A New York e' finita la crisi immobiliare..

The Reluctant Landlords

With housing prices still in the dumps, many Americans are finding themselves in the uncomfortable position of landlord.

Some have been forced to relocate for a job and can't sell their houses. Others have moved, but are holding on to their previous homes, hoping for prices to rebound before selling. Many are finding that rent checks don't come close to covering their mortgage payments.

Hard data are scant on how many homeowners are renting out their homes, but anecdotal evidence suggests numbers are up. In one indication of the trend: More homeowners are converting their homeowners insurance to landlord policies that cover the additional risks of leasing out a home. Allstate Corp., the second largest home insurer in the U.S., reported a 27% increase in conversions in the first quarter from the previous year.

"The number of rental homes available is greater today than it was a year ago due to the foreclosure crisis," says Mike Nelson, current president of Rental Home Professionals Inc., a multiple listing service of rental homes owned by the National Association of Residential Property Managers in Chesapeake, Va.

In Frederick, Md., Realtor Jim Bass says that because of rising demand, a couple of months ago his real-estate group started offering property-management services, tending to the rented homes of absent owners. Mr. Bass says a client recently rented out his 4,700-square-foot house after failing to sell his home, which he listed for $790,000. Now a tenant pays $2,995 per month—a shortfall of $2,000 from the $4,995 mortgage payment. The homeowner "feels that two years from now, the market will improve to the point where he can recapture that," Mr. Bass says.

Experts generally advise against becoming a landlord in hopes of recouping lost home value. In some hard-hit parts of the country, such as Florida, Nevada, Arizona and parts of Ohio, prices may not climb back to mid-2000s levels anytime soon. Landlords have to pony up money each year for property taxes, insurance, maintenance and repairs. Meanwhile, demand for rentals in many parts of the U.S. isn't strong: Apartment vacancy rates nationally are the highest in more than two decades and rents are falling in some areas, compounding the difficulty of finding a good, steady tenant. :clap:

Homeowners who owe more than a house is worth in very depressed areas may be better off selling even in a short sale, whereby the bank agrees to accept less than the full amount owed on the mortgage, says economist Edward Leamer, director of the UCLA Anderson Forecast. Your credit rating takes a serious hit, but, he says, "better to take your losses and move on."

Kyle Becker, 27 years old, and his wife didn't feel they had much of a choice in becoming landlords. The couple and their infant son moved from Columbia, Mo., to Winchester, Va., last year so that Mr. Becker could attend pharmacy school at Shenandoah University.

Before they moved, they listed their three bedroom, two-bath ranch-style home in May 2008 for $139,000. They had bought it in 2005 for $110,000 and put $30,000 into roofing and siding. By February, they hadn't received a single bid.

"We had only seven lookers over the course of a year," :eek: Mr. Becker says. Meanwhile, the couple was paying $1,200 a month in rent for a Virginia house. Last spring, the Beckers finally leased the Missouri house for $675 a month—$225 less than their mortgage payment.

If he had to do it all over again, Mr. Becker says, he might have chopped the price of his Missouri house, where sales have been stagnant—with the exception of "distressed" properties in some stage of default.

The calculation isn't the same for all homeowners. Those who have paid off their home or have a small mortgage balance may be able to wait out the market. And there are pockets of the country—Houston is one—where home prices haven't fallen as hard. Some homeowners may want rental income to supplement retirement savings.

Still, they may be shocked by the costs. Teshika Holmes, 36, says she received no bids for her three-bedroom house in Huntsville, Ala., after a job loss forced her to relocate to Montgomery, Ala. She's renting it out for about $800 a month.

Ms. Holmes hired a property manager who charges 10% of the rent. Typically rates run from 3% to 12%. She also pays an increased premium of $500 a year for landlord insurance. Among other things, a landlord policy covers the loss of rental income if a fire makes the house uninhabitable. It costs about 25% more than a standard homeowners policy, according to the Insurance Information Institute.

Ms. Holmes says she has negative cash flow each month from her Huntsville house, but the rent allows her to stay current with her mortgage and preserve her good credit. "The only thing I wanted was the house note paid," she says.

Some homeowners are renting out their homes because they live in areas where a handful of distressed sales have skewed home prices downward. Economists say homeowners who have equity in such homes may be right to delay selling, as sales have started picking up. However, they should be realistic: Sales of lower and moderately priced homes are recovering faster than homes at the upper end, and prices may not rise that much in the short term.

David Richter, of Chicago suburb Wheaton, Ill., says he rented out his home because he was receiving low bids. "There were plenty of lowball bidders," says Mr. Richter who moved to a smaller home in Wheaton. "We have enough equity that we felt we were better off riding it out."

