Real Estate Brokers and
Real Estate, Homes for Sale, REALTOR (R) Agents, Houses Nationwide: HomeGain Broker Licensing HomeGain.com, Inc. 1250 45th Street - Suite 200 Emeryville, CA 94608 Phone: 510-655-0800 Fax: 510-655-0848 HomeGain is a licensed broker in the state of California able to accept referral fees in all fifty states. Below is our license information for California and the additional states where we have also become licensed. California Department of Real Estate License # 01268088 Alabama HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 067124 Alabama Real Estate Commission -- Arizona HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: CO52402700 Arizona Department of Real Estate Arkansas HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: PB00052962 Ernest L. Galer, Broker Arkansas Real Estate Commission -- California HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 01268088 California Department of Real Estate Colorado HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: EC40023175 Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies Division of Real Estate Connecticut HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: REB.0754431 Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection Real Estate and Professional Trades Division District of Columbia HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: CO101700 District of Columbia Board of Real Estate Florida HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: CQ1011349 Florida Division of Real Estate Georgia HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: H-39014 Georgia Real Estate Commission Illinois HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 078.0009806 Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation Indiana HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: CO10000256 Indiana Real Estate Commission Iowa HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: F04273000 Iowa Professional Licensing and Regulation Division Real Estate Commission -- Kentucky HomeGain.com, Inc. License No. 56966 Kentucky Real Estate Commission -- Louisiana HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 30149 Dewey Gassaway, Broker Louisiana Real Estate Commission -- Massachusetts HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 6159 Massachusetts Board of Registration of Real Estate Brokers and Salespersons Michigan HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 6501299470 Michigan Division of Labor and Economic Growth Missouri HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 2002019777 Missouri Department of Economic Development Montana HomeGain.Com, Inc. Ernest L. Galer, Broker Montana Board of Realty Regulation -- New Hampshire HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 053112 New Hampshire Real Estate Commission -- New York HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 32FE1070571 NY Dept. of State, Division of Licensing Services North Carolina HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: C11521 North Carolina Real Estate Commission North Dakota HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 664 North Dakota Real Estate Commission -- Pennsylvania HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: RB062802C Pennsylvania Dept. of State Bureau of Prof. & Occup. Affairs South Carolina HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 62008989 South Carolina Real Estate Commission -- Tennessee HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 256797 Tennessee Real Estate Commission Texas HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 477516 Texas Real Estate Commission Utah HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: CN59674 Utah Department of Commerce Division of Real Estate -- Virginia HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number 0226 005677 Virginia Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation Wisconsin HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 835326-091 Wisconsin Department of Regulation and Licensing Real Estate Board Wyoming HomeGain.com, Inc. License Number: 94100 Wyoming Real Estate Commission --
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Boston.com / Real estate Buying Renting Recent sales Place an ad Luxury Living Community data Financing Commercial Moving Guides How to solve appraisal problems By Inman news MORE Having an appraisal done on your home is essential, whether or not you plan on selling. Loan calculators NEWS LINK NEWS LINK RESOURCES For Sale: Homes | Condos | Open Houses For Rent: Apartments | Houses | Roommates Vacation rentals Place an ad: On Boston.com | In the Globe Commercial: Search listings for sale or rent An appraisal is a dispassionate, third-party estimate of the value of a piece of property. It can either give you peace of mind by affirming your offering price or it can put the kibosh on a transaction entirely. As part of your loan application, you will pay for your lender (typically $200 to $400) to order an appraisal to estimate the current market value of the home you want to buy. You may also opt to hire an appraiser yourself before you make an offer to help you determine the price you bid on a house. Lenders require appraisals before they will approve and fund a loan in order to ensure that the home is worth the amount of money you are