Sunday, February 28, 2010

Las Vegas Commercial / Prime Location / In Probate


www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Hello !

See attachment

This LV commercial property grabbed my attention because :

- prime location on Las Vegas Blvd.

- property is in estate / sale must be approved by probate judge

- been on the market 3 days

Corner of Las Vegas Blvd / Bonanza .

4542 structure

.42 ac lot / need to verify

List price $ 510 000

I am speculating that someone my get approval from probate for a good investment sales price from this probate judge.

Still trying to gather more info on this property - let me know if you are interested.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

FDIC Considers Principal Reduction For Underwater Homeowners

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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FDIC Considers Principal Reduction Program

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is experimenting with a plan to help underwater home owners by reducing principal as long as they continue to pay their mortgages for an as-yet-undetermined period of time.

"We're thinking about it in terms of earned principal forgiveness. If you stay current on your mortgage, you would earn a principal reduction. It would only be for loans significantly underwater," says FDIC Chair Sheila C. Bair.

The initiative would be very limited in scope and would be launched later this year.

Lender Wells Fargo also has been carefully experimenting with principal reductions on a limited basis. "I do not believe that you can do a programmatic-wide or country-wide principal forgiveness [program]. You end up with many problems if you try to do this across the board," says Mike Heid, co-president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage.

Source: Washington Post, Renae Merle (02/26/2010)

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Commercial Foreclosures Loom - Huge Drag On Economy

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Even as the economy shows signs of recovery, a government watchdog is warning that another financial crisis is coming round the bend -- and that the Treasury Department and financial regulators are not prepared to deal with it. "There is a commercial real estate crisis on the horizon, and there are no easy solutions to the risks commercial real estate may pose to the financial system and the public," says a report issued Thursday by the Congressional Oversight Panel, the bailout watchdog led by Harvard Law professor and middle-class advocate Elizabeth Warren. "The Panel is concerned that until Treasury and bank supervisors take coordinated action to address forthrightly and transparently the state of the commercial real estate markets -- and the potential impact that a breakdown in those markets could have on local communities, small businesses, and individuals -- the financial crisis will not end." Over the next five years, about $1.4 trillion in commercial real estate loans will reach the end of their terms and require new financing. Nearly half are "underwater," meaning the borrower owes more than the property is worth.

Commercial property values have fallen more than 40 percent nationally since their 2007 peak. Vacancy rates are up and rents are down, further driving down the value of these properties. When the reckoning comes, it could threaten everyone from banks and pension funds to renters and small businesses -- and small banks could be particularly vulnerable. Warren warned against government inaction. "When commercial properties fail, the result is a downward spiral of economic contraction; job losses; deteriorating store fronts, office buildings and apartments; and the failure of the banks serving those communities," she said. "These are the same small banks that provide loans to the small businesses that create jobs and boost productivity. If hundreds more community banks go under the effect could be to dump sand in the gears of our economic recovery. Story continues below "We need to start now before the system is on the brink of collapse to work out a plan." The report's exhaustive description of the coming crisis isn't new. What's new is its conclusion, based on the panel's review and conversations with Treasury officials, that the U.S. government is unprepared. It "strongly urges Treasury to put a plan in place now to deal with the coming crisis," Warren told reporters Wednesday during a conference call.

The report spells out why: In a recent speech, Dennis Lockhart, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta...spoke about the "potential of a self-reinforcing negative feedback loop" involving bank lending, small business employment, and commercial real estate values. Lockhart noted that small businesses tend to rely heavily on smaller financial banks as a source of credit. He further noted that smaller financial institutions tend to have a larger-than-average concentration in commercial real estate lending. Lastly, he noted that banks with the highest levels of exposure to commercial real estate loans account for almost 40 percent of all small business loans. What this means is that a small bank that does not make many loans -- perhaps because it is hoarding capital to offset future losses in the value of its commercial real estate portfolio -- can feed a vicious cycle that does additional damage to the bank itself. The lack of lending may mean that small businesses that rely on the bank as a source of credit will be forced to shut their doors. This drives up vacancy rates on commercial real estate in the local region, which puts more downward pressure on real estate prices. And those falling prices can lead to additional write-downs in the bank's commercial real estate portfolio.

