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Digg it UP - Factors Contributing to the Down Real Estate Market
A Holistic View of Six Sigma the median price of homes. If the average working family in an area makes a combined income of $45,000, traditionally the house they can afford will be in the range of $112,500 to (if they can get a really low interest rate mortgage) $150,000. Average house prices can’t rise too high or there will be no one that can qualify to buy them."Only the overall review of the entire business as an economic system can give real knowledge" - Peter F. DruckerNo one needs to emphasize the holistic approach the Six Sigma deployment takes on overall business processes. All processes in an organization present at least one opportunity for improvement. Having a limited picture about the limitations of Six Sigma and its applications projects an all together different picture.At the enterprise level, each company must consider the entire application of the project and this is certainly beyond the line employee level.A Little BackgroundWe have all known Six Sigma as a deployment strategy related to company activities and we have examples for justification. We have many glaring examples of successful and not so successful companies in recent history. Motorola, DuPont and General electric are some cases in point. Also known to us are the failures of deployment mostly in non- manufacturing businesses.While thinking along the same lines, if in your understanding, Six Sigma is not applicable to your organization or industry, perhaps what first step you may take is answer whether it can improve the financial situation of your company within an acceptable timeframe. This fundamental answer must be obtained even before the project selection process. Answers to whether Six Sigma can work in all processes and parts of the organization must be put into place.Thinking Beyond The Shop FloorNotions and misconceptions such as those confining Six Sigma to the shop floor and relegating it as something of a quality implementation tool dedicated for manufacturing industry must be shown its due place for it to show results of a An area with weak economic viability gives way to increased crime, poorer quality schools, rundown neighborhoods and declining home values. Median household income across the United States, when inflation is factored in, has dropped in 45 states. Of the four states that have had an increase in income, the highest was Rhode Island with an increase of 4.4% followed by Wyoming with a 4.1% increase in median income. Montana and North Dakota followed with increases of 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. Even though people are making the same amount of money or even a little more than they did a few years ago, their buying power has decreased. Media Projecting Continued Down Market/Bubble Burst Blaming the media for a downwardly spiraling market is very much a “shoot the messenger” scenario. But continuous speculation on when the housing price bubble was going to burst caused an expectation in people’s minds that became a reality. The bubble didn’t have to burst. Housing prices could have gone up and stabilized. But forecasting impending doom is a much better attention-getter than forecasting the status quo. And most media outlets are businesses that have to show a profit at the end of the year. Even though we realize that the media is biased (and we support the specific media that validates our biases), we still give the media credit as a disinterested third party that is just reporting the facts. Just as history is written by the victors, the slant on the information that is reported serves the media outlets’ purposes. While most are not manipulating the news with a Machiavellian glee, headlines or news teases are somewhat sensationalized to bring in readers or viewers. How many times has a headline caught your attention and when you read the article you find that the headline had very little to do with the facts of the story? The problem is that many people don’t bother to read much more than the headline and first paragraph, or they hear the news story teaser but don’t watch the actual report. Hearing or seeing the same information repeatedly eventually turns what may have been merely a theory into fact in your brain. The repetition alone creates credibility in our minds. Knowing what caused the current market in your area can help you to determine how to locate houses, negotiate with sellers (pay The Difference Between Critical Illness and Disability Insurance Anyone who doesn’t realize that much of the United States is in a down real estate market right now has either been living in a cave or been in a coma. You could join with all the real estate investors, agents, mortgage brokers and other supporting characters who are involved in the real estate transaction in a collective moan of pain. But you would do better to understand what contributed to the current market downturn in order to find ways to make money in this market.While not a life insurance product, I think it is worth mentioning about the other two more popular types of insurance. Instead of paying a death benefit, critical illness insurance and disability insurance pay a living benefit.Critical illness (CI) insurance was developed by a South African doctor in the early 1980’s after he was alarmed that while many of his patients had standard life insurance, it was of no use to them if they had a heart attack and survived. Critical illness insurance will pay a lump sum benefit should you be diagnosed with a serious illness or condition and survive a set time frame (usually one month). The big three conditions are heart attack, stroke and cancer – but some insurance companies add additional 18 – 20 conditions under their plans (leukemia, severe burns, loss of limbs…). CI application forms are very similar to their life insurance counterparts, the biggest difference being that a far greater weight is placed on you immediate family’s health history. The insurance company needs to know if there is a history of heart attack or other diseases to determine your eligibility for this type of insurance.It is vitally important to read and understand the definitions of all of these illnesses, as some of them can be very technical. Also you will have additional riders (add-ons), that you can select when you sign up for this type of insurance – the most popular being the ‘return of premium’ rider (ROP). If you select the return of premium rider, you will be able to have all (or a portion) of your premiums refunded to you, if you have not