Saturday 30 April 2016

Triangle's red-hot real estate bad news for homebuyers

WAKE COUNTY (WTVD) --

Realtors are warning buyers looking for a home in the Triangle to be patient and leave your emotions at the door.

With high demand and inventory on a steady decline, it is a seller's market.

In 2015, the number of closings was up about 9 percent over the previous year, but inventory of homes for sale decreased more than 15 percent.

Thomas Wohl, RE/MAX Preferred Realtor, has been in the real estate industry for 22 years. He told ABC11 he's never seen a seller's market like this; one of his buyers offered more than 5 percent over the asking price for a home in North Hills, but were outbid.

He said it's common to see up to a dozen buyers make offers well over the asking price for a home that oftentimes needs major repairs.

"People are willing to knowingly overpay for the right location," he said. "Sellers, these days, don't make repairs. They don't take care of their home, barely stage their home because they know they can sell it no matter what."

Melinda Bilcheck of Raleigh is looking to downsize. She was one of several interested buyers swarming a North Raleigh home Friday on the first day it was open for showings.

"I have my median price range I'd like to stay at, but am I willing to go above that? Yes," she said without hesitation.

Wohl said he fears the housing market is headed for a bubble. He explained appreciation is based on both demand and improvements to the home, but sellers are realizing little to no improvements are necessary.

"So if you have a house that hasn't been improved, the only thing you're counting on is a demand," Wohl said of a buyer who overpays. "You only have half of what it takes to make it a stable market. So it's only a demand and supply. At some point it will turn the other way."

His advice to buyers is to be patient, do your research, and don't make an emotional decision.

"I'm seeing across the board that houses don't have the right backyard, don't have the right kitchen, they're a little bit noisy in the back because it backs up to the road, people are still overpaying for it," Wohl said. "And to me, when the market goes off, they're not going to be very happy with the results."

Source: http://abc11.com/realestate/triangles-red-hot-real-estate-bad-news-for-homebuyers/1316029/
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Friday 29 April 2016

America’s 20 Hottest Markets for Real Estate in April 2016

As the average temperature climbs fast across the U.S., interest from would-be home buyers is rising just as quickly—and that means the number of days that homes sit on the market is dwindling, according to the most recent analysis of realtor.com® data for the month of April.
While the roster of metro areas on our monthly list of the country’s hottest markets looks pretty similar to those of months past (can you say California, here I come?), we’re seeing some new heat emanating from the Midwest.
And that’s significant, says Jonathan Smoke, chief economist of realtor.com, who carried out the analysis.
“The Midwest region is representative of the status of the broader U.S. recovery,” he says. “When Columbus, OH, is the 10th hottest market in the country, you know that the Midwest—and the U.S. overall—is back and doing well.”
In fact, Smoke says, many Midwestern markets are continuing a boom period that kicked into gear last year.
“The Northeast is seeing much stronger year-over-year growth in today’s pending home sales data than the Midwest or any other region, but the Midwest’s growth is better than the U.S. overall,” he says.
According to Smoke’s analysis, close to 550,000 new listings came onto the market in April, which helped total inventory grow 2% over March. However, home sales are accelerating so quickly, the added inventory still isn’t keeping up with demand.
The median age of inventory, which fell 22 days from February to March, dropped by six more days in April. So there are 4% fewer homes available for sale compared with this time last year, and homes are selling five days faster.
“Pent-up demand, lower mortgage rates, and strong employment continue to power the strongest and healthiest real estate market we have seen in a decade,” Smoke said in a statement.
Smoke and his team assessed the major metropolitan markets where homes are selling fast and demand (as measured by listing views on realtor.com) is high. Those on the hottest markets list receive two to three times the number of views per listing compared with the national average, and see inventory move 17 to 45 days more quickly than the rest of the U.S.
So here are the metro areas where sellers are making bank and buyers need to be on their toes. Note that we’re talking about more than the individual city, in most cases; the San Francisco market, for example, includes Berkeley, in the East Bay, and Hayward, farther inland. Click on the icons in the interactive map for more detailed information on each market.
The hot list
1.      San Francisco, CA
2.      Vallejo, CA
3.      Denver, CO
4.      Santa Rosa, CA
5.      San Jose, CA
6.      Dallas, TX
7.      Santa Cruz, CA
8.      Sacramento, CA
9.      Ann Arbor, MI
10.    Columbus, OH
11.    Boston, MA
13.    San Diego, CA
14.    Stockton, CA
15.    Raleigh, NC
16.    Lafayette, IN
17.    Fort Wayne, IN
18.    Oxnard, CA
19.    Modesto, CA
20.    Sioux City, IA
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Wednesday 27 April 2016