Before doing that, homeowners should consider the financial realties. Generally, utilities, maintenance and repairs run higher with tenants than when the owner occupies the house. Collecting enough rent to cover the note on a home purchased at the height of the housing boom may be impossible. :censored:

Rental income is taxable, but can be offset with business expenses–including mortgage interest, real-estate taxes and homeowners insurance–and depreciation. Expenses in excess of rental income also can be deducted, up to a limit.

Renting for an extended period can eliminate or diminish the value of capital-gains tax exclusions. Federal tax law requires you to live in the house at least two years of the previous five in order to qualify for the full capital-gains tax exclusion upon sale of $250,000 for a single person or $500,000 for a couple, with some exceptions.

Karen B. McIntyre, 46, a certified financial planner in Lower Gwynedd, Pa., a Philadelphia suburb, says she and her husband have been renting out their former home after they bought a newly built home nearby because of its better location and excellent price. "We may also lose some of the capital gain exclusion, but expect the increased selling price (of the older home) will make up for the decrease in capital gain exclusion."

Per quelli che ... "Non svendo, affitto" :cool:
 
Sembrano notizie dal ... pianeta marte.

Ormai cominciano anche a mancare gli aggettivi per definire queste situazioni (comunque ancora in progresso). Io ho sempre sostenuto che quando ci si trova in mezzo alla tempesta e' difficile pensare che esista il sereno, pero' stavolta ho paura che ci vorra' un bel pezzo prima di ritrovare una qualsivoglia sorta di normalita' sul mercato immobiliare americano.

Secondo me il vulnus restera' nella memoria storica delle nuove generazioni; se ho ragione il settore immobiliare diventera' uno dei tanti settori industriali "maturi", piatti, lenti e poco remunerativi.

Sara', insomma, un po' come il mercato delle auto usate.
 
Sembrano notizie dal ... pianeta marte.

Ormai cominciano anche a mancare gli aggettivi per definire queste situazioni (comunque ancora in progresso). Io ho sempre sostenuto che quando ci si trova in mezzo alla tempesta e' difficile pensare che esista il sereno, pero' stavolta ho paura che ci vorra' un bel pezzo prima di ritrovare una qualsivoglia sorta di normalita' sul mercato immobiliare americano.

Secondo me il vulnus restera' nella memoria storica delle nuove generazioni; se ho ragione il settore immobiliare diventera' uno dei tanti settori industriali "maturi", piatti, lenti e poco remunerativi.

Sara', insomma, un po' come il mercato delle auto usate.


Aa no, che dici, in autunno ci sarà un violento rimbalzo e i prezzi torneranno a crescere come nei 10 anni precedenti:D
 
Aa no, che dici, in autunno ci sarà un violento rimbalzo e i prezzi torneranno a crescere come nei 10 anni precedenti:D

Guarda che ci sono 7.000.000 di famiglie interessate all'acquisto e il 21 settembre è molto vicino...
:D:D:D
 
Guarda che ci sono 7.000.000 di famiglie interessate all'acquisto e il 21 settembre è molto vicino...
:D:D:D

E le banche non sapendo dove mettere i soldi, li metteranno in mano ai "kamikaze dell'immobiliare", causando un'inondazione di liquidità, seguita da un'iperinflazione sotto tutti i punti di vista, anche quello ortofrutticolo

MPERA%20GIGANTE.jpg
 
Usa: disoccupazione vola al 9,7%; Romer, dati terribili

da swissinfo
4 settembre 2009 - 18.20

NEW YORK (awp/ats/ans) - E' emergenza lavoro negli Usa. Mentre il Tesoro e la Fed tirano le somme sullo sforzo compiuto per tirar fuori il sistema finanziario dalla crisi, sul fronte dell'economia reale la disoccupazione ai massimi di 26 anni rischia di colpire duramente i consumi. Mettendo una seria ipoteca sulle prospettive di ripresa della prima economia mondiale.

In base ai dati diffusi oggi dal dipartimento del Lavoro, il tasso di disoccupazione negli Usa ad agosto ha raggiunto il 9,7%, al di sopra delle previsioni degli analisti, per un rialzo al 9,5% dal 9,4% di luglio. Il tasso dei senza-lavoro è ora a livelli che non si toccavano dal 1983, dopo che il mese scorso le imprese del settore non agricolo hanno tagliato altri 216.000 posti.