collected on the policy over a specific timeframe.Disability insurance will pay a monthly benefit while you are disabled a The buying opportunities in this market are huge and self-evident. We are in a buyers’ market. The problem for most investors is that they are afraid of getting stuck in a property, either not being able to sell or ending up upside down because of a drop in price or both. There are several components that contribute to a down market and knowing what those components are can help you to find a way around them. Some common components of down markets are: Too many houses on the market Higher interest rates which limits the number of buyers House prices over-inflated due to past hot market Economic turmoil in an area Media projecting continued down market/bubble burst Let’s tackle them one by one. Too many houses on the market. Too many houses on the market can be caused by either having too many people jumping on the bandwagon at the end of a hot market or it could be caused by an actual slowdown in sales. In today’s market in Tampa, FL, for example, houses are selling at about the same rate that they were selling last year at this time. However, because Tampa had such a hot market, people were motivated by the outrageous prices that they saw other people getting for their houses and everyone decided that this was the time to sell. Unfortunately, most “civilians” missed the hot market and got in too late. They put top of the market prices on their homes and have watched the houses sit on the market for three, six, even up to nine months. Unfortunately, over the past nine months, prices have corrected in the Tampa Bay market (and many other areas of the country) and have declined by an average of 10%. Sellers have been slow to lower their prices to meet with this new reality. Buyers are waiting for the other shoe to drop. A symptom of a glut of houses on the market is an increased length of time that a house takes to sell. Why? There are more houses to buy than there are buyers to buy them. Simple supply and demand. When the supply is large, demand drops. Prices drop after demand drops. When prices drop, demand usually goes up. We are not yet at the slack tide point where prices bottom out and before demand goes up. Right now, prices are still dropping. It will be many more months before demand goes up again. The interesting thing about the length of time on market is how quickly investors have forgotten what a normal market looks like. Three years ago, 90 days on the market was the average for home sales in the Tampa area. We are back to that point again today. Check with your local Board of Realtors to see what the average length of time on market is today compared to three or four years ago. The down market you are experiencing may be more of a return to a normal market when you look at the numbers. Unfortunately, what we are about to see is a second wave of houses coming on the market due to foreclosure. There are many factors that are causing the foreclosure rate to double, even quadruple in some areas: rising taxes and insurance, adjustable rates rising, gas prices, even credit card minimum payments. We will talk about rising taxes and insurance rates in more detail, but don’t discount the drastic effect of rising gasoline prices and increased credit card minimum payments have had on homeowners. The U.S. is a paycheck to paycheck society. A year ago, most families were one or two paychecks away from financial disaster. Many made up the shortfall by using credit cards and made the minimum monthly payment. When credit card companies increased the minimum payment, in some cases doubling the minimum due, people were not able to make the payment. Missing a payment or being late on a payment resulted in the credit card issuers upping the interest rate on the cards. If someone is having difficulty making a minimum payment on a card with a 10% interest rate, they certainly are not going to be able to make the minimum payment on a card that has risen to 19% or higher. The effect of gasoline price increases is transparent at the pump. A tank that used to cost $20 to fill up now costs $40 or more. If you are filling your tank just once a week, that extra $80 a month is causing a pinch. Since most U.S. families are two-car households, there is now an extra $160 going out the door per month. That is close to $2,000 a year. Less apparent is the increase in the cost of consumer goods across the boards. Think about how goods are shipped in the U.S. The cost of trucking goods, from groceries to building supplies to clothing, has gone up due to rising gasoline prices. And that cost is passed on to the consumer. People who used to live paycheck to paycheck are now one to two paychecks behind. If you want proof, go to an Amscot or any paycheck advance place and see the working people lined up. Higher Interest Rates Limit the Number of Buyers. One of the contributing factors to our recent hot market was low interest rates. People who could never before afford a house were becoming homeowners, creating a whole new pool of buyers. Lower interest rates also meant that people could buy more house for their money because people buy based on the monthly payment. For example, a $225,000 mortgage at 8.5% interest would have a principle and interest payment of $1,717.82 The same mortgage at 5.5% interest comes in with a monthly payment of $1,271.67, a difference of almost $450. When people can buy more house for their money, the median house price tends to rise. Conversely, when interest rates go up, monthly payments go up and many people have to buy a lower priced home or are priced out of the market. Higher interest rates lead to fewer buyers which leads to less demand. Which leads to a glut of houses on the market. Houses Over-Priced Due to Past Hot Market Buyers are waiting for prices to stabilize. The recent hot market inflated prices and in some cases over-inflated prices. Demand was high and prices went up with the demand. In some markets prices have held, but in many markets, prices are declining (or correcting depending on who you talk to) and buyers are reluctant and rightly so, to buy in a falling market. No one wants to pay $350,000 for a house only to have an identical house in the same neighborhood sell the next month for $320,000. It is one thing to buy a house for $125,000, hold it and watch the value shoot to $275,000 in two years then have it fall back to $240,000. Even with the decline, you had a huge upside growth and the loss is an opportunity cost; it is on paper. Buying a house and seeing the price drop and stay below what