Friday, December 30, 2011

Denver housing bucks trend

Denver housing bucks trend



Continue reading on Examiner.com Denver housing bucks trend - Denver Real Estate | Examiner.com http://www.examiner.com/real-estate-in-denver/denver-housing-bucks-trend#ixzz1i1ytEpAL





Read More: http://www.examiner.com/real-estate-in-denver/denver-housing-bucks-trend

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Fannie Mae, banks halt foreclosures for the holidays

Fannie Mae, banks halt foreclosures for the holidays

@CNNMoney December 1, 2011: 4:11 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Happy holidays struggling homeowners! Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and several large mortgage lenders have pledged not to foreclose on delinquent borrowers during the Christmas season.

For homeowners with loans through Fannie Mae (FNMA, Fortune 500) and Freddie Mac (FMCC, Fortune 500), the moratorium will run from Dec. 19 to Jan. 2. During this time, legal and administrative proceedings for evictions may continue, but families will be allowed to stay in their homes, Fannie said in a statement.

"No family should have to give up their home during this holiday season," said Terry Edwards, an executive vice president for Fannie Mae.

Among some of the major banks that offer mortgage loans, Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) Mortgage said it will not evict anyone between Dec. 22 and Jan. 2. Wells Fargo (WFC, Fortune 500) will also suspend evictions during that period, but will not shut down its eviction machinery entirely.

The bank said it will observe the moratorium on foreclosed properties in its own portfolio but for loans it services for other lenders "foreclosure-related actions may still occur."

Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) said that it would "avoid foreclosure sales or displacement of homeowners or tenants around the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays."

Why Fannie/Freddie execs get paid a lot

However, that policy only applies to loans the bank itself owns. Like Wells Fargo, it will also honor the wishes of the owners of the loans it services, which could mean moving forward with certain foreclosures.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Fed sees ‘slightly’ improved economy in Colorado region

Fed sees ‘slightly’ improved economy in Colorado region

Date: Wednesday, October 19, 2011, 4:05pm MDT
Heather Draper
Reporter - Denver Business Journal
Email | Facebook | Twitter | Finance Etc. blog

The economy in Colorado and neighboring states “improved slightly” in late August and September, the U.S. Federal Reserve reports in its latest “Beige Book” survey of the region’s business executives.

The Fed’s Kansas City-based 10th District, which includes Colorado and some or all of six neighboring states, was among 10 of the 12 Fed districts nationwide that registered modest or slight growth in the six-week period covered by the Beige Book. Growth was slower or non-existent in the Richmond and Philadelphia districts.

The Beige Book is based on interviews with a sample of business executives representing key industries in each district. The reports are anecdotal and do not contain statistics, but they are widely followed and help the Fed to set national economic policy.

According to the latest 10th District Beige Book, consumer spending increased in the retail and auto sectors, but declined slightly in the restaurant and travel sectors.

“Luxury goods, such as jewelry and custom-upholstered furniture, sold particularly well,” the report said.

Manufacturing activity rose at durable goods factories, and the high-tech services industry experienced strong growth, while transportation activity was flat.

Residential and commercial real estate and construction contacts continued to report weak conditions. Multi-family building projects were the only area of reported growth by commercial construction contacts.

The energy sector expanded further with production increasing for oil, natural gas and coal, according to the report.

Bankers in Colorado and neighboring states reported increased deposits, but somewhat weaker loan demand and a slight deterioration in loan quality.


Read More: http://www.bizjournals.com/denver/news/2011/10/19/fed-sees-slightly-improved-economy.html

Ten Best Cities for Buying Investment Property

Jason Hartman Recommends

Ten Best Cities for Buying

Investment Property


While many average Americans are skittish about the housing market, the country's richest citizens see current conditions as perfect for buying income properties

Irvine, CA (PRWEB) October 19, 2011

Buying investment property is the best possible way to invest your money and now is the time, according to wealth creation expert Jason Hartman. Not only does purchasing income property allow the investor to borrow the financing(leveraging debt and inflation), it allows the investor to “outsource” his mortgage payments to the tenant while ultimately earning the investor rights to a free and clear title.

“Tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of people are quietly creating wealth every year because they pulled their money out of the stock market, which has had no real gains in years, and put it to work with income property investing,” said Jason Hartman, founder of Platinum Properties Investor Network and host of The Creating Wealth Radio Show. “Time and again, history has proven that income property investments are most the historically proven way to create long-term wealth.” Hartman notes the philosophies of investment icons including Robert Kiyosaki, Donald Trump and Warrent Buffett as examples of such wealth creation.

Considering that 85 percent of all wealthy Americans built their fortunes with real estate investments, Jason Hartman shares his top ten picks in the U.S for purchasing income-producing property:

1. Atlanta - The only way to describe the hand-picked Atlanta submarkets we recommend is “exceptional.” When it comes to American cities, Atlanta is a story for the history books. First founded as a railroad hub of the southern states, it refuses to stop growing at an exponential pace while attracting numerous Fortune 500 corporate headquarters. Its population continues to grow by the millions while the number of transplant professionals looking for rental homes surges by the week.

2. Dallas - Not only home to all kinds of cowboys, Dallas is continuously rated as one of the best cities in America for business and real estate by Forbes and numerous business journals. Its market-friendly approach, favorable tax climate, proximity to freeways, large renter population and high quality of life promise a bright present—and future—for real estate investors.

3. Phoenix - When it comes to return on investment, “The Valley of the Sun” just won't quit. Not only does Phoenix continue to attract dozens of Fortune 500 and Fortune 100 companies, but the ratio of affordability to rental income potential is one of the best in the country. Phoenix is the 5th largest metro area in the United States and is sunny year-round.

4. Indianapolis - Combine a low cost of living, a bunch of the top sports franchises, ever-increasing recommendations by Forbes magazine and increasing employer presence. this is the gold mine that is Indianapolis. When a city in the Midwest manages to lead job growth nationwide in the midst of a massive economic recession, you should take notice if you are ready to buy income properties. They call it “The Crossroads of America” for good reason.

5. St. Louis - Home to very proud residents that welcome a surprising amount of tourism and visitors each year, St. Louis is beginning to impress investors. With a ton of top American corporate headquarters and a wide variety of healthy industries from manufacturing to high-tech, this jewel of Missouri is worth a look.

6. St. Robert - Perhaps the less famous Saint of Missouri, but the often unrecognized leader of regional commerce in this part of the country is St. Robert. Located just off Interstate 44 and supported in part by the stability of Fort Leonard Wood, the local military base, St. Robert has one of the highest predicted growth rates in coming years for American jobs.

7. Denver - The mile-high city first made famous during and after the gold rush and push West, Denver continues to attract adventurers, transplants and business investors. Named the 2nd best place to live by Sperling's due in part to its year-round entertainment and activities, it also keeps impressing Forbes (among others) as a promising investment market. Add well-run local government with ambitious infrastructure projects, a large “creative class” and rapid private-sector growth and you have an idea of the massive potential that Denver has to offer.


Read More: http://m.benzinga.com/pressreleases/11/10/p1997571/jason-hartman-recommends-ten-best-cities-for-buying-investment-property



Tuesday, October 18, 2011

It's Time to Buy That House

It's Time to Buy That House

Online.wsj.com —Jack Hough is a columnist at SmartMoney.com


U.S. house prices have plunged by nearly a third since 2006, and homeownership rates are falling at the fastest pace since the Great Depression.

The good news? Two key measures now suggest it's an excellent time to buy a house, either to live in for the long term or for investment income (but not for a quick flip). First, the nation's ratio of house prices to yearly rents is nearly restored to its prebubble average. Second, when mortgage rates are taken into consideration, houses are the most affordable they have been in decades.