I posti persi il mese scorso, in realtà, sono inferiori a quanto pensassero gli economisti, che avevano previsto la perdita di 230.000 posizioni. E anche nel solo settore manifatturiero i posti persi sono stati il mese scorso 63.000, poco più dei 60.000 previsti. Ma gli esperti del Dipartimento del lavoro hanno dovuto rivedere, in peggio, i dati di giugno e luglio, aggiungendo all'emorragia altri 49.000 posti andati in fumo. E così nel solo mese di luglio gli Usa hanno perso 276.000 posti, decisamente più di quanto stimato in precedenza (247.000). Con il risultato che la disoccupazione si avvicina pericolosamente alla soglia psicologica del 10%, che la Federal Reserve, nei verbali dell'ultima riunione di politica monetaria, prevede verrà raggiunta nel 2010.

Una "situazione terribile", l'ha definita Christina Romer, che presiede il consiglio dei consulenti economici della Casa Bianca. Certo - ha notato Romer - il trend mostra una progressiva frenata nella corsa ai licenziamenti rispetto ai livelli d'inizio 2009: allora, nel solo mese di gennaio, erano andati in fumo ben 741.000 posti di lavoro, l'emorragia più forte dal 1949. Quello giunto dal Dipartimento del Lavoro resta però per l'amministrazione Obama un vero e proprio campanello d'allarme, anche perché la media settimanale delle ore lavorate é rimasta invariata a 33,1, vicino ai minimi record. E gli economisti concordano nel ritenere che, prima di tornare ad assumere, le imprese aumenteranno il monte orario settimanale. :cool:

Gli sforzi del presidente Obama per uscire dalla crisi rischiano di risultare vani se non ripartiranno velocemente i consumi, che valgono i tre quarti del prodotto interno lordo degli Usa e sono strettamente collegati all'andamento dell'occupazione. E non è un problema solo degli Usa: anche Eurolandia questa settimana ha preso atto che la disoccupazione nei Sedici è ai massimi di oltre un decennio (9,5%), con 3,26 milioni di disoccupati in più in un anno.

Perdono posti tanto il terziario (con un rosso di 80.000 unità dopo le 154.000 di luglio) quanto il settore delle vendite al dettaglio (9.600 posti in meno dopo i 43.200 di luglio). Male anche le costruzioni, con 63.000 posti in meno che si aggiungono ai 73.000 di luglio. E l'emorragia nel manifatturiero è addirittura peggiorata rispetto ai 43.000 posti persi a luglio: licenziano compagnie che vanno da Whirlpool, che ha appena annunciato che chiuderà uno stabilimento in Indiana, ad American Airlines, che sta procedendo con i 1.600 tagli annunciati a giugno.
 
Condo Speculators Unclear on the Concept: 164 Solana Point Circle

Welcome to 164 Solana Point Circle in Solana Beach. This 3-bedroom, 2.5-bathroom condo can be yours for just $1.695 million. If you can find some bank willing to give you a super-super-jumbo loan at 5.75%, your mortgage will be just $9900 per month. Add in $450 per month in HOA fees, and $1765 in property tax, and you're looking at just over $12,000 a month. What a deal, right?

One problem. The dude next door is trying to rent an identical 3-bedroom, 2.5-bath unit for just $3950 a month.

What kind of moron would pay $12,000 a month to live next to renters paying $3950 a month? And even after you've made those enormous mortgage payments for 30 years and your property is paid off, you are still paying property tax and HOA fees that add up to more than half of the rental value!

Oh, and your other neighbor at 188 Solana Point is trying to sell at $1.295 million. It ain't renting, but it's better than $1.695 million.

-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-

P.S.: moron = imbe.cille
 
Interessante, spiega il meccanismo degli ARMs

Another Wave of Foreclosures Looms

At the root of the problem is that many who took out option ARMs were betting that home prices would rise. The loans helped people buy homes at a time when prices surged to unprecedented highs. As long as home prices kept climbing, these borrowers could refinance before their loans adjusted. But once prices tumbled, that option vanished. Now many people cannot refinance because they owe more than their homes were worth.
 
Recession turned renter's market: How to take advantage of the housing slump

There's not a lot of good news to be found in this recession, but here's one positive note for some Central Oregonians: We're in a renter's market.

Tim Duy, University of Oregon economist and author of the Central Oregon Business Index, says the region has a glut of housing stock right now, largely from homeowners who want to sell and can't. Many of those homes are now for rent.

Duy also said areas with relatively high unemployment rates — like Central Oregon — don't tend to attract new residents.

“It seems like the supply is certainly high and demand is waning,” Duy said. “That would tend to depress prices.”