you paid for it is an actual loss. The people who are buying right now are people who have to buy a house (they have been transferred to an area, they sold their house and need another, etc.) or people who have found a deal far enough below market to ensure that the decline in prices won’t affect them. Everyone else is sitting. And watching. And waiting. Economic Turmoil in an Area. The recent run up of house prices across the country resulted in a corresponding run up of property taxes. Property taxes are based on the assessed value of the house. In order to keep taxes from going up, the local taxing authority would have to reduce the millage rate. Not a likely scenario. The millage rate (also known as the tax rate) is a figure applied to the value of your property to calculate your property tax liability. One “mill” represents one dollar of tax per thousand dollars of taxable property value. For example, if the millage rate is .008557 for each dollar of value, multiply the millage rate by 1000 to get the price per $1,000 or simply move the rate three decimal places to the right. Millage rates are usually rounded off to two decimal places so if the millage rate is 8.56 and your house’s taxable value (not its actual value) is $100,000, your property taxes would be $856. Now, if you originally had a taxable value of $100,000 on your house and due to rising market prices its taxable value went up to $200,000, your property taxes would double to $1,712. That is an extra $71 a month. Not a hardship to most people. But realize that many people are on a fixed income or are living paycheck to paycheck. That extra $71 this year may be an extra $80 next year and an extra $100 the next year. If people’s incomes aren’t rising to cover the additional costs (and cost of living increases have been averaging around 3% – many companies have not been giving raises at all), then a cash crunch develops. In some locations, another contributing factor to economic turmoil is an increase in insurance rates. Insurers have taken huge hits in recent years and are passing their costs on to consumers. Because insurance is required by lenders, homeowners are not able to opt out from this expense. While most homeowners are not increasing their insurance coverage to correspond with the rise in property value, the rates themselves have increased. The same amount of coverage costs more. In addition, many people rushed to get cash out refinances to pay off consumer debt, buy “toys” or send their kids to college. The larger mortgage required higher insurance coverage. Now they are facing higher mortgage, tax and insurance payments. In some areas, the job market has stagnated or even fallen off. Large corporations have announced layoffs of employees (think US automakers Ford and GM, for example). Outsourcing is another major factor in what is now a transitional job market. While unemployment rates have been trending downward indicating a net increase of jobs in the United States, jobs are not being created equally throughout the fifty states or even equally within areas of a state. And, the jobs that are being created are not necessarily higher paying jobs. A GM line worker who was making $52,000 a year plus benefits is not going to easily find a position that will pay him that much, particularly if he doesn’t have a college degree and transferable skills. He will be lucky to find a position at half or two-thirds of his former salary. A poor job market, which may either be lack of jobs available or a market with a low pay scale inhibits the amount of buyers as well as limits the median price of homes. If the average working family in an area makes a combined income of $45,000, traditionally the house they can afford will be in the range of $112,500 to (if they can get a really low interest rate mortgage) $150,000. Average house prices can’t rise too high or there will be no one that can qualify to buy them. An area with weak economic viability gives way to increased crime, poorer quality schools, rundown neighborhoods and declining home values. Median household income across the United States, when inflation is factored in, has dropped in 45 states. Of the four states that have had an increase in income, the highest was Rhode Island with an increase of 4.4% followed by Wyoming with a 4.1% increase in median income. Montana and North Dakota followed with increases of 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. Even though people are making the same amount of money or even a little more than they did a few years ago, their buying power has decreased. Media Projecting Continued Down Market/Bubble Burst Blaming the media for a downwardly spiraling market is very much a “shoot the messenger” scenario. But continuous speculation on when the housing price bubble was going to burst caused an expectation in people’s minds that became a reality. The bubble didn’t have to burst. Housing prices could have gone up and stabilized. But forecasting impending doom is a much better attention-getter than forecasting the status quo. And most media outlets are businesses that have to show a profit at the end of the year. Even though we realize that the media is biased (and we support the specific media that validates our biases), we still give the media credit as a disinterested third party that is just reporting the facts. Just as history is written by the victors, the slant on the information that is reported serves the media outlets’ purposes. While most are not manipulating the news with a Machiavellian glee, headlines or news teases are somewhat sensationalized to bring in readers or viewers. How many times has a headline caught your attention and when you read the article you find that the headline had very little to do with the facts of the story? The problem is that many people don’t bother to read much more than the headline and first paragraph, or they hear the news story teaser but don’t watch the actual report. Hearing or seeing the same information repeatedly eventually turns what may have been merely a theory into fact in your brain. The repetition alone creates credibility in our minds. Knowing what caused the current market in your area can help you to determine how to locate houses, negotiate with sellers (payi Selling on eBay - Have You Found the Magic Formula Yet? rices are still dropping. It will be many more months before demand goes up again.Selling on eBay can be very profitable and a great way to make some cash while clearing your house of unwanted items at the same time. It's quite simple, just describe and photograph your items and seven to ten days later