Tag Archives: register real estate advisors

Ebby Halliday

DALLAS (Foundation Fighting Blindness) – The Foundation Fighting Blindness will honor local business and community icon Ebby Halliday at a 100th Birthday Roast & Toast on Wednesday, Feb. 23, at the Hilton Anatole in Dallas at 5:30 p.m.

 “Ebby Halliday’s longstanding commitment to philanthropy is inspiring, and the sustained support she has granted the Foundation Fighting Blindness will surely lead to brighter futures for the more than ten million Americans affected with retinal degenerative diseases,” said Bill Schmidt, CEO, Foundation Fighting Blindness.

Register Real Estate Advisors congratulates Ebby Halliday for her lifelong achievements in real estate and philanthropy!

Gasoline & Smoldering Embers: Outlook for Fed’s Monetary Policy

The Federal Reserve is charged with two missions: contain inflation and encourage job growth. Since the recession began in December 2007, the Fed has been working hard to stimulate the economy by providing an avalanche of low-cost money in hope that businesses would borrow and banks would lend. Instead, “excess reserves” have increased exponentially since October 2008.

 For nearly 50 years, from 1958 to 2008, banks held virtually no excess reserves. From August 2008 to January 2009, excess reserves went from $1.8 billion to $797 billion. By March 2010, they peaked at $1,120 billion. This expansion of credit into the banking system is unprecedented and gargantuan. How will this affect future interest rates and inflation?

This build-up of excess reserves is akin to gasoline pooling in the bottom of a barbecue grill full of smoldering charcoal. The Fed has poured a massive amount of gasoline into the grill to try to reignite the fire. The trick is that once the coals reignite, the Fed will have to carefully manage its “exit strategy” before inflationary pressures explode.

Banks’ reserves are categorized as either required reserves or excess reserves. Required reserves are funds that regulations require banks to hold against loans they have made. Excess reserves consist of money deposited into bank’s regional Federal Reserve Bank that is available for lending.

Typically, banks carry small balances of excess reserves. They earn their largest profits by making loans to consumer and businesses. They earn little interest on money parked in excess reserves at the Fed. This money is also referred to as fed funds, which banks borrow for short periods – as short as one day. These days, the fed funds rate range for 0 percent to ¼ percent interest.

These excess reserves represent a mountain of credit that banks could be lending to businesses. So why aren’t they?

The Saint Louis Federal Reserve offers two possible reasons. First, the banks may view a risk-free return of ¼ percent as the best investment option available. Second, individual banks that are undercapitalized may prefer to hold relatively safe investments while they rebuild capital by cutting costs, raising fee income and hoping for economic recovery. So for the time being, the gasoline is pooling in the barbecue grill, mot generating any heat in the economy.

With gold trading at over $1,200 per ounce, it is clear that some investors are anticipating high inflation. Inflation is not an immediate concern as the unemployment rate is high, and excess capacity exists in many manufacturing industries in the United States and around the world. At some point, the global and U.S. Economies will turn the corner and begin to create jobs, which will in turn increase personal income. At that point, inflationary trends could begin to re-emerge.

What happens when the economy starts to rebound substantially? When the charcoal gets too hot and begins to throw off sparks, the Fed will have to siphon the excess gasoline from the barbecue before a spark ignites an explosion. One way the fed can do this is by selling the assets off its balance sheet back to the banks. Making the banks repurchase loans from the Feb would soak up all the excess reserves. But if the Fed starts selling these assets – largely residential mortgage – back to the banks, mortgage rates might increase, undermining the economic recovery.

A second approach would allow the Fed to smother the inflationary effects to massive excess reserves without selling the loans back to the banks. Since October 2008, the Fed has had the authority to pay banks interest on their excess reserves. It can raise the interest rate paid on excess reserves to a point that banks prefer to keep the money idle at the Fed rather than loaning it to businesses.

In effect, the Fed can crowd put private borrowers by offering higher interest rates than businesses would be willing to accept. If the mortgage market is still weak when the Fed needs to start “tightening” the economy, it can raise rates on reserves rather than selling its massive mortgage portfolio.

