Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Be It Ever So Illogical: Homeowners Who Won’t Cut the Price

March 26, 2008
Economic Scene

Be It Ever So Illogical: Homeowners Who Won't Cut the Price

In 2005, Randolph Harrison and his wife, Pamela, decided to move north from Silicon Valley, over the Golden Gate Bridge into wooded Marin County to be closer to her new job. They found a six-bedroom house that seemed ideal except for the price, $1.875 million. The current owner, they knew, had bought the house a year earlier for $1.475 million.

So the couple, who both have finance jobs in the technology industry, told their real estate agent that they wanted to offer $1.575 million. He told them that the owner wouldn't even listen to such a low bid. The owner's attitude was "we'll just stay here until we sell it for 1.875," the agent said, "even if it takes years."

Three years ago, when the real estate bubble was still inflating, this sort of standoff was the exception. It's the norm today. Overall home sales have fallen a remarkable 33 percent since the summer of 2005. Home prices, on the other hand, continued to rise until 2006 and are now only 5 to 10 percent below where they were in mid-2005, according to various measures.

In most other areas of the economy, this combination of plummeting sales and stable prices would not happen. When demand for airline tickets drop, the airlines cut their prices until they have sold their seats. When stocks become less appealing, share prices fall, sometimes sharply.

Just try to imagine stock prices staying roughly flat over a three-year period while sales volumes sank because investors considered the market overvalued. Bear Stearns is still worth $150 a share, and I'm not selling until someone pays me $150!

Real estate, though, is different. For both economic and psychological reasons, there is no asset more conducive to hopeful overvaluation.

That means real estate slumps tend to grind on for years, until sellers submit to reality and reduce their prices. This week's batch of economic reports suggest that the adjustment is finally starting to happen. The decline in house prices is accelerating, especially in some of the big metropolitan areas covered by the Case-Shiller index released Tuesday, while the number of home sales has recently risen a bit.

But prices still have a ways to fall. Relative to the economic fundamentals — like incomes and housing supply — the average price nationwide seems to be about 10 percent too high. (This, of course, hides a lot of variation. In Texas, prices look sensible, while in much of Florida and Arizona, they are probably about 25 percent too high.)

The slow unwinding of the real estate excess, in turn, means that the turmoil in the financial markets and the country's broader economic problems also aren't anywhere near their end. Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, recently told Congress that the stabilization of prices was "what we're looking forward to." That is, the end of the real estate slump is the only thing that can get the economy back on solid ground.

Until house prices stop falling, it won't be clear how many more people will default on their mortgages. Even homeowners who stay current on their mortgage payments will be affected. With the value of their largest asset dropping, many will decide to spend less and save more, aggravating the economic slowdown.

On Tuesday, the Conference Board reported that Americans were more pessimistic about the economy's direction over the next six months than at any point since the bad old days of the 1973 oil embargo.

In many ways, it would be better if the housing correction would happen more swiftly and sharply. The pain might be worse, but it would be over quickly. We seem to understand this principle when we're removing a bandage. Why, then, is it so much harder with housing?

Because houses are almost perfectly engineered to trick owners into overvaluing them.

For starters, people have an obvious emotional connection to their house. After you have raised a family or enjoyed long meals with friends there, you are naturally going to place a higher value on it than a dispassionate buyer would. It's your home.

In normal times, buyers and sellers can still come to an agreement because inflation allows sellers to feel that they have made a nice return on their house. People don't sell houses frequently, so the sale price of a house is almost always higher than it was when the current owner bought it, just as the price of food, haircuts and everything else tends to rise over a five- or 10-year span. Because of leverage — the fact that people buy houses mostly on credit — these inflation-driven price increases turn into true investment gains.

In the wake of the biggest housing boom on record, it's understandably hard to accept a new reality. Robert Glinert, a real estate agent in the Los Angeles area, said he has recently been saying no to almost half the sellers who have asked him to represent them. Their initial asking price is just too unrealistic.