Because commercial real estate loans typically have three- to five-year terms, those loans are constantly being refinanced. The problem is that loans made at the height of the boom -- 2005 to 2007 -- were based on inflated values during a time of easy money, and now they're coming up on the end of their terms. "There was a big commercial real estate bubble, and it has to come down," Warren said. "And that means there will be losses to be borne by investors and banks." The report notes that $770 billion (53 percent) of commercial mortgages maturing from 2010 to 2014 are underwater. More than 60 percent of mortgages maturing in 2012 and 2013 are underwater. Many of these loans are likely to default, and the losses could cause more small- and medium-sized banks to collapse. The nation's 20 biggest banks -- those with at least $100 billion in assets -- have an average commercial real estate exposure equal to 79 percent of their total risk-based capital, according to the report. For the nation's roughly 7,000 community banks -- those with less than $10 billion in assets -- the average commercial real estate exposure equals 288 percent of total risk-based capital.

So the average community bank has about $3 in commercial real estate loans for every $1 set aside to cover possible losses. The panel calls for regulators to perform on small banks the kind of "stress tests" that were conducted last year on the nation's 19 biggest bank holding companies to assess their health if the economy deteriorated. But in a sign of the government's unpreparedness, Warren notes that last year's stress tests were overly limited. "Concerns over commercial real estate are very real," Warren said. "The largest loan losses are projected for 2011 and beyond, but the stress tests conducted on big Wall Street banks last year examined their stability only through 2010." There are more than 10,100 troubled commercial properties worth more than $205 billion across the U.S., according to Real Capital Analytics.

The report notes that banks alone could experience losses nearing $300 billion. The Treasury Department declined to comment on the report. However, a spokeswoman pointed to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's remarks during a September hearing before the panel. In discussing smaller banks and their exposure to commercial real estate, Geithner said they account for a small share of the nation's banking system, "so we are probably likely as a country to be able to manage through and withstand those remaining pressures."

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Custom Home - 5 Year Unrestricted Family Ski Pass : Grand Targhee Ski Resort w / purchase of home











www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Once $ million dollar home :

now $ 575 000

Lot 10 of the Redtail PUD, Driggs, ID 83422

This gorgeous custom home is a LEED certified (green built-energy efficient)home with reclaimed hardwood floors, granite counters, high end appliances, large stone fireplace & more. The next 5 Buyers will be given a 5 year unrestricted family ski pass at Grand Targhee Resort.

This home is potentially a short sale

Directions: Redtail is located 2 miles east of Driggs on the south side of Ski Hill Road; minutes from Grand Targhee

Free 5 Year Unrestricted Family Ski Pass : Grand Targhee Ski Resort w/ purchase of lot



www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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REDTAIL CROSSING

.53 AC LOT

$ 105 000

Legal Description: Lot 43 of Redtail PUD, Driggs, ID



The Redtail Community is located in the Teton Creek Basin, amongst wildlife & trees. Only minutes from Driggs & Grand Targhee Resort.

The first 5 Buyers will be given a 5 year unrestricted family ski pass at Grand Targhee Resort.


Directions: Redtail is located 2 miles east of Driggs on Ski Hill Road.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Las Vegas - East Sahara - Bank Owned Car Wash - Prime Location



www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Hello !


This LV car wash commercial listing has some good investment potential.


See attachment for listing detail :


- BANK OWNED CAR WASH


- Prime E Sahara Avenue location


- .57 ac / 84' x 298 '


- 8 bay


- 2400 sq ft canopy


- next to car sales lot


- listed for $ 399K


I really think the Sahara Ave prime location and the fact this is distressed bank owned property if bought at the right price it could be a really good investment.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Protecting Mortgage Interest Deduction

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Protecting the Mortgage Interest Deduction

On February 1, President Obama released his budget proposal for 2011. Consistent with its proposed FY 2010 budget, the Administration's again has recommended limiting the value of the mortgage interest deduction (MID) for upper income taxpayers by, in effect, converting the deduction to a 28% tax credit for those individuals currently in the 33% or 35% tax brackets.

The mortgage interest deduction has been part of U.S. tax policy since the federal tax code was first enacted in 1913. It is a remarkably effective tool that facilitates homeownership. While only about 30% of all taxpayers in any given year itemize their deductions, more than 3/4 of homeowners utilize the deduction over the period they own their home. For this reason, NAR is 100% opposed to the provision that modifies the MID and prepared to use its formidable array of resources against its enactment.

