Colorado Real Estate Listings
Colorado Real Estate Listings You are here: About > Home & Garden > Home Buying / Selling > Real Estate For Sale > Real Estate Agent Web Sites > States A-C, Find an Agent > Colorado Home & Garden Home Buying / Selling Essentials 10 Things Home Buyers Shouldn't Do Best Tips for First Time Home Buyers "Must-Do" Tasks Before You Sell How to Buy a Home, Step by Step For Sale by Owner Advice Articles & Resources How To Buy a Home How To Sell a House Celebrity & Historic Credit Reports & Scores Design & Remodel Home Maintenance Inspections & Appraisals Investing & Foreclosures Modular & Manufactured Mold, Radon, Lead, etc. Mortgage Advice Moving & Relocation Real Estate Careers Real Estate For Sale Vacation Homes Buyer's Guide Before You Buy Top Picks Home Buying Books Foreclosure Books Mortgage Books Product Reviews Forums Help FREE Newsletter Sign Up Now for the Home Buying / Selling newsletter! See Online Courses Search Home Buying / Selling Colorado Real Estate Listings This guide to Colorado real estate agents will help you locate real estate listings in that state. Properties for sale throughout Colorado. Articles & Resources Sort By : Guide Picks | Alphabetical | Recent Up a category Alamosa - Thelma Turney Century 21 Valley Realty. Breckenridge - Susan Gunnin RE/MAX Properties of the Summit. Colorado Springs - Paul Cornuke RE/MAX Properties, Inc. Denver - Alan Cramer Priority One Real Estate. Denver - Gary & Cindy Belhumeur Frontier Real Estate 4 more Articles & Resources below Articles & Resources more from your guide Denver - Dave Babb Mercury Realty, Inc. Denver - The Brokerage House The Brokerage House. North Glenn - Michael Barela Metro Brokers, Barela and Associates. Trinidad - Charlie Barks & Barbara Sandgren Adobe Gold Properties. Topic Index | Email to a Friend Our Story | Be a Guide | Advertising Info | Work at About | Site Map | Icons | Help User Agreement | Ethics Policy | Patent Info. | Privacy Policy | Kids' Privacy Policy ©2005 About, Inc., A part of the New York Times Company . All rights reserved. Around About Oprah's Life Vacation Ideas Shop Safely Online VIDEO: Craft Rooms VIDEO: Christmas Traditions What's Hot Coping with Unethical People How To Buy Land Real Estate Appraisal Before You Buy a Log Home Package Home Buying / Selling - GuideReviews Headlines Getting Ready to Sell Your House Guests and lots of activities make it difficult to show... Before You Buy Gas Logs Gas logs are growing in popularity every year, so manufacturers... Pros and Cons of Becoming a Real Estate Agent You've decided you want to become a real estate agent,... Step-by-Step Directions Help You Measure Square Footage Each year, home owners discover that their new home's square...
Selling home on your
Alaska Journal of Commerce: Selling home on your own can prove costly 04/22/02 [an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive] Home Focus In this Issue Calendar Bulletin Board Movers & Shakers Business History Archive Around the World Legals Viewpoint Profile Cartoons Contact Us Advertise with us Subscribe About Us Classified ADs Oil & Gas Special Sections Wealthbuilders Fish Factor Travel Insight Property Wise Tech Watch Law Page Philanthropy Health Book of Lists -5° 17° 9° 8° 27° 33° 35° 41° 44° 39° 35° Choose City Anchorage Barrow Bethel Cordova Deadhorse Denali Park Dillingham Dutch Harbor Fairbanks Galena Haines Homer Juneau Kenai Ketchikan Kodiak Kotzebue McGrath Nenana Paxson Petersburg Pribilof Islands Sitka Skagway Soldotna Talkeetna Valdez Wrangell Yakutat Email Newsletter Palm Pilot Delivery Letter to the editor Comments Locate a copy [an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive] 042202 prop_wise 2 Alaska Journal of Commerce Late night television and local radio programming is rife with infomercials and advertisements touting how easy it is to buy and sell your houses, buildings and businesses all by yourself and save staggering amounts of money to boot. -- Web posted Monday, April 22, 2002 Selling home on your own can prove costly By Ken Jelinek For the Journal Late night television and local radio programming is rife with infomercials and advertisements touting how easy it is to buy and sell your houses, buildings and businesses all by yourself and save staggering amounts of money to boot. They can be rather insulting to those of us in the real estate industry because they attempt to make us sound unnecessary, unethical and expensive. But the fact is, you really can do it yourself successfully. Cynically speaking, however, you can also