Baton Rouge home foreclosures on the rise

From the Baton Rouge Business Report:

“The number of local homeowners who are late on mortgage payments or face foreclosure continues to increase in Baton Rouge, but at a slower rate then the rest of the state or the nation. The percentage of homeowners who were 90 days or more late was 4.83% in August, according to figures from First American CoreLogic. That’s up from 3.25% in August 2008. The percentage of delinquent homeowners in Louisiana is 5.47%, up from 3.66% in August 2008. Nationally, the number of late payments was up by nearly three percentage points in the past year, from 4.18% in August 2008, to 7.1%. The foreclosure rate in Baton Rouge grew half as much as the state average, going from 1.26% in August 2008, to 1.52%. Statewide, 1.79% of homes faced foreclosure in August, compared with 1.24% in August 2008.”

If you want to search for Baton Rouge foreclosures use my site to find a deal TODAY!

1627 Munal, Baton Rouge, La 70816

Located in Avalon Subdivision, this home is a LOT For the money. Almost 2100 sq ft living.  4 bedrooms, 2 baths, corner lot. Located off of Millerville close to interstate 12, shopping, dining, and more!  Call me today to make this your home. View more pictures as my website timhouk.com

2100 sq ft of living for 185000!

2100 sq ft of living for 185000!

1089 Longwood Drive, Baton Rouge, La

By and far my favorite home that I have listed.  Personally I mean. Gorgeous cottage home featuring 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath home at the corner of Claycut and Longwood (which is the best looking street in Baton Rouge to me).  1886 sq ft living, HUGE lot.  It doesn’t get any better than this!

Front of the home

Front of the home

Side of the home

Side of the home

First time homebuyer tax credit – Time running out!

Ok, EVERYONE is aware of the homebuyer tax credit ending NOV 30th.  But, I want to stress the point that we essentially have 2-3 weeks to get a home under contract!  If you aren’t searching for homes, I highly suggest you start TODAY.  Everyone will be cramming in to get their loans complete before the deadline.  FHA loans are taking a little longer than usual so don’ t put yourself at risk. Go to my site, www.timhouk.com, start searching for homes. Contact me and then we will get out and preview some homes.  Unless you have a home picked out today, it will be about 6 weeks before we close.  1-2 weeks to find and negotiate a contract and then a typical 4 week closing period.  Hurry before its TOO LATE! Here are a few steps that could speed up the process:

1. Go ahead and contact your lender to get pre-approved.  If you don’t know a good lender, I have many.

2. Locate your past 2 years tax returns and last 2 months pay stubs as the lender will need them to get started.

3. Once your lender determines your price range, then think about the areas you want to live in.

4. Start searching for homes on my site

5. Lastly, CALL me!  225.301.7467

I look forward to hearing from you!

Baton Rouge real estate is on the move!

Wow.  What an amazing few months in real estate in Baton Rouge and surrounding areas.  Properties are flying.  First time homebuyers are on full steam ahead!  I worked with no less than 6 new buyers over the past week who are looking in the 130-160,000 price range.  But it isn’t just the first time homeowners are on the move suprisingly.  Lots of investors and buyers in the 300,000 range are taking advantage of the phenomenal rates and increased supply of homes.  Rates were in the 4.85 range last week!  Now is the time to buy. If you are even remotely interested in a home right now CALL ME.  225.301.7467.  I would love to discuss options and give a more detailed update on the Baton Rouge housing market.  Search for homes at my website Tim Houk

Thanks and have  GREAT day Baton Rouge!!!

Baton Rouge economy seen as one of the best in the Nation

From the metro monitor on the top performing areas:

MetroMonitor Overall Performance

The map below classifies the 100 largest metro areas into 5 categories (quintiles), based on their average rank across a series of four indicators: employment change from peak; unemployment rate change from one year ago; gross metropolitan product change from peak; and housing price index change from one year ago.

Brandywine Condominiums woes a thing of the past

I must give myself a small pat on the back for the hours and hours of work that went into putting this deal together.  We still have a ways to go with the project, but me and my investor have made a HUGE step in turning this complex around for the best.

From the Business Report

Majority interest in Brandywine Condominiums sold

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

The Brandywine Condominiums have had a great deal of bad press lately with rentals not being paid and units being boarded up. Several months ago, the condominium complex had 16 of its 298 units burned down. Originally, the project on Darryl Drive was designed for apartments, but was converted to condominiums in the 1980s. The units were not separately metered, meaning the condominium dues had to include utilities. But when condominium dues were not paid utilities were cut off in many of the units, causing tremendous controversy and resulting in irate tenants allegedly burning down two of the buildings. Recent closings might end the controversy.