"People say, 'I don't care about the market — my home is still worth what I paid for it in 2006,' " Mr. Glinert told me. "And I say, 'To you. Only to you.' "

Doing what Mr. Glinert is asking sellers to do — dropping the asking price below their purchase price — is especially difficult. It's tantamount to admitting defeat.

David Laibson, a leading behavioral economist, categorizes this sort of behavior under the heading of "the principle of the matter." His point is that people often go to great lengths to avoid taking a loss — or simply having to acknowledge one. "Even a small loss evokes a sense of frustration," said Mr. Laibson, a professor at Harvard. "There's something magical about 'at least breaking even.' "

Often, this hurts no one so much as it hurts the would-be sellers. They stay in homes where they no longer want to live, rather than accepting their loss and moving on. Or they move but endure the hassle of renting out their old home, waiting, usually in vain, for the mythical buyer who understands its charms. All the while, their money is tied up in the house, and inflation is eating away at its real value.

Back in 2005, after Mr. Harrison and his wife couldn't find a house they considered fairly valued, they opted to rent instead. They pay $3,250 a month for a four-bedroom home, which is a bargain relative to what their mortgage payments would have been.

And that six-bedroom house listed for $1.875 million? The last Mr. Harrison checked, it still hadn't sold.



--
Lee Wareham - REALTOR®, TRC, e-PRO
The Tucker Group
Kinlin Grover GMAC Real Estate
193 Cranberry Highway - Route 6A
Orleans, MA 02653
800-275-9210 x141, 774-313-6091 Mobile
508-255-1489 Fax
mailto:lwareham@kinlingrover.com
http://LeeWareham.com

http://www.CapeTuckerGroup.com - The Tucker Group Cape Cod Real Estate Team Website

http://LoCape.com - a new "narrow search" local search engine - indexing lower Cape Cod websites only. Brought to you by the Tucker Group.

http://SearchCapeCodRE.com – sign up for daily email alerts and search MLS listings!

Monday, March 24, 2008

Home resales up first time in seven months

ECONOMIC REPORT
Home resales up first time in seven months
Median sales prices plunge record 8.2% in past year
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Boosted by a record decline in prices, the U.S. housing market showed signs of stability in February, with sales of existing home rising modestly for the first time in seven months, the National Association of Realtors reported Monday.
Resales of U.S. homes and condos rose 2.9% to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 5.03 million, ahead of the 4.85 million pace expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. See Economic Calendar.
It's the strongest sales pace since October. Sales are down 23.8% compared with a year ago.
Inventories of unsold homes fell 3% to 4.03 million, representing a 9.6-month supply at the February sales pace. Inventories are not seasonally adjusted, but a decline from January to February is unusual. Read more from the NAR.
The median sales price plunged to $195,900, down 8.2% from a year earlier, the largest price decline recorded. Prices of single-family homes fell 8.7% in the past year, also the most since the records begin in 1968.
Since the credit crunch first hit in August, resales have been "stuck" in a narrow range around 5 million, said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the real estate agents' trade group.
Sales rose in three of four regions, with the West still lagging. Sales rose 11.3% in the Northeast, 2.5% in the Midwest and 2.1% in the South. Sales fell 1.1% in the West.
Median sales prices are down 13.4% in the West, largely because the market for jumbo loans above $417,000 remains frozen, Yun said.
The median sales prices can be affected by the mix of home sold regionally and within different price ranges. Two other home price indexes that track resales of the same home over time will be released on Tuesday.
Sales of single-family homes rose 2.8% in February to 4.47 million, the second increase in a row and the fastest sales pace since August. Inventories of unsold single-family homes fell 5.5% to 3.43 million, a 9.2-month supply.
Sales of condos rose 3.7% in February to 560,000 annualized. Condo sales are down 29.7% in the past year. Inventories of unsold condos rose 14% to 604,000, a 13-month supply.
The Commerce Department will report on sales of new homes on Wednesday, with economists looking for a decline to 575,000 annualized sales from 588,000. End of Story
Rex Nutting is Washington bureau chief of MarketWatch.
 


