Archive for October, 2009

FDA Oyster Ban

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

oyster-WEBThe Food and Drug Administration is considering banning fresh oysters from May to October. If approved, oysters harvested during warm months would have to be processed before they could be sold. Florida fisherman and restaurateurs say the ban would hurt their business.

They can be steamed, fried, baked or even barbequed but real oyster lovers eat their rocks right out of the half shell. And while the taste suits their pallets, their bodies sometimes disagree.

Susan Smith of the State Department of Health says raw oysters can cause food poisoning and occasionally death, mainly among older consumers and people with weak immune systems.

“This bacterium that is commonly found in oysters during Florida’s hot summer months could have an ill effect on someone who has an immune compromised system.”

The FDA is proposing a yearly ban on the sale of raw oyster during the warmer part of the year. Restaurants could still serve oysters, they would just have to be cooked and uncooked oysters would have to be processed before they’re sold.

Restaurants that sell raw oysters are required to put a disclaimer on their menus warning about the risks.

Barnacle Bills, a seafood restaurant in Tallahassee, has been selling raw oysters for 32 years and hasn’t reported one case of sickness or death. Owner Jeff Stilwell says a ban is bad for business

“Any kind of ban on anything just crushes business. You know the rumors, the innuendos, the things that go around. It will probably put half the seafood restaurants over on the coast out of business.”

And fisherman will suffer as well. Ten percent of the country’s oysters are harvested from Florida’s Apalachicola Bay where dozens of fisherman depend on oysters to make a living.

If approved, the ban would go into effect in 2011.

Home Sales Up

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

ORLANDO, Fla. – Oct. 23, 2009 – Florida’s existing home sales rose in September, which marks more than a year (13 months) that sales activity has increased in the year-to-year comparison, according to the latest housing data released by Florida Realtors®. September’s statewide sales also increased over sales activity in August in both the existing home and existing condominium markets.

Existing home sales rose 34 percent last month with a total of 14,419 homes sold statewide compared to 10,778 homes sold in September 2008, according to Florida Realtors. Statewide existing home sales last month increased 4.1 percent over statewide sales activity in August.

Florida Realtors also reported a 77 percent increase in statewide sales of existing condos in September compared to the previous year’s sales figure; statewide existing condo sales last month rose 8.9 percent over the total units sold in August.

All of Florida’s metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) reported increased existing home sales in September; all but one MSA also showed a gain in condo sales. A majority of the state’s MSAs have reported increased sales for 15 consecutive months.

Florida’s median sales price for existing homes last month was $142,000; a year ago, it was $174,900 for a 19 percent decrease. Housing industry analysts with the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) note that sales of foreclosures and other distressed properties continue to downwardly distort the median price because they generally sell at a discount relative to traditional homes. The median is the midpoint; half the homes sold for more, half for less.

The national median sales price for existing single-family homes in August 2009 was $177,500, down 12.1 percent from a year earlier, according to NAR. In Massachusetts, the statewide median resales price was $315,000 in August; in California, it was $292,960; in Maryland, it was $265,862; and in New York, it was $205,000.

NAR’s latest industry outlook notes positive signs in the housing sector, but adds that extension of the federal first-time homebuyer tax credit would help sustain a fragile recovery. “Now that the market is showing some momentum, we have an opportunity to achieve a more rapid and broader stabilization in home prices,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. The outlook for home sales and prices depends on whether the tax credit is extended, he said, describing it as “the best tool in our arsenal to encourage financially qualified buyers to stimulate the economy and help reduce the budget deficit.”

In Florida’s year-to-year comparison for condos, 5,088 units sold statewide last month compared to 2,870 units in September 2008 for a 77 percent increase. The statewide existing condo median sales price last month was $102,500; in September 2008 it was $153,500 for a 33 percent decrease. The national median existing condo price was $179,300 in August 2009, according to NAR.