DOX Apartments purchased 152 units on Monday, and intends to purchase another 37 units in the next 30 days. Three agents brokered the property with Keller Williams Red Stick Partners: David Vercher, Tim Houk and Michael Cahill. According to Houk, there were five sellers and two closing attorneys involved. Kevin McCleary of McCollister, McCleary & Fazio closed 78 units, and Jacque Favert at Title Plus closed the remainder of the units.”

Stay tuned for the rest of the story!

Baton Rouge among best cities for real estate

from the Baton Rouge Business Report:

Four La. markets named among nation’s best for real estate

A new report says Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Lake Charles and Monroe are four of the U.S. real estate markets expected to perform the best in the upcoming year. Local Market Monitor, which produces the Home Price Forecast for more than 300 cities, says home values should remain level in those cities over the next 12 months. Officials with Local Market say home prices in those cities are lower than the national average, and the effects of the recession have been slight. Baton Rouge, in particular, has continued to add jobs. The markets expected to do the worst include places where there were spikes in home prices and where speculative buying got out of hand, such as Las Vegas, Miami and Modesto, Cali

Baton Rouge home prices continue to rise!!

From the Baton Rouge Business Report:

B.R. home prices continuing to rise

“After posting a slight drop, Baton Rouge home prices are continuing to rise above 2008 numbers. Capital Region home prices rose by 1.74% in June, when compared to the year before, according to First American CoreLogic’s LoanPerformance Home Price Index. That’s better than the 7.8% decrease reported in the index nationwide. June’s numbers come after Baton Rouge home prices were down 1.61% in May, compared to May 2008. Louisiana’s index was up 0.6% in June, the sixth highest gain of any state. West Virginia saw the biggest increase, with the index going up 3.35%. Nevada and Florida had the biggest decreases in home prices, with the index showing drops of more than 25%. First American bases its Home Price Index on public records sources such as property sales, tax assessments and mortgage filings.”

Not tooting my own horn, but I am busier now that I have been in a very long time, as are MANY other agents.  It is a great time to purchase in  Baton Rouge and surrounding area’s. While there are SOME financing difficulties that can arise, don’t let that discourage you from jumping at a GREAT opportunity!

Tim Houk

The trouble with appraisals. Sellers in Baton Rouge beware

This article explains the pitfalls with appraisals currently. To those not aware, appraisers are no longer chosen by the lenders. Instead it is a lottery system that may get you an appraiser that is not from where you live which can cause serious pitfalls. I am not saying the sky is falling…but there are issues out there and this helps explain why.

This article is from the Wall Street Journal:

After being blamed for helping to inflate home values during the housing boom, the appraisal business is again coming under fire.

Squeezed by a drop in fees, some appraisers are compensating by driving long distances to handle more assignments. Their wanderings are raising questions about whether they know enough about the neighborhoods to accurately assess the value of homes—which has implications for both home buyers and owners.

Bob Blake, a flight-test engineer who lives in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., was shocked when an appraiser who traveled 44 miles from Port St. Lucie, Fla., valued his home at $228,000 in late May. Mr. Blake’s mortgage broker, Skip McDonough, protested to the appraisal-management company, Nations Valuation Services Inc., that the appraiser had failed to look at comparable homes. Eventually, Nations sent another appraiser, who valued the home at $295,000. The dispute delayed Mr. Blake’s refinancing by more than six weeks.

A spokesman for Nations Valuation declined to discuss the details of the appraisals but said, “We feel we handled it properly.”

Appraisals are supposed to shield home buyers from paying too much and lenders from overestimating the value of collateral. If appraisals come in too high, buyers may overpay, making defaults more likely. If they are too low, it becomes hard to sell or refinance homes. Many real-estate agents and builders say that the pendulum has swung too far toward caution, and that lowball appraisals threaten to snuff out any recovery in the housing market.

In June, Evie Salazar traveled about 75 miles from her office in Corona, Calif., to do an appraisal in Cathedral City, Calif. Usually, Ms. Salazar says, she tries to work within about 40 miles of her home, but business was slow at the time she accepted that job. “You do what you’ve got to do at times to feed the family and pay the bills,” she says.

Ms. Salazar, an appraiser for the past 12 years, says she researched the Cathedral City market carefully and did a good job. But many real estate agents and mortgage brokers charge that some wandering appraisers are coming up with dubious estimates. Too many appraisers are getting assignments in places where they “just don’t know the nuances,” says Rick Turley, who oversees the San Francisco Bay area for the Coldwell Banker real-estate-brokerage chain.