Under current law, interest paid on up to $1 million of mortgage debt, plus interest paid on home equity loans or lines of credit of up to $100,000 may be deducted. These caps apply to the combined indebtedness on a principal residence and one additional residence. As currently drafted, the Administration's proposal would change the MID by reducing the economic benefits of mortgage deductibility for families earning over $250,000 (AGI) and on single taxpayers earning over $200,000 (AGI).

In the past, most Members of Congress have supported our views and also opposed changes to the MID. Senator Max Baucus, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance, and Representative Charles Rangel, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, along with their other colleagues, pointed out in 2009 that changes to itemized deductions were ill advised stating "some of the reforms and offsets contained or referenced in the budget, such as the limitation on itemized deductions, raise concerns and will require more study as we determine the best policies for getting America back on track."

Today's housing market, while improving, cannot absorb any negative signals, no matter what the income level of the taxpayer and no matter what market segment of housing might be affected. As we did in 2009, NAR will launch a multi-phase plan of action to eliminate this provision from the budget plan. NAR has already sent letters to Members of the House of Representatives and the Senate and will continue to protect the MID.

Friday, February 19, 2010

2009 Foreclosure Trends - Worst States

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Foreclosing on 2009

by Selma Lewis, Research Economist

At the end of 2009, foreclosures were definitely "in the news." And for good reason. The number of foreclosures rose from 1.8 million at the end of 2008 to about 2.5 million at the end of 2009. According to RealtyTrac, at the end of 2009, there was a total of 2,824,674 properties involved in foreclosure filings; that total includes default notices, scheduled foreclosure auctions and bank repossessions. This means that 2.21 percent of all U.S. housing units - one in 45 - received at least one foreclosure filing during 2009. That is up from 1.84 percent in 2008, 1.03 percent in 2007 and 0.58 percent in 2006.

It is important, however, not to generalize foreclosure trends across all states. In fact, four states - Nevada, Arizona, Florida, and California - account for 45 percent of the foreclosure inventory (according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's Mortgage Delinquency Survey) and 50 percent of all delinquency filings (based on data from RealtyTrac). Nevada tops the list with more than 10 percent of its housing units receiving at least one delinquency notice. In general, throughout 2009 these four states topped the list with the highest rates of filings and the number of foreclosures.*

In contrast, Vermont boasted the lowest foreclosure rate - 0.05 percent of its housing units - as well as the lowest absolute number of foreclosures - 143. Similarly, North Dakota had only 0.13 percent of its housing units receiving a delinquency notice. West Virginia was third at 0.17 percent and South Dakota ranked fourth at 0.21 percent. For comparison, the average national delinquency rate in the same quarter was at 8.85 percent.
Current Situation

At the beginning of the foreclosure crisis, mortgage defaults were primarily among non-prime borrowers. But things changed. In 2009, the wave of foreclosures were largely among prime loans. This suggests that while the initial crisis stemmed from bad underwriting practices, the extension of the crisis was due to the national economic recession and borrowers losing their jobs. Actually, the number of seriously delinquent prime loans grew at a much faster rate in 2009 - 66 percent - than did the number of seriously delinquent subprime loans, which increased by about 20 percent. As a result, prime loan defaults accounted for about 60 percent of the increase in all delinquent loans over the past year.

Similarly, the number of prime loans in foreclosure has doubled in each of the past two years, 99 percent between 2007 and 2008, and 95 percent in 2009. In comparison, the number of subprime loans in the process of foreclosure increased only 5 percent in the past year and 12 percent the year before. There has been, however, a much lower share of subprime loans originated in the last year, falling by 14 percent from the year prior. In the 3rd quarter of 2009, prime mortgage foreclosures accounted for 54 percent of all foreclosures, while subprime loans accounted for 36 percent.