fix your own car, generate your own electricity, defend yourself in court, trade your own stocks and never visit a doctor. You could probably do your neighbor's job too. One day, when everything is perfectly computerized and digital, you probably won't need a real estate agent. But for now, for the rest of us, we need the help, and that help is going to cost us. So, before you go spiraling off in your declaration of independence, ask yourself, "If it's really so easy, then why aren't all real estate transactions conducted without an agent?" You might also ask yourself if you would want to eliminate the real estate agent and take on all of his or her responsibilities when you are already bogged down with your own life in general, and especially if you haven't done it enough to do it right or do it well? Then, listen closely to your answers because we professionals in the industry are often patching up real estate transactions gone sour behind the well-meaning do-it-yourselfers. Keep in mind that I'm referring to all professionals in the industry including agents, attorneys, loan originators, title officers, processors, surveyors, tax assessors, appraisers and inspectors. But I'm referring specifically to the agent because he or she is the center in this wheel. Nationally, only three to five of every 100 home sales consists of successful "For Sale by Owner" transactions. The vast majority of those that attempt it end up hiring an agent within the first 30 days after they have realized the true cost, time and demands required for marketing and showing a home. Locally, the statistics indicate 15-17 percent of FSBOs are successful. While there are a lot of reasons for this, one of the main ones is that we have a robust seller's market with relatively low inventory. This can be quite tempting for sellers to strike out on their own because it looks easier than it is. But even the owners that sell their own homes usually sell to a buyer who has an agent paid for by the seller. The truth is that the vast majority of all real estate transactions are completed with agents involved on at least one side of the sale, and for this reason, most transactions go very smoothly. But sometimes they don't. One recent seller took the advice of a local FSBO program on pricing his home. Several programs will give you limited service for a set fee. He put an ad in the paper and sold it within three days. When the appraisal report came back he learned that he priced his home too low but was still committed to that price. Sure, he might have saved 6 or 7 percent in brokerage fees but he lost a lot more than that to the happy buyer because his FSBO consultant didn't know the market well enough. In a similar incident, a very excited couple heard of a perfect home on the market For Sale By Owner in their neighborhood. The sellers told them that they didn't want to pay any brokerage fees and proceeded to negotiate down the asking price by $9,000, which made the buyers feel special. A market analysis revealed that the starting price was already about $10,000 too high. And yet, it's going to be sold at the same market price to the buyers whether or not they have an agent paid by the seller. Recently a buyer made an offer on a duplex that was accepted with a counteroffer to increase the earnest money. Both buyer and seller agreed verbally and the only thing lacking was the buyer's signature on that change. In the meantime, the seller sold the duplex to a second buyer to get a higher price and quicker closing. He now has two accepted offers on the same property at the same time. Which party in this potential lawsuit would you like to be? Not all sellers innocently try to save money on real estate commissions. Some choose to "overlook" disclosing pertinent and sometimes legally required information to buyers because doing so might lower the final sales price or prohibit a sale indefinitely because they can't afford to fix a deficiency. How would you protect yourself without the watchful eye of an expert? Agents usually take on quite a bit of risk in marketing your house for sale or driving you around looking at homes to buy. They pay for everything up front and often don't get paid until the day it is recorded, which makes him or her, actually, quite a bargain. On the other hand, you could do it yourself. Ken Jelinek is an associate broker with RE/MAX Properties in Anchorage. He can be reached at 907-257-0196. [an error occurred while processing this directive] © 2004 The Alaska Journal of Commerce and Morris Communications Corp.