Two of the silliest mantras during the real-estate bubble were that a house is the best investment you will ever make and that a renter "throws money down the drain." Whether buying is a better deal than renting isn't a stagnant fact but a changing condition that depends on the relationship between prices and rents, the cost of financing and other factors.

[UPSIDE]

But the math is turning in buyers' favor. Stock-oriented folks can think of a house's price/rent ratio as akin to a stock's price/earnings ratio, in that it compares the cost of an asset with the money the asset is capable of generating. For investors, a lower ratio suggests more income for the price. For prospective homeowners, a lower ratio makes owning more attractive than renting, all else equal.

Nationwide, the ratio of home prices to yearly rents is 11.3, down from 18.5 at the peak of the bubble, according to Moody's Analytics. The average from 1989 to 2003 was about 10, so valuations aren't quite back to normal.

But for most home buyers, mortgage rates are a key determinant of their total costs. Rates are so low now that houses in many markets look like bargains, even if price/rent ratios aren't hitting new lows. The 30-year mortgage rate rose to 4.12% this week from a record low of 3.94% last week, Freddie Mac said Thursday. (The rates assume 0.8% in prepaid interest, or "points.") The latest rate is still less than half the average since 1971.


Read More: http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB10001424052970204774604576629443313035736-lMyQjAxMTAxMDEwNjExNDYyWj.html?mod=wsj_share_email_bot

Friday, September 30, 2011

Rate on 30-year mortgage falls to record 4.01 pct.

Rate on 30-year mortgage falls to record 4.01 pct.









WASHINGTON (AP) -- Fixed mortgage rates have fallen to historic new lows for a fourth straight week and are likely to fall further.

The average on a 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 4.01 percent from 4.09 percent this week, Freddie Mac said Thursday. That's the lowest rate since the mortgage buyer began keeping records in 1971. The last time long-term rates were lower was in 1951, when most long-term home loans lasted just 20 or 25 years.

The average on a 15-year fixed mortgage, a popular refinancing option, ticked down to 3.28 percent. Economists say that's the lowest rate ever for the loan.

Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. The 10-year yield has risen this week to around 2 percent. A week ago, it touched 1.74 percent - the lowest level since the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis started keeping daily records in 1962. As recently as July, the 10-year yield exceeded 3 percent.

Rates on mortgages could fall further after the Federal Reserve announced last week that it would take further action to try to lower long-term rates.

Still, low rates have so far done little to boost home sales or refinancing. Many would-be buyers or homeowners don't have enough cash or home equity to get a new loan.

High unemployment, scant wage gains and debt loads represent a heavy burden for many people. Others can't qualify. Banks are insisting on higher credit scores and 20 percent down payments for first-time buyers.

This year is shaping up to be among the worst for sales of previously occupied homes in 14 years. Few are buying, even though the average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage has fallen to around 4 percent.

A drop in mortgage rates could provide some help to the economy if more people could refinance. When people refinance at lower rates, they pay less interest on their loans and have more money to spend.

Consider a homeowner who owes $250,000 and is paying 5.09 percent on a 30-year fixed mortgage. That was the average rate being offered in January 2010. Refinancing the loan at 4.01 percent could save him or her roughly $2,000 a year.

But many homeowners with good jobs and stable finances have already refinanced over the past year as rates have fallen. The average rate on the 30-year loan fell to new lows in November, August and again this month.

Homeowners also typically pay a few thousand dollars in closing costs when they refinance. And the low rates being offered don't include extra fees, which many borrowers must pay to get the rates. Those fees are known as points; one point equals 1 percent of the loan amount.


Read More: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MORTGAGE_RATES?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2011-09-29-15-43-28

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Foreclosure starts surge in Western states

Foreclosure starts surge in Western states

ForeclosureRadar: BofA ramping up filings against delinquent homeowners

Inman News™

Flickr/<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/respres/2539334956/" target=blank>respres</a>Flickr/respres

Foreclosure starts jumped by double digits from July to August in four out of five Western states tracked by ForeclosureRadar, reversing what had been a declining trend over the past several months, the company said.

