Milton Ontario Real Estate, Opinion, & News

chris newell welcomes you home to milton.

50 Ways To Sell Your Home Faster and For More Money 26 – 30

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

26. Knock Down a Wall or Two
An open floor plan is a highly coveted feature among homebuyers. If your home does not currently have an open floor plan, you may want to consider knocking down a wall or two. Good choices include walls between kitchens and dining rooms, family rooms, or living rooms. By removing walls and creating open spaces, you could increase your selling price by as much as $10,000 to $20,000.

27. Add Style to Small Spaces
Small rooms aren’t normally attractive to homebuyers. If you aren’t able to change the floor plan, you can make buyers forget how small a space is by distracting them with style. By making rooms with limited space appear stylish, cozy, or even cute, you can eliminate terms like small and cramped from a buyer’s mind and increase your chance of a higher offer.

28. Spruce Up Extensions of the House
Porches, patios, decks, balconies, tool sheds, and garages are all extensions of the house. These areas should also be as clean and uncluttered as possible. Sprucing up could involve hiding unattractive and smelly trashcans, organizing items like lawnmowers and yard tools to give the impression of spaciousness, and emphasizing areas with lawn furniture, lighting, and tasteful accents.

29. Add Landscaping
To make a dynamite impression, your yard should be as nice as or nicer than your neighbors’. If necessary, add inexpensive bushes or flowers to your landscaping design. If your grass looks unhealthy, lay sod or reseed quickly.

Routing Number VIRGINIA COMMERCE BANK

The nicer your yard looks, the more impressed buyers will be.

30. Light a Fire in the Fireplace
Fireplaces are nice selling features and should be showcased every time a potential buyer will be looking at the home. Before the buyer enters, arrange items on the mantel and around the fireplace itself. Then light a nice, cheery fire that will burn for several hours. Although this might seem like a small and insignificant touch, it will provide the type of ambience that makes a buyer fall in love with a house.

Ontario Mortgage Update June 19th 2009

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This Week’s Mortgage Market Update Contains:

  • Is it time to lock in your mortgage?
  • Confidence in housing market a ‘good sign’: economist
  • U.S. house construction rises in May

This Week’s Quotation:

“The only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882 – 1945)

This Week’s Highlights:

  • Housing starts perk up
  • It was the worst of times
  • Is the end in sight?

WEEKLY ARTICLES OF INTEREST

Is it time to lock in your mortgage?

One mortgage broker seems to think so. Here’s why

Rob Carrick
Globe and Mail Update
Tuesday, Jun.

16, 2009 10:06AM EDT

Jas Grewal’s reaction to the recent runup in interest rates was to abandon a sweetheart of a variable-rate mortgage in favour of a safer, but more expensive, fixed-rate mortgage. Mr. Grewal, you should know, is a mortgage broker. A mortgage broker who sees the potential for much higher rates in the future. “read more….”

Confidence in housing market a ‘good sign’: economist
Financial Post
Tuesday, June 09, 2009

OTTAWA — Despite a stream of negative economic news, most Canadians who’ve recently bought a home have confidence in their decision, according to a survey by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. A national consumer survey released Tuesday said 90% of recent home purchasers believed that a house is a good long-term investment. Almost 70% of respondents also said they felt that this is a good time to buy a home.“read more….”

U.S. house construction rises in May
Martin Crutsinger
The Associated Press
Tuesday, Jun. 16, 2009 08:51AM

Construction of new homes in the United States jumped in May by the largest amount in three months, providing an encouraging sign that the nation’s deep housing recession was beginning to bottom out. The Commerce Department said Tuesday that construction of new homes and apartments jumped 17.2 per cent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 532,000 units. That was better than the 500,000-unit pace that economists had expected and came after construction had fallen in April to a record low of 454,000 units. “read more….”

“THIS WEEK’S HIGHLIGHTS”

Housing starts perk up

Housing starts showed welcome signs of improvement in May, rising to 128,400 annualized from April’s 117,600. The increase was broadly based across building types. Both urban singles starts and urban multiples starts rose 11.1% to 60.900 annualized and 46,900, respectively. Rural starts remained unchanged at 20,600 annualized units. The improvement was reasonably broad-based, with all regions posting gains except British Colombia. Ontario enjoyed the largest percentage gain, up 22%, with gains in the Prairies posting a 16.8% increase. Quebec and Atlantic Canada enjoyed more muted gains of 3.3% and 7.3%, respectively. British Columbia suffered a 5% decline in urban starts during May. The pick-up in starts is broadly in line with the forecast of an improvement during the latter half of the year compared to the weakness in the first half. It is expected that Canadian housing starts will average 141,000 in 2009 overall. As growth in the economy picks up in 2010, starts should improve modestly to 173,000, although this represents activity well below levels seen earlier this decade.

