became unaffordable, Alan Greenspan’s Federal Reserve monetary policies, real estate speculation, and more.
This article explains some options available to a home seller to help them sell a house quickly even in a falling market whose bottom has not yet clearly been reached.
House selling option #1: Sell your house to a real estate investor
Homeowners who need to sell a house quickly because of unaffordable mortgage payments, job loss, transfer, or relocation, divorce, inheritance, or any other of number of reasons can look for a company that buys houses on the internet or via their local ‘real estate wanted’ section of their local newspaper to find a real estate investor who can buy a house for a cash offer in a short period of time. There are investors who advertise “we buy houses” on plastic signs on fences and telephone poles, but many of these signs are placed by investors of dubious backgrounds.
Do your homework on the internet if possible: make sure to research the person or company you are considering doing business with to see if they’re reputable. If the investor claims to have professional licenses check their online records if available. In general, the ‘simpler’ the transaction the better chance you have of dealing with a straightforward purchaser. This means that you should sell the house directly and completely in the traditional formal manner at an escrow or title company of your choosing or with representation of an unbiased real estate attorney that is not working exclusively for the investor.
The upside of selling a home to a real estate investor for a cash purchase is that you can, if you meet certain criteria, walk away with cash in hand or a mortgage that will be paid off in a very short period of time. The downside is that investors will want to guarantee that they make a profit upon the resale of your house and their profit comes out of your equity in your home or your pocket.
Most real estate investors who buy single family homes and then re-sell them quickly (house flipping) and those who use a buy-and-hold strategy are looking for deep discounts on a home. This figure for an offer typically starts at 70% of current Fair Market Value (FMV). Of course most investors would prefer to purchase a home at far less than 70% of current FMV. There are some investors who will pay closer to 80% of current FMV for properties that they buy, but these buyers are difficult to locate at times. (Current FMV also means that a house’s value is determined only after repair costs, if any, are subtracted.)
House selling option #2: “List Smart” with a real estate agent or broker
If you are the kind of home seller who wants to get top-dollar for your house, then this section may not give you the type of advice in terms of price you’re looking for. But, if you’re looking for a quick sale of your real estate read this article carefully and repeatedly.
The key to selling a house can be learned from the previous discussion of real estate investors’ criteria for buying a house in terms of discount from current FMV. For your home to ‘jump off the page’ at a retail buyer if you have it listed with an agent or broker it must be priced significantly below the competition. It’s really that simple. If your neighbor’s identical house is listed for $210,000 and yours is priced at $195,000 whose home is going to be sold first?
Do you really want to be a FISBO and sell your house yourself?
For-sale-by-owner (FSBO) home selling strategies have always been popular in concept, and for people are sophisticated in terms of contract law, they can result in saving some money. But, for people with little experience buying and selling real estate the use of an experienced and licensed real estate professional can be an invaluable aid. Statistics published by the National Association of Realtors indicate that the typical FSBO home sold for $187,200 compared to $247,000 for agent-assisted home sales in 2007. Many do-it-yourself home sellers eventually sell or buy a home with the aid of an agent even if they have tried by themselves for a short or long while.
Create a real estate auction environment
You’ve probably seen the advertisements for real estate auctions in your area. Want to know the secret of how these auction companies stay in business? It’s auction frenzy psychology.
By offering people looking to buy a home at an auction an opportunity to buy a foreclosed home at a very low price the auction companies are appealing to the greed of the bidders. Once this emotion of greed and a spirit of competition with the other buyers has kicked in many people will bid a price up on a home far in excess of the original asking price. An auction environment can definitely work against a buyer, especially if there are a lot of other bidders involved!
You can use this lesson to your advantage. If you price your home at an almost ridiculously low level you should expect to start receiving bids from potential buyers. Remember, it’s better to have lots of low bidders, initially, that you can play off against each other and watch the price rise to close to the current fair market value or sometimes in excess of it. Also remember that you don’t have to accept any offer you consider too low. Make sure you know the federal, state, and local laws that govern real estate law, contract law, and especially the non-discrimination provisions that apply.
House selling challenge #1: How to determine fair market value for my real estate
In today’s real estate market determining the current FMV of a home is a very difficult thing to do. Most economists agree that home prices will continue to fall nationally for some time to come and that a true stabilization of US home prices may not occur for one to two years or more.
One quick and dirty to come up with a home’s approximate FMV is to average the price that zillow.com and cyberhomes.com (and other online home appraisal sites) give to the house and then multiply that number by 85%. This should get you to a price that would make a retail home buyer or first-time home buyer jump at your house over the competition.
It is very, very important for home sellers to understand the competitive landscape. Without a house priced at a deep discount from ‘competitively’ priced homes on the market a seller has little chance of getting top dollar or even any offers to purchase at all.
The only working definition of current fair market value that is worth remembering is that it is whatever a willing retail buyer will actually end up paying for your house in a 2 to 4 month period of time. These buyers, especially first-time homebuyers and people with less than perfect credit, are also facing their own challenges to qualify for a mortgage loan because of tighter underwriting standards imposed since the unfolding of the credit crisis in the United States.
House selling challenge #2: Low, no, or negative home equity
This is a tough situation and it’s responsible for many of the foreclosures that are occurring in today’s housing market. For people who purchased homes since 2003 (or even earlier) the chances are that their home does not have a lot of equity built up unless a substantial down payment was made on the house. For many of these homeowners who want to sell a home fast they are faced with an less than ideal situation of paying money at closing to sell their house to cover the amount they owe their mortgage lender in excess of the sales price and the closing costs.
When this can’t happen because of limited financial resources on the seller’s part the lender usually ends of taking the house back in foreclosure and it becomes part of the real estate owned (REO) inventory mentioned above that is acting as a drag on house values.
Conclusion
Whatever your situation is you can learn more about all things related to real estate simply by researching here at Ezine Articles, on Google, or on your favorite search engines or websites. Happy learning!
By: Patrick McGlivray, J.D.