The increase in foreclosure starts seen in Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon and Washington appeared to be driven primarily by Bank of America and related companies, which boosted notice of default and notice of trustee sale filings by 116 percent from July to August.

Wells Fargo and US Bank also ramped up foreclosure start filings, ForeclosureRadar said, while filings by JP Morgan Chase and Citibank were essentially flat, ForeclosureRadar said.

In California, foreclosure starts jumped nearly 70 percent from July to August, totaling 31,965 -- the highest level in a year. The average time to foreclose in California increased to 333 days in August, 49 days longer than a year ago.

Notice of trustee sale filings were up more moderately, rising 6 percent from July to August but still down nearly 24 percent from a year ago at 24,020.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Colorado's Economy In A Nutshell

DENVER - The data that has been gathered from the Colorado economy is sending mixed signals.

The state's economy is normally similar to the rest of the country, but today it varies in some aspects.

"Jobs still remain stagnant," 9NEWS anchor Gregg Moss said. "There are about 230,000 people in our state looking for work right now."

Though that number seems large, in comparison to the rest of the country, it's relatively low.

Nonetheless, job growth is still moving along slowly, with the construction industry being the slowest to recover, according to economists. However, it differentiates when it comes to manufacturing, which is making a comeback.


Read More: http://www.9news.com/news/article/211935/188/Colorados-economy-in-a-nutshell

Monday, July 18, 2011

Denver Metro Area Luxury Home Sales Soar in June

Denver Metro Area Luxury Home Sales Soar in June, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Reports

Denver, CO, July 17, 2011 --(PR.com)-- Luxury home sales in the Denver Metro Area soared in June from the previous month and were also up from a year ago as high-end buyers took advantage of attractive property values in many areas, according to Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Colorado’s leading provider of luxury real estate services.

A total of 71 homes changed hands for more than $1 million last month, up sharply from May’s total of 47 sales. June’s transactions also outpaced June 2010 when 67 luxury homes were sold. Additionally, the ultra luxury market gained momentum with 11 multi-million-dollar homes selling last month, up from seven in May.

The median sale price of million-dollar homes moved higher in June, reaching $1.3 million from $1.25 million in May. However, the median was off from last June’s $1.34 million price.

Other indicators also provided encouragement for the high-end market in the Denver Metro Area: Homes also sold at a faster rate on average at 164 days vs. 215 for those closing the previous month. And sellers received an average of 92.6 percent of their asking price, up from 91.3 percent in May and 90.4 percent last June.

The figures were derived from Multiple Listing Service data of all homes sold for more than $1 million last month in the Denver Metro Area.

Read More: http://www.pr.com/press-release/339367

Saturday, July 2, 2011

This real-estate scam can land you in jail

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Rarely has a topic elicited as much response as my column about the scam known as flopping, which is the “art” of intentionally misrepresenting the value of a financially strapped borrower’s house in order to buy it at a discounted price from the lender and resell it at its true market value.

Under a flopping scam, the owner seeks permission from the lender for a short sale at a price that is below what he owes on the property. The lender hires a real- estate agent to provide what’s known in the trade as a “broker price opinion,” which is the agent’s informed estimate of the property’s worth. But instead of providing honest evaluations, some agents are low-balling the number. And then, if the lender accepts the figure, they or an accomplice buy the house in question at that price and flip it, or resell it quickly at the true market value and pocket the difference.

Crime and punishment

Some readers asked what’s the big deal? After all, no crime is committed. “I don’t really get the objection to this,” wrote Bill, a Colorado attorney. “If I buy a short-sale property from a bank and sell it a year later for a profit, there’s no issue. If I do it a month later, no problem. Why is it fraud if I resell it a day later? Lenders are not losing money on the marked-up price because they cannot sell the property; they are not the owners yet.”