Denver Real Estate
Denver Real Estate - Find Homes in Denver at REALTOR.com Denver Real Estate Find Homes For Sale In Greater Denver, Colorado 5432 Listings in this area Select an area of Denver Select from the list below to search for homes and real estate in Greater Denver BOM-Boulder Mountain BOP-Boulder Plains BOU-Boulder BRM-Broomfield JFC-Jefferson County Central JFN-Jefferson County North JFW-Jefferson County West (Golden) JNC-Jefferson County North Central LAF-Lafayette LBE-Loveland/Berthoud LNG-Longmont LSV-Louisville MCP-Mountain Conifer Pine MGC-Gilpin County Mtn MJN-North Jefferson County Mtn NNW-North Northwest Suburban NSW-North Suburban West Other Areas To select two or more, hold down control key (command key on a Macintosh) while clicking mouse. or... Enter the MLS # Search in popular metros: Atlanta | Austin | Boston | Chicago | Dallas | Denver | Houston | Las Vegas | Long Island | Los Angeles | Memphis | Miami | New York City | Orange County | Palm Beach | Phoenix | Sacramento | San Diego | Seattle Site Map | Corporate News & Info | Contact Us | Advertise With Us | Join our staff Terms of Use and PrivacyPolicy . 1995- NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS and Homestore, Inc. All rights reserved. Equal Housing Opportunity REALTOR.com is the official site of the National Association of REALTORS and is operated by Homestore, Inc. REALTOR -- A Registered collective membership mark that identifies a real estate professional who is a member of the National Association of REALTORS and subscribes to its strict Code of Ethics. Inquiries regarding the Code of Ethics should be directed to the board in which a REALTOR holds membership.
Real Estate Investment, Seller
Real Estate investment with private mortgages and seller financing. Real estate investors. Sell Mortgage , Real Estate Investment, Seller Financing, Private Mortgage Investment , Discounted Mortgage , Hard Money Mortgage , Sub Prime Mortgage , Credit Report Place/View Listings: Sell Mortgage • Mortgage Wanted • Get Mortgage • Note Brokers • Mortgage Brokers • Lenders Site Index Real estate investment Why own a real estate investment: To rent the real estate and produce positive cash flow. To resell the real estate for a profit. [ Home ] [Why own investment real estate?] [ Why most real estate is sold at market price ] [ Where to find the deals ] [ Nothing down real estate deals ] [ Money making ideas for real estate investors ] [ Creative Financing Ideas ] [ Home inspection ] [ Construction problems with older homes ] [ Home construction Estimation form ] [ Tax benefits of investment real estate ] [ Tax Table 2005 ] [ Mortgage interest rates ] [ Income Real estate 10-yr spreadsheet Online ] [ Fixup houses Profitabilty Analysis Online ] [ HUD anti-flipping rules ] [ Buying real estate from senior citizens. Get rich slow. ] [ Real estate investors tax audit guide ] [ Understanding real estate legal descriptions ] [ Real estate investors credibility ] [ Print Rent payment coupons ] [ What is a triple net lease ] [ Commercial mortgage simple underwriting ] [ Commercial loan Qualifier ] [ Foreign investor & US real estate ] [ Real Estate for Sale ] There are lots of people out there giving late night TV shows and selling expensive courses that will guarantee to make you rich and famous. Some of their promoters are now in jail, some who aren't, deserve to be. So here are some simple aids that won't cost you a dime. First of all, you make your money when you buy, not when you sell. So finding the motivated seller who is willing to offer you a good deal in exchange for a quick sale is the single most important factor to your real estate investment success. Surprise, surprise, most owners of real estate want to sell it for full fair market value. In fact many owners are so proud of their real estate they want you to pay MORE than fair market value. Most real estate sellers don't want to give you a 30% discount on fair market value. But this is what you need if you intend to fix up and resell the real estate for a profit. Think it can't be done? A real estate investor we know in Tampa closed on a pre-foreclosure house for $46,000 in February 2004, using 100% hard money financing. They sold it for $98,000 in April 2004 having spent about $2,000 on fix-up work. Let's be clear on this. If you can buy a house for $70,000 that would be worth $100,000 if it was fixed up, but it will cost $30,000 to fix it up, you're paying market value, NOT getting a bargain. You need to buy this house for $45,000 or keep looking. Download our free spreadsheet to evaluate that real estate "bargain" in real terms. You need to factor in things like the real cost of fixing it up, the closing costs when you buy, the closing costs when you sell, the cost of money while you are fixing it up from the day you buy it to the day you sell it, any pre-payment penalties