--
Lee Wareham - REALTOR®, TRC, e-PRO
The Tucker Group
Kinlin Grover GMAC Real Estate
193 Cranberry Highway - Route 6A
Orleans, MA 02653
800-275-9210 x141, 774-313-6091 Mobile
508-255-1489 Fax
mailto:lwareham@kinlingrover.com
http://LeeWareham.com

http://www.CapeTuckerGroup.com - The Tucker Group Cape Cod Real Estate Team Website

http://LoCape.com - a new "narrow search" local search engine - indexing lower Cape Cod websites only. Brought to you by the Tucker Group.

http://SearchCapeCodRE.com – sign up for daily email alerts and search MLS listings!

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Homes sales dip, but prices rise

Homes sales dip, but prices rise

CAPE AND ISLANDS

Real estate sales volume continued to fall on the Cape and Islands last month, but median prices edged up, according to numbers released this week by the Cape Cod and Islands Multiple Listing Service.

Last month, 182 residential properties were sold in the region, bringing the total for the year to 367.

These numbers are down from February 2007, when 200 homes were sold, for a total of 417 sales over the first two months of that year.

The median sales price of a residential property was $373,438, up 7 percent from the median of $349,000 in February 2007.

Thus far this year, the median price on the Cape and Islands is $365,000, up from $360,000 over the same period last year.

FROM WIRE AND STAFF REPORTS



--
Lee Wareham - REALTOR®, TRC, e-PRO
The Tucker Group
Kinlin Grover GMAC Real Estate
193 Cranberry Highway - Route 6A
Orleans, MA 02653
800-275-9210 x141, 774-313-6091 Mobile
508-255-1489 Fax
mailto:lwareham@kinlingrover.com
http://LeeWareham.com

http://www.CapeTuckerGroup.com - The Tucker Group Cape Cod Real Estate Team Website

http://LoCape.com - a new "narrow search" local search engine - indexing lower Cape Cod websites only. Brought to you by the Tucker Group.

http://SearchCapeCodRE.com – sign up for daily email alerts and search MLS listings!

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Online Real Estate Search Surpasses All Other Media

Research now shows that you are 500% more likely to sell a house through the internet than through a newspaper.

-2006 National Association of REALTORS® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers


--
Lee Wareham - REALTOR®, TRC, e-PRO
The Tucker Group
Kinlin Grover GMAC Real Estate
193 Cranberry Highway - Route 6A
Orleans, MA 02653
800-275-9210 x141, 774-313-6091 Mobile
508-255-1489 Fax
mailto:lwareham@kinlingrover.com
http://LeeWareham.com

http://www.CapeTuckerGroup.com - The Tucker Group Cape Cod Real Estate Team Website

http://LoCape.com - a new "narrow search" local search engine - indexing lower Cape Cod websites only. Brought to you by the Tucker Group.

http://SearchCapeCodRE.com – sign up for daily email alerts and search MLS listings!

Monday, March 17, 2008

The Cape is Calling

Boston.com THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING
REAL ESTATE

The Cape Is Calling

Still kicking yourself for not buying that Cape vacation home years ago? Well, market forces and foreclosures are presenting a second chance, as one intrepid couple discovers.

If you're thinking of purchasing a vacation home on Cape Cod any time soon, stop. Abandon your plans. It's a total sellers' market. Trust me, you can't afford anything you'd want to live in. And the traffic - I mean, do you want to sit in three hours of traffic each way every weekend? Look elsewhere for your vacation home, like New Hampshire or the lakes region of Maine, wherever . . . just not the Cape. Really. You'll be very disappointed.