In the last couple of months, it has become evident that the foreclosure crisis has moved "up market." Among recent prime loan defaults, those loans with balances of between $417,000 and $600,000 have performed the worst. In fact, the monthly Mortgage Monitor by Lender Processing Services (LPS) suggests that non-agency jumbo prime loans have had the worst deterioration rates year-over-year for both delinquencies and foreclosures, with delinquencies increasing some 85 percent and foreclosures increasing some 190 percent, both significantly higher than other product types. In 2006, homes in the bottom one-third of home values accounted for almost 55 percent of all foreclosures. In 2009, the bottom one-third made up 35 percent of foreclosures, compared to 35 percent and 30 percent for the middle and top one-thirds, respectively. That means 30 percent of foreclosures are homes in the top tier of local home values, almost twice the proportion of foreclosures than three years ago. Data by Amherst Securities suggest that the increasing rate of negative equity among top home price tiers might be kindling this trend.
Underwater

Nearly 10.7 million, or 23 percent, of all residential properties with mortgages were in negative equity as of the second quarter of 2009. An additional 2.3 million mortgages were possibly approaching negative equity - or having less than five percent in equity. That adds up to nearly 28 percent of all residential properties with a mortgage nationwide.

The share of homeowners "under water" is still largely concentrated in five states - in fact, those states with the highest foreclosure rates, namely Nevada, Arizona, Florida, Michigan, and California. Among the top five states, the average negative equity share was 46 percent, compared to 13 percent for the remaining states.

In terms of larger metropolitan areas (with population greater than 50,000 people), the highest levels of negative equity are in those metros located in the top five "negative equity" states. Within smaller metropolitan areas largest losses are seen in Merced, CA and El Centro, CA (both 85 percent underwater), Modesto, CA and Stockton, CA (both 84 percent), Bakersfield, CA (79 percent), and Port St. Lucie, FL (79 percent).
"Strategic Defaults"

With estimates from LPS of some 25 percent of borrowers currently having negative equity nationwide, the question increasingly being asked is what the likelihood may be of homeowners underwater who are likely to "leave the pool", or "strategically default". According to a study by Experian and Oliver Wyman, more than a quarter of all existing defaults were found to be strategic and they more than doubled from 2007 to 2008 to 588,000. The study also found that borrowers with higher credit scores were 50 percent more likely to strategically default than those with lower credit scores.

In another survey study by Guiso, Sapienza, and Zingales**, the authors found that 26 percent of existing defaults were strategic. They also found that no household would default if the equity shortfall is less than 10 percent of the value of the home. Yet, 17 percent of households would default, even if they could afford to pay the mortgage, when the equity shortfall reaches 50 percent of the value
of their house.

Besides relocation costs, the most important variables in predicting strategic default are moral and social considerations. All things being equal, people who consider it immoral to default are 77 percent less likely to declare their intention to do so, while people who know someone who defaulted are 82 percent more likely to declare their intention to do so. That said, there is some research that suggests that while borrowers with negative equity should be walking away in droves, most homeowners choose not to strategically default due to the desire to avoid the shame and guilt of foreclosure and exaggerated anxiety over the perceived consequences from foreclosure.
What May Lie Ahead

What many analysts are finding alarming is the decreasing rate of delinquencies that are ending up in foreclosures. Loss mitigation efforts such as the Making Home Affordable Program (HAMP), as well as backlogs caused by the elevated delinquent loan volumes, are extending the number of days in delinquency. The data by LPS suggest that average number of delinquent days for loans in foreclosure has risen from 249 to 406 from January 2008 to December 2009 - an increase of 63 percent. The fear is that the increasing pool of troubled loans, also referred to as the "shadow inventory," is only going to lead to more inventory and home price problems in the future. (We'll discuss shadow inventory in a follow-up article in next month's Real Estate Insights.)

The impact of HAMP is still difficult to evaluate. December's numbers suggest 1,164,507 cumulative trial-period plan offers extended to borrowers, and 902,620 trial modifications started. The goal is 3-4 million homeowners with lower mortgage payments through a modification through 2012. Available data indicate around 112,000 modifications have turned permanent. The latest assessment of the program's progress by the State Foreclosure Prevention Working Group*** also suggests that while the HAMP has helped to slow down the foreclosure crisis, current efforts have been insufficient as the total number of struggling homeowners not on track for any foreclosure prevention assistance continues to grow. Indeed, the Working Group found that only four out of ten seriously delinquent borrowers were involved in loss mitigation efforts.