on the money you have borrowed etc. If you intend to keep and rent out the property then you can pay a little more. But don't forget, even with current interest rates you have vacancy. property taxes, insurance, repairs and maintenance to pay for before you get to positive cash flow. Download our free real estate investment spreadsheet to evaluate that real estate "bargain" over the next ten years. Or calculate your potential profits directly on this web site . (Note: It may a take couple of minutes for page to load). Don't spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on some real estate "get rich quick" seminar or course pitched by some late night TV smoothie, check out our books on real estate investment. Money making ideas. Where to find the deals Why it's hard to find good deals. Financial Calculators. Find Money for your transaction. Search our bookstore for books on real estate. Dictionary of real estate and mortgage terms. A marketplace for your seller's mortgage if they'd sooner have cash. Understanding legal descriptions Is that good deal as good as you thought it was? Projects all the costs involved for real estate investors who are thinking of "flipping" properties. Download our FREE Microsoft Excel (97 or higher) "fix up" analysis spreadsheet. (This is a self-executing compressed file, just note where you download it and double click on it.) Useful real estate and mortgage forms. Remember laws vary from State to State and even County to County. We have property management forms, deeds, leases, mortgage origination forms etc. Download our custom designed Sample Quickbooks99 file to show how to easily account for real estate income. Are you better to pay cash and get conventional financing or pay a higher price and get low interest rate seller financing? Compares different offers and even make two or more offers on the same property with different terms. Download our FREE Microsoft Excel (97 or higher) " different offers " analysis spreadsheet. (This is a self-executing compressed file, just note where you download it and double click on it.) Just how much money will that investment property earn you over the next ten years? And how much will you make when you sell it? Down load our FREE Microsoft Excel (97 or higher) 10-year income analysis spreadsheet (This is a self-executing compressed file, just note where you download it and double click on it.) Or run it on this web site. Think a million dollars is a lot to retire on? Think again. See just how long your money will last under different scenarios. Download our FREE Microsoft Excel (97 or higher) " Retirement scenario" spreadsheet. (This is a self-executing compressed file, just note where you download it and double click on it.) How to survive a tax audit. Home construction and estimating forms for you to print and use. Why interest rates move. Property analysis card Your "Credibility Kit" as a home buyer Taxation of non resident investors in US real estate and mortgages. Commercial triple net leases explained Order on line valuation Our real estate investment bookstore [ Home ] [Why own investment real estate?] [ Why most real estate is sold at market price ] [ Where to find the deals ] [ Nothing down real estate deals ] [ Money making ideas for real estate investors ] [ Creative Financing Ideas ] [ Home inspection ] [ Construction problems with older homes ] [ Home construction Estimation form ] [ Tax benefits of investment real estate ] [ Tax Table 2005 ] [ Mortgage interest rates ] [ Income Real estate 10-yr spreadsheet Online ] [ Fixup houses Profitabilty Analysis Online ] [ HUD anti-flipping rules ] [ Buying real estate from senior citizens. Get rich slow. ] [ Real estate investors tax audit guide ] [ Understanding real estate legal descriptions ] [ Real estate investors credibility ] [ Print Rent payment coupons ] [ What is a triple net lease ] [ Commercial mortgage simple underwriting ] [ Commercial loan Qualifier ] [ Foreign investor & US real estate ] [ Real Estate for Sale ] FREE Newsletter! subscribe unsubscribe Site Index Bookstore Contact us Complete list of FREE Mortgage and Real Estate courses Send page to friend Calculators Current, historic interest rates FREE content for your web site About Us & Privacy Policy Forms library Real estate and mortgage Resources Dictionary of terms FREE Downloads Bookmark this site. Internet Explorer users Click here NetScape press CTRL-D. AOL users click the Heart. Mortgage-investments.com is our US Federally registered service mark no. 2,647,595 Free info on mortgage investments, private mortgages, hard money mortgages, discounted mortgages, seller financing. 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real estate agents Money