Yes, the Federal Reserve has amped up its balance sheet by over $1 million dollars. Yes, Traditional thinking might conclude that this could lead to higher inflation in the future. But the Fed’s ability to pay interest on excess reserves is likely to mitigate the inflationary risk substantially.

The next time the fed needs to rein in an expanding U.S. economy, it can raise the interest rate banks are paid for reserve deposits and keep these funds from reaching the businesses and consumers that would drive inflation.

Over time, if rates rose to high, this could become expensive for the Fed. Ultimately, it will have to sell these loans at the optimal time to minimize and losses and have minimal impact on interest rates.

This article was written by Dr. Mark Dotzour and was published in the Tierra Grande Journal of the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University in October of 2010.

Why Consumers Should Always Use a Realtor When Buying, Selling, or Leasing Property

This information was produced by the Houston Association of Realtors. This is the final video from the Consumer Knowledge Series. I hope they have been informative to our readers. Although this series has ended, we will continue to add valuable real estate videos to our blog on a weekly basis. And remember…whenever you are buying, selling, or leasing property…call on Register Real Estate Advisors so you can get the best Real Estate Advice!

Why Consumers Should Use a Realtor When Selling a Property

We cannot over express this…our team’s marketing plan is proven to work, even in a down market!

Spring Branch in Texas

  WALMART ROLLS JOBS INTO SPRING BRANCH

 SPRING BRANCH (Houston Business Journal) – Walmart Inc. will hire about 300 at its newest Houston-area store in Spring Branch.

 The store is expected to open in April.

The facility at 1118 Silber St. is currently under construction.

Why I Moved to RREA!

I had a chance to talk to Shannon about why I picked RREA as my brokerage.

How to Choose A Realtor When Buying A Property

When you choose Register Real Estate Advisors, you can be assured that you have a dedicated, professional, and highly trained agent to represent your buying needs. Whether you choose new construction or a resale home, you will be impressed with the level of service our Realtors provide. We are looking forward to the opportunity when we can meet your real estate needs — Give us a call today!

Texas Passes Florida in Reverse (Mortgages, That Is)

PLANO (HousingWire) – Texas is home to the second-largest number of reverse mortgages in the country, according to the Texas Mortgage Bankers Association.

 Currently, there are more than 72,000 reverse mortgages outstanding in the United States, the organization reports. Texas holds more than 6,300, an 8.2 percent market share.

 With its 13 percent share, California ranks first in the number of reverse mortages. Meanwhile, Florida got bumped from second to third on the list.

 Reverse mortgages offer older homeowners an alternative to selling their homes or obtaining a home equity loan for additional retirement income or needed capital.

 To learn more about the pros and cons of reverse mortgages, read “Reverse Mortgages: Alternative Home Equity Funding” in the July 2010 issue of Tierra Grande magazine.

Assessing the Real Cost of a Fixer-Upper

Everyone s looking for a bargain these days and the Real Estate Market is obliging. Many homes that are currently on the market are Foreclosures or Short Sales. Unfortunately most of these homes are being sold with no disclosures, as is, Caveat Emptor (or “Buyer Beware”) and usually need some work or are considered “fixer-uppers”.

You need to know the facts before you decide that this bargain is the right one for you. When you buy a fixer-upper house, you can save a ton of money, or get yourself in a financial mess (anyone out there remember the movie “The Money Pit”?).

Trying to decide whether to buy a fixer-upper house? Follow these seven steps, and you’ll know how much you can afford, how much to offer, and whether a fixer-upper house is right for you.

1. Decide what you can do yourself.

TV remodeling shows make home improvement work look like a snap. In the real world, attempting a difficult remodeling job that you don’t know how to do will take longer than you think and can lead to less-than-professional results that won’t increase the value of your fixer-upper house.

  • Do you really have the skills to do it? Some tasks, like stripping wallpaper and painting, are relatively easy. Others, like electrical work, can be dangerous when done by amateurs.
  • Do you really have the time and desire to do it? Can you take time off work to renovate your fixer-upper house? If not, will you be stressed out by living in a work zone for months while you complete projects on the weekends?