The debate over appraisals is inflamed by a natural tension: Real-estate agents and mortgage brokers, who need to complete transactions to collect their fees, are unhappy when an appraiser nixes the sale price. But it also suggests that there may be unintended consequences to an attempt by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo to reform the appraisal business.

Using the threat of litigation, Mr. Cuomo last year prodded the government-backed mortgage investors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into adopting a new code of conduct for appraisers. Since those two companies provide funding for the bulk of U.S. home mortgages, the code, which took effect May 1, has become the national standard for most home loans.

The code bars loan officers, mortgage brokers or real-estate agents from any role in selecting appraisers. One result is that more lenders have outsourced the selection to appraisal-management companies, or AMCs, which take a sizable cut of the appraisal fee, often 40% or more. The AMCs pay appraisers as little as $175 to $200 per assignment, compared with the $350 or more that many get when they work directly for a lender.

“Many appraisers are struggling to survive on the fees paid by the AMCs,” says Bill Garber, a spokesman for the Appraisal Institute, a trade group based in Chicago. Appraisers are being asked to work faster even as their fees are cut, and that conflicts with the goal of getting reliable appraisals, he says.

Squeezing Appraisers

Appraisal-management companies deny they are squeezing appraisers too hard. A spokesman for banking giant Wells Fargo & Co., which owns an AMC, says it “has invested substantial time and resources in the quality control of the valuation process to, among other things, ensure that individual appraisers have relevant knowledge of the markets and properties they review.” A spokeswoman for Mr. Cuomo says the new code is working well and helping protect appraisers from pressure to inflate estimates.

Appraisers are required to follow a set of national rules known as the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice. Among other things, those rules require that “an appraiser preparing an appraisal in an unfamiliar location must spend sufficient time to understand the nuances of the local market.”

Yet some appraisers who travel long distances to find work may be hard-pressed to spend “sufficient time” in an unfamiliar market. LaRon Hall did an appraisal in early June on a home being sold in Palm Desert, Calif., about 86 miles from his office in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. He says he needs to accept jobs within a broad swath of Southern California to earn a living. Under the new appraisal code, Mr. Hall says, “you’re getting less money and you’re having to do more. … It’s definitely a sticky situation.”

Mr. Hall appraised the three-bedroom home at $186,000, far above the $138,000 for which it sold in late June. Concerned about accuracy, the mortgage lender that financed the purchase rejected Mr. Hall’s appraisal and ordered one from another party before making the loan, according to a person involved in the transaction.

A spokesman for Equifax Inc., whose AMC unit ordered the appraisal in Palm Desert, says Mr. Hall has an excellent record on appraisals and that Equifax has a “rigorous quality-control process.”

Though consumers can’t choose their own appraiser—unless they’re paying cash for a home—they should request a copy of the appraisal and examine it to see whether it contains any errors in the description of the property and whether the nearby homes, or “comps,” used to gauge its value are truly comparable. If they aren’t, the consumer should present any evidence of flaws to the banks and insist that the appraisal be reviewed and redone if necessary.

Carol Kearns, herself a real- estate agent, complains that an appraisal done on her own Montvale, N.J., home in June was “an unprofessional guess.” The appraisal came in at $730,000, which was more than enough to qualify Ms. Kearns and her husband, Robert, to refinance their mortgage. But Ms. Kearns, upset at what she sees as sloppy work, maintains that the home is worth more than $900,000.

The appraiser was Uchenna Eboh, whose employer, Kobi Group, is about 46 miles away in Mendham, N.J. Ms. Kearns says Mr. Eboh didn’t seem to know her neighborhood and used dissimilar houses as “comps.” Among those, she says, were two on much smaller lots and one on a busy street corner.

‘Reasonable Proximity’

A colleague of Mr. Eboh says he couldn’t comment and referred questions about the appraisal to the AMC that ordered it, Lender Processing Services Inc.’s LSI unit. A spokeswoman for LPS says the appraisal “followed the processes required” by federal standards and LSI’s “more-stringent requirements.” She says LSI “only uses local, knowledgeable appraisers located within a reasonable proximity to the properties.”

Sometimes appraisers are called on to express opinions on the values of faraway homes without even seeing them. LandSafe, an appraisal unit of Bank of America Corp., in May assigned Jane Price, an appraiser in Dallas, to review another appraiser’s estimate of a home in Cathedral City, Calif. Ms. Price didn’t visit the neighborhood in question, but her review cited nearby homes she used to determine comparable value.

Ms. Price declined to comment. A spokeswoman for Bank of America says Ms. Price was asked to do only a “desktop review” of the original appraisal. “California is a state which has a lot of market information available, which allows a reviewer to gather credible data about a property even when they are not in the immediate area,” the spokeswoman adds.