As the increase in the rates of prime loan defaults suggests, so does the predominant hardship reason for permanent modifications under the Making Home Affordable program: curtailment of income is currently the primary reason for mortgage defaulting. With the unemployment rate at or near 10 percent nationally, and millions of more Americans having either exited the workforce or remaining underemployed, it is very difficult to say definitively how the economy will play out in the next couple of years and what the effects will be on the future foreclosure rates.

More in-depth analysis of this issue by NAR Research is available at

Thursday, February 18, 2010


www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Hello !

Call me for revenue and expense figures for Las Vegas 8 plex.

At the square footage listing price this is a very good investment.

The debt service is what is hurting the current owner - good NOI before debt service.

$ 36K of NOI before debt service for 2009

Figures look very good for investment return.

Purchase price $ 425K

10 Must Have Features Of New Home

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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So what home features are buyers asking for the most in their search for a new home?

AVID Ratings Co., a firm that provides surveys and employee training to home builders across the United States and Canada, conducts an annual survey of home buyer preferences.

The company found the following hot home features reign supreme in today’s market:

1. Large kitchens with an island.

2. Energy-efficient appliances and high-efficiency insulation and windows. (These were the most sought-after “green” features from buyers.)

3. Home office or study

4. Main-floor master suite

5. Outdoor living room

6. Ceiling fans

7. Master suite soaker tubs and oversize showers with seating areas

8. Stone and brick exteriors

9. Community landscaping with walking paths and playgrounds.

10. Two-car garages

Are there any surprises from the list?

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Retail Distress Highest Amongst Unanchored Strips

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Distress is rampant in the retail sector, which leads all property sectors with $32 billion in distressed assets, according to New York-based Real Capital Analytics. But not all retail is created equal. A look inside the numbers reveals that unanchored strip centers, retail in regions plagued by high unemployment and deep housing busts, as well as loans originated in 2006 and 2007, are disproportionately more susceptible to distress.

For example, $9.4 billion in retail commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) loans are delinquent, in foreclosure or already taken back by banks, accounting for about 29% of the $32.6 billion of total delinquencies across all property types, according to Horsham, Pa.-based RealPoint LLC.

Markets where the economic crisis has cut sharpest — where housing prices have dropped precipitously and where unemployment is above the national average — have experienced higher levels of delinquencies and distress among retail properties, according to Suzanne Mulvee, real estate strategist with Boston-based Property & Portfolio Research.

Mulvee points to Las Vegas, Atlanta, Phoenix, Orlando and Jacksonville, Fla., as cities where pain is most acute among retail properties. For example, in Las Vegas the unemployment rate hit 13.1% in December and year-over-year home prices were down 26.6%, according to the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices.

In such markets, retail developers attempting to forecast demand for retail may have anticipated tens of thousands of new homes to be built and sold, Mulvee says. When those homes are either halted in construction or completed but left vacant, it creates an obvious problem for retail that was intended to serve those new homeowners. “Banks will tell you that,” she says. “Most of the issues are in their construction portfolios.”

Vintage variation

Another overriding pattern that emerges among distressed retail loans is vintage. Mortgages originated in 2006 and 2007 are more likely to default than retail loans originated in other years. “It’s clear people overpaid for those properties,” says Tom Fink, a senior vice president with Trepp. “The expectations that these properties would generate enough income to pay operating expenses and also cover debt service was wrong. People that bought in 2006 and 2007 got hit by the maelstrom and are suffering now.”

In addition to vintage, property type is another indicator of potential distress. Unanchored strip centers are having greater problems than regional malls, power centers and grocery-anchored strip centers, according to Fink. These properties — typically 75,000 sq. ft. or less — have fallen into trouble quickly by losing just one or two tenants.

For example, smaller centers that had Starbucks as an anchor were hammered by the coffee chain’s decision to shutter hundreds of locations last year. If vacancy falls below predetermined limits, co-tenancy clauses can allow other tenants to exit their lease agreements, potentially turning one or two dark stores into a larger exodus.

One thing that is not affecting the numbers, however, is General Growth’s bankruptcy. Despite the firm’s ongoing restructuring, it has largely remained current on all its debt obligations. Some of its loans are in special serving, but the firm was never delinquent on its payments other than a slight hiccup that delayed payments right around the time it filed for bankruptcy.

