Monday, August 29, 2011
Going From Homeowner To Renter
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Foreclosure Survival Ideas
Monday, August 22, 2011
Firm's database helps keep Americans in homes
Consumers can't access MortgageKeeper Referral Services directly, but lenders and others can connect clients to its database for help on a variety of issues, including house payments and food assistance.
Last winter, Consumer Credit Counseling Service of San Francisco helped a Dayton, Ohio, housekeeper catch up on her mortgage payments and utility bills, find food assistance and get her property taxes lowered.
But how does a Northern California-based counseling agency know whom to call to get local help for a struggling homeowner living halfway across the country? By tapping into a national database of community resources operated by MortgageKeeper Referral Services Inc.
Created six years ago by a college professor and a housing policy wonk with extensive experience in foreclosure intervention strategies, MortgageKeeper's database is rich with 6,000 resources nationwide that can help financially strapped borrowers dig out from under their problems — if borrowers only knew about them.
The resources are out there for the asking, says MortgageKeeper President Rochelle Nawrocki Gorey, but for any number of reasons, people in need can't find them or don't try. Sometimes people are too afraid of losing their homes to con artists to seek help.
Enter MortgageKeeper, which connects distressed owners with reputable, fully qualified and totally vetted community services in all 50 states, but with a major focus on the 80 metro areas that account for roughly 90% of all foreclosures.
"Our database gets answers to homeowners fast, getting to the root cause of their loan delinquency," says Gorey, who has spent nearly two decades in housing policy research. "Hopefully, the end result is owners who have both their financial and personal needs met so they can stay in their homes."
In July alone, the Downers Grove, Ill., company made more than 75,000 referrals, its highest usage ever. That's about 2,500 people a day who were connected "directly and discreetly" to someone willing not just to listen to their stories but also to help them overcome their difficulties.
The only problem: Consumers can't reach MortgageKeeper directly. They have to go through the company that services their mortgage or a housing counseling agency.
Not all loan servicers or counseling agencies are affiliated with MortgageKeeper. But Gorey and her partner, Michael Collins, an assistant professor of consumer finance at the University of Wisconsin in Madison who has studied consumers in the marketplace for more than 10 years, recently signed Saxon Mortgage Services Inc. as a client.
Saxon, a top-25 mortgage servicer, according to National Mortgage News, joins a list of companies that also includes Ocwen Financial Corp., which claims to be the country's largest administrator of subprime mortgages.
Lenders' participation in MortgageKeeper isn't totally altruistic. After all, a typical foreclosure results in a $50,000 hit to a lender's bottom line. Borrowers who have help solving their issues are more likely to remain or become current on their house payments and avoid foreclosure altogether.
But if your servicer isn't a MortgageKeeper participant, you can still get through by contacting one of several counseling agencies.
Besides Consumer Credit Counseling Service of San Francisco, which, contrary to its name, is national in scope, company clients include Money Management International, CredAbility and the Homeownership Preservation Foundation's hot line at (888) 995-HOPE, each a law-abiding consumer counseling agency.
MortgageKeeper's up-to-date, real-time community resources are embedded into its clients' borrower-dedicated Web pages. Once you are there, you simply type in your ZIP Code and the service categories that interest you, and up pops a list of service descriptions and the relevant contact information.
MortgageKeeper has a list of up to 20 categories, everything from food assistance to job training to help with prescription drugs. Clients pick the ones they deem most pertinent based on their experience with borrower defaults. Saxon, for example, offers 12 categories.
In July, more folks who accessed the MortgageKeeper database asked for help with their utilities and with food than anything else. Employment, housing and credit counseling also were of big interest. And for the first time, help with rental housing was a top-five resource referral.
"There are a lot of nonprofits and government agencies that want to help with financial and personal challenges," Gorey says. "Many times, they are located right in their neighborhoods, but people are just not aware of them. Our database gets answers in seconds from a list of exhaustively researched, best-in-class agencies."