2. Price the cost of repairs and remodeling before you make an offer.

  • Get your contractor into the house to do a walk-through, so he can give you a written cost estimate on the tasks he’s going to do.
  • If you’re doing the work yourself, price the supplies.
  • Either way, tack on 10% to 20% to cover unforeseen problems that often arise with a fixer-upper house.

3. Check permit costs.

  • Ask local officials if the work you’re going to do requires a permit and how much that permit costs. Doing work without a permit may save money, but it’ll cause problems when you resell your home.
  • Decide if you want to get the permits yourself or have the contractor arrange for them. Getting permits can be time-consuming and frustrating. Inspectors may force you to do additional work, or change the way you want to do a project, before they give you the permit.
  • Factor the time and aggravation of permits into your plans.

Kimberly Whaley - Fixer Upper - Register Real Estate Advisors

4. Double check pricing on structural work.

If your fixer-upper home needs major structural work, hire a structural engineer for $500 to $700 to inspect the home before you put in an offer so you can be confident you’ve uncovered and conservatively budgeted for the full extent of the problems. Get written estimates for repairs before you commit to buying a home with structural issues. Don’t purchase a home that needs major structural work unless:

  • You’re getting it at a steep discount
  • You’re sure you’ve uncovered the extent of the problem
  • You know the problem can be fixed
  • You have a binding written estimate for the repairs

5. Check the cost of financing.

Be sure you have enough money for a down payment, closing costs, and repairs without draining your savings. If you’re planning to fund the repairs with a home equity or home improvement loan:

  • Get yourself pre-approved for both loans before you make an offer.
  • Make the deal contingent on getting both the purchase money loan and the renovation money loan, so you’re not forced to close the sale when you have no loan to fix the house.
  • Consider the Federal Housing Administration’s Section 203(k) program, which lets qualified purchasers wrap up to $35,000 into their mortgages to upgrade their home before they move in.

6. Calculate your fair purchase offer.

Take the fair market value of the property (what it would be worth if it were in good condition and remodeled to current tastes) and subtract the upgrade and repair costs. For example: Your target fixer-upper house has a 1960s kitchen, metallic wallpaper, shag carpet, and high levels of radon in the basement. Your comparison house, in the same subdivision, sold last month for $200,000. That house had a newer kitchen, no wallpaper, was recently re-carpeted, and has a radon mitigation system in its basement. The cost to remodel the kitchen, remove the wallpaper, carpet the house, and put in a radon mitigation system is $40,000. Your bid for the house should be $160,000. Ask your real estate agent if it’s a good idea to share your cost estimates with the sellers, to prove your offer is fair.

7. Include inspection contingencies in your offer.

Don’t rely on your friends or your contractor to eyeball your fixer-upper house. Hire pros to do common inspections like:

  • Home inspection. This is key in a fixer-upper assessment. The home inspector will uncover hidden issues in need of replacement or repair. You may know you want to replace those 1970s kitchen cabinets, but the home inspector has a meter that will detect the water leak behind them.
  • Radon, mold, lead-based paint
  • Septic and well
  • Pest Most home inspection contingencies let you go back to the sellers and ask them to do the repairs, or give you cash at closing to pay for the repairs. The seller can also opt to simply back out of the deal, as can you, if the inspection turns up something you don’t want to deal with. If that happens, this isn’t the right fixer-upper house for you. Go back to the top of this list and start again.

If you’re in the market to buy or sell a home or facing a financial challenge and need to short sale your home, please give me a call at 832-5786-4902.

some information provided by: houselogic.com



Things That Go Boom: Texas’ Population

 TEXAS (San Antonio Express-News) – Real Estate Center economists have been saying it for the past few years, and now the latest census data are supporting it: Texas is on the verge of a population boom.

 ”Today, one out of 12 Americans lives in Texas — the same proportion that lived in New York City in 1930,” wrote Michael Barone recently in the Wall Street Journal.

 ”Metropolitan Dallas and metropolitan Houston, with about six million people each, threaten to overtake our fourth-largest metro area, San Francisco Bay (population about seven million), in the next decade,” he said.

 Barone, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, was comparing census data from the past eight decades.

 According to the San Antonio Express-News, initial census numbers last month were necessary so states could know how many congressional districts they would have. Texas picked up four additional districts.

 Look for more 2010 census data to be released as the year progresses.