Outlook

Most experts think the worst is yet to come for retail and that loans will continue to go bad at a brisk rate throughout 2010.

“Retail is still going to be one of the most troubled assets,” Fink says. “The population has shifted within communities and significant big-box chains have gone out of business with no new concepts to take their place. At one time if OfficeMax closed then maybe Babies “R” Us or Linens ‘n Things or Circuit City would move in. Those retailers are all gone. The space they occupied remains empty, there is nobody to fill it.”

Banks in 2009 added to today’s woes by granting one-year extensions to some borrowers that were having problems meeting their debt obligations at loan maturity. But that process may be near its end. In some cases, banks may have granted extensions in order to allow time to negotiate with borrowers, but after six or eight months with no resolutions it is time to foreclose, Fink says.

Borrowers that were just able to scrape enough money together to make monthly mortgage payments in 2009 also may have trouble in 2010 because of eroding property fundamentals.

“A lot of the banks have been able to extend because the debt service coverage was there, but this is the year where the debt service coverage starts to take the bigger hit,” Mulvee says. That’s because property incomes are continuing to erode as vacancies increase, existing retailers get lease extensions or new retailers sign on at lower rental rates than lenders had projected when the loans were originated.

Inadequate property income may remove the extension option and force more foreclosures, Mulvee says, but that creates a new problem as lenders attempt to liquidate foreclosed assets. Each sold property adds to the data appraisers and investors use to determine market pricing. Foreclosed properties typically sell on the low end of the price spectrum, bringing down overall asset values.

“If they kick too much product they will lower the value of what they are holding,” she says. “They are trying to avoid creating that spiral.”

Looming Foreclosures Will Not Hurt Market

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Shadow Inventory Unlikely to Hurt Market

Nearly 5 million houses and condos, of which the mortgages are delinquent, will go through foreclosure over the next few years, a new study by John Burns Real Estate Consulting Inc. concludes.

This represents more than half of the 7.7 million households now behind on their mortgage payments. The situation is worst in Arizona, California, Florida, and Nevada. Burns calculates that there is an inventory equivalent to 27 months of sales in Orlando, 24 months in Miami, and 18 months in Las Vegas.

Consulting firm CEO John Burns says there is strong investor demand for these properties, so as long as employment continues to recover and interest rates remain moderate, these sales won’t have much impact on overall prices.

Source: The Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty (02/16/2010)

Friday, February 12, 2010

Invest In Vacant Lots

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Vacant Lots Become Hot Property
Vacant residential lots are looking better and better to real estate investors.

The cost of a finished, ready to build lot, can cost a developer about 25 percent of the finished home price. There are a number of these ready-to-go lots on the market at about half what they actually cost to prepare. Investor groups are snapping them up, figuring that the time will come soon when they will be in demand.

"The country needs 1.2 million new units for the next 10 years just because of population growth," says Scott Clark, president of American Development Partners, which has bought thousands of vacant lots all over the West. "[U.S. builders] built about 500,000 units in 2009 and 600,000 units in 2008, so there eventually will be pent-up demand. We want to get as many of those finished lots as we can because as demand begins to rise, the need for housing will become painfully obvious. The delta (ratio of change to value of underlying asset) in this investment will be significant."

Source: Inman News, Scott Bergsman (02/12/2010)

Commercial Loan Defaults To Weaken Economy

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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More Commercial Failures Predicted

Failed commercial loans could leave U.S. towns and cities with thousands of empty buildings and cause still more bank failures, the Congressional Oversight Panel predicted Thursday.

Commercial property values have declined more than 40 percent in the last three years, the report said.

Small banks are particularly hard hit by this situation because they do the most small-business lending. The report blamed the crisis on lending policies that valued properties based on inflated prices and said banks failed to consider the possibility of reduced consumer demand from a severe recession.

The report concluded that these looming failures could further weaken the financial system and inhibit the flow of credit.

Source: The Associated Press, Daniel Wagner (02/11/2010)

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Real Estate / foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming - Las Vegas Nevada




www.buytetonland.com

www.buylvland.com


Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

---------------------------------------------

Hello !



Call me regarding this property : NOT A SHORT SALE - NOT BANK OWNED - CONVENTIONAL SALE !

