Our Economic Helter Skelter
November 26th, 2009 categories: Market Trends, Real Estate News
“Sooner or later in life, we all sit down to a banquet of consequences.”
Robert Louis Stevenson
Is a Federal Housing Administration(FHA) crisis on the horizon? With FHA’s insurance reserve ratio falling to the lowest level in history, at 0.53 percent, there are some who believe the FHA is the next subprime crisis waiting to happen. One of those is homebuilder, Toll Brothers Inc., CEO, Robert Toll. Toll predicts that just like the failed bank bailouts, the FHA will be next in the handout line. And, with the reserve ratio as low as it is, he may be on to something. According to a Congressional mandate, the ratio should be no lower than 2.0

In addition to the alarming FHA news, this week’s Wall Street Journal reported that nearly 25 percent of all homeowners are upside down with their home mortgage. In other words, they owe more on the mortgage than their home is worth. Well, considering how values have fallen since ‘05, that isn’t too surprising.
While the recent encouraging national home sales figures provided us a glimmer of hope amidst the current economic downturn, today’s sobering news concerning the viability of FHA home loans, and the depressed values of properties, bring us back to reality. So, what are we to believe? Are things getting better? Is the First Time Homebuyer’s Tax Credit frenzy skewing sales numbers, or, are increased home sales “genuine”? Are these numbers more akin to a mirage? Instead, are we stuck in an economic tailspin for months, or years to come?
In the competition to provide us the latest and greatest updates on where the economy is heading, we see indications that are both promising and discouraging. Where the housing market may be going, we don’t exactly know. But, fortunately, one thing is for sure, there will be homes both bought and sold. So, perhaps we’d best stick to the present, and as they say, the future will take care of itself. After all, as someone once said, “Predicting the future is easy. It’s trying to figure out what’s going on now that’s hard.”
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Celebrating Americana on the Half Shell
November 15th, 2009 categories: Entertainment, Real Estate News

“The first man gets the oyster, the second man gets the shell”
Andrew Carnegie

Fortunately, during last weekend’s 52nd Urbanna Oyster Festival, there were plenty of oysters to be had, even for those in the back of the line. Everyone had loads. And, most of us, way too many! If you’ve not had the chance to venture to Urbanna, Virginia, for the annual oyster celebration, you’re not only missing great food, but also a special glimpse of small town America.
Urbanna is located in Virginia’s Northern Neck, which is situated North of Williamsburg, and Southeast of Fredericksburg, hugging the Chesapeake Bay.
It’s been called a “historic town”, and, in many ways, it is. It’s among the places you’ll see on the National Register of Historic Places. But, each year, on November 6th & 7th, you’ll find some 75,ooo folks headed to this “sleepy” coastal town for oysters, fritters and other assorted dishes, and loads more fun. I can tell you, it’s likely on the “must see” list for those who enjoy touring the country in their RV’s, because there were plenty of those big boys parked in and around the festival.
The two day festival has an assortment of activities, from an oyster shucking contest to the crowning of the festival’s Oyster Queen, among others.

Any number of booths selling food, jewelry, art work, intricate wood design (well, you get the picture, like you’d see at the County Fair), and assorted items dot the town’s landscape. Parking is available, but plan on paying a minumum of $10 or Friday, and $20 on Saturday to park.
And, for those visiting for the first time, it doesn’t matter where you park, the prices are the same. So, for convenience sake upon leaving, use the lots before you come into town.

Enjoying the sights and sounds of Urbanna, and the Oyster Festival, the kids having fun, the adults enjoying each other’s company, the interaction with the booth workers, reminded me of the abundance our Commonwealth has to offer. While most of us relish the time away from work on the weekends, and the relaxation it provides, you might mark the calendar and set aside this early November date next year. It is a piece of Americana that you don’t want to miss.
You’ll meet some very nice people, view a beautiful part of the state, and enjoy some appetizing food dishes. But you might do yourself a favor. In case your eyes are too big for your stomach, don’t forget to bring the Tums!
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Are We Being Led, or Led On?
September 23rd, 2009 categories: Real Estate News, Relocating
Leadership has been examined, discussed, practiced, criticized, admired, and mischaracterized for almost as long as humans have been around.
But, for real estate professionals, where does ”leadership” come into practice? Do we lead anything? Are we led by anyone? The obvious answer is, of course leadership is practiced. And, yes, there are indivduals leading us in our profession. But, if that’s the case, what kinds of leadership do we see? Are they leading us in the right direction? And, who is leading who, to do what?