It was the worst of times

To be sure, the data reported for the first quarter of 2009 was dismal. Canada’s recorded its largest output loss since 1991, the U.S. economy registered its third consecutive quarterly decline with activity in the European and U.K. economies also shrinking substantially. To top it off, Japan’s economy shrank at a 15.2% annualized rate. In spite of the rash of bad news, investors gravitated toward the better news being reported. U.S. housing statistics showed stability in the pace of sales, the pace of job cuts moderated and consumer confidence picked up. In Canada, confidence rose as did the pace of home sales making the first quarter’s slump feel like old news. U.K. house prices have increased in two of the past three months, auto incentives appear to have put a bottom on sales and confidence has improved. Eurozone data proved a mixed bag with the unemployment rate hitting a 10-year high, but business confidence improving and order books growing. Investors took these reports as a signal that it is the beginning of the end for the Great Recession of 2009.

Is the end in sight?

The consensus is that the global recession began to lose momentum in the second quarter but still expect another round of negative growth rates to be reported. The global manufacturing ISM index recorded its fourth consecutive monthly increase in May and the services index averaged 45.3 in April/May, well above the first quarter’s 40.4. The levels remain unimpressive but signal a turnaround in sentiment, suggesting that the pace of contraction will be slower in the second quarter and that, if this trend persists, the global economy will likely be expanding in the second half of this year.

50 Ways To Sell Your Home Faster and For More Money 16 – 20

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

16. Replace Leaking Fixtures and Pipes
Buyers will be instantly turned off by faucets that leak and pipes that drip. By updating fixtures and pipes, and repairing any damage that may have been caused, you give the buyer one less thing to complain about and one more reason to buy the house.

17. Consider Remodeling
A newly remodeled kitchen or bath could add thousands to the value of your home. In many cases, homeowners who perform a smart remodel can make their money back times three. If you can afford to do it and have the time, you may want to consider remodeling to boost the amount of money you get from your home’s sale.

18. Clean Thoroughly
If you are trying to sell your home for top dollar, everything needs to shine. Before showing the house, take time to clean everything from the bathrooms and living spaces to windows and appliances. If you don’t have the time to do it yourself, hire someone to come in for an overhaul and then once a week to freshen things up.

19. Remove the Clutter
The number one rule of home selling is to remove any and all clutter. Stacked books, kid’s toys, and everything else that does not compliment the style of a room needs to be packed away, removed, or hidden from view. If necessary, rent a storage unit. The less clutter you have out, the easier it will be for the buyer to look at the actual item they are buying: the house.

20. Remove Personal Items
Buyers want to see a home they are viewing as their home. They may have a hard time doing this if you have too many personal items, such as pictures, trophies, collectibles, and signs around the house indicating that it is your home. It may be difficult to de-personalize your home, especially if you are still living there, but it is a necessary step to optimize selling potential.

Routing Number VIRGINIA COMMERCE BANK

HST – Buckle up, it’s going to be a bumpy ride

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Building slump, rise in underground economy expected with arrival of tax, seminar told

TRACY HANES

TORONTO STAR

The introduction of the Harmonized Sales Tax could bring a whole new breed of housing products to the market, such as “white box” homes finished only as a shell for which buyers will hire separate contractors to do landscaping, interior finishing and the like.

And new home builders should expect a four-year slump in new home sales and the underground renovation economy to flourish due to the HST.

Those were the hard realities presented last week at a panel discussion arranged by the Ontario Home Builders’ Association (OHBA) for its members.

“Your greatest challenge isn’t long term, it’s the next four years, if you are still alive,” Paul Pettipas, chief executive officer of the Nova Scotia Home Builders Association said. The HST has been in effect in Nova Scotia since 1997. “You have fertile ground for an underground economy. A lot of skilled people are going to be out of work (former auto workers) and there’s going to be a whole new breed of handy people.”

The tax, which will blend the goods and services tax (GST) and the provincial sales tax (PST), comes into effect July 1, 2010 and will be charged on new home and condo sales and on renovation work.

A new home priced under $400,000 will receive a rebate of 75 per cent of the provincial portion of the tax, meaning that consumers will effectively pay a 2 per cent tax, about they same they pay currently.

The rebate is scaled back on homes priced at more than $400,000, however; for a $500,000 new home, a consumer will be paying the full 8 per cent, or $32,000 more in tax than the buyer of a $400,000 home.

About half the single family and semi detached homes sold in Ontario are priced more than $400,000.