Once-Fugitive Real Estate Heir's Plea Deal Approved

Robert Durst, the estranged member of a wealthy real estate family and subject of a documentary about the death of his first wife, was sentenced to 7 years and 1 month in prison on a weapons charge that cleared the deck for him to face murder charges in California.
U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt sentenced Durst, 72, on Wednesday in New Orleans, approving a sentence that Durst had accepted in February as part of a plea agreement. Engelhardt also fined Durst $5,000 and said that his sentence, once served, would be followed by three years of supervised release. Durst will serve more than 4 ½ times the maximum under federal guidelines.
Durst is charged in Los Angeles in the 2000 killing of a female friend, Susan Berman, to keep her from talking to New York prosecutors about the disappearance of his first wife in 1982.
His attorneys have said repeatedly that he is innocent, does not know who killed Berman, and wants to prove it.
"I have been waiting to get to California about a year so I can state my not guilty plea," Durst, looking pale in an orange jail jumpsuit, told Engelhardt. "I truly, truly want to express my statement that I am not guilty in the death of Susan Berman."
Ten years and a $250,000 fine would have been the maximum sentence that Durst could have faced for illegally carrying a .38-caliber revolver after being convicted of a felony. However, Engelhardt noted, a presentence report recommended 12 to 18 months under federal guidelines.
Engelhardt said the longer-than-standard sentence was reasonable because the plea deal included agreements with U.S. attorneys in Houston and Manhattan and the Orleans Parish district attorney not to prosecute Durst on a variety of offenses. Those could have carried sentences longer than 85 months, Engelhardt said.
He will get credit for time served since his arrest in mid-March last year, Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael McMahon said.
"They always do that," he said.
Accepting the sentence "cleared the decks — at a cost," defense attorney Richard DeGuerin said. "It's a great cost, but he's not facing any other prosecutions except what's in California."
"This case is and always has been about the accusation that Bob killed his best friend, Susan Berman. He did not kill Susan Berman, he doesn't know who did, and he's eager to get to California and prove that," DeGuerin said.
McMahon and DeGuerin said Durst also will forfeit more than $44,000 found in his hotel room when he was arrested and $117,000 in a package sent to Everette Ward, the name under which Durst had registered, and intercepted by the FBI after his arrest.
Durst's attorneys and prosecutors in Los Angeles have agreed that he will be in Los Angeles by mid-August.
He's likely to leave Louisiana within a couple of weeks, McMahon said.
"He'll be out of here pretty quickly," McMahon said, noting that timing and the specific prison that Durst goes to is up to the federal Bureau of Prisons.
Engelhardt recommended that Durst serve his time at FCI Terminal Island, California, about 30 miles from downtown Los Angeles. The location is near the trial venue and has medical facilities Durst needs because of his "advanced age and serious health considerations, including mobility challenges," defense lawyers wrote in a request filed Monday.
An estranged member of the wealthy New York real estate family that runs 1 World Trade Center, Durst was tracked to New Orleans in March 2015 by FBI agents worried that he was about to flee to Cuba.
He was detained at a hotel on the eve of the finale of a six-part documentary about him, and was arrested early on the morning of the show. "The Jinx" described the disappearance of Kathleen Durst, the death and dismemberment of a neighbor in Galveston, Texas, and Berman's death.
At the end of the show, Durst is heard muttering, "What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course."

Sourcehttp://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory/fugitive-real-estate-heirs-plea-deal-approved-38706446

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Is Genting looking to flip former Miami Herald property?