NOTE: Article written by Lew Sichelman
Friday, August 19, 2011
Does refinancing your home make financial sense?
A home mortgage refinance may sound like a good idea in theory, but it's not always possible or desirable.
For starters, lenders have tightened up the approval process, making it more difficult to get a loan.
"Homeowners today need to be triathletes to qualify for a loan, with great income, great credit and great value in their home," says Anthony Hsieh, founder and CEO of loanDepot.com, headquartered in Irvine, Calif.
In addition, a refinance may not make sense financially, particularly for borrowers who plan to sell their homes in the next few years.
Before taking the leap and opting to refinance, homeowners should ask themselves the following six questions.
Do I have equity in my home?
Homeowners need to have at least 20 percent equity in their home to qualify for a new loan without paying private mortgage insurance.
Adding PMI to the cost of a new loan could negate the benefit of a refinance.
Today, many homeowners are underwater - meaning they owe more on their mortgages than the house is worth.
However, being underwater or having little equity does not necessarily rule out a refi.
"Homeowners should still apply for a refinance even if they have low equity, because there are some Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac programs and FHA loans that may accept them," Hsieh says.
"The best way to find out if you fit into a program is to go to a lender."Roy Meshel, district vice president for W.J. Bradley Mortgage in Phoenix, recommends homeowners refinance quickly in case the housing slump deepens, causing values to depreciate even more.
Patrick Cunningham, vice president of Home Savings & Trust Mortgage based in Fairfax, Va., recommends an increasingly popular approach - the so-called "cash-in" refinance.
"Some people are opting to bring cash to the settlement in order to pay down their loan balance to qualify for a refinance," he says.
Do I have good enough credit?
Borrower credit scores play a big role in securing a good mortgage rate. In fact, you'll need a good credit score to qualify for any type of mortgage at all.
Mortgage rates operate on a sliding scale, with the lowest rates going to applicants with the highest credit scores of 720 or higher.
Borrowers with scores below 620 will have trouble qualifying for a mortgage at any rate.
What are my financial goals?
Many homeowners refinance to lower their monthly payments. A mortgage calculator can give borrowers a sense of what their new payment would be after a refi.
Others choose a shorter-term loan with higher monthly payments so they can reduce overall interest payments and own their homes faster.
"Some people are restructuring their loans to a 20-, 15- or 10-year mortgage, which works well for people with plenty of disposable income," Cunningham says. "But I worry that people are too focused on paying off their mortgage and not integrating this decision with their overall financial plan."
Cunningham urges borrowers to make sure they contribute to retirement savings and college savings, pay off high-interest debt, and save six to 12 months of expenses "before opting for a shorter, more expensive mortgage."
Meshel says people should consider whether they want to retire without a mortgage before opting for a new 30-year loan. Those who have employment concerns may want to refinance into the lowest possible payment in case they experience a job loss.
How long do I plan to stay in this home?
Mortgage professionals generally tell borrowers to expect a home refinance to cost 3 percent to 6 percent of the loan amount. A simple calculation shows how long it will take to reach the break-even point when the savings outweigh the costs.
"If the breakeven is at 15 months and you plan to stay in the home for five years or longer, it is probably worth it to refinance,"
Cunningham says. "But if you plan to move in two years, it may not make sense."
Meshel says long-term homeowners who are close to paying off their mortgages might not want to refinance because of the costs incurred.
What are the terms of my current loan?
Borrowers with adjustable-rate mortgages or interest-only loans should consider the potential benefit of switching to a fixed-rate loan. Hsieh says all borrowers with ARMs should switch to a fixed-rate loan unless they intend to move within one year.
However, Cunningham says some borrowers can benefit by sticking with their current ARM.
"Consumers with a subprime ARM should definitely switch to a new loan," Cunningham says. "But some with conventional ARMs may find that they are in a good loan and that their rates are actually dropping."
While new loans today rarely have a prepayment penalty, many homeowners still have loans with that restriction, which could reduce the financial gain of a refinance, Meshel says.
Do I have a second mortgage or line of credit?