Read More Here: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-real-estate-scam-can-land-you-in-jail-2011-07-01

Friday, June 24, 2011

Real-Estate Disclosure: What You Don't Know Can Hurt You

Real-Estate Disclosure: What You Don't Know Can Hurt You

When a bulldozer began to to clear away dirt for an in-ground pool in Brian Dyer's back yard, the Lakeland, Fla., homeowner got the surprise of his life: mountains of trash emerged from the hole. "It's just a sick feeling in the pit of your stomach to see what they're bringing up with each scoop," he told Tampa Bay's 10News.

Dyer said that contractors tried to dig into three different areas in the backyard and each time, came up with more trash. "We found several tires, what appears to be washing machine tubs, trash, debris, metal parts, we found a lawnmower in the deep hole over there," he said, pointing to an 11-foot-deep hole. "You name it, it seems to be coming up out of the hole."
Dyer has no idea how much more trash is under his property, how far it goes--or, even worse, if it's under his house.

"We're very fearful at this point," he told 10News.

It's anybody's guess as to whether anyone but the person who dumped the stuff illegally knew it was there. Builders dug down the required 12 inches for the foundation when the house was built in 2006. The debris was hidden three feet deep.

Read More: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2011/06/20/real-estate-disclosure-what-you-dont-know-can-hurt-you/

Friday, June 10, 2011

Mortgage Assistance Relief Services Act

Frascona on MARS

Prominent real estate attorney Oliver Frascona doesn't think the MARS rule regarding short sale transactions is as onerous as many think.

Prominent real estate attorney Oliver Frascona has heard all of the wailing from real estate brokers regarding the six-month-old rule known as MARS, but he doesn’t buy it.

Any real estate broker who does short sales, in which a lender accepts less then the mortgage amount, is surely familiar with MARS.

MARS, an acronym for Mortgage Assistance Relief Services Act, went into effect on Jan. 1. A 54-page, single-spaced document such as the Federal Trade Commission’s MARS, addresses a number of topics, of course. But the most significant change is that it makes it illegal for real estate brokers to charge sellers an upfront fee or to pass along a short sale coordinator’s fee on any short sale prior to receiving a written offer from a lender or servicer that the homeowner decides is acceptable.

This is what FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz had to say about this portion of MARS in February: “Banning the collection of up-front fees will protect homeowners from being victimized. This is especially important at a time when so many people are behind on their mortgages or facing foreclosure.”

Penalties for breaking the rules are stiff – up to fine of $11,000 a day.

But Frascona, a shareholder of the Boulder-based firm Frascona, Joiner, Goodman and Greenstein, PC, said that he does not believe the intent of MARS is to go after brokers who pay small upfront fees to reputable short-sale assistant firms. Studies have shown that brokers who use these short-sale facilitators have a much greater likelihood of completing a short-sale quickly.

Culprits: Out-of-state firms that charge upfront fees

“They’re not going to go after the broker who pays a couple of hundred bucks upfront to a short-sale company that needs the money to cover its overhead,” Frascona told me. “They’re going after the out-of-state guys who charges a bunch of money and didn’t do anything. And they should be going after those guys.” He also said that the FTC rule would apply to real estate brokers who are giving short-sale work to unqualified family members, who are not helping the distressed homeowners.

“They’re not going after Joe Broker who has got a short-sale listing and says I’ll pay a reputable firm to get the process started,” Frascona said. “Unless, I’m missing something, I just don’t see it. The public is not being harmed. The consumer is actually being helped. There is no kickback involved.”

The reality, even if the FTC decided to go after real estate brokers who are paying legitimate firms upfront fees, they couldn’t, he said. “The FTC has the same budget constraints as everybody else,” Frascona said. “There is no way they have the financial resources to go after a reputable broker working with a reputable company, especially when they are helping people at a reasonable cost.”

Not that he is a fan of MARS.

“i don’t think the FTC knew what it was doing,” Frascona said. “It’s like it’s left hand didn’t know what it’s right hand was doing. MARS is a mess.”