you'll get a payment though paypal or by cheque posted to you.With so many items available, how do you ensure that your item sells above similar items. Despite many ebooks, self acclaimed experts and guides on the subject, there simply is no magic formula to absolutely guarantee you sell successfully. Even professional power sellers sometimes have a maximum of just 60% of auctions finish successfully. However you can increase the odds of your auction finishing successfully by using your knowledge of how buyers search.The title of your item is the most important part of your item description. The reasoning behind this is because a standard eBay search will only search item titles. A massive 70% of buyers use eBays search box to find the items. Keywords entered into the search box are not compared with the item description or sub-title.So ideally you need to research into your item before listing it, or at least before deciding on the title of your item. To assist you with there are two services I recommend. The first of these is called Keyword-Pro which is a comprehensive list of top 50 keywords in every eBay category. Updated weekly, the service can give you a wide range of keywords to insert into your title to give it a higher chance of being found in searches.Details can be found at: http://trading-web-solutions.com/keywords/eBay themselves have a smaller less powerful version that lists the top 10 keywords in each category. With just 10 words you are The interesting thing about the length of time on market is how quickly investors have forgotten what a normal market looks like. Three years ago, 90 days on the market was the average for home sales in the Tampa area. We are back to that point again today. Check with your local Board of Realtors to see what the average length of time on market is today compared to three or four years ago. The down market you are experiencing may be more of a return to a normal market when you look at the numbers. Unfortunately, what we are about to see is a second wave of houses coming on the market due to foreclosure. There are many factors that are causing the foreclosure rate to double, even quadruple in some areas: rising taxes and insurance, adjustable rates rising, gas prices, even credit card minimum payments. We will talk about rising taxes and insurance rates in more detail, but don’t discount the drastic effect of rising gasoline prices and increased credit card minimum payments have had on homeowners. The U.S. is a paycheck to paycheck society. A year ago, most families were one or two paychecks away from financial disaster. Many made up the shortfall by using credit cards and made the minimum monthly payment. When credit card companies increased the minimum payment, in some cases doubling the minimum due, people were not able to make the payment. Missing a payment or being late on a payment resulted in the credit card issuers upping the interest rate on the cards. If someone is having difficulty making a minimum payment on a card with a 10% interest rate, they certainly are not going to be able to make the minimum payment on a card that has risen to 19% or higher. The effect of gasoline price increases is transparent at the pump. A tank that used to cost $20 to fill up now costs $40 or more. If you are filling your tank just once a week, that extra $80 a month is causing a pinch. Since most U.S. families are two-car households, there is now an extra $160 going out the door per month. That is close to $2,000 a year. Less apparent is the increase in the cost of consumer goods across the boards. Think about how goods are shipped in the U.S. The cost of trucking goods, from groceries to building supplies to clothing, has gone up due to rising gasoline prices. And that cost is passed on to the consumer. People who used to live paycheck to paycheck are now one to two paychecks behind. If you want proof, go to an Amscot or any paycheck advance place and see the working people lined up. Higher Interest Rates Limit the Number of Buyers. One of the contributing factors to our recent hot market was low interest rates. People who could never before afford a house were becoming homeowners, creating a whole new pool of buyers. Lower interest rates also meant that people could buy more house for their money because people buy based on the monthly payment. For example, a $225,000 mortgage at 8.5% interest would have a principle and interest payment of $1,717.82 The same mortgage at 5.5% interest comes in with a monthly payment of $1,271.67, a difference of almost $450. When people can buy more house for their money, the median house price tends to rise. Conversely, when interest rates go up, monthly payments go up and many people have to buy a lower priced home or are priced out of the market. Higher interest rates lead to fewer buyers which leads to less demand. Which leads to a glut of houses on the market. Houses Over-Priced Due to Past Hot Market Buyers are waiting for prices to stabilize. The recent hot market inflated prices and in some cases over-inflated prices. Demand was high and prices went up with the demand. In some markets prices have held, but in many markets, prices are declining (or correcting depending on who you talk to) and buyers are reluctant and rightly so, to buy in a falling market. No one wants to pay $350,000 for a house only to have an identical house in the same neighborhood sell the next month for $320,000. It is one thing to buy a house for $125,000, hold it and watch the value shoot to $275,000 in two years then have it fall back to $240,000. Even with the decline, you had a huge upside growth and the loss is an opportunity cost; it is on paper. Buying a house and seeing the price drop and stay below what you paid for it is an actual loss. The people who are buying right now are people who have to buy a house (they have been transferred to an area, they sold their house and need another, etc.) or people who have found a deal far enough below market to ensure that the decline in prices won’t affect them. Everyone else is sitting. And watching. And waiting. Economic Turmoil in an Area. The recent run up of house prices across the country resulted in a corresponding run up of property taxes. Property taxes are based on the assessed value of the house. In order to keep taxes from going up, the local taxing authority would have to reduce the millage rate. Not a likely scenario. The millage rate (also known as the tax rate) is a figure applied to the value of your property to calculate your property tax liability. One “mill” represents one dollar of tax per thousand dollars of taxable