asking for. While most appraisals match up with what buyers want to borrow, some do not, which can send a lender backing out of your loan commitment. Understanding how real estate appraisals and appraisers work can help you deal with the consequences. Why do appraisals go awry? Most appraisal problems boil down to two things: incomplete information on the property or incompetence of the appraiser. Incomplete information often comes with the appraisal territory. All appraisals must conform to guidelines set by the Federal Reserve, but ultimately every appraisal is a subjective analysis of a property's current market value. To arrive at that number on your house, an appraiser will compare your house with that of three comparable homes in the area that have sold within the past six months and adjust for differences in the properties. They will photograph, measure and inspect the home (do NOT consider this your home inspection, however) to help them make their comparisons. But true market value can be difficult to ascertain in markets where prices are volatile and properties widely vary. Incompetence in the field can cause appraisal problems, too. Not all real estate appraisers are created equal in terms of licensing and education. While federal licensing requirements for everyone are being phased in, only about half the states currently require appraisers to be licensed, though most states do require appraisers to pass a written examination and have 75 hours of continuing education and 2,000 hours of direct experience. Inexperience can be a big culprit in a problem appraisal, so can downright incompetence. Boosting the appraisal A lender probably will reject your loan application if the appraisal of the property comes back lower than the asking price. But you can fight a low-ball appraisal. Here's how: Get a copy of the appraisers report. You can successfully argue to raise the estimated value if you show that the report overlooks a valuable feature of the home or failed to consider the recent sale of comparable property for a higher price. Take your case to your loan representative. The lender can override the estimate or order a new report from a different appraiser. Try to renegotiate with the seller. The seller may be willing to accept less than you originally agreed to pay in order to avoid the time and cost required to cancel the sale and put the house back on the market. Increase your down payment. The lender may be willing to overlook a low appraisal if you put more money down. Find a good appraiser Ask your lender for the names of appraisers they know, trust and have on their list of approved appraisers. You also can check with one of several national appraisal organizations for names of local appraisers who are members in good standing. Look for an appraiser who can do your appraisal in a timely manner and who has experience in the area you want to buy. This can help speed things along, and assure you of an accurate appraisal. TIP: If you do choose an appraiser from your lender's list to check out a house, and you end up making an offer, you may not have to pay again for the required loan-application appraisal. Quick Take If you have any question about the value of the house you are bidding on, add an appraisal contingency to your purchase offer. This provision stipulates that the property must appraise for at least the purchase price you're offering. If the appraisal comes in lower, you can back out of the deal or renegotiate price. feedback | help | site map | advertising | globe archives | rss © 2006 The New York Times Company Real Estate Guide - Massachusetts Home Builder - New Home Construction
Home equity for the
MSN Money - Home equity for the holidays MSN Home Hotmail My MSN Sign In Money S earch MSN Money: Help Home News Banking Investing Planning Taxes My Money Portfolio Loans Insurance Banking Home My Accounts Bill Pay Mortgages/Loans Services Credit Reports Financial Tools Track your bills Resources Decision Centers Home Buying Guide Home Financing Your Credit Rating Financial Privacy Better Banking Credit Card Smarts Bankruptcy Guide Commentary Index Related Links Manage Debt More on Budgeting Print-friendly version Send this to a friend See where rates stand Calculate your debt burden here Find a home-equity loan Find books on home buying Find It! Article Index Finance Q&A Tools Index Site Map Recent articles by Bankrate.com: Mortgage rates hit 18-month high , 11/2/2005 Best deal? Go to the source , 10/27/2005 When it pays to stay single , 10/24/2005 More... The Basics Home equity for the holidays advertisement Borrowing from a home-equity loan for holiday spending is tempting because of the lower rates and tax-deductible payments. But theres a huge risk involved. By Bankrate.com This season, many consumers will charge against the home for the holidays. They will use home-equity debt to pay for gifts and travel. Some will do it directly, paying for presents and airline tickets with charge cards tied to home-equity lines of credit. More will do it indirectly, by using equity to pay off credit-card balances that end up as bloated as a turkey-sated family. Home-equity debt traditionally has been spent on investments that bring some kind of return -- renovating houses, paying for college, starting small businesses. More recently, as consumers