To contact or learn more about Oliver Frascona’s law firm, please visit this link to his law firm.

Good news for the Denver housing market

DENVER - There is some good news on the housing front. Sales of single-family homes and condos in the Denver-metro area were up in May from April, but down from a year ago, according to Metrolist Inc. Data.

The sale of 3,700 properties in May is 9 percent higher than April, but off 15 percent from 2010.

The median sales price for a single-family was more than 3.5 percent higher from April - coming in at $230,000.

Real estate analyst Gary Bauer is encourage by these numbers, saying we're getting back to a more normal market with numbers not skewed by 2010's homebuyer tax credit.

(KUSA-TV © 2011 Multimedia Holdings Corporation)

Thursday, May 12, 2011

REOs and Shorts Accounted for 39% of Q1 Existing-Home Sales

REOs and Shorts Accounted for 39% of Q1 Existing-Home Sales

Data released by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) Tuesday show that distressed properties – including bank-owned homes and pre-foreclosure short sales – made up 39 percent of the first quarter’s existing-home sales. That’s up from 36 percent a year earlier.

Overall, sales of previously owned homes rose to an annual rate of 5.14 million units during the first three months of this year, the trade group reported. That pace is 8.3 percent higher than during the previous quarter and essentially flat – down just 0.8 percent – compared to the same period last year.

NAR says existing-home sales continued to recover in Q1 with quarter-over-quarter gains recorded in 49 states and the District of Columbia. Vermont was the only state to post a decline. There, existing-home sales dropped 7.1 percent.

With distressed homes grabbing such a large share of the market, the median home price in most areas continues to slide. NAR says distressed properties typically sold at a discount of about 20% during the first quarter. According to the trade group’s study, the national median existing single-family home price was $158,700 in the first quarter, down 4.6 percent from $166,400 in the first quarter of 2010.

Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, says lower priced homes have seen the best sales performance. “The biggest sales increase has been in the lower price ranges, which are popular with investors and cash buyers,” he said. “The preponderance of sales activity at the lower end is bringing down the median price, so what we’re seeing is the result of a change in the composition of home sales.”

Yun also noted, “When buyers principally purchase distressed properties in a given market, the recorded prices will be very low, which is what we’re seeing now in much of the country.”

According to NAR’s latest findings 118 of the 153 metropolitan statistical areas included in the study showed price declines in the first quarter when comparing figures from a year earlier.

Although sales nationally are slightly below a year ago, the volume of homes sold for $100,000 or less in the first quarter was 8.9 percent higher than the first quarter of 2010, creating a downward skew on the overall median price, NAR explained in its report.

The share of all-cash home purchases rose to 33 percent in the first quarter from 27 percent in the first quarter of 2010.

NAR says investors accounted for 21 percent of first quarter transactions, while first-time buyers purchased 32 percent of homes, and repeat buyers claimed a 47 percent market share.

Foreclosure rate slows as repossession timeline lengthens

Increased scrutiny of how lenders foreclose on Americans has dragged the repossession process out to unprecedented lengths, driving down the pace at which banks are taking back homes.

Big banks are taking longer not only to push borrowers into foreclosure, but also to move homeowners through each stage of the process than in previous years, according to a report by Irvine-based RealtyTrac.

The extended timelines have meant a reprieve for troubled borrowers. But economists said the delays could hold back a national housing rebound if foreclosures remain a significant part of the market for years to come.

In April, U.S. foreclosure activity fell for the seventh month in a row on a year-over-year basis to the lowest point in more than three years, RealtyTrac said. The sharp April drop was the result of the foreclosure-processing slowdown and not an indication of a housing rebound lifting people out of default, experts said.

"The banks have had to slow down and get more lawyers involved because of all of the fuss over the robo-signing scandal," said Christopher Thornberg, principal of Beacon Economics, referring to the revelations last year that banks foreclosed on properties using faulty paperwork.