Cunningham says borrowers with a second mortgage will face additional complexity when refinancing.
"Borrowers can either pay off the second loan or combine the two loans into a larger first mortgage," Cunningham says. "Otherwise, the lender holding that second loan must agree to stay in second position behind the lender of the first mortgage, which the lender may or may not be willing to do."
Note: Article written by Michele Lerner at Bankrate.comEstate Planning And Real Estate
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Credit Killers That Ding Your Fico Score
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Notices of Default in California Decline Sharply
The number of Californians entering foreclosure dropped steeply in the second quarter to the lowest level since 2007, a sign the foreclosure crisis in California is easing as the housing market stabilizes and regulators increase scrutiny of lenders. (Learn more this Wednesday, free, details here.)
Notices of default filed against California homes dropped 17% from the previous quarter and 19.2% from the same period last year, according to San Diego research firm DataQuick (full report here). A total of 56,633 homes received a notice of default, which is the first formal step in the foreclosure process.
“Homeowner distress spreads fastest when home price declines are steepest. And it now appears likely that, barring some new economic shock, the worst of the price declines are behind us,” said John Walsh, Data Quick President.
Note: Article written by Alejandro Lazo of the LA Times
The number of homes taken back by banks also fell in the second quarter. A total of 42,465 homes were repossessed during those three months, a 10.9% decline from a year earlier and a 1.4% drop from the first quarter. On average, California homes took 10 months to wind their way through foreclosure, up from 9.1 months in the previous quarter and the year-earlier period.
Foreclosures have slowed nationally partly because homeowners are challenging them in court and the nation’s biggest banks are negotiating a settlement with regulators over faulty repossession practices. Some experts believe that if a settlement is reached, foreclosures could surge again once banks overhaul their practices and compensate borrowers. But unlike states where the foreclosure system is overseen by the court system, California has seen a steady decline in default notice filings for more than two years with the housing market recovering faster than other hard-hit regions.
The second quarter marked the lowest level of default notices received by California homeowners since the second quarter of 2007. Last quarter’s numbers were also well below the record 133,431 default notices filed in the first quarter of 2009, when home prices were dropping sharply.
Homeowners in more affluent, coastal counties were less likely to enter foreclosure than those in other parts of the state. Mortgages on properties in San Francisco, Marin and San Mateo counties were the least likely to go into default, while those in Kings, Sutter and Yuba counties were the most likely, DataQuick reported.
In one sign that the most beaten-down areas of the state might be getting some relief, the default-notice decline was greatest in the state’s least expensive communities, where foreclosures had been the most prevalent, DataQuick said.
Most loans receiving default notices last quarter were made in 2005 through 2007, the tail end of the bubble, indicating that the most distressed homeowners in the state bought their properties during the run-up in home prices and during the height of the shoddy lending practices that pervaded the mortgage industry.
There has never been a better time to jump into foreclosure investing. Sellers and Banks are super motivated and the wholesale deals have been flying. See for yourself with a few our recent student deals here. You need to get your buying business off the ground now, as it doesn’t get better than this.
Monday, August 15, 2011
San Pedro, Marymount Expand Ties
Building on a partnership that seems to be off to a strong start, Marymount University will expand its footprint in downtown San Pedro this fall.
The first floor of the former Northrop-Grumman facility at 222 W. Sixth St. will be transformed into classroom space and offices to accommodate upper division business majors and students majoring in global studies, according to university spokeswoman Kelly Curtis.
That will be on top of the returning theater arts and music students set to return for classes on Aug. 29 in the Grand Annex in the 400 block of West Sixth Street. Those students also will expand their use in the coming year of the Warner Grand Theatre at 478 W. Sixth St.
But that's not all.
The following year, a two-story vacant storefront at 430 W. Sixth St. - the former Lad 'N' Lassie children's clothing shop - will be turned into art exhibit space, classrooms, research areas and offices.