Keith Wooden, the director of development for Housing Works, the regional housing authority, says at the 600 or so housing units his organization operates, he estimates a 15 percent to 20 percent vacancy rate, though Housing Works properties are income-restricted, so they're not a perfect representation of the larger market. Wooden said a study the organization commissioned in February found that some non-income- restricted apartment-unit properties in Central Oregon were up to 30 percent vacant.

Compared with a 3 percent to 5 percent vacancy rate in the end of 2007, Wooden said the rental market in Central Oregon is “definitely a renter's market.”

Wooden said a quick look at rentals online or in newspaper classifieds reveal the desperation of the rental owners, management companies and landlords.

“Central Oregon landlords are offering discounts and specials. They're lowering their rates,” he said. “If you think about losing $600 or $700 a month in rent, that's hard. You're going to lower the rent until you can get someone in there.”

Wooden says it's a great time for renters to negotiate.

“People will still screen and charge for that,” Wooden said, so expect to pay an application fee and any standard charges, such as deposits and cleaning fees.

But people “can negotiate on the rent, they can maybe negotiate on a garage, if those are available on the property,” Wooden said. “Particularly if you're willing to sign a lease. Right now, we're entering fall and winter, and there's not going to be a lot going on.” So landlords will likely be eager to get tenants for the winter. It's also a way to guarantee a low rate for the next six months or year, depending on your lease term.

Wooden did warn that some properties, such as houses in highly desirable neighborhoods or apartment units in good locations, might be immune to the soft market.

But “the ones that are a little older or off the beaten path, even the nicer ones, they're going to have vacancies,” he said. And if there are vacancies, you're in a better position to negotiate.

Wooden also says people with credit trouble may get approved for a rental that might have been denied to them a few years ago.

“People are accepting more risky tenants,” he said, such as those with a weak rental history or with a low credit score.

Anthony Albertazzi, a Bend lawyer who has dealt with business, bankruptcy and real estate law, says if you're dealing with a property management company, be sure it is making contact with the owner of the property. The management company may have limited administrative control, but the property owner has the ultimate say about what you will pay.

For those who find themselves in an unfavorable lease in the current renter's market, Albertazzi said the first thing to do is read the lease you signed.

“Many times, it'll say it's a one-year lease with a buyout provision. Almost all leases say if you leave early, you have to pay a month or a month and a half,” he said, as a sort of fine for breaking the lease. But you have to read the original document.

“It's surprising to me how many times people don't have a copy of (their) lease,” he said.

If you don't have a copy, ask your landlord for a copy. If no one can track down a copy, Albertazzi says under Oregon law, your agreement defaults to a month-to-month lease.

If you want to negotiate on your rent, Albertazzi suggested calling your landlord and telling him you're thinking of moving out. Ask if he wants to negotiate a deal.

“Sometimes, the landlord may want to have you out or they'll really want to keep you in,” he said. “That moment can prompt your landlord to just spontaneously say, ‘Gee, we'd really like you to stay; we can take a hundred off your rent.'”

Albertazzi says if your landlord doesn't want to negotiate, you have to decide if it's worth it to pay the fee to break your lease. If you do, your credit will not take a hit, though an eviction, which has to move through the court system, will show up on your record.

“What you do have to be aware of being a tenant,” Albertazzi said, is “when you go to rent from someone else, your new landlord is going to look to the previous landlord as the primary source of information. It's important that when you do break things off with the previous landlord, it's done in a way that's not going to give you a bad history.”

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Usa: vendite case nuove agosto +1, 5%
Bloomberg, dato in linea con le stime
(ANSA) - ROMA, 17 SET - Le vendite di abitazioni nuove negli Stati Uniti, ad agosto, hanno segnato un rialzo mensile dell'1,5% al tasso annuo di 598.000 unita'. Lo scrive l'agenzia Bloomberg. Il dato e' in linea con le previsioni degli analisti, che si attendevano un rialzo a un tasso annuo di 598.000 unita'. Sempre ad agosto, i permessi edilizi sono saliti del 2,7% a 579.000 unita' contro le 583.000 previste dagli analisti.
 
l'ha pagata 21 l'ha venduta a 25....money talks.
lo sconto e il resto sono tutte chiacchiere.

Mr. Fuld and his wife, Kathleen, purchased the apartment for $21 million in January 2007. The full floor, four-bedroom, 6,200-square-foot apartment, which underwent a multimillion-dollar renovation, was not officially on the market but had been quietly shopped for $32 million.

L'ha pagata 21, ci ha speso svariati milioni per ristrutturarla e l'ha venduta a 25. Tutto dipende da quel "multimillion-dollar renovation"; potrebbe averci fatto gain cosi' come potrebbe aver venduto in pari o in perdita.
 
Indietro