BY DAVID SMILEY
Unable to build the luxury Miami casino and resort envisioned five years ago when they dropped $236 million for 14 acres on Biscayne Bay, gaming giant Genting Group may indeed be actively seeking to flip the property.
Rumored for years, the company’s interest in selling the former site of the Miami Herald’s headquarters was confirmed recently on condition of anonymity by a developer who said he was shown the property. The meeting came after another failed attempt to change Florida’s restrictive gambling laws during the state’s 2016 legislative session.
Details such as the asking price and the exact timing of the visit were unavailable. A Genting spokeswoman denied any meeting took place.
WE HAVE NOT SHOWN THE PROPERTY TO A POTENTIAL BUYER
Melissa Rieder, Genting subsidiary Resorts World Bimini
“We have not shown the property to a potential buyer,” Melissa Rieder, marketing manager for Genting subsidiary Resorts World Bimini, wrote in a one-sentence email.
Despite the denial, the reported encounter suggests that Genting, among Miami’s more secretive real estate players, is at the very least considering a sale of the centerpiece of the company’s nearly $500 million portfolio. In total, the developer owns about 30 acres, including the Omni Mall and several parcels next to the Miami-Dade School Board headquarters.
“It means that they understand the people in downtown don’t want a big casino,” speculated Miami Mayor Tomás Regalado, who once presented Genting Chairman K.T. Lim with a key to the city only to turn on casino plans. “That’s the bottom line.”
In actuality, it’s difficult to reach any conclusions on Genting’s plans, given the company’s secrecy and years of mixed messages. After signaling years ago that it intended to build a luxury complex without a casino, company representatives reached out to Miami condo king Jorge Perez in 2014 to talk about a partnership that never developed. Similarly, a brief talk with soccer star David Beckham about a professional sports stadium at the site went nowhere.
Even now, Genting continues to be active in Tallahassee, where its Resorts World Miami affiliate is represented on matters of “casino hotels” by Ballard Partners, and in the city of Miami, where former congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart registered to lobby for the company in January. Meanwhile, Genting was among the interested parties last year when the county sought to partner with a developer to build out the space over the Omni bus station and attached Metromover station, and the company is in the midst of renovating the historic Boulevard Shops across from the Performing Arts Center.
As for building plans, Genting hasn’t submitted any for the site since seeking comments on plans for an “as-of-right” project more than two years ago, according to the city’s planning department. Since then, Assistant Director Luciana Gonzalez said a search of the department’s files show no applications for building permits, marina or bay walk.
It is, of course, possible that Genting isn’t actively shopping the site, but rather open to offers in case they get a deal too good to turn down. When the company purchased the Herald property during the recession, the price gave some sticker shock, said Suzanne Hollander, a real estate broker and FIU professor. But now, with Miami’s cooling real estate market still among the hottest in the country, Genting could still receive an offer that proves irresistible.
“In real estate, every property has a sale price even if it’s not for sale. Maybe it’s not actively on the market,” she said. “It’d make a whole lot of sense that they could make a profit on it.”
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Tuesday 26 April 2016

Once-fugitive real estate heir Robert Durst eyes Los Angeles-area prison

NEW ORLEANS –  Robert Durst is asking a federal judge to recommend a Los Angeles-area prison when he's sentenced on the weapons charge that's kept him in Louisiana pending his trial on a California murder charge.

Sentencing is scheduled Wednesday for the 72-year-old real estate heir, arrested last year in New Orleans.

A Monday court filing by Durst's lawyers say Durst is ill, and that California's Terminal Island prison has the sort of medical facilities he needs. And, they note, it's near Los Angeles, where Durst faces trial in the 2000 death of his friend Susan Berman.


Durst pleaded guilty to the weapons charge in February, accepting an 85-month prison sentence. Judge Kurt Englehardt said he'd decide whether to accept that agreement after reading a pre-sentencing report that has not been made public.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/04/25/once-fugitive-real-estate-heir-robert-durst-eyes-los-angeles-area-prison.html
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Thursday 21 April 2016

A mixed month for real estate across Miami-Dade, Broward

March was a mixed month for Miami-Dade real estate, according to data released Wednesday by Miami-Dade Realtors.
Compared to March 2015, the median sale price of single-family homes in Miami-Dade increased by 7.7 percent, from $260,000 to $280,000, while prices of existing condos slid by 2.5 percent, to $215,000 from $209,500 in the previous year.
EWM Realty International broker Chris Zoller attributes the slump in condo prices to the “simple fact that developers are selling new product.”
“If you have money for both [a new car and a used car], what are you going to buy? Like most people, you’re going to look to buy a new product,” he said.
The volume of sales in Miami-Dade also dropped. Single-family home sales decreased 5.8 percent from March 2015, with 1,240 sales this year versus 1,168 in the same month of 2015. Sales of condos declined by nearly twice as much, falling 11.5 percent, from 1,466 in March 2015 to 1,297.
Meanwhile in Broward, median sale prices increased across the board, with single-family prices up 2.9 percent over March 2015 and condo prices up 5.8 percent year-over-year. The number of sales in Broward increased by 2.9 percent for single-family homes, from 1,399 to 1,440, and 5.4 percent for condos/townhouses, from 1,544 sales to 1,628, according to data released by Broward Realtors.
“Miami-Dade has slowed down, specifically due to the strong dollar and the economy of Latin America. When the Latins are looking at currency valuations that have resulted in an . . . increase in price, it has had a profound effect on [sales],” said Phil Spiegelman, principal of ISG World. “But this isn’t the first time . . . political unrest in Latin America has had effect on the South Florida real estate market,” and markets will readjust, he added.
Spiegelman and Zoller predict that both sales and prices across Miami-Dade will return to an upward trajectory in the coming months.
Miami-Dade inventory grew in March, with an increase of 8.2 percent for single-family homes and 15.9 percent for condos. Single-family homes fall just short of the six-month supply considered a healthy threshold, while condos surpass it almost twofold with a 10.8-month supply.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/business/real-estate-news/article72950247.html
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Wednesday 20 April 2016

How an online real estate company optimized its Hadoop clusters?