What Does Leadership Look Like In the Practice of Real Estate?
As real estate agents, our job is advise, counsel, and, among other things, educate our clients. At the end of the day, we are paid to influence or persuade. Is that leading? Of course it is. As most of us would agree, leadership is the practice or art of persuasion. The ability to lead is based upon the faith or thrust that those being led have in their leader. Aren’t our clients trusting us when we advise them on market conditions or price? How about when we make recommendations to sellers on staging their home or preparation needed before placing it on the market?
What is their faith in our capabilities based upon? A positive history with us as a previous client? In the case of a new client, what leads them to place their trust in you as an agent? Was it your amazing marketing presentation? And, what about buyers with their new agent, what is the basis for the selection of agent? A recommendation from a friend? The agent’s track record? Good interpersonal skills? Does it really matter? When all is said and done, isn’t it the result that’s most important? While the result is certainly very important to the buyer or seller, how the agent leads is sometimes more important than what the result is.
Agents are considered to be ”independent contractors“. One of the benefits that comes with that capacity is freedom. Since independent contractors aren’t “employed” per se, but instead, work for themsleves, they are free to operate under their own set of rules. Within limits, of course. They are bound by the professional code or operating guidelines of their profession. For Realtors, these guidelines are the Realtor Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice. And while Realtors are well aware of what they should or shouldn’t do, most of their clients aren’t. In other words, in most cases, they wouldn’t be aware of misconduct by their agents unless it hit them in the face. And to be honest, while Realtors take pride in what the Code stands for, sometimes their practice of it leaves something to be desired.
How are Realtors held accountable for the practice of their profession? Do owner/brokers hold their agents accountable for their lack of professionalism or malpractice? If so, how? Do these brokers consider it more important for those new agents to get out and sell houses as quickly as they can, or to be well grounded in their Code of Ethics?
More importantly, if the Code is the cornerstone or building block of the practice real estate, how familiar does an agent have to be with their Code of Ethics before they are given a license to practice? In other words, what are those in leadership positions in the real estate profession requiring of their community of agents? What example are they setting and what standard are they accepting from those they are leading?

In real estate, like other professions, there are those sitting in leadership roles that are simply placeholders. Normally they’re in the position for affirmation and little else. Certainly not to seek change, and God forbid, to make waves! I’m reminded of a former classmate of mine from a recent leadership program, who, when asked why he was there, responded, “To check the block”!
There are those who believe that our leadership challenges aren’t much different than those of other professions. But, instead of minimizing the difficulties we face, perhaps we need to be asking instead, how we can transform our profession to one that is second to none when it comes to the public’s trust, instead of one that’s on par with Used Car Salesmen, according to Donald Trump.
But, let’s not get the cart before the horse. Before we take a look at some sugggested avenues of improvement, let’s take a look at some anecdotal evidence on where the real estate ethical compass rests today. We’ll begin that examination in our next blog entry.
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The Details of Home Marketing
September 13th, 2009 categories: Real Estate News, Relocating