OK, I'm lying. Statistics, market trends, and reality on the ground make buying a Cape vacation home one of the no-brainer investment decisions of 2008 for those with a 20 percent down payment and pristine credit to meet banks' new stricter requirements and no need to sell an existing home in this tough market. That's why my husband and I are spending most our weekends house hunting. We are relaxed, sipping our piping-hot to-go coffees, politely yielding the way to the other house hunters where Route 6 goes from four lanes to two. In a month, I fear I'll find myself in a drag race to the Sagamore Bridge. (That's why I lied.)

Despite my exaggerated fears, the vacation home buying activity is more likely to resemble a horse race than a drag race. Housing values aren't expected to reverse their slide for another year, based on the latest economists' data. This means that Cape buyers today aren't flippers, investors, or speculators. Today's house hunters are buying because they love the Cape, not because they want to make a quick buck. They'll make money eventually, when things turn around, but this market offers something far more precious: a chance to fulfill a dream that had previously been far from reach - a vacation home on the Cape.

Due to a recent inheritance, my husband and I now quite unexpectedly find ourselves among this group of buyers. When the money came to us, we thought about investing it in a financial portfolio. But you can't watch the sunset from the deck of your mutual fund. You can't walk to the beach from your ETF. You can't host rockin' all-night parties in the backyard of your high-yield CD. So we now find ourselves compulsively scanning the Multiple Listing Service in search of "The House."

There are many reasons why the Cape currently represents a nearly irresistible buying opportunity. First, it's gorgeous down there, in case you haven't been. It possesses some of the finest beaches on earth. "I can feel myself relax the minute I cross the Bourne Bridge," says Courtney French of Norwood, who, with her husband, Warren, purchased a vacation home in Mashpee in October. "I feel like I'm coming home. We can't wait for summer."

Since no one is making any more land on the Cape (and the ocean claims a little of it each year), the amount of buildable property is dwindling. Conservation rules are making it next to impossible to expand many existing homes, says Ed McKenna, an associate with Buyer Brokers of Cape Cod-Berard Associates in Barnstable. Until very recently, the prices of homes on the Cape reflected all of these factors. Which is to say, prices were beyond the reach of most families seeking an affordable second home.

Since the real estate peak in 2005, the median price for a single-family home in Barnstable County (everything on the Cape side of the canal) dropped by 8.7 percent, according to data from the Warren Group, which tracks New England real estate transactions. (These figures do not include foreclosure deeds.) That's a hit, to be sure, but to put it into perspective, prices dropped up to 30 percent in the county in the 1989-1993 real estate crash, recalls John F. Meade, the Barnstable County register of deeds. That crash, which he also witnessed as registrar, was fueled by rampant speculation, overbuilding, and the savings and loan crisis. "I look at this market, and I don't think it comes close to where it was in the early '90s," says Meade. "Back then, you could pick up a great place near the water. They were all over the place and for a reasonable price. I haven't seen that in this market.

What Meade has seen, and we've seen firsthand in our weekly travels to the Cape, is a flood of properties that sold below $200,000 - a real rarity for these parts. "In 2004 and 2005, you didn't see anything less than $300,000," he says. "I'd look at my daily transactions, and everything went for $300,000-plus. Then in the last year or two all of a sudden, you're seeing lots of $200,000-range sales and even some in the $100,000 range." A sector of the market in which Meade has noticed a sales slowdown is the $500,000 to $1 million range. "We're just not seeing those deals, and those were really moving in the early 2000s."

He notes that properties in the high end of the market, $1 million-plus, have been relatively unaffected by the downturn. Many have held their value or continue to appreciate. Others have been in families for a long time or were purchased largely for cash, so their owners still have equity and, even if the home value has decreased, it's unlikely the house is worth less than what, if anything, is owed. These owners have no need to bail out of their properties in this less-than-stellar market.