Interest rates for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 5.06 percent last month, a significant drop from the average rate of 6.04 percent in September 2008, according to Freddie Mac. FAR’s sales figures reflect closings, which typically occur 30 to 90 days after sales contracts are written.

Among the state’s smaller markets, the Pensacola MSA reported a total of 275 homes sold in September compared to 267 homes a year earlier for a 3 percent increase. The market’s existing home median sales price last month was $135,000; a year ago it was $146,900 for an 8 percent decrease. A total of 48 condos sold in the MSA in September, up 41 percent over the 34 units sold in September 2008. The existing condo median price last month was $190,000; a year earlier, it was $180,000 for a 6 percent gain.

© 2009 Florida Realtors®

We got Southwest Airlines

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

SouthwestAirport October 6October 21, 2009 01:10:00 PM
By PAT KELLY / News Herald Writer
WEST BAY — Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly officially announced Wednesday the low-cost carrier will begin service to the new Northwest Florida-Panama City International Airport when it opens in May. Tickets will go on sale in December.

Kelly’s announcement came shortly after 1 p.m. Wednesday live via “streaming video” as part of Southwest’s media day from Dallas, about 15 minutes after the start of the a Panama City briefing attended by local business leaders and government officials. Kelly said the airline will bring an all-Boeing 737 fleet and the company’s bags-fly-free policy.

“We have been overwhelmed by the energy Panhandle residents put on Southwest to come to their region,” Kelly said during his video address. “It was very, very clear they wanted us. We are so flattered by that.”

Southwest will fly up to eight daily flights, Kelly said. Nashville, Tenn., and Baltimore-Washington International in Maryland will be the destinations.

Speaking about the current airline situation in the Panhandle, Kelly said the region was an “underserved, overpriced tourist gem. … It sees 16 million visitors by car each year.”

Kelly said the company is entering into a strategic alliance with the St. Joe Co., which donated the land for the new airport.

The St. Joe agreement will “ensure Southwest will break even for the first three years, which reduces the risk profile that is typically associated with opening new markets,” Kelly said.

Local and state leaders were meeting at the airport for the expressed purpose of hearing an update on construction progress and airline marketing efforts, but Southwest’s announcement had been anticipated.

The new airport is set to open in May, and Kelly’s confirmation answers one of several questions still remaining, such as whether a low-cost carrier like Southwest Airlines is coming to the West Bay location.

Officials and business leaders in Pensacola, Okaloosa County and Panama City have been courting the coveted carrier for months, citing lower fares that can bring in more tourists and businesses.

“The Panhandle has so much to recommend it,” said U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla. and a leading advocate of the new airport serving the region. “I know that as more and more people and businesses learn about the area, we’ll attract even more jobs and opportunities.”

Lagoon Bridge

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Written by Jason Koertge No Comments
Last Updated: October 16, 2009
The new Grand Lagoon Bridge in Eastern Panama City Beach is sure to light up in activity soon. Recently they planted new utility poles to the west of the existing bridge and moved the utility lines from the old poles adjoining the existing bridge to the new poles. Last time I was out there (about two weeks ago) they had moved the power, but cable and phone lines had yet to be moved. That looks like it is all complete now.

On the south side of the bridge there is a very long light-blue pipe assembly that is being joined under a tent by workers. I can only assume that this is for the sewer line that will need to be temporarily re-run along the temporary bridge that will begin construction in the coming weeks. Total construction time on the temporary bridge is expected to be around 90 days. Upon completion, they’ll demolish the old bridge and start the new one.
Curtesy of
www.PCBdaily.com

Extend Tax Credit?

Friday, October 16th, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) – Oct. 16, 2009 – Lawmakers are trying to extend and expand an $8,000 federal tax credit for first-time homebuyers, a stimulus-package tax break that many regard as a significant prop for the still-tottering economy.

The latest Senate proposal would drop the requirement that the credit be available only to first-time buyers, broadening the reach of the program but also adding to its cost, estimated by congressional analysts at $16.7 billion.

