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Davis CA Real Estate 2010 Predictions...

Friends, I hope that this new year and this new decade is one of hope, peace, personal contentment, and a time when you are surprised and happy with what you make happen in your life! 

The question of the season is, so what is going to happen this year? First, let’s visit 2009 for a moment.  It was the year of the first time home buyer.  I helped buy/sell 46 properties and 31 of them were for people who had never owned a home before.  My favorite was a family who has been renting in Davis for 30 years, and decided that NOW is the time to own.  There was lots of nervousness around these sales, but ultimately the rates were excellent, the government incentives were a help and these new homeowners are excitedly begining to nest in their new homes.

What we did not see in 2009 were enough mid-range homes of good aesthetic quality.  And even fewer high end homes.  I believe that sellers in the mid-upper ranges have chosen to stay put and remodel rather than move up.    For buyers in this range, the prospects were generally dismal.

So, 2010?  If we were “returning to normal” before, we have definitely arrived now!  People are buying homes not simply as an investment, but as a place to live, to have a sense of neighborhood, to raise their children and to LIVE comfortably.  Sales take longer, buyers are more detail-oriented, processes are undertaken more deliberately.

Inventory will improve.  At present we have 81 properties on the market.  For a town with a population of about 65,000 this represents VERY few choices!  Many people who were waiting will make their move to sell this year.  We have a large population of people who own large homes (think Northstar) whose children have long since left home – I predict that this population will be ready to start right sizing, looking for something new that better suits their lifestyle. We will see these homes begin to come on the market.

There will be no “average” Days On Market. Homes that are attractive, well kept and accurately priced will sell within a week on the market, so buyers, be prepared to take action.  Homes in ill repair, unstaged and unready for market, and not priced correctly will linger for hundreds of days.  Buyers are no longer tolerant of paying top dollar for what they disparagingly refer to as ”dumps”.

Interest rates will go up.  The U.S. government will stop purchasing mortgage-backed securities from Fannie-Mae and Freddie-Mac by the end of March 2010 based on the lack of funds that have currently been allocated for the ongoing purchase of these mortgages. If true, this means that banks will once again need to step in and underwrite these loans (as opposed to the American public) and it’s fairly safe to assume that banks won’t be writing loans at 5% fixed interest for 30 years.

Foreclosures, in Davis? There will continue to be a handful of foreclosures in Davis, and there will be mid and high end homes in the mix.  There will be short sales and new rules for short sale processes mean that the sales time will be shorter and less mysterious.

People want to build their own homes.  This Instinct that is unscientifically based on anecdotal evidence from the many people I speak with.   They want something new, something with a modern aesthetic, something that fits their life, something that they aren’t finding in our most recent inventory. There are very few lots in Davis, this is the year that homes will go up on these lots….

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New Rules: No More Funny Money, Credit i...

We’ve been waiting for it – here it is!  The new economic stimulus package has reached the mortgage product market – and we have the new “conforming jumbos”.

New loan limits are 125% of the median house price – $580,000 for a Davis jumbo.

The days of the computer generated approval are over!  You will need to provide full documentation – income verification, asset statements, credit scores – to qualify for a loan approval. Maximum seller contribution is 3% for a single family home.  Non-traditional credit is no longer allowed, and the maximum debt-to-income ratio has been lowered to 45%.

Credit is king - you will be rewarded for your good credit, but if your FICO is less than 640, well, how do you feel about renting? For an 85% loan, plan on having a credit score of 700.  To get cash out, look for  a 720 FICO.  For second homes, loans are based on a 60/40 loan to value ratio, and dependent on a 660 FICO.

Loans will be risk based.  For the same loan (with one point), someone with a FICO of 720 or higher may get a 5.75%, while the person with a 659 FICO will pay 6.375% for the same loan.

Additionally, the FHA reform bill is pending to make FHA changes permanent.  In Yolo County, the loan limit is $580,000, with a minimum FICO score of 660 and a minimum of 3% cash.  For example:

Sales price:            $575,000

Cash required:      $ 27,359

Loan @ 6.75%:      $566,991

Payment:              $3677 Principal and Interest

Insurance:             $100

Tax:                        $599

MMI:                     $233

Total Payment:    $4609/ month

Is this all a good thing?  Yes, it is.  The loan practices of the past decade have defrauded us all, and most of all, they have not been good for the people who have signed up for interest only 5 year ARMs.  Well-intentioned people were finally able to buy a house.  Inexperienced and often poorly informed, they instead entered in to a loan obligation that they could not sustain.  Perhaps if the traditional loan practices had been in place they never would have been buying a home in the first place. 

And for those who do have good credit and the ability to sustain a loan, the new jumbo limits are now aligned with the very real price of homes here in Davis. 

Find out more details about how the new loans will work in Davis by calling Vicki, Greg or Cara Mengali at Mortgage Resource Network.