Our love of the Cape initially interested us in buying a vacation home there. The rate of property foreclosure in Barnstable County - among the highest in Massachusetts - sealed the deal. It's not that we want to buy a foreclosed property - you usually can't make a full inspection prior to making a bid, all sales are "as is," and, often, previous owners must be evicted - but we are interested in the aftereffects of those foreclosures.

Two things happen when foreclosures spike. The first is that since many of those foreclosure auctions end without a bid large enough to cover the cost of the existing mortgage, the bank ends up retaining ownership. The bank must then market the property, often through a realtor, just like a regular home - only much, much cheaper - and bank-owned properties are now flooding the Cape. Bank-owned properties allow a full inspection and price negotiation, as do short sales (when an owner about to be foreclosed upon sells the property at a price that is approved by the bank).

The second effect of a high foreclosure rate is a price drag on all properties for sale. "Comparables," also known as "comps," are the sample properties that buyers and sellers use to determine the offering price for homes, and that bank appraisers use to determine whether the house is worth the purchase price and the mortgage they will write. In many communities, foreclosures are becoming the dominant comps in certain price brackets (in Hyannis, this is true in the $200K-and-under range), which is driving down the fair market value of properties not in foreclosure. It's a bummer for homeowners selling, but it is a powerful negotiating tool that a savvy buyer is a fool not to use. Add in historically low 30-year fixed mortgage rates, and it truly is a perfect time for buyers.

"We were happy about the amount of house we could buy for the price range we were looking in," says French, who ended up buying a three-bedroom, two-bath Saltbox near a freshwater pond in Mashpee for $295,000. The asking price was originally $350,000.

Some towns are softer than others, of course. The farther out the Cape you go, the firmer the market becomes, and there are pockets all along Route 6 that have retained their value. Median single-family home prices in Bourne dropped 16 percent between 2005 and 2007, but Chatham values have merely flattened. Cotuit never stopped appreciating in value. Hyannis home values are getting creamed. How 2008 will play out is anyone's guess, but given the ripple effect of the subprime debacle, increasingly tightened access to loans, and overall decline in property values, no one expects things to truly turn around until the first few months of 2009. That's just fine with us.

WE WANTED TO BUY A HOUSE SOMEWHERE on the elbow of Cape Cod - Chatham, Harwich, Orleans, and Brewster - towns that were expensive to begin with and that have mostly held their value. However, there are short-sale and bank-owned properties coming on the market every week, and when they do, we pounce. Many other homes have sat unsold for far longer than their owners expected. The owners are finally starting to lower their prices in response. Most of the properties we have seen have had at least two price reductions in the past few months.

The first thing we did before we set foot on the Cape was to determine what we were willing to spend, including assumptions about taxes, maintenance, utilities, and the occasional surprise expense (like a roof or boiler repair). We guesstimated that the mortgage payments would be about three-quarters of what we expected to lay out in monthly expenses. Secondly, we got a preapproval letter from our current mortgage company based on those preliminary assumptions. Our third step was to recruit the help of a buyers' broker who would represent us but still receive her commission from the seller. We chose Maria Lamb of Buyer Brokers of Cape Cod-Berard Associates. She specializes in the lower Cape, lives in Chatham, right smack in the middle of the towns we're exploring, and knows most of the available properties by heart.

After our first visit, we dialed in what we wanted (no more than a half-mile from the ocean, at least three bedrooms, a deck and yard, at least 1,000 square feet but no bigger than 1,800) and what we'd pay ($400,000 max and hopefully well below that). Lamb went to work, scouring the MLS for suitable properties, doing drive-bys to determine if they were worth our time, and giving us the real history of many of the "new" listings. A well-worn real-estate trick involves taking an old listing off the market, repricing it, and putting it back on the MLS as a "new listing," which will place it near the top of the many listings vying for your attention.