What’s the best way to market a home? While making sure your visuals (pictures, virtual tours/videos) are exhaustive and don’t leave anything to the imagination, the details of the listing are just as important in attracting prospective buyers.
PROPERTY DETAILS
Properly listing a home requires much more than good visuals. While they are important, providing the specifics of the home is a valuable aspect of marketing as well. How many times has a client wondered about room sizes, while sorting through the homes they actually want to drop by to see, only to find that data is missing from the listing? Is it in the best interest of the seller to include those room sizes in the listing? Yes, it is. What about a description that highlights the home’s best features?
PAINTING A PICTURE
Providing a brief “highlight reel” of what the property has to offer is what the “REMARKS” narrative section of the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) is all about. But, how well is it being used? Is the agent painting a picture of the property’s best features? Given the limited amount of available characters the MLS allows to describe the property, is the narrative accurate as well as compelling in describing the home? Or, is the listing agent’s property description more fiction than fact? When searching for prospective properties, since buyer’s agents do their best to match what their clients are looking for in a home with what’s indicated on the MLS, providing an accurate and complete depiction of the property, benefits the seller as well as the buyer.
Yard Signs & Lockboxes
Yard signs and lock boxes are tools of the trade that have long been staples of listing hardware. While yard signs “mark the spot” of the home for sale, they also provide a visual alert to those who drive or walk by that the property is on the market. Traditional signage emphasizes the name and number of the listing agency, and, oftentimes, the listing agent.

But, some have taken advantage of the sign to provide more information of what the house has to offer through pictures. This simple yet effective method of providing a glimpse inside the home may be the beginning of a more effective use of an old marketing method. Jim Duncan, an agent from Charlottsville’s Nest Realty, uses signs to provide the property’s address, price, a website address for more property information, as well as the listing company’s contact information. Oh, and there are property pictures as well. A more effective way of making the most of the yard sign, don’t you agree?
A lock box is a lockbox is a lock box, right? Well, not in Northern Virginia, right now. Our ongoing controversy over which lock box is the best one is to use is currently very heated, often with more misinformation involved in the discussion, than accuracy. The bottom line for a property listing is this; make sure, whatever lock box is being used on a property, that fact is accurately included in the listing. There are few things as frustrating for a Realtor, or a prospective buyer, than arriving at a property only to find it secured by a different lock box than that indicated on the MLS.
Getting the most out of the marketing avenues available when listing a home depends on knowing what tools are available, but more importantly, using those resources properly. Every seller wants the widest exposure for their product. As the Realtor’s Code of Ethics instructs them, it is a listing agent’s duty to act in the best interests of a client in fulfilling their marketing responsibilities. Is your agent using the marketing tools available to properly showcase your home? Let’s hope so.
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Short Sales – The Good, The Bad, The Ugly!
July 3rd, 2009 categories: Real Estate News, Relocating

The term “Short Sale” has become common place in housing markets over the past few years. Yet, for many, what a short sale is, and how it becomes a reality, is still a mystery. A short sale is a sale of real estate in which the proceeds from the sale are less than, or “short of”, what’s owed on the balance of the loan securing the property being sold.
The Good
At first glimpse, one might wonder why a lender would ever entertain such an arrangment, accepting less than what’s owed on a loan. In most cases, the owner(s) are “upside down” with their mortgage. In other words, they owe more than their property is currently worth. While there are various reasons why owners are in their current distressed state, the good news is that banks have begun to embarace the short sale process. Foreclosing on properties isn’t in anyone’s interest – especially banks. According to the legal counsel for the Virginia Association of Realtors (VAR), the average foreclosure costs the bank approximately $65,000. That’s not what they lose on the loan payoff. That is simply what it costs the bank to handle or manage the foreclosed property. For banks, avoiding foreclosure simply makes monetary sense.