have become more clever about using debt, equity loans are seen as a cheaper, smarter way to consolidate debt and pay for such items as cars and furniture. But gifts and airline tickets to visit family? Believe it or not, bankers and consumer advocates agree that there are times when it's appropriate to pay for something so fleeting by charging it against the roof over your head. It's not exactly wise to go into debt to pay for presents, but if you're going to do it, you might as well do so as inexpensively as possible. Find a loan that's right for you at the Loan Center Debt for gifts "Don't let these things be excuses to be in debt. That's the issue," says Anthony Hsieh, president of Home Loan Center, an online lender based in Orange County, Calif. If you listen long enough to AM radio, you are likely to hear a holiday-themed sales pitch for these loans, which allow you to borrow money and use the accumulated equity in your home as collateral. Generally, it takes two to four weeks to get access to the money after you apply. Home-equity loans, also known as second mortgages, come in a lump sum. You repay them with equal monthly payments at a fixed rate for a specified period. Related news and commentary on MSN Money Gift cards are not gifts 15 worst holiday gift ideas The fine art of holiday tipping: why, who and how much The 13 worst holiday spending blunders 12 rules for regifting without fear 10 low-cost gifts from the heart Home equity lines of credit, or HELOCs, on the other hand, work like credit cards. Instead of getting a lump sum, you start out with a credit line and can draw up to the credit line's limit. During the first years of the account, the minimum monthly payment covers only the interest on the balance. The rate is variable and usually is tied to the prime rate. The tax deduction On both kinds of equity debt, the interest you pay is deductible from your federal income taxes in most cases. That's the key, Hsieh says. If you decide to take some time to pay off your holiday debt, why not do it with tax-deductible interest? "Is it irresponsible to dig into equity (to pay for gifts?)" Hsieh asks. "Yes. But if you're going to get into debt and you're disciplined enough to pay it off in a predetermined time, there is an advantage to using a HELOC because the interest is deductible." Rudy Cavazos of Money Management International , a national, nonprofit credit-counseling agency based in Houston, agrees that buying things with low-rate home equity debt "beats using that credit card" with higher rates and no tax-deduction. But he's not sure every consumer understands all the differences between regular credit cards and cards tied to HELOCs, including the biggie: "You're placing your home on the line as security, as collateral, for these funds." No walking away from equity debt Sure, the HELOC has a lower rate and the interest is tax-deductible. But the regular credit card is unsecured, meaning that the balance is not backed by collateral -- so the debt can be wiped clean in some bankruptcies. Not so with a card tied to a HELOC. If you buy your godson a Christmas gift with your HELOC, you are pledging your house as collateral. You can't walk away from the debt, even in bankruptcy. This important point might not be stressed at the time of the loan application. That's why Cavazos recommends that consumers get some kind of loan counseling before they take out home-equity loans or get HELOCs. Consumer credit counseling agencies, such as MMI, often hold workshops or do one-on-one education for people who get home loans of all kinds. Cavazos hears radio advertisements all the time that urge listeners to use home equity as a way to consolidate debt "or improve their lifestyle in some way. That's all good, but you have to remember to educate yourself before you enter into these types of financial tools." When it comes to gifts and holiday travel, the best financial tool is to stay away from debt in the first place. Instead, use the financial tool that can't be beat: a savings account. Editors' choice Don't get scammed by your mover Safeguard your Social Security number 5 ways to tap into the onshore drilling boom Your checkbook just became obsolete Turn $1 a day into $67,815 Readers' choice Ratings Top 5 Articles 9.30 Zombie debt collectors dig up your old mistakes 9.24 Keep thieves out of your bank account 9.22 Credit reports now free for entire U.S. 9.19 10 ways to avoid outrageous hospital overcharges 9.17 Tax breaks for Katrina victims -- and all of us View all top rated articles More Resources · E-mail us your comments on this article · Post on the Your Money message board · Get a daily dose of market news S earch MSN Money tips advertisement MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. 