San Francisco-based online residential real estate company Trulia lives and dies by data. To compete successfully in today's housing market, it must deliver the most up-to-date real estate information available to its customers. But until recently, doing so was a daily struggle.
Acquired by online real estate database company Zillow in 2014 for $3.5 billion, Trulia is one of the largest online residential real estate marketplaces around, with more than 55 million unique site visitors each month.
Hadoop at heart
With so much data to store and process, the company adopted Hadoop in 2008 and it has since become the heart of Trulia's data infrastructure. The company has expanded usage of Hadoop to an entire data engineering department consisting of several teams using multiple clusters. This allows Trulia to deliver personalized recommendations to customers based on sophisticated data science models that analyze more than a terabyte of data daily. That data is drawn from new listings, public records and user behavior, all of which is then cross-referenced with search criteria to alert customers quickly when new properties become available.
To make it all work, throughout each night, the company must complete dozens of workflows and hundreds of complex jobs on time. With many teams writing Hadoop jobs or using Hive or Spark concurrently, Trulia has to ensure reliability in its multi-tenant, multi-workload environment. Delayed or unpredictable jobs throw a wrench in the works and can seriously affect the bottom line. Until recently, that meant Trulia had to intentionally underutilize its Hadoop clusters to ensure jobs completed on time.
"We process, on a daily basis, over a terabyte of new information: public records, listings, user activity," says Zane Williamson, senior DevOps engineer at Trulia. "We process this data across multiple Hadoop clusters and use the information to send out email and push notifications to our users. That's the lead driver to get users back to the site and interacting. It's very important that it gets done in a daily fashion. Reliability and uptime for the workflows is essential."
"It's been a pretty painful process, I think," Williamson adds, noting that he joined Trulia relatively recently. "It's been a pretty big challenge to reliably run this data cycle, maintain uptime and troubleshoot issues. Troubleshooting issues could sometimes take days to dial in on."
Sprinkle with Pepperdata
To ease that pain and achieve more reliable Hadoop job completion, Trulia turned toPepperdata, a specialist in adaptive Hadoop performance that guarantees quality of service on Hadoop.
Pepperdata provides a granular view of everything happening across your Hadoop clusters, actively governing use of CPU, memory, disk I/O and network for every task, job, user and group. For Trulia, the pièce de résistance was Pepperdata's newest feature — the capability to turn any trackable metric into an alert defined at any level of granularity, from cluster, to node, user, queue, job or task.
"We're watching how every application on the cluster is actually using the hardware," says Sean Suchter, co-founder and CEO of Pepperdata. "If there is any contention between some high priority thing and some computationally expensive ad-hoc thing, we'll detect that and slow down or otherwise affect the low priority thing just enough to give a consistent, high quality of service to the high priority thing."
"The performance gains we get scale pretty well with the chaos of the cluster," he adds. "The more chaos you have, the more applications you run, the more different tenants you have, the better we can do. We're able to react in a second-by-second fashion and do a lot of optimization. The opportunity goes higher the more complex the environment is."
Pepperdata has used the alerting feature to create detailed notifications to proactively track performance metrics across its Hadoop environment. Between dashboards and the alerting functions, Trulia is now able to identify problems much easier and faster. With the new visibility, the company has been able to optimize its Hadoop usage and maximize utilization.
"We rolled out Pepperdata last year," Williamson says. "It's been an amazing tool for us to diagnose problems. Within hours, rather than days, we could zoom in on what was going on and make changes."
He notes that Trulia now uses Pepperdata to manage five different Hadoop clusters, range from a dozen nodes to more than 40. There's about 2 petabytes of data across all the clusters. The company also has a number of clusters on AWS that are not yet managed by Pepperdata because they're used for batch-driven EMR workloads that aren't persistent. But he's working with the Pepperdata team to bring those clusters under Pepperdata management too.
"It's definitely on my roadmap," he says. "I feel like I'm running blind here."
 Source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/real-estate-market-psychology-1.3537384
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