Cultural arts benefactors Marylyn (Ginsberg) and Chuck Klaus purchased the building for the university in the couple's ongoing effort to support young artists while also bringing the arts and more life into downtown San Pedro.
For Marymount, the satellite location - now called Marymount's waterfront campus - has provided extra space needed after the Rancho Palos Verdes Catholic school expanded to a full four-year institution.
The growing partnership has paid off for everyone, Curtis said.
"We have just a tiny auditorium, so last year when we moved all our film series and theater students (to the 1,500-seat Warner Grand Theatre), we have much more student interest in theater," she said."The same with the jazz ensemble which now performs at (San Pedro's) First Thursdays and on a big stage (at the theater)."
The university's speakers series also will make use of the Warner Grand this year, she said, with Father Greg Boyle, the Jesuit priest who founded Homeboy Industries, scheduled to give a talk for students and the community at 7 p.m. Nov. 10.
"We believe (the partnership) is one of the most significant things to happen in downtown San Pedro in many years," said Liz Schindler Johnson of the Grand Vision Foundation.
"We felt that downtown San Pedro already has the flavor of a college town with its narrow, tree-lined streets, quaint stores and lots of artistic activities."
NOTE: Article written by Donna Littlejohn
Friday, August 12, 2011
Mortgage Rates Keep Dropping
The average interest this week fell to 4.32% on a 30-year fixed home loan and 3.5% on a 15-year fixed mortgage.
The typical rate for a 15-year fixed mortgage was 3.5%, Freddie Mac said Thursday — the lowest since Freddie began tracking it in 1991.
But with rates near record lows, the Mortgage Bankers Assn. says loan applications have spiked more than 20% because of the latest surge in refinancings.
The increase occurred despite a slight decrease in applications to buy homes. Refinance applications were up by 30%, the trade group said Wednesday.
Greg McBride, senior analyst for rate tracker Bankrate.com, said people with large mortgages in expensive markets like California should feel a particular sense of urgency if they are considering refinancing.
As a result of the credit crisis, the limit for a conforming loan — one that can be backed by Freddie Mac and or Fannie Mae — was increased to $729,750 in the most expensive regions to support the housing market. That increase is set to expire Oct. 1, when the conforming loan limit will fall back to $625,500.
Loans higher than the conforming limit, known as jumbos, are available — but rates have been running at least half a percentage point more than for conforming loans. And as McBride pointed out, people refinancing into a jumbo loan are required to have more equity in their homes, typically 25% or 30% instead of the 20% requirement on smaller mortgages.
For someone refinancing a $700,000 loan, "It means you've got to get the loan closed by the end of September before the goal posts move," McBride said.
Freddie Mac surveys lenders early each week, asking them what conforming loan rates they are offering to borrowers with good credit and 20% down payments or, in the case of refinancings, at least 20% equity in their homes.
The borrowers in the latest survey would have paid 0.7% of the loan amount in upfront lender fees and discount points, along with additional payments for appraisals, title insurance and other third-party costs, Freddie Mac said.
Living Together Clauses and Options
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Rolling Hills Estates Gives Chandler Ranch Project The Go-Ahead
After decades of discussion about the future of a giant, dusty rock quarry in Rolling Hills Estates - including some eight years devoted to a specific proposal - it took the City Council just 40 minutes this week to give Chandler Ranch the go-ahead.
Near one of the main entryways to the affluent Palos Verdes Peninsula community, the 114-home luxury residential project will replace the industrial Chandler's Sand and Gravel facility and create a new golf course for private Rolling Hills Country Club.
It's the final vision in a series of reuse concepts that have been proposed since the 1980s for an eyesore that brings some 60,000 rumbling trucks to and from the quarry-turned-landfill each year.
More than 25 years ago, 600 homes were proposed. but that plan was abandoned after community outcry.
In 2003, the city created a committee to refine a proposal for the site that would fill in the deep quarry and sustain the neighboring country club, which was facing an expiring long-term lease.
"Then, it was just kind of pie-in-the-sky: `Will this ever get done and will I be alive when this happens?"' Councilwoman Judy Mitchell said. "It's been quite a few years."
