Customizing Homes

Many build an independent house, rather than buy an apartment, because it allows them to sit down with the architect and decide on the minutest of details, so that it ultimately becomes the home they’ve always dreamed of.

Providing for such levels of customization in a large apartment complex is so complicated that no developer thinks of it. One exception – and he says he may be the only exception in the world – is Kamal Sagar. This architect-cum-developer and an IIT-Kharagpur alumnus has customized many of the apartment complexes he’s built over the years and, more recently, has made his boldest move – providing for a level of customization that even he has not done before, and doing it for large complexes, going over 400 apartments. [Read more...]

Home Sales Turnaround On Horizon, Analysts Say

Nashville’s three-year-long real estate slump is expected to soon turn around, according to independent analysts. But for Tawsha and Jeff Connell, a couple in their early 30s who aspire to own a home in Brentwood, buying now isn’t the answer.

“We’re looking to rent for the long haul until it’s the right time for an investment,” said 31-year-old Connell, who owns My Big Day, a wedding planning service. She and her husband, Jeff, 32, live with their toddler son, Colton, in a rental house.

“The market has to improve a significant amount before we do anything at all,” she says.

Local real estate advisers are championing what they see as bargain home prices and modest interest rates as reasons to take out a mortgage loan. The median home price in the Nashville area has dropped below $160,000 this spring, down 12 percent from last summer. [Read more...]

Homes Sales Rise In Summit

After declining since June, home sales in Summit County rose slightly in December.

But December’s sales were still near historically low levels and were lower than those for December 2009.

Those who did get into the market might have been spurred by historically low mortgage rates that are now rising. Long-term mortgage rates climbed above 5 percent this week.

It was the first time the 30-year fixed rate surpassed 5 percent since last spring, according to mortgage guarantor Freddie Mac.

In December 2010, Summit County home sales totaled 349. That was up 4.8 percent from the 333 sales in November. [Read more...]

House Prices Return To Positive Growth

house prices return to positive growth_House prices last month surprisingly bounced back into positive growth after almost a year of price deflation.

John Loos, an FNB Home Loans strategist, said yesterday house price inflation had returned a few months earlier than previously expected and the pace at which this had happened led the bank to believe its previous forecast of an average 5 percent increase in house prices next year was “slightly on the conservative side and an upward revision would be in order”.

Loos said FNB still expected single-digit average price inflation for next year but at a slightly higher rate of 7 percent to 8 percent. FNB’s house price index last month rose 2 percent year on year from the revised minus 0.9 percent in October.

The growth in the index follows a period of house price deflation that started in December last year and peaked at minus 8.3 percent in May.

Loos said although November was the first month of return to year-on-year price increase, last month’s number was just the continuation of an improving trend that started in the form of diminishing house price deflation from about June, which was a lagged response to gradually rising demand from early in the year as interest rates began to fall.

Standard Bank said yesterday its property book for the first 11 months of this year revealed an average monthly decline of 4.3 percent in the median house price, but the rate of contraction improved slightly last month to minus 4.5 percent year on year from minus 4.6 percent in October.

Johan Botha, a Standard Bank economist, said this brought the number of monthly declines to 18 consecutive months but “there are signs that the residential property market has turned the corner and that interest in residential property is returning”.

“Prospective buyers are returning and the loosening of credit criteria announced at the beginning of September is being reflected in the number of loan applications and loans being granted.

Jacques du Toit, a senior property analyst at Absa Home Loans, said he expected the positive house price growth to continue and move even higher, adding that transaction volumes had also picked up in recent months. However, Du Toit said the recovery would still be gradual. By Roy Cokayne, Business Report