property value. For example, if the millage rate is .008557 for each dollar of value, multiply the millage rate by 1000 to get the price per $1,000 or simply move the rate three decimal places to the right. Millage rates are usually rounded off to two decimal places so if the millage rate is 8.56 and your house’s taxable value (not its actual value) is $100,000, your property taxes would be $856. Now, if you originally had a taxable value of $100,000 on your house and due to rising market prices its taxable value went up to $200,000, your property taxes would double to $1,712. That is an extra $71 a month. Not a hardship to most people. But realize that many people are on a fixed income or are living paycheck to paycheck. That extra $71 this year may be an extra $80 next year and an extra $100 the next year. If people’s incomes aren’t rising to cover the additional costs (and cost of living increases have been averaging around 3% – many companies have not been giving raises at all), then a cash crunch develops. In some locations, another contributing factor to economic turmoil is an increase in insurance rates. Insurers have taken huge hits in recent years and are passing their costs on to consumers. Because insurance is required by lenders, homeowners are not able to opt out from this expense. While most homeowners are not increasing their insurance coverage to correspond with the rise in property value, the rates themselves have increased. The same amount of coverage costs more. In addition, many people rushed to get cash out refinances to pay off consumer debt, buy “toys” or send their kids to college. The larger mortgage required higher insurance coverage. Now they are facing higher mortgage, tax and insurance payments. In some areas, the job market has stagnated or even fallen off. Large corporations have announced layoffs of employees (think US automakers Ford and GM, for example). Outsourcing is another major factor in what is now a transitional job market. While unemployment rates have been trending downward indicating a net increase of jobs in the United States, jobs are not being created equally throughout the fifty states or even equally within areas of a state. And, the jobs that are being created are not necessarily higher paying jobs. A GM line worker who was making $52,000 a year plus benefits is not going to easily find a position that will pay him that much, particularly if he doesn’t have a college degree and transferable skills. He will be lucky to find a position at half or two-thirds of his former salary. A poor job market, which may either be lack of jobs available or a market with a low pay scale inhibits the amount of buyers as well as limits the median price of homes. If the average working family in an area makes a combined income of $45,000, traditionally the house they can afford will be in the range of $112,500 to (if they can get a really low interest rate mortgage) $150,000. Average house prices can’t rise too high or there will be no one that can qualify to buy them. An area with weak economic viability gives way to increased crime, poorer quality schools, rundown neighborhoods and declining home values. Median household income across the United States, when inflation is factored in, has dropped in 45 states. Of the four states that have had an increase in income, the highest was Rhode Island with an increase of 4.4% followed by Wyoming with a 4.1% increase in median income. Montana and North Dakota followed with increases of 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. Even though people are making the same amount of money or even a little more than they did a few years ago, their buying power has decreased. Media Projecting Continued Down Market/Bubble Burst Blaming the media for a downwardly spiraling market is very much a “shoot the messenger” scenario. But continuous speculation on when the housing price bubble was going to burst caused an expectation in people’s minds that became a reality. The bubble didn’t have to burst. Housing prices could have gone up and stabilized. But forecasting impending doom is a much better attention-getter than forecasting the status quo. And most media outlets are businesses that have to show a profit at the end of the year. Even though we realize that the media is biased (and we support the specific media that validates our biases), we still give the media credit as a disinterested third party that is just reporting the facts. Just as history is written by the victors, the slant on the information that is reported serves the media outlets’ purposes. While most are not manipulating the news with a Machiavellian glee, headlines or news teases are somewhat sensationalized to bring in readers or viewers. How many times has a headline caught your attention and when you read the article you find that the headline had very little to do with the facts of the story? The problem is that many people don’t bother to read much more than the headline and first paragraph, or they hear the news story teaser but don’t watch the actual report. Hearing or seeing the same information repeatedly eventually turns what may have been merely a theory into fact in your brain. The repetition alone creates credibility in our minds. Knowing what caused the current market in your area can help you to determine how to locate houses, negotiate with sellers (pay Email Marketing Basics - How to Write an Email II f the contributing factors to our recent hot market was low interest rates. People who could never before afford a house were becoming homeowners, creating a whole new pool of buyers. Lower interest rates also meant that people could buy more house for their money because people buy based on the monthly payment. For example, a $225,000 mortgage at 8.5% interest would have a principle and interest payment of $1,717.82 The same mortgage at 5.5% interest comes in with a monthly payment of $1,271.67, a difference of almost $450. When people can buy more house for their money, the median house price tends to rise.You never know what is going to be in the email. You don’t even know what mood the person is going to be in. You don’t know if they are happy or sad or angry or peaceful. You don’t know if they want to start a war or end a war or anything.There is anticipation, excitement.That, my friend, is how your emails should be. They should NOT be predictable, boring, or unexciting. They should not be passively written from some kind of formula. They should proceed from your gut, from your heart.Now do not get me wrong here – you have to know what you are going to say. And you should always