The backers of that idea, Sens. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., chairman of the Senate’s banking committee, have suggested that their measure be attached to another pending bill aimed at throwing a lifeline to people hit by the recession, an extension of federal assistance to the millions in danger of exhausting unemployment insurance benefits.

While the White House says there will not be a second stimulus package following the $787 billion economy booster enacted last February, extending the homebuyers’ credit and unemployment benefits are among several primary means being pushed by the administration or Congress to help people get through the prolonged economic downturn.

Others include continued subsidies for laid-off workers trying to keep their health insurance and a proposal by President Barack Obama to provide seniors and others with a $250 payment to make up for the lack of a Social Security cost of living increase next year.

The stimulus-package credit allows first-time homebuyers to reduce their federal income taxes by 10 percent of the price of a home, up to a maximum of $8,000. The credit, which could cost in the $12-15 billion range this year, is set to expire Dec. 1.

The Isakson-Dodd proposal would extend the credit to June 30, 2010. It would also remove the first-time homebuyer requirement and raise the eligibility income limit to $150,000, or $300,000 for a couple. That’s double the current phase-out limits.

As with the Cash for Clunkers program for cars, skeptics have questioned whether the credit will have any long-term effect on the housing market.

Brookings Institution economist Ted Gayer wrote in a recent report that the tax credit is “very poorly targeted.” He calculated that of the 2 million or more people who would make use of the credit if it were extended for a year and expanded to cover all buyers, only about 383,000 would be additional sales motivated by the credit. He estimated that the real cost of the credit would thus be more than $40,000, rather than $8,000, per buyer.

But believers say it has been instrumental in sustaining an economic recovery highly dependent on housing.

The National Association of Home Builders, the source of the 383,000 figure for increased home purchases, pointed out that this would also create more than 347,000 jobs, generate $16.1 billion in wages and salaries and $12.1 billion in business income.

“Homebuyers for the past two years have been sitting on the fence and we needed something to move them into the market,” said Lucien Salvant, managing director for public affairs at the National Association of Realtors. With more foreclosures coming next year, “to knock the props out of the housing market at this point would not be a wise move.”

The NAR, together with the NAHB and the Mortgage Bankers Association, have been running ads in the Washington area urging Congress to extend the homebuyer tax credit.

They note that home sales to first-time buyers have increased by 25 percent in 2009 and now account for 50 percent of all sales. They add that first-time buyers are often at the lower end of the market and the tax credit is reducing the inventory of foreclosures.

Isakson, in a speech on the Senate floor this week, said lawmakers owed it to the country to extend “a proven program that works” and “buoy the marketplace.”

He said that if the program is allowed to expire, the market again will depress values, sales and consumer confidence.

Senate Democratic leaders have not decided whether the homeowners’ credit issue should be part of the unemployment bill. But there is powerful backing for taking it up in some form.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said last week that she is looking into extending and expanding the popular tax credit, which according to IRS data has so far drawn more than 1.4 million applications from first-time homebuyers.

Senate Majority Harry Reid, D-Nev., last month joined Sens. Ben Cardin, D-Md., John Ensign, R-Nev., Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., and Isakson in introducing a bill calling for a straight six-month extension of the tax credit.

The potential addition of the Isakson-Dodd proposal to the unemployment benefit bill would be a new element to a bill that the Senate is already trying to enlarge.

The House last month passed legislation to increase jobless benefits by 13 weeks, but only in those 27 states where the unemployment rate is at or above 8.5 percent.

That left lawmakers from the other 23 states unhappy, and last week Senate Democrats reached agreement on a bill that would give an additional 14 weeks of benefits in all 50 states, and another six weeks on top of that to those in states with the 8.5 percent unemployment rate. The national unemployment rate is 9.8 percent.