JUST FELL OUT OF ESCROW !!! ( SEE ATTACHMENT )



Highly desirable 26th floor 1 bedroom luxury suite in MGM Signature high rise :



- 1 BR

- 2 bath

- 26th floor

- strip views

- balcony

- $ 259K

* Highly desirable rental pool property

This unit traded for $ 830k IN 12/06

Just an unbelievable deal in THE MOST SOUGHT AFTER LAS VEGAS STRIP PROPERTIES.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Real Estate / Foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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4 Reasons to Sell Now

Selling a property in this tough market can seem like a challenge. Here are four factors that actually make this a good time to post a For-Sale sign.

* Sell low and buy low. Because all property values are down, the loss on the property a home owner sells is really only a paper loss because the next property he buys also will be a bargain. If he buys smartly, when prices come back up in a few years, he’ll be in better shape.
* Down-payment help is widely available. While nothing-down loans have disappeared, it is easy to find down-payment assistance for lower-income and first-time home buyers. Programs vary all over the country, but one good way to find them is to search online for “down-payment assistance programs” and the name of your region.
* Your uncle has money to share. Besides the $8,000 first-time home buyer tax credit and the $6,500 move-up credit, there are an array of energy tax credits that can make home improvements pay off in cash.
* Good help is available. Really talented real estate practitioners, contractors, and designers are available and eager for business.


Source: McClatchy Tribune, Kate Forgach (02/07/2010)

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Real Estate / Foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Mortgage Rates Top 5%

Long-term mortgage rates climbed above 5 percent this week. According to Freddie Mac, 30-year fixed loans averaged 5.01 percent compared to 4.98 percent last week.

Here are the across-the-board averages for other mortgages:

* 15-year fixed loans rose to 4.40 percent from 4.39 percent
* Five-year adjustable-rate mortgages climbed to 4.27 percent from 4.25 percent.
* One-year ARMs fell to 4.22 percent from 4.29 percent a week ago.


Source: Chicago Sun-Times, Francine Knowles (02/05/10)

Friday, February 5, 2010

Real Estate / Foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming


www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Just released - bank owned foreclosure property :

- 9.76 acres

- 1900 sq ft old log cabin

- not in subdivision , all the horses you want

- $ 140K

This property will not last long call ph 208 390 0737

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Real Estate / Foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Apartments Moving in the Right Direction

A quarterly survey of conditions in the apartment market hasn’t changed much in the last six months, a positive sign in this tough atmosphere.

The National Multi Housing Council, which conducted the survey, reports that there was a steady uptick in sales volume and equity financing was increasingly available, “which represents another step, albeit a small one, toward a more normal transactions market, said NMHC Chief Economist Mark Obrinsky.

Obrinsky predicts that when job growth returns, “a large wave of Echo Boomers will enter the supply-constrained market and we should see above average rent growth.”

Source: National Multi Housing Council (02/02/2010)

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Real Estate / Foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Small Banks at Greatest Risk

Rating agency Standard & Poor’s said Monday that for commercial real estate, the worst is probably yet to come.

Vacancies remain high and rents are declining, causing more delinquencies and lower prices, S&P said.

While big banks have the most real estate exposure compared to smaller institutions, they probably aren’t facing the greatest risk.

The agency said small community “unrated” banks made the riskiest deals and continue to hold loans with the most down side.

Source: Reuters (02/01/2010)

Real Estate / Foreclosure / Teton Valley Idaho - Jackson Hole Wyoming

www.buytetonland.com

Timothy S Anderson
Windermere Real Estate Teton Valley
Windermere Prestige Properties Las Vegas Nevada
pH 208 390 0737
email : buy@buytetonland.com

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Market for Ski Homes Brisk After Prices Slide

Falling prices for ski vacation homes are creating the best buyers market in years, real estate professionals in winter resort areas say.

For the first time since the resort business slowed in 2007, Tom Peak, an associate with Prudential Utah Real Estate in Park City, says he’s seeing significant demand.

''Normally we don't see a lot of activity until Christmas time,'' Peek says. 'But our market started picking up around Thanksgiving, before the slopes were even open.''

Practitioners say that prices in many areas are about half what they were before the market slowed, and cash is king.

Source: The New York Times, Irene Rawlings (01/29/2010)