write from within your own personality.Do not try to be someone you are not. Do not try to write emails just like someone else because they are successful and you are not yet successful.I remember when I was first starting online, one of my first email sequences I just took a whole bunch of affiliate emails and looped them together. That did not do well. Why? It was not my style. You see, the people coming to my web site and email campaign had read my articles – they liked my style or they wouldn’t have signed up for my ecourse. But then my ecourse was some scripted set of emails from someone else. And they knew it wasn’t me.Now, maybe they didn’t really know it wasn’t me – but they knew they didn’t connect like they did when they read my articles Conversely, when interest rates go up, monthly payments go up and many people have to buy a lower priced home or are priced out of the market. Higher interest rates lead to fewer buyers which leads to less demand. Which leads to a glut of houses on the market. Houses Over-Priced Due to Past Hot Market Buyers are waiting for prices to stabilize. The recent hot market inflated prices and in some cases over-inflated prices. Demand was high and prices went up with the demand. In some markets prices have held, but in many markets, prices are declining (or correcting depending on who you talk to) and buyers are reluctant and rightly so, to buy in a falling market. No one wants to pay $350,000 for a house only to have an identical house in the same neighborhood sell the next month for $320,000. It is one thing to buy a house for $125,000, hold it and watch the value shoot to $275,000 in two years then have it fall back to $240,000. Even with the decline, you had a huge upside growth and the loss is an opportunity cost; it is on paper. Buying a house and seeing the price drop and stay below what you paid for it is an actual loss. The people who are buying right now are people who have to buy a house (they have been transferred to an area, they sold their house and need another, etc.) or people who have found a deal far enough below market to ensure that the decline in prices won’t affect them. Everyone else is sitting. And watching. And waiting. Economic Turmoil in an Area. The recent run up of house prices across the country resulted in a corresponding run up of property taxes. Property taxes are based on the assessed value of the house. In order to keep taxes from going up, the local taxing authority would have to reduce the millage rate. Not a likely scenario. The millage rate (also known as the tax rate) is a figure applied to the value of your property to calculate your property tax liability. One “mill” represents one dollar of tax per thousand dollars of taxable property value. For example, if the millage rate is .008557 for each dollar of value, multiply the millage rate by 1000 to get the price per $1,000 or simply move the rate three decimal places to the right. Millage rates are usually rounded off to two decimal places so if the millage rate is 8.56 and your house’s taxable value (not its actual value) is $100,000, your property taxes would be $856. Now, if you originally had a taxable value of $100,000 on your house and due to rising market prices its taxable value went up to $200,000, your property taxes would double to $1,712. That is an extra $71 a month. Not a hardship to most people. But realize that many people are on a fixed income or are living paycheck to paycheck. That extra $71 this year may be an extra $80 next year and an extra $100 the next year. If people’s incomes aren’t rising to cover the additional costs (and cost of living increases have been averaging around 3% – many companies have not been giving raises at all), then a cash crunch develops. In some locations, another contributing factor to economic turmoil is an increase in insurance rates. Insurers have taken huge hits in recent years and are passing their costs on to consumers. Because insurance is required by lenders, homeowners are not able to opt out from this expense. While most homeowners are not increasing their insurance coverage to correspond with the rise in property value, the rates themselves have increased. The same amount of coverage costs more. In addition, many people rushed to get cash out refinances to pay off consumer debt, buy “toys” or send their kids to college. The larger mortgage required higher insurance coverage. Now they are facing higher mortgage, tax and insurance payments. In some areas, the job market has stagnated or even fallen off. Large corporations have announced layoffs of employees (think US automakers Ford and GM, for example). Outsourcing is another major factor in what is now a transitional job market. While unemployment rates have been trending downward indicating a net increase of jobs in the United States, jobs are not being created equally throughout the fifty states or even equally within areas of a state. And, the jobs that are being created are not necessarily higher paying jobs. A GM line worker who was making $52,000 a year plus benefits is not going to easily find a position that will pay him that much, particularly if he doesn’t have a college degree and transferable skills. He will be lucky to find a position at half or two-thirds of his former salary. A poor job market, which may either be lack of jobs available or a market with a low pay scale inhibits the amount of buyers as well as limits the median price of homes. If the average working family in an area makes a combined income of $45,000, traditionally the house they can afford will be in the range of $112,500 to (if they can get a really low interest rate mortgage) $150,000. Average house prices can’t rise too high or there will be no one that can qualify to buy them. An area with weak economic viability gives way to increased crime, poorer quality schools, rundown neighborhoods and declining home values. Median household income across the United States, when inflation is factored in, has dropped in 45 states. Of the four states that have had an increase in income, the highest was Rhode Island with an increase of 4.4% followed by Wyoming with a 4.1% increase in median income. Montana and North Dakota followed with increases of 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. Even though people are making the same amount of money or even a little more than they did a few years ago, their buying power has decreased. Media Projecting Continued Down Market/Bubble Burst Blaming the media for a downwardly spiraling market is very much a “shoot the messenger” scenario. But continuous speculation on when