Utah Real Estate

Cornerstone Real Estate
May 2000
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Northern Utah's Professional Realtors
Copyright © 2000 Realty Times
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Are We Headed for a Buyer's Market?

In January, the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) reported that national home inventories were at an all-time low. Both the NAR and the National Association of Homebuilders reported record sales for 1998 and 1999, and housing starts are once again on the increase. That's made it pretty hard for buyers to find homes.

Home inventories and how quickly they sell are a strong indicator of the national economy, but they are also an effective barometer for the local economy. However, other indicators show that a change may be coming. Will the seller's market shift and begin to favor buyers?

The stock market is beginning to teeter with dizzying highs and lows. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has suggested that stock prices are higher than many company profits suggest they ought to be.

To keep inflation from gaining on economic expansion, the Fed has raised interest rates five times in the last year. Meanwhile, consumers are already beginning to feel the pinch of rising costs in goods and services, particularly in the healthcare industry and at the gas pump. In some areas gasoline prices have nearly doubled.

Mortgage prices have gone up accordingly, with interests rates almost a point and half higher than they were six months ago. In a recent interview Vincent Daniel of CIBC World Markets said he expected mortgage originations to take a dip, similar to the 15% drops of the 1992, 1993 and 1995 markets. "When interest rates rise, mortgage volumes decline," he said.

Home prices have shot skyward, too. The Affordability Index by the NAR shows that the median home price has risen from $122,000 in 1997 to $133,300 in 1999, a difference of 9% in two years. Starter homes have jumped from 103,200 in 1997 to 113,300, also a 9% difference, but median salaries for these buyers for the same period have only increased 6%. When the first-time buyer is shut out of the market, move-up buyers are not able to sell their homes as quickly. Housing sales inevitably slow down, and the inventory on hand will rise.

Does that mean you should wait to buy a home? Absolutely not. It may take 18 months or longer before rising interest rates affect the home market in your area. By then, interest rates may be higher and you may find yourself paying more for a lesser home than you can afford right now. What should you do?

Position yourself to buy. Review your credit report online. Clean up what you need to in order to better qualify for a loan.

Get pre-qualified. You'll know exactly how much you can spend and you'll have a letter that can show sellers and their agents that you mean business.

Hire a REALTOR®. Most Realtors have agreements that you can sign that mean that they represent you as a fiduciary. That means they can't legally do anything that is not in your best interest. When you don't sign, you are only a customer and the seller is the client.

Keep contingencies to a minimum. Home sellers in a hot market have no patience with contingencies. They will also favor an offer where the buyer doesn't have a home to sell first, particularly if they are relocating.

Don't forego an inspection. In a hot seller's market, buyers think that sellers will be more impressed if they waive their right to have the home inspected by a professional. Don't do it. The inspection shows you what you are really buying, seller's market or not.

Be available. You may go back and forth with a seller once the offer is made. Make sure both you and your husband or wife, or other buyers on the contract can easily be reached and that you can each "speak for the other."

This is not a win-lose situation. Remember that you will only be able to buy a home if you get what you want and the seller gets what s/he wants. Be reasonable, flexible, and don't sweat the small details.


Written by Blanche Evans


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Cornerstone Real Estate
E-mail: realestate@utahcornerstone.com
Web: http://www.UtahCornerstone.com
435-881-0277

Cornerstone Real Estate
435-787-8683
1047 S 100 W #100
Logan UT 84321


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