The first house we looked at was exactly what we wanted, an adorable three-bedroom Cape, huge backyard, a half-mile from the beach in Harwich, sold fully furnished with items that we actually liked. Many vacation homes come furnished - some with beautiful pieces, some in a style best described as Early Frat House. But we didn't feel right about bidding on the first thing we saw. We wanted to see what we could get closer to the ocean. During the rest of the weekend, we learned the truth of the old adage "location, location, location." A $400,000 house will get progressively smaller, uglier, and more run-down the closer you get to a major body of water. It seemed to us that the listing agents who showed us these hovels, some of which had rooms barely big enough to turn around in, were banking on the fact that people will still buy anything close to the beach. "They still have a bubble-icious mind-set," Lamb told us.

McKenna, Lamb's co-worker, seconds that motion: "There are still a lot of listing agents who have to . . . reeducate . . . their clients about what the current values of properties are. Many are still living in 2005."

The good news is that we could nonetheless find plenty of options for under $400,000. We are also continually surprised by the number of new listings coming on the market every day. These are generally homes owned by people who have to sell (although each summer, Lamb tells us, many vacation homeowners put their houses on the market just to see if they can snag an outrageous offer from a visiting New Yorker who falls in love with the Cape). Many homes are already vacant. If they're not bank-owned, this tells us that the sellers are carrying at least two mortgages and will be more open to aggressive negotiations.

We're also pleasantly surprised at the high quality of the properties that are more than 1 mile from the ocean - huge homes priced well below our threshold. About half of the homes we looked at that were within a half-mile of the ocean came with a rental history - a list of names of people who had already rented the home and were interested in doing so again - meaning renting out our vacation home would be easy if we wanted help paying the bills. However, new buyers are not obligated to honor rental reservations made with the prior owner as long as that is stipulated in the purchase and sale agreement - despite what one listing agent tried to persuade us of.

We're heading back down for a two-day house-hunting trip. We're in no rush to make what, in the final analysis, is still a huge investment. We are confident, though, that one day very soon, we'll find "The House."

See you on Route 6.

Kris Frieswick is a regular contributor to the Globe Magazine. Send comments to magazine@globe.com. 

© Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
 


--
Lee Wareham - REALTOR®, TRC, e-PRO
The Tucker Group
Kinlin Grover GMAC Real Estate
193 Cranberry Highway - Route 6A
Orleans, MA 02653
800-275-9210 x141, 774-313-6091 Mobile
508-255-1489 Fax
mailto:lwareham@kinlingrover.com
http://LeeWareham.com

http://www.CapeTuckerGroup.com - The Tucker Group Cape Cod Real Estate Team Website

http://LoCape.com - a new "narrow search" local search engine - indexing lower Cape Cod websites only. Brought to you by the Tucker Group.

http://SearchCapeCodRE.com – sign up for daily email alerts and search MLS listings!

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Mortgage Ratesheet



March 14, 2008


Purchase Transactions $225K+

Conforming Loans

Assuming FICO of 720+

Rate Points

30 Year Fixed 6.125% 0 15 Year Fixed 5.250% 0


30 Year Fixed 6.50% 0

* Low income programs for borrowers at or below 80% of the area median income

(Standard purchase price limits apply)



JUMBO Loans up to $2,000,000!


Rate Points Margin Caps

3/1 ARM 6.75% 2 2.75% 5/2/5

30 Year Fixed 7.75% 0

*Rates are subject to change without notice


          • Primary, Secondary & Investment Properties

          • Home Equity Lines & Loans

          • 3/1, 5/1, 7/1, 10/1 ARM’s Interest Only

          • Fast pre-approvals

Matt Dolan

508-737-3509

Matthew.Dolan@gmacm.com



Rates subject to change without notice



Monday, March 10, 2008

Loan Limits Increasing!!!


Slade Mortgage Loan Limit Alert!           

March 10, 2008
On March 5, the Department of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD") released the new Federal Housing Administration ("FHA") loan limits set for either (1) FHA-insured loans in a specific area or;(2) Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac limits set for conventional mortgage loans in a specific area.
 