the housing price bubble was going to burst caused an expectation in people’s minds that became a reality. The bubble didn’t have to burst. Housing prices could have gone up and stabilized. But forecasting impending doom is a much better attention-getter than forecasting the status quo. And most media outlets are businesses that have to show a profit at the end of the year. Even though we realize that the media is biased (and we support the specific media that validates our biases), we still give the media credit as a disinterested third party that is just reporting the facts. Just as history is written by the victors, the slant on the information that is reported serves the media outlets’ purposes. While most are not manipulating the news with a Machiavellian glee, headlines or news teases are somewhat sensationalized to bring in readers or viewers. How many times has a headline caught your attention and when you read the article you find that the headline had very little to do with the facts of the story? The problem is that many people don’t bother to read much more than the headline and first paragraph, or they hear the news story teaser but don’t watch the actual report. Hearing or seeing the same information repeatedly eventually turns what may have been merely a theory into fact in your brain. The repetition alone creates credibility in our minds. Knowing what caused the current market in your area can help you to determine how to locate houses, negotiate with sellers (pay Focus on Foreclosure, Part 1 - Profit from Foreclosures by Preventing Them ate is .008557 for each dollar of value, multiply the millage rate by 1000 to get the price per $1,000 or simply move the rate three decimal places to the right. Millage rates are usually rounded off to two decimal places so if the millage rate is 8.56 and your house’s taxable value (not its actual value) is $100,000, your property taxes would be $856.What makes foreclosures so appealing to many real estate investors is that it’s not one-size-fits-all strategy. You have three basic choices when it comes to foreclosure investing: preforeclosure, at the auction, and after the auction. Let’s take a look at what’s involved in preforeclosure investing.Preforeclosure refers to the period when the homeowner is in default and the lender has begun the foreclosure process. Most homeowners in this situation are facing a financial crisis of some sort: divorce, death, job loss, high medical bills, or some other circumstance that has made them unable to make their mortgage payments. Increasingly, we are seeing people facing foreclosure because they bought their home with a “teaser” mortgage that started out with low payments. When the introductory period was over and the payments adjusted to the market rate, the homeowners couldn’t manage the higher amount.These people are in distress and are usually confused and frightened. Lenders typically don’t bother explaining borrowers’ rights and options; they just want to collect their money. You have the opportunity to help homeowners avoid foreclosure, salvage their credit rating, and get on with their lives—and you can make money by doing it.Build your business by helping othersPreforeclosure investing makes everyone involved a winner. The homeowner is able to avoid foreclosure and get out from under the burden of a house he can’t afford; the lender doesn’t have to go to the expense and trouble of foreclosing and then getting rid of the property; and you get a profitable investment.In many cases, you’ll be able to work with the homeowner to negotiate a discoun Now, if you originally had a taxable value of $100,000 on your house and due to rising market prices its taxable value went up to $200,000, your property taxes would double to $1,712. That is an extra $71 a month. Not a hardship to most people. But realize that many people are on a fixed income or are living paycheck to paycheck. That extra $71 this year may be an extra $80 next year and an extra $100 the next year. If people’s incomes aren’t rising to cover the additional costs (and cost of living increases have been averaging around 3% – many companies have not been giving raises at all), then a cash crunch develops. In some locations, another contributing factor to economic turmoil is an increase in insurance rates. Insurers have taken huge hits in recent years and are passing their costs on to consumers. Because insurance is required by lenders, homeowners are not able to opt out from this expense. While most homeowners are not increasing their insurance coverage to correspond with the rise in property value, the rates themselves have increased. The same amount of coverage costs more. In addition, many people rushed to get cash out refinances to pay off consumer debt, buy “toys” or send their kids to college. The larger mortgage required higher insurance coverage. Now they are facing higher mortgage, tax and insurance payments. In some areas, the job market has stagnated or even fallen off. Large corporations have announced layoffs of employees (think US automakers Ford and GM, for example). Outsourcing is another major factor in what is now a transitional job market. While unemployment rates have been trending downward indicating a net increase of jobs in the United States, jobs are not being created equally throughout the fifty states or even equally within areas of a state. And, the jobs that are being created are not necessarily higher paying jobs. A GM line worker who was making $52,000 a year plus benefits is not going to easily find a position that will pay him that much, particularly if he doesn’t have a college degree and transferable skills. He will be lucky to find a position at half or two-thirds of his former salary. A poor job market, which may either be lack of jobs available or a market with a low pay scale inhibits the amount of buyers as well as limits the median price of homes. If the average working family in an area makes a combined income of $45,000, traditionally the house they can afford will be in the range of $112,500 to (if they can get a really low interest rate mortgage) $150,000. Average house prices can’t rise too high or there will be no one that can qualify to buy them. An area with weak economic viability gives way to increased crime, poorer quality schools, rundown neighborhoods and declining home values. Median household income across the United States, when inflation is factored in, has dropped in 45 states. Of the four states that have had an increase in income, the highest was Rhode Island with an increase of 4.4% followed by Wyoming with a 4.1% increase in