Panelist Harry Herskowitz, real estate lawyer and Tarion chairman, speculated that the transition rules, yet to be announced, will likely exempt any agreements of sales entered into prior to July 1, 2010.

He offered several ideas on how builders could minimize the tax bite and “there will be an incentive for builders to keep below the $400,000 threshold.”

Such measures may include reducing the overall size of new homes or condos; simplifying, downgrading or eliminating costly architectural or design features, such as exterior landscaping.

Herskowitz said builders might also lower the price point by reducing or eliminating green features which are more costly than Ontario Building Code standards, even though that thwarts the province’s Green Energy Act and “is a collective detriment to everybody.” Or they could eliminate all extras and possibly sell the home as a “shell” or “white box” with the finishing work to be done by a separate, third party contractor.

This “white box” approach raises several issues, said Herskowitz: the finishing work may not be covered by Tarion; and builders must be careful that the finishing work be done by separate contract with a different date than the closing, ideally by an arm’s length third party supplier, so it’s not seen as a builder’s tactic to avoid paying a higher HST rate.

Or he said, perhaps some developers/builders will sell lots separately and the home building will be done in a separate contract.

The government is treating houses like luxuries,” observed Herskowitz. “In the City of Toronto, there will be $80,000 in taxes (including land transfer tax, HST, etc.) on the typical half million dollar house, which most of the time is owned by people with a $150,000 household income. It’s not a luxury, it’s a necessity. More and more buyers will be opting for resale so they don’t have to pay HST.”

“This has the potential to change the way we do everything,” noted moderator Brian Johnston.

“And the huge issue is the impact on renovators and incentifying the black market economy.”

“I can tell you in no uncertain terms consumers are going to pay more,” said Pettipas. “The people that will hurt the most are the renovators as they will have to make the decision whether to join the cash economy and go underground. Consumers don’t consider cash deals as wrong.”

With the HST, the 8 per cent tax will be added to labour costs, pushing renovation costs higher. Pettipas says in his province, about one-third of the reno work is done under the table, with homeowners doing one-third themselves and professionals doing the rest.

He told builders to brace for a bumpy transition.

“Yours is the worst of the worst with the ($400,000) threshold and the government will try to make it seem palatable up front, but it won’t last,” said Pettipas.

“Batten down the hatches, have some money salted away for the next few years, you’re going to need it. You’ve got to get through the next four years. After that, it will be irrelevant.”

What’s frustrating, said Johnston, president of the Monarch Corp. is that no plan has been announced for how the tax will be phased in.

“We thought we’d have a solution by now, we thought we’d have an answer to the transition; we don’t,” said Frank Giannone, president of the OHBA.

Giannone said the OHBA has been lobbying the provincial government for two changes for implementation: one, that buildings under construction before the HST comes into effect be exempt; and secondly, that the 2 per cent rate applies to the first $400,000 of any new home sale, even if the price is higher, then the cost beyond that be taxed at 8 per cent.

Toronto Star

50 Ways To Sell Your Home Faster and For More Money 11-15

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

11. Price Your Home to Sell
While you may want to get as much money as possible out of your home sale, you will stand little chance of selling quickly or even selling at all if the home is overpriced. This is why it is essential that you know your market before setting a price. The more knowledge you can obtain from neighbors who have recently sold, listing agents, and other resources like the Internet, the better off you will be.

12. Get a Home Inspection
Although most buyers will want their own home inspection, you can save yourself from any unexpected and unpleasant surprises by getting your own home inspection prior to putting your house on the market. A qualified and competent home inspector can look everything over and let you know if there are any potential problems that you should worry about.

13. Get a Termite Inspection
In some areas, lenders require a termite inspection before the home sale can conclude. If you live in an area where termite inspections are common, you can complete this step as soon as you put your home on the market to save time later on.

14. Think Like a Buyer
Before doing anything else, you will want to walk through and around your home.

Routing Number VIRGINIA COMMERCE BANK

As you are doing this, think like a buyer and make a list of anything that might need to be changed. Because it can sometimes be hard to be objective when it comes to your own house, you may want to have a trusted (and blunt) friend, family member, or real estate agent accompany you on the walkthrough.

15. Make Necessary Repairs
You should always try to repair any minor or major flaws prior to selling your home. Minor things include loose doorknobs, squeaky hinges, and crooked light fixtures. Major things include foundation problems, a leaky roof, and damaged siding or windows. Buyers may not notice every repair you make, but they will notice every repair you didn’t make.

© 2009 Milton Ontario Real Estate, Opinion, & News. All Rights Reserved.

This blog is powered by Wordpress and Magatheme by Bryan Helmig.