Foreclosure filings— notices of default, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — dropped 9% in April from March and plunged 34% from April 2010 as 219,258 U.S. properties received new filings in April. The number of bank repossessions fell 5% from the prior month and 25% from April 2010, with lenders taking back 69,532 U.S. properties. In all, 239,795 foreclosure filings were made, with some properties receiving multiple filings.

Read More: http://www.latimes.com/business/realestate/la-fi-foreclosures-20110512,0,5524709.story

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Denver-area million-dollar home sales soar in April

Denver-area million-dollar home sales soar in April

Date: Tuesday, May 10, 2011, 12:57pm MDT


The market for million-dollar homes in the metro Denver area continues to improve, judging by April sales figures from Metrolist Inc. released Tuesday.

Fifty-five percent more million-dollar-plus homes — and 100 percent more condominiums in that price category — sold in April than in March, according to Gary Bauer, an independent Littleton-based real estate broker and Metrolist analyst.

There were 57 homes, six of which were condominiums, sold or closed on in April, which was down seven percent from the same month in 2010. The lowest-priced home in that category was $1 million and the highest was $3.2 million. The total sales volume for those 57 properties was $84.2 million.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Why did my property value drop so much this year?

Property holds its valuePrintE-mail
Written by News Release
Wednesday, 04 May 2011 00:00

Property owners in western Colorado may be expecting to see their 2011 Notice of Valuation showing a lower value than their 2009 value, given the ongoing national economic woes. Delta County assessor Debbie Griffith reports that generally the Western Slope market remained relatively stable with pockets of neighborhoods that experienced a decline or increase in value.

These neighborhoods were influenced by local economic drivers, such as the oil and gas industry, resulting in values that have decreased more substantially, or increased. As was seen in the 2009 reappraisal, the sales volume, or number of sales occurring, has remained very low.

Griffith provided the following breakdown for the four major categories of real property, while stressing that the values are not yet final.

She explains, "We have just started our appeal period and have county Board of Equalization ahead that may change value significantly. We have not even set values for the natural resources (coal mine), oil and gas or state assessed properties at this time."

Under Colorado law, county assessor's offices throughout the state conduct a complete reassessment of all property in their county every two years. The 2011 reappraisal reflects the real estate market as of the appraisal date on June 30, 2010. Property sales are analyzed in the 18-60 months prior to the appraisal date, and adjusted to match the market conditions as of June 30, 2010. Sales occurring beyond June 30, 2010 cannot be used to set the 2011 value, nor can listing prices or length of time a property has been on the market. Only valid, arms length transactions can be considered in establishing value.

Many transactions in the past two years involved foreclosures, Griffith noted. A foreclosure is not a sale; it is a transfer of ownership to the lending agent. When this lending agent (usually a bank or mortgage company) puts the property on the market and it sells, this sale is one that can be considered by assessors.

This new valuation is mailed to taxpayers on May 1, 2011 and is used as a basis for 2011 and 2012 property taxes (payable in 2012 and 2013).

Because the volume of sales has dramatically decreased in the past four years, the perception of property owners, especially those who have had their property on the market for a length of time, is that values are dropping. However, in general, that is not the case. The assessor's values are not based on the number of sales but on the prices of the properties that have sold during the statutorily required sales data collection period that ended on June 30, 2010. The accompanying graph indicates that the median sales prices have generally shown modest to no declines in Western Slope counties, while the number of sales has been quite low.

The value established by assessors is the base from which property taxes are determined. Each property owner shares in providing revenue for local services which includes schools, police and fire protection, local government and public health. The Colorado property tax system is designed to fairly and equitably distribute taxes according to the value of the property. Colorado county assessors are also subject to an independent audit of assessor's valuation methodologies that is one of the most rigorous statistical and procedural audits found in any state.

ASSESSED VALUATIONS
20102011
Residential$164,998,336$147,013,579
Commercial$72,599,206$60, 059,577
Industrial$4,893,847$4,340,087
Agricultural$44,198,099$41,988,422