median income. Montana and North Dakota followed with increases of 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. Even though people are making the same amount of money or even a little more than they did a few years ago, their buying power has decreased. Media Projecting Continued Down Market/Bubble Burst Blaming the media for a downwardly spiraling market is very much a “shoot the messenger” scenario. But continuous speculation on when the housing price bubble was going to burst caused an expectation in people’s minds that became a reality. The bubble didn’t have to burst. Housing prices could have gone up and stabilized. But forecasting impending doom is a much better attention-getter than forecasting the status quo. And most media outlets are businesses that have to show a profit at the end of the year. Even though we realize that the media is biased (and we support the specific media that validates our biases), we still give the media credit as a disinterested third party that is just reporting the facts. Just as history is written by the victors, the slant on the information that is reported serves the media outlets’ purposes. While most are not manipulating the news with a Machiavellian glee, headlines or news teases are somewhat sensationalized to bring in readers or viewers. How many times has a headline caught your attention and when you read the article you find that the headline had very little to do with the facts of the story? The problem is that many people don’t bother to read much more than the headline and first paragraph, or they hear the news story teaser but don’t watch the actual report. Hearing or seeing the same information repeatedly eventually turns what may have been merely a theory into fact in your brain. The repetition alone creates credibility in our minds. Knowing what caused the current market in your area can help you to determine how to locate houses, negotiate with sellers (pay You Are Not Entitled to a Job! the median price of homes. If the average working family in an area makes a combined income of $45,000, traditionally the house they can afford will be in the range of $112,500 to (if they can get a really low interest rate mortgage) $150,000. Average house prices can’t rise too high or there will be no one that can qualify to buy them.R?sum? TipsSome basics about job hunting...First of all, nobody owes you a job! This obvious fact is often overlooked by the eager job hunter -- at least for a couple of months -- when he or she gives up looking for a job! Many people think employers should hire them because of their award-winning personality. You have got to have a little something to show for yourself besides your pretty smile. The simple truth is, you need to find a way to stand out from the crowd so that your potential employer will actually listen to what you have to say.A great r?sum? is the best place to start. Action statements about what you have accomplished really stick out on a r?sum?. Vague statements can really hurt your chances for a position. Your r?sum? is the first chance to impress an employer. Do not ruin that chance with silly spelling errors and cloudy information. Employers love concise, well thought out r?sum?s. Your r?sum? is your map to a job. It should lead to a job and not the garbage. Write it like you spent the last year perfecting it. It should never sound like it was slopped together in an hour.A good way to STAND out from the competition is by expressing your desire for the job with a little extra effort. There are ways of straying from the convention and yet remaining in the norm. A paper r?sum? is the norm. R?sum?s can take any form your imagination takes you. Some employers will welcome creativity and other formats such as portfolios or website r?sum?s. A great place to discover new ways of impressing employers is at Vision-R?sum?. This extra effort might just help you stand out from the crowd and provide the traction need An area with weak economic viability gives way to increased crime, poorer quality schools, rundown neighborhoods and declining home values. Median household income across the United States, when inflation is factored in, has dropped in 45 states. Of the four states that have had an increase in income, the highest was Rhode Island with an increase of 4.4% followed by Wyoming with a 4.1% increase in median income. Montana and North Dakota followed with increases of 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. Even though people are making the same amount of money or even a little more than they did a few years ago, their buying power has decreased. Media Projecting Continued Down Market/Bubble Burst Blaming the media for a downwardly spiraling market is very much a “shoot the messenger” scenario. But continuous speculation on when the housing price bubble was going to burst caused an expectation in people’s minds that became a reality. The bubble didn’t have to burst. Housing prices could have gone up and stabilized. But forecasting impending doom is a much better attention-getter than forecasting the status quo. And most media outlets are businesses that have to show a profit at the end of the year. Even though we realize that the media is biased (and we support the specific media that validates our biases), we still give the media credit as a disinterested third party that is just reporting the facts. Just as history is written by the victors, the slant on the information that is reported serves the media outlets’ purposes. While most are not manipulating the news with a Machiavellian glee, headlines or news teases are somewhat sensationalized to bring in readers or viewers. How many times has a headline caught your attention and when you read the article you find that the headline had very little to do with the facts of the story? The problem is that many people don’t bother to read much more than the headline and first paragraph, or they hear the news story teaser but don’t watch the actual report. Hearing or seeing the same information repeatedly eventually turns what may have been merely a theory into fact in your brain. The repetition alone creates credibility in our minds. Knowing what caused the current market in your area can help you to determine how to locate houses, negotiate with sellers (paying off credit card balances or trading them for a house in a good school district for example) and finding creative ways to sell your property when everyone else can’t even get people to view their properties. Stay tuned to find out how to buy and flip houses in a down market.
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