At Tuesday's City Council meeting, the panel voted unanimously - to applause - for a series of measures that will allow the project to move forward.
"This is a major step in our city, for a major project. It is a first step; by no stretch of the imagination is it a last step," Councilman Frank Zerunyan said.
Challenges remain, including approval from the city of Torrance and a 32-acre land swap between the two cities that will keep all Chandler Ranch homes in Rolling Hills Estates. A regional boundary commission must approve the swap.
At the same time, the foundering real estate market and general poor economy make up a fairly atrocious environment for a massive undertaking that will cost more than $350 million.
Still, Tuesday's action constitutes a milestone.
"We've gone through this for 25, 30 years," said John Robertson, grandson of Linden Chandler, who opened the quarry in the 1930s.
"I never thought we'd see this day. ... I think grandpa would be very proud."
The project, brought jointly by the Chandlers and neighboring Rolling Hills Country Club, raised some significant opposition - mostly from local equestrians concerned about its lack of horse facilities. But the project's backers negotiated their way to acceptance.
In fact, no members of the public rose to comment on Chandler Ranch before the council voted on it.
Robertson joked that he had not attended public hearings - instead sending Mike Cope, who has managed the project for a decade - because he gets "too excited."
Council members and project supporters remarked that prolonged negotiations and discussions had soothed opponents and addressed city concerns.
"You see a lot of ruffled feathers along the way, but it was really satisfying last night to see how everybody came together," country club General Manager Greg Sullivan said Wednesday. "In the end, the project satisfied everybody."
The 228-acre plan will include a new 18-hole, Arnold Palmer-approved golf course surrounding the 114 Mediterranean-style homes with red-tile roofs. The club will get a new 61,000-square-foot clubhouse and tennis courts.
Design details of the buildings will be subject to city neighborhood-compatibility hearings in the future. Also planned is an underground water filtration system that would clean runoff and reduce pollution downhill in Harbor City's Machado Lake.
The 114 homes will be split between three school districts - Palos Verdes Peninsula, Torrance and Los Angeles Unified. Changing those boundaries is something the future home-builder company would have to pursue, if desired, Sullivan said.
The project's backers have agreed to donate about $1 million to the city for equestrian improvements, an amount that will be matched by developer fees. Altogether, the money should bring serious improvements to municipal horse facilities and trails.
That was done in part to quell opposition from equestrians who were unhappy that the project was removed from the city's "horse overlay," meaning homeowners will not be allowed to keep horses. Horse owners also were originally unhappy that a proposed loop trail around the city will not be completed because of the project.
Though the Palos Verdes Peninsula Horsemens Association came to support Chandler Ranch, some equestrians remained unconsoled. In recent months, one even mentioned taking legal action against the project.
Others demanded that the developer make sure to test more thoroughly for suspected Indian remains before construction, a request to which the Chandlers and country club have agreed.
Tuesday's meeting was the council's third on the project, following a handful of Planning Commission meetings beginning last fall.
The council approved a tract map, General Plan amendment, zone change, environmental impact report and the land swap with Torrance. Also approved was a development agreement allowing 10 years for construction to begin, plus a possible five-year extension.
Councilwoman Susan Seamans recused herself because she lives within 500 feet of the project and is a "social member" of the Rolling Hills Country Club.
The project will go to the Torrance Planning Commission in coming months, and then on to a regional commission overseeing municipal boundary changes.
Note: Originally written by Melissa Pamer of The Daily Breeze
'Big Step' For Chandler Project
Tuesday night, the Rolling Hills Estates City Council certified the final environmental impact report, accepted amendments of certain land-use designations in the city’s general plan, and approved a tentative tract map, grading plan and conditional use permits for the Chandler Ranch/Rolling Hills Country Club project. Mayor Pro Tem Susan Seamans recused herself from the discussion and vote.
This is not the end for the decade-long process, but it signals the beginning of the end.