As an example, following loan limits apply for FHA loans ONLY:
                                                                                          Single Family               Two Family     Three Family        Four Family

MA

BARNSTABLE

BARNSTABLE TOWN, MA (MSA)

 $   462,500

 $      592,050

 $     715,700

 $     889,450

MA

BERKSHIRE

PITTSFIELD, MA (MSA)

 $   417,000

 $      533,850

 $     645,300

 $     801,950

MA

BRISTOL

PROVIDENCE-NEW BEDFORD
-FALL RIVER, RI-MA (MSA)

 $   475,000

 $      608,100

 $     735,050

 $     913,450

MA

DUKES

NON-METRO

 $   729,750

 $      934,200

 $  1,129,250

 $  1,403,400

MA

ESSEX

ESSEX COUNTY, MA METROPOLITAN
DIVISION

 $   523,750

 $      670,500

 $     810,450

 $  1,007,200

MA

FRANKLIN

SPRINGFIELD, MA (MSA)

 $   417,000

 $      533,850

 $     645,300

 $     801,950

MA

HAMPDEN

SPRINGFIELD, MA (MSA)

 $   417,000

 $      533,850

 $     645,300

 $     801,950

MA

HAMPSHIRE

SPRINGFIELD, MA (MSA)

 $   417,000

 $      533,850

 $     645,300

 $     801,950

MA

MIDDLESEX

CAMBRIDGE-NEWTON-FRAMINGHAM,
MA METROPOLITAN DIVIION

 $   523,750

 $      670,500

 $     810,450

 $  1,007,200

MA

NANTUCKET

NON-METRO

 $   729,750

 $      934,200

 $  1,129,250

 $  1,403,400

MA

NORFOLK

BOSTON-QUINCY, MA METROPOLITAN DIVISION

 $   523,750

 $      670,500

 $     810,450

 $  1,007,200

MA

PLYMOUTH

BOSTON-QUINCY, MA METROPOLITAN
DIVISION

 $   523,750

 $      670,500

 $     810,450

 $  1,007,200

MA

SUFFOLK

BOSTON-QUINCY, MA METROPOLITAN DIVISION

 $   523,750

 $      670,500

 $     810,450

 $  1,007,200

MA

WORCESTER

WORCESTER, MA (MSA)

 $   417,000

 $      533,850

 $     645,300

 $     801,950

 
Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac or conventional loan amounts will also be rising, but the final loan amounts have yet to be determined. We will keep you updated as soon as we find out the new limits.
 
As to interest rates, the markets are expected to lower interest rates in the next few weeks. Today is already a good example of the direction that rates will be going... Which is DOWN! Please call or email your Slade Mortgage loan officer for the most up to date information.
 
If you do not have your application in yet, please call/email me right away to get that part of the process out of the way, so when rates drop.... you are READY!
 
Thanks for your interest in these updates... I have enjoyed all your feedback and have hired additional staff to help with your inquiries.
 
Talk with you soon.
 
Mike

Mike Burton
President

Slade Mortgage Group Inc.
222 Main Street Falmouth, MA
Phone: 508-548-0177
MB # 1294, Licensed in Massachusetts and Florida
"We are here for you today and tomorrow!"
  
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Slade Mortgage | 222 Main Street | Falmouth | MA | 02540



--
Lee Wareham - REALTOR®, TRC, e-PRO
The Tucker Group
Kinlin Grover GMAC Real Estate
193 Cranberry Highway - Route 6A
Orleans, MA 02653
800-275-9210 x141, 774-313-6091 Mobile
508-255-1489 Fax
mailto:lwareham@kinlingrover.com
http://LeeWareham.com

http://www.CapeTuckerGroup.com - The Tucker Group Cape Cod Real Estate Team Website

http://LoCape.com - a new "narrow search" local search engine - indexing lower Cape Cod websites only. Brought to you by the Tucker Group.

http://SearchCapeCodRE.com – sign up for daily email alerts and search MLS listings!