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Charlotte April Realty Stats Post a Gain in Volume & Price

Charlotte residential closings increased in April to 1773. While this number was down 26% from April 2008, April presented the fourth straight month of increase in closings. The average sales price of $201,532 was up approximately $20,000 over the lowest average posted in January of this year. 

Low interest rates, the first time home buyer credit and great inventory of excellent homes has fueled a surge of interest by buyers in the lower price points over the past six weeks. While activity at the lower price points, sales activity on homes valued over the convential loan limit ($417,000) still remain weak, people search for jumbo loan money. The good news for the higher price segment is some banks are now seeing an opportunity in jumbo loans and are starting to lend again. 

For any one looking to purchase a home in the future, I cannot stress enough how now might be one of the best opportunities in recent history. For additional statistics from the Charlotte Regional Realtors Association, got to http://carolinamls.epubxpress.com/link/rref/2009/jun/48?s=0 

Thinking about buying  or selling, let our team provide you with specific data regarding your selling or buying opportunity, by contacting me: gina@mayesharrisrealty.com

Charlotte Buyers are Benefiting from a Dismal Market

The following story from MSNBC is a great example how today's real estate market has great opportunities for buyers. Charlotte, North Carolina, buyers are taking advantage of this market and buying a larger home, too.

Math smiles on move-up buyers

A dismal real estate market can be a good time to purchase a bigger house

Image: Chris and Lori Kirsten
Chris and Lori Kirsten got $20,000 less than they might have in 2007 when they sold their Seattle condo earlier this year, but they purchased this suburban home for $425,000 — $86,000 less than the home's peak value.
Robert Hood / msnbc.com
 
By Mike Stuckey
Senior news editor
msnbc.com
updated 7:52 a.m. ET, Thurs., April 23, 2009

 
Mike Stuckey
Senior news editor

 
BOTHELL, Wash. - After two years of married life in a 680-square-foot, one-bedroom Seattle condo, Lori and Chris Kirsten were ready to spread out in a real house with room for a home theater and a yard where the Labrador retriever they had always wanted could roam.

The Kirstens prepared to list their condo for sale and go house-hunting, banking on equity in the unit, which Lori had brought in 2003 for $130,000, to help with the transition to a larger place. Seattle’s hot real estate market had pushed the condo’s value to $215,000 or more at its peak in 2007.

But their home search lost some steam when their agent told them Western Washington real estate prices, although not in the freefall experienced elsewhere, had still declined to the point that their unit might now fetch $25,000 or $30,000 less than two years ago. When they saw condos comparable to theirs selling for as little as $170,000, “I thought, ‘I just can’t do it,’” Lori recalled.

Their mood brightened when they began shopping in the spacious neighborhoods of this suburb northeast of Seattle and found a 3,000-square-foot, four-bedroom split-level on a half-acre of towering fir trees that they wound up buying for $425,000. That’s $86,000 less than the $511,000 peak value placed on the home by real estate Web site Zillow.com, $64,000 below the original asking price of $489,000 and even well below the final asking price of $438,000.

A buyer’s market
The Kirstens — Lori, 36, is a physical therapist and Chris, 33, is a Microsoft manager — are among the relatively small number of home buyers across the nation who are taking advantage of the record drop in real estate prices and historically low interest rates sparked by the mortgage meltdown and foreclosure crisis to move up into bigger or fancier digs.

It’s a trend that many in the languid real estate industry would like to encourage.

 

 

“Obviously, if you’re selling for less than you could have gotten two years ago, you’re disappointed, but you really need to look at your bottom line,” said Walt Molony of the National Association of Realtors. “If you’re trying to trade up, whatever you’re going to trade up to is going to sell at a discount, too. You need to look at your net.”

Real estate agents from the foreclosure epicenters of Florida and California to more stable markets like the Seattle area are using that advice to lure move-up buyers.

“Do the math,” said agent Mark Zawideh, who has been selling homes in the suburbs west of Detroit, where prices have declined 18 percent in the last year alone. “If you’re in a $200,000 house (the median price in the area) and you lost 18 percent, that means you lost $36,000,” Zawideh said. “But if you’re moving up and buying a $500,000 house, that person just took a $90,000 loss, so you can see you’re making 54,000.”

“If you didn’t sell at the peak, be happy,” Zawideh said. “Don’t look back and be sorry. The fact that you’ve waited ends up being a great decision. A lot of people get excited when they sit down and do the math.”

 

Contact Information

Photo of Mayes Harris Team Real Estate
Mayes Harris Team
RE/MAX Metro
13422 Scanlan Way
Davidson NC 28036
704-589-8166
704-892-4462
Fax: 704-896-7178

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