“I never thought I’d see this day,” said John Robertson, grandson of Linden Chandler, founder of the the Chandler Sand and Gravel Facility.
It was a major step for the city and project, Councilman Frank Zerunyan said.
“Perhaps with our due diligence that we have and the type of city that we run, maybe we were too slow for you. … We never intended to be a difficult city, only a transparent city,” he said.
The 228-acre project, which straddles the cities of RHE and Torrance, is a collaboration between the Country Club and the Chandler family, who still owns the sand and gravel facility on Palos Verdes Drive East. Since 2002, the two entities have worked on a plan that includes the development of 114 single-family homes, a new 61,000-square-foot clubhouse and related facilities, and a redesigned 18-hole golf course.
Since that time the plan and its EIR have gone through a number of revisions. During public hearings, residents have cited traffic, noise, school district boundaries, the horse overlay zone, as well as the aesthetics of the clubhouse and the 114 homes to be built if approved.
City staff and the project’s managers have gone back to the drawing board many times to modify the plan to mitigate some of the residents’ concerns.
Some of the compromises include: The club and the Chandler family agreed to earmark $2 million for equestrian projects, including trail improvements, in exchange for the removal of horse zoning from the housing project; and the homes, the clubhouse and related facilities must fall within the city’s neighborhood compatibility ordinance, and those plans will have to be reviewed by the city’s Planning Commission.
Still to be determined are the school borders. The city of Torrance has agreed to give RHE jurisdiction of 32 acres of the project that falls within its borders, but the Torrance Unified School District has made no agreement. Some of the students residing in the housing development will attend TUSD. The other students are expected to attend schools within the Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified School District. However, in June, a question regarding houses falling within the Los Angeles Unified School District arose.
“It does appear from the information that we have from the district that five of the homes are within the LAUSD boundaries,” Niki Cutler, the city’s principal planner, said Tuesday night.
City Council will have a second reading of three ordinances approving the zone changes and amendments to the general plan related to the project at its Aug. 9 meeting.
“This is the beginning of a long process. I hope the economy recovers, comes back faster than we think, so that we see a project,” Zerunyan said.
Note: Originally written by Mary Scott of Peninsula News
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
What's popular with homebuyers in 2011
Some items on the shopping list: a home in great condition with rooms that can do double duty. Areas that mingle indoor and outdoor living - patios, porches, decks and outdoor rooms - are always a plus. And so are those features that offer a little luxury, like garden tubs, first-rate appliances and high-dollar countertops.
They're also going back to basics: searching for solid, well-maintained properties that will give them their money's worth.
"I think this year they're buying properties that are in good mechanical condition that have inherent value," says Ron Phipps, president of the National Association of Realtors.
But more than anything, buyers want to drive a hard bargain.
They want "great deals," says Patricia Szot, president of the MetroTex Association of Realtors. "And no matter where a seller prices their property, they're looking to negotiate."
Here are nine items popular with buyers this year:
Homes in good condition
Buyers demand homes that are well maintained, Phipps says. "There's not a lot of flexibility in that." The attitude is: "I'd rather spend the money getting into the house" and not have to spend more money later, he says. Buyers don't want an unknown expense hanging over their heads.
Pat Vredevoogd Combs agrees. "I'm not working with too many people who want a fixer-upper," says Combs, past president of the National Association of Realtors and vice president of Coldwell Banker AJS Schmidt in Grand Rapids, Mich.One big reason: With most transactions, "buyers have limited amounts of cash," Phipps says. "Even if they want to do a fixer-upper, they don't have the money to do it."
"Buyers have enough money to buy," he says. "They don't have enough money to buy and improve. And the lenders make it really difficult."
Rock-bottom bargains
Buyers "are more focused on negotiating, drawing limits in their mind and focusing on the strategy," says Justin Knoll, president of the Denver Board of Realtors.
Some of it is a point of pride, he says. "They want to tell their friends and family that they really got a smokin' deal."