Additionally, the Administration and Congress have moved to stem the foreclosure rate and make short sales a more standardized and acceptable choice for lenders. A push from lawmakers to improve and simplify short sales has encouraged banks to embrace this option for homeowners, avoiding further emotional and financial pain that would ensue if foreclosured on.
The Bad
From a Realtors point of view, handling a short sale transaction is never easy. On the selling side, there are two other major participants in the process, the homeowner (Seller) and the bank (Lender). Each of these bring with them potential problems. The good thing is, the homeowner is usually approaching the transaction as a motivated party. Unfortunately, that rarely seems to be the bank’s case.
Complicating matters further is the lack of national standardized short sale procedures, and no mandated cummunication timelines between banks and realtors (who represent their clients). If there’s anything more frustrating for the real estate community than their fruitless attempts to reach the proper point of contact at the bank when dealing with a short sale, I’m unaware of it. If the short sale cummunication and coordination process was designed any poorer, it would be DOA. But, fortunately, despite the piecemeal structure, many of the transactions do close….eventually. But, “muddling through” is no way to conduct business.
The difficulty in successfully executing a short sale is due to more than poor coordination and communication. Aside from these stumbling blacks, two other hurdles must be overcome. The first involves the banks, the other, the real estate community.
The Ugly
While we’re almost four years into the Mortgage Meltdown, banks have yet to hire enough personnel to handle their short sale and foreclosure workload. We’re routinely informed that negotiators and asset managers are beset with caseloads of 300 or more. With numbers like those, how can we expect success? Within the Realtor community, it isn’t the numbers that are the problem, it’s the lack of know how.
Many Realtors handling short sales or foreclosures lack the training needed to properly do the job. The Commonwealth of Virginia has no training requirement for handling these types of transactions. Many agents, if trained at all, do so after “muddling through” their first few such transactions. Wouldn’t it be smarter to have the training prior to accomplishing the task? How can a professional do the job without knowing what has to be done? And, who is paying for the mistakes made along the way?
Both Short Sales and Foreclosures have excellent certification programs available. For the former, the Certified Short Sale Professional (CSP), and the latter, the Certified Foreclosure Specialist (CFS). But, unfortunately, many who should be taking these courses aren’t.
Today, in many regions of the country, shorts sales and foreclosures account for more than fifty percent of real estate transactions. Luckily, there is an abundance of information on the subject available from lenders, the real estate community, and best of all, online. Time and experience has resulted in greater success in navigating each of these unconventional property sales approaches. But the players involved, and the processes, have miles to go before can begin to claim the process works well.
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When You Know You’ve Made the “Big Time”
June 24th, 2009 categories: Entertainment, Relocating
Life is full of events that flag certain milestones in life. These milestones come in different forms, be they job related, academic, social, emotional, or another. Significant achievements often designate what we might call a ”rite of passage“. A sort of coming into our own. Well, many who found themselves in Fredericksburg this past weekend, may have witnessed just such an event in the life of our City. What was the big event? The opening of Fredericksburg’s very own Wegmans supermarket. But, as anyone whose been inside a Wegmans can tell you, it is anything but your father’s neighborhood grocery store.

While Wegmans has some seventy stores, they’re exclusively in the Northeastern U.S. Many shoppers outside of this area have never heard of Wegmans, much less stepped inside their doors. From its birthplace of Rochester, N.Y., it’s stores have spread to neighboring states New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Maryland. Store features include:
1. Cheese Shop
2. Bakery
3. Coffee bar
4. Patisserie
5. Sushi Station
6. Seafood Bar (with wine & beer by the glass)
7. Burrito and Panini bar
8. Crab Cake Counter
9. Thai & Indian Buffet
10. Kosher Deli
And much more, to include the two levels of seating for diners, who would rather sit down to enjoy their food. This includes the upstairs balcony, where those who enjoy the touch of fresh air feel right at home.
For those of us who avoided the 20,000 or so shoppers who were brave enough to wade into Wegman’s on opening day, there’s plenty left to be had. I happened to stop in earlier today, and the shelves have been fully re-stocked, while the aisles are still quite busy. Its something new, and not your ordinary “shopping” experience. As a matter of fact, the kids I witnessed in the store, seemed to be enjoying themselves as much as their parents.
Many have chosen to call Fredericksburg home because of its location, or history, or family in the area, or for its culture, or lifestyle reasons, among others. And, availability of shopping is an important consideration for many. With Wegmans moving into the neighborhood, we’re beginning to look a bit more like the “Big Time.” Now, if we can just convince Trader Joe’s that Fredericksburg is big enough for them too, we might be on to something!
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