Feds probe real estate agents - Apr. 22, 2005 Web CNN/Money Buying & Selling Investment Property Home Improvement Million $ Life Financing Best Places SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | SUBSCRIBE TO MONEY | Feds probe real estate agents Money magazine investigation shows Justice Dept. looking into anticompetitive practices. April 22, 2005: 5:27 PM EDT By Jon Birger, Money Magazine NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Did you pay your real estate broker too much? The U.S. Department of Justice may be set to turn Tulsa, Okla. into a test-case for ending the stranglehold 6 percent commissions have over the real estate brokerage business. MONEY has learned that Justice's Antitrust Division is gathering information on the bully tactics that full-commission brokers in Tulsa allegedly use against their discount rivals to discourage commission-cutting. The probe follows other recent efforts to spur competition in the real estate industry. According to a copy of a Justice Department subpoena obtained by MONEY, federal investigators are seeking information on "possible anticompetitive conduct in the provision of real estate services in the Tulsa area" as well as "documents related to refusal to cooperate on real estate transactions." An Antitrust Division spokeswoman confirmed the existence of the investigation but declined to provide additional details. Al Unser, executive director of the Greater Tulsa Association of Realtors said: "We received a CID [civil investigative demand] from the Justice Dept. and we have responded." Economists who study real estate, such as the University of Cincinnati's Norm Miller, believe anti-competitive behavior is the primary explanation for the persistence of the 6 percent commission. J.D. Smith and Bob Meyer are two Tulsa discount real estate agents who say they were interviewed by federal investigators. They say the investigators wanted information on full-commission agents' alleged refusal to show home-buying clients properties listed by discount brokers -- a tactic known as boycotting. Boycotting exploits the one major weakness of the multiple listing service. The MLS's upside is that it centralizes all homes for sale in a single electronic marketplace that can be accessed by all agents -- and these days by Web-savvy consumers as well. The downside is that brokers must depend on one another to help sell their homes, and that discourages them from undercutting each other's commissions. While boycotting the listings of discounters is generally considered an antitrust violation -- if undisclosed, it's also a breach of fiduciary duty to clients -- industry insiders are well aware that boycotting goes on, even if they claim not to condone it. For Smith, the Feds' investigation comes a year or so too late. His realty business on the brink of ruin, Smith recently abandoned discount brokerage and went back to charging 6 percent. "In one week," Smith said, "I've had more showings and more offers from other realtors than I had in the previous two months." The Tulsa investigation is part of an ongoing Antitrust Division foray into the sharp-elbowed realty world. In March, the Antitrust Division sued the Kentucky Real Estate Commission over a state law that prohibits real estate brokers from offering commission rebates to consumers. More recently, Assistant Attorney General R. Hewitt Pate sent letters to lawmakers and regulators in Oklahoma and Texas, urging them to reject proposals that would effectively prohibit brokers from engaging in limited-service or fee-for-service realty -- such as listing a home for sale on the multiple listing service for a flat fee of $500. Bruce Hahn, chairman of the American Homeowners Grassroots Alliance, argues that state prohibitions on rebates and fee-for-service discourage competition and inflate commissions paid by consumers. "We've talked to Justice, and we think what they're doing is tremendous," he said. E-mail Jon Birger at jbirger@moneymail.com. The Hot List Most profitable renovations How risky is your 401(k)? Big new tax credits for hybrid cars More Real Estate How to buy and build on rural land Most overvalued housing markets When booms go bust... contact us | magazine customer service | site map | glossary | RSS | press room OTHER NEWS: CNN | SI | Fortune | Business2.0 = Money subscribers = Premium content -- * - Time reflects local markets trading time. † - Intraday data is at least 15-minutes delayed. Disclaimer © 2005 Cable News Network LP, LLLP. A Time Warner Company ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms under which this service is provided to you. privacy policy Reprints of site stories are available. Top Stories Most overvalued housing markets Risks to the economy in 2006 Which was the worst ad of all in 2005? After the ride, a rest Hilton brands reunite after 40 years YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Real Estate Antitrust Division Corporate Governance Oklahoma or Create your own Manage alerts | What is this?