Currently, a laid-off worker in a high unemployment state is entitled to up to 79 weeks of state and federal assistance. The average payment is about $300 a week. Supporters of the extension say it is necessary in an economy where 15 million unemployed are competing for 3 million jobs.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press, Jim Abrams, Associated Press writer. All rights reserved.

Short Sale Changes

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

There’s an old saying, “It’s not always what you don’t know that hurts you, it’s what you know for sure that isn’t so.”

Agents currently working the short sale market may soon find themselves in this situation. What we’ve been taught about how to do successful short sales will soon work against us and our sellers, because the government just changed all the rules with the new Making Home Affordable (MHA) program. We must do things differently. Very differently,

The Making Home Affordable program is being managed by Treasury and Fannie Mae. It covers more than 85% of mortgage loans, including loans owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, FHA loans, and loans managed by about 50 of the major servicers. For these loans, the new MHA policies and processes are mandatory.

Good news and bad news
There’s good news and there’s bad news associated with the MHA changes. The good news is that it is actually an attempt to simplify and standardize the short sale process, rules and paperwork. The bad news is that there are tens of thousands of loss mitigators out there who have to be trained before the new program will be implemented in a consistent way. So right now, implementation is patchy at best.

Making sure it is implemented
To speed up the implementation, Freddie Mac has been tapped to audit servicers’ files and fine servicers who aren’t using the new MHA process. With this “big stick” and some financial incentives, the program should pick up speed.

It’s mandatory
Realtors who want to close short sales will need to learn the new MHA rules, guidelines and use the new standard forms. And, yikes! Things are really different under Making Home Affordable. There are some small differences based on whose loan it is, but in general, here are just three key changes:

Some of the changes in how you’ll do business
Change #1: There are clearly defined steps which the servicer’s loss mitigator must follow in sequence when a loan is in default (or imminent default ). If attempted refinancing or a loan modification do not work — then and only then — will a loss mitigator consider the possibility of a short sale. This is the only time during the loss mitigation process when a short sale will be a possibility. The loss mitigator will use a specific net present value formula to determine if the lender/investor will net more from a short sale than from a foreclosure. The decision is strictly a financial one. This means the short sale attempt will be approved in advance if it is financially to the lender’s advantage.

Change #2: You will continue to list with the seller, but the loss mitigator sets the price and the listing term. The listing term can range from as few as 90 days to as long as 365 days. The servicer/lender still must accept the contract which your seller has approved.

Change #3: Good news! Fannie Mae’s Servicing Guide Announcement #09-03 clearly says there is to be no negotiation of short sale commissions. “..closing of pre-foreclosure sales may not be conditioned upon a reduction of the total commission to be paid to real estate agents to the level below what was negotiated by the listing agent with the borrower, unless the fee exceeds 6% of the sales price of the property in aggregate.” In other words, if you’ve negotiated a listing fee with the seller, the servicer/lender may not ask you to reduce that fee.

Important work — helping homeowners in distress
This should give you a quick idea of how significant the changes are for the short sale process. In short sales there is a lot more to know, so if you are helping homeowners in financial distress avoid foreclosure, you’ll want to learn all you can about the Making Home Affordable program. This is important work and I’d encourage you to — Get Involved. Get Trained. Get to Work. America’s homeowners need you.

Editor’s Note: Get up to speed on the new short sale process, better assist your clients in financial distress, and position yourself for more success through this new online course with Laurie Moore-Moore. Endorsed by Broker Agent.

Laurie Moore-Moore is CEO of The Institute for Luxury Home Marketing and co-founder of its new division, The Center for Asset Preservation. For information on the industry’s first and only comprehensive training (live and online) on Short Sales under the new Making Home Affordable program, click here. For information on luxury home training and the Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist designation, click here.

Due to a problem on our web server

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

We cleared all previous blog data due to a problem on our web server — sorry for the inconvenience

Navigation

Search

Archives

October 2009
S M T W T F S
    Nov »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  

Other

Syndication