They "want value," says Alice Walker, president of the Greater Nashville Association of Realtors. "They are very picky. They're just a lot more critical. They are not going to settle because they know they don't have to."
Her advice to sellers: Repair, update, clean and stage. "You have got to remove every obstacle possible for the buyers," Walker says.
The more-for-less approach even holds when buyers consider bank-owned properties, says Joan Pratt, real estate broker, Re/Max Professionals in Castle Pines, Colo. "They want the short sales and the foreclosures and they want them to look like they're owner-occupied," she says. "They don't want to paint. They don't want to put carpet in.
They don't want to clean."
And they're surprised when they don't find it, Pratt says.
Outdoor living areas
"The thing that we've seen over the past couple of years is more outdoor living areas," says Laurie Knudsen, president of the Charlotte Regional Realtor Association. Some popular features: Decks, outdoor kitchens, two-way fireplaces.
"It's a selling point if a house already has it," she says. And "it's going to make it more competitive on the market."
Incentives
Call it "Rock-bottom deals, part two."
Along with pricing, "it's all about incentives," says Mab l Guzm n, president of the Chicago Association of Realtors.
To pique buyer interest, sellers offer everything from gift cards for new furniture and paint to financial assistance at closing.
Szot agrees, and laments that it's made the road more difficult for sellers.
"Not only are (buyers) asking them to lower the price, but they are asking for a lot more," Szot says. "So negotiations are a lot more difficult now."
Practical green features
Call it "Yankee frugality," says Phipps. But what he sees on buyer shopping lists is a home that is easy on the planet because it's easy on the wallet.
Buyers are looking for things like triple-glazed windows, high-efficiency boilers and energy-efficient appliances. "The buyer of today wants to make sure that the ongoing operating costs of the house are as controlled and economical as possible," he says.
Another popular item: nontech green features. Buyers are looking at the sun exposure in relation to energy efficiency, he says. And that's something that will vary with the area and region, he says.
Open kitchens
"The wall between the kitchen and the family room is evaporating," Phipps says.
"The kitchen is becoming part of the gathering space," he says. "And it's ironic - it's the way it was 300 years ago. We've come full circle."
Repurposed materials
Buyers like a material that looks or feels natural, even if it's not the genuine article, Phipps says. For example, "granite (for counters) is still popular, but it doesn't have to be granite," he says. "It can be stone, another natural material or something that looks like stone."
"We're seeing lots of different materials and lots of reusable materials, which is interesting," he says. "Also a lot of unusual uses of hardwood - like pine flooring (reclaimed and) reused for counters," or terra cotta slabs - beautifully glazed - used for countertops, he says.
Smaller, less-formal homes
Buyers are buying smaller homes, but they want to be able to use and reuse every inch of space, Phipps says. "They are being much more strategic and efficient with how they use it."
Formal spaces that might only be used three or four times per year are disappearing. "The slipcover rooms are gone," says Phipps.
That's "led to a repurposing of space," he says. Formal living rooms have been added to great rooms or converted into home offices or entertainment rooms.
"Three to five years ago, if they could get a loan that would get them into a McMansion with stone and tile and brick and more rooms than they needed, they would do it," says Jeff Wiren, president of the Portland Metropolitan Association of Realtors. "Now they're saying `I don't know if I want to heat that place and clean it.' They're being much more realistic."
Touches of luxury
Buyers like luxury. And sometimes the amenities that convey that feeling of living large are relatively simple or inexpensive.
One example: coffee bars in the master bedroom. "It's like a butler's pantry in your bedroom," Pratt says. "An area for your coffee pot and accoutrements and a little fridge."
The feature has been popular, especially in high-end homes, for about five years, she says.
Another luxury touch: high-dollar finishes in less-expensive homes, Knoll says. Granite counters and stainless steel appliances, marble tiles in the bathrooms and vessel or undermount sinks continue to impress, he says.
Buyers also like "a living space where you can have barstools and do some entertaining," he says.
Says Knoll, "There is a sex appeal about housing, and they do get excited about those kinds of things."