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investment property mortgages lenders rates properties Let -a- Property .info The Home for Landlords, Tenants and Letting Agents investment property mortgage for uk investors Add a Site Investment Property Mortgages UK Buy to Let Mortgages | UK Limited Companies | Commercial Mortgages | Property Development Loan | Business Mortgages | Investment Mortgages For an Instant, No Obligation Quote : >> PLEASE CLICK HERE << For Mortgages UNDER 50k please click here We have teamed up with 'The Money Centre' - one of the UK's largest independent finance brokers . As the Money Centre are a 'Buying Group' they are able to secure mortgages from specialist funding institutions on far more competitive terms than are available to the public direct! For the purchase or refinance of commercial or semi-commercial property for letting on commercial terms Typical terms for this type of loan are as follows: Amount - minimum 100,000 - no maximum Loan to Value - up to 75% Open Market Value of property to be mortgaged. (Experienced Landlords may be able to obtain up to 85%) Term - up to 25 years Repayment - regular instalments of capital and interest. An "Interest Only" option may be available on part of the loan Interest rates - fixed or variable rates are available. Margins on variable rates are usually between 1.5% and 3% above Base Rate or LIBOR Lenders Fees - an Arrangement Fee (usually 1% of loan amount) is payable on acceptance of the lender's formal offer. It may be possible to add this amount to the loan. Other Costs - borrowers are responsible for legal and valuation costs Brokerage Fees - Our standard charge is 1% of loan amount Lenders endeavour to be flexible to meet your needs, but their prime consideration will always be based upon proven ability to service loan repayments. Site Terms and Conditions Back Top all of these retirement uncertainties mean more and more people are turning to Buy-to-Let as a flexible, controlled means of long term saving for early retirement. Once the mortgage is paid off you have an income to live off (or own an asset outright that you can sell) in your retirement. Unlike a pension (you cannot access until you are at least 50 and that is controlled by a faceless fund manager); with Property you can see it, control it, generate an income from it, sell it (usually within a few months). Property is a flexible form of investment where you can easily control and minimise the risks of failure. The most basic idea that someone else is going to pay your mortgage off for you is very appealing for an increasing number of people. Advertising Accommodation Credit Cards General Home Insurance Income Protection Unemployment Insurance Landlords Tenants Insurance Mortgage Insurance Protection Professional Advice Property Finance & Mortgages Property to Buy or Sell Savings Secured Loans Unsecured Personal Loans
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REcolorado.com - brought to you by Metrolist Inc. -- Welcome to REcolorado - Colorado's Premier Public Property Listing Website Find A Home Required Fields Property Type: Residential Condominium Income Land Sort Order: Price City Square Feet Bedrooms Bathrooms Street Name Optional Fields Price: (default $0 to $999,999,999) From To Finished Square Ft: From To Bedrooms: From To Bathrooms: From To Car Spaces: From To Address #: From To Street Name: City: ALL AGATE AGUILAR AKRON ALLENSPARK ALMA ARVADA AURORA BAILEY BELLVUE BENNETT BERTHOUD BLACK HAWK BOULDER BOW MAR BRECKENRIDGE BRIGHTON BROOMFIELD BRUSH BUENA VISTA BUFFALO CREEK BYERS CALHAN CANON CITY CARBONDALE CASTLE ROCK CEDAREDGE CENTENNIAL CENTRAL CITY CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE COALDALE COKEDALE COLORADO CITY COLORADO SPRINGS COLUMBINE VALLEY COMMERCE CITY COMO CONIFER COPPER MOUNTAIN COTOPAXI CRAIG CRESTED BUTTE DACONO DEER TRAIL DELTA DENVER DILLON DIVIDE DRAKE DUMONT DUPONT EAGLE EASTLAKE EATON EDGEWATER ELBERT ELIZABETH ELK SPRINGS EMPIRE ENGLEWOOD ERIE ESTES PARK EVANS EVERGREEN FAIRPLAY FEDERAL HEIGHTS FIRESTONE FLAGLER FLORISSANT FORT COLLINS FORT LUPTON FORT MORGAN FOUNTAIN FOXFIELD FRANKTOWN FRASER FREDERICK FRISCO GARDNER GEORGETOWN GILCREST GLENDALE GLENWOOD SPRINGS GOLDEN GRANBY GRAND JUNCTION GRAND LAKE GRANT GREELEY GREENWOOD VILLAGE GROVER GUFFEY HAMILTON HARTSEL HENDERSON HIGHLANDS RANCH HILLROSE HOEHNE HOT SULPHUR SPRINGS HUDSON HUGO IDAHO SPRINGS IDLEDALE INDIAN HILLS JAMESTOWN JEFFERSON JOHNSTOWN KEENESBURG KEYSTONE KIOWA KITTREDGE KREMMLING LA SALLE LA VETA LAFAYETTE LAKE GEORGE LAKEWOOD LARKSPUR LAST CHANCE LEADVILLE LIMON LINDON LITTLETON LIVERMORE LOCHBUIE LONE TREE LONGMONT LOUISVILLE LOVELAND LYONS MATHESON MEAD MEEKER MERINO MILLIKEN MOFFAT MONTROSE MONUMENT MORRISON NATHROP NEDERLAND NIWOT NONE NORTHGLENN NUNN ORCHARD OTIS PALMER LAKE PARKER PARSHALL PEETZ PENROSE PEYTON PINE PINECLIFFE PLATTEVILLE PUEBLO RAMAH RED FEATHER LAKES ROGGEN ROLLINSVILLE RUSH SAGUACHE SALIDA SAN LUIS SAN PABLO SEDALIA SEIBERT SEVERANCE SHAWNEE SHERIDAN SILVER PLUME SILVERTHORNE SIMLA STEAMBOAT SPRINGS STERLING STRASBURG SUPERIOR TABERNASH THORNTON TRINIDAD TWIN LAKES VAIL VICTOR VONA WALDEN WALSENBURG WATKINS WATTENBURG WESTCLIFFE WESTMINSTER WESTON WHEAT RIDGE WIGGINS WINDSOR WINTER PARK WOODLAND PARK WOODROW WRAY YODER Zip Code: County: ALL ADAM ALAMOSA ARAPAHOE ARCHULETA BENT BOULDER BROOMFIELD CHAFFEE CLEAR CREEK CONEJOS COSTILLA CROWLEY CUSTER DELTA DENVER DOLORES DOUGLAS EAGLE EL PASO ELBERT FREMONT GARFIELD GILPIN GRAND GUNNISON HINSDALE HUERFANO JACKSON JEFFERSON KIOWA KIT CARSON LAKE LARIMER LAS ANIMAS LINCOLN LOGAN MESA MOFFAT MONTROSE MORGAN OURAY PARK PUEBLO RIO BLANCO ROUTT SAGUACHE SEDGWICK SUMMIT TELLER WASHINGTON WELD YUMA Subdivision: -- MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: MLS Number: Terms of Use Privacy Policy Fair Housing © 1998-2005 Metrolist, Inc. All rights reserved.