Foreclosure Property
HUD foreclosures - all HUD foreclosure properties. HUD Foreclosures & HUD REO's Search For all HUDForeclosure properties & HUD Homes across the country. Home Oahu Real Estate Kauai Real Estate Big Island Hawaii Real Estate Maui Real Estate Contact Us Welcome to the HUD Foreclosure & HUD Bank owned (reo) real estate center! HUD Foreclosure and HUD REO listings! Search Foreclsore listings What is a HUD home? The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) is a part of HUD--the part that provides federal mortgage insurance. If a foreclosed home was purchased with a loan insured by the FHA, the lender can file a claim for the balance due on the mortgage. FHA pays the lender's claim, then transfers ownership of the property to HUD, which sells the home. Will HUD make the repairs? HUD homes are sold as-is. The new owner is responsible for all repairs and improvements. How do I find a HUD? HUD foreclosures are our specialty. My staff and I are committed to making the buying and selling of HUD foreclosures a pleasurable and rewarding experience. Our website allows you to search all active HUD Real Estate listings. The site is easy to use and navigate through property searches. Featuring the best HUD foreclosure and bank owned (REO) homes, condos and land for sale. Contact us today ! To find out how we can be of assistance to you. Find HUD foreclosures the easy way with American Dream Realty, the leader in online HUD property data. If you are looking for a HUD foreclosure, you are sure to find one . Our database of HUD foreclosures is updated daily! Whether you are looking for a new home, an investment property or a place at the beach, American Dream Realty can help you find it! |Home| |Oahu Real Estate | Maui Real Estate | | Kauai Real Estate | | Big Island Hawaii Real Estate | |Financing| |About Us| |Contact Us| |Maui Featured Homes| | | Oahu Featured Homes| |Kauai Featured Homes| |Big Island Featured Homes| |How We Sell Homes| Foreclosures - Hawaii Foreclosures - HUD Foreclosures Jeff Manson's Team Serving all of Honolulu county, Hawaii on Oahu. Providing Realtor and Real Estate services for: Honolulu, Diamond Head, Kahala, Lanikai in Kailua, Hawaii Loa Ridge, Portlock in Hawaii Kai, Waialae Iki, Kaneohe, North Shore of Oahu, Mililani and Waikiki.
Sell House
DIY House selling by channel4.com/4money E4 More4 FilmFour FourDocs TV Listings Site A-Z NEWS FILM HOMES LIFE ENTERTAINMENT HISTORY SCIENCE COMMUNITY SHOP SPORT CULTURE CARS MONEY VIDEO LEARNING HEALTH MUSIC GAMES Home On TV Compare & Buy Mortgages & Homebuying Smart Money Banking & Saving Borrowing & Spending Insurance Tax & Pensions Funny Money Forum Latest features Mortgages and homebuying features Special features Guide to renting & letting Homebuying guides Property buying Property selling Remortgage How much can I borrow Conveyancing What mortgage type Flexible mortgage Choose an interest rate type Decide a repayment method Cut your bills Gas & electricity Home phone Digital TV Mobile phone Broadband Top tools Mortgage calculator Overpayment calculator Stamp duty calculator Payments calculator Money jargon A-Z Compare and Buy 400 Loans 300 Credit Cards 7000 Mortgages 1000 Saving Accounts 300 Current Accounts Subject to Moneysupermarket .com Terms Money Books Latest personal finance books Share money tips Share your money tips DIY house selling next How to be your own estate agent Selling your home through an estate agent can be an expensive and time-consuming business. We look at the alternatives. By Sarah Jagger How to sell your home alone For most people in the UK, selling your home means using an estate agent. An agent will advertise your property and introduce potential buyers but charge you 2% of the sale price as commission, plus VAT at 17.5%. Or if you use more than one agent, you will be charged up to 3.5% commission plus VAT by whichever agent introduces the buyer. So on a sale price of £100,000, this would mean estate agents’ commission of more than £3,500 before you take into account solicitors fees and removal charges. You could, of course, simply add that cost into your asking price – but in a slow market that could mean you have a long wait for a buyer, or price yourself out of the market altogether. There are some alternatives though, and one in twenty vendors are now taking the DIY route which could speed up the process and save you on average £4,500 which means you can afford to get the decorators in at your new home. next About C4 | Jobs | Text Only | Access Advice | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions | Privacy | Help | Online Ad Sales
Real Estate Prices
Real estate horror stories - Dec. 2, 2002 Enter Ticker Symbol Search CNN/Money Autos Real Estate Money's Best Home Markets & Stocks News Jobs & Economy World Biz Technology Commentary Personal Finance College Credit and Debt Insurance Interest Rates Retirement Tax Center Ask the Expert Five Tips The Good Life Millionaire in the Making Money 101 Moneyville Retirement Planner Savings Calculator Asset Allocator Mutual Funds Money Magazine Video CNN TV Fortune 500 Best Employers Money 101 Portfolio Calculators Real-time Quotes Last 5 Quotes SPONSORED BY include virtual="/fn_adspaces/markets-stocks/last_five_quotes/sponsor.88x31.ad" -- CNN/Money Email newsletters RSS Mobile news Money archives Buy story reprints Find a Mortgage SPECIAL OFFER Personal Finance Your Home Real estate horror stories There's never been a national bust but keep an eye on your backyard. December 2, 2002: 11:57 AM EST By Leslie Haggin Geary, CNN/Money Staff Writer New York (CNN/Money) - During the past three years, real estate has been a shelter in the storm. Since 2001, home prices have gained about 6.3 percent annually, according to the National Association of Realtors . And in dozens of hot markets , from San Francisco to Providence, RI to Topeka, KS, homeowners have seen double-digit price increases over the past year. Next to the seeming flimsiness of stocks, real estate looks rock solid. For the past 40 years, home sales prices have outpaced inflation by one or two percentage points per year, and there has never been a national decline in real estate values. But that's just part of the picture. When you drill down to local markets, instead of steady rises, you may find vertiginous spikes followed by stomach-churching drops. What's more, when busts hit, it can take years -- maybe even a decade -- for individuals who bought at the top of the market to recoup their investment. To see how grim it can get, we looked at annual sales figures for 138 metro areas across the country during the past three decades to spot where local bubbles burst, what drove prices into the cellar and how long it took for property owners to recoup their money. Here are some of the factors that can kill a real estate boom. Population shifts It's obvious. Jobs equal workers. Without work, residents leave, and home sales dry up. Consider the case of southern California. Once home to a thriving defense industry, military cutbacks hit the region especially hard in the early 1990s. Some 1 million individuals left the area, according to Ingo Winzer, president of The Local Market Monitor , a real estate consulting firm that tracks housing prices nationwide. In Los Angeles, home prices shed 21 percent of their value between 1989 and 1996, with the typical house selling for $172,900. (The peak was $214,800 in 1989 following a five year, 77-percent jump.) An exodus can hit smaller communities, too. Syracuse, NY once boasted 250,000 residents back in the 1950s, when it was a thriving industrial city. No longer. Many of those jobs are gone and Syracuse lost a full 10 percent of those inhabitants from 1990 to 2000, when its population dropped to 147,000 residents. Home prices, not surprisingly, fell too. Half of all property owners in the county who sold homes in 1997, for example, sold at a loss. Vacant buildings were not uncommon. (At one point, there were more than 1,000 empty dwellings.) Local recessions Ask housing experts about local busts and one of the first places they'll mention is Houston, TX. When the oil market was kicked in the teeth back in the mid-1980s, home prices in this city tumbled fast. In just three years, from 1985 to 1988, the typical home price dropped by 21 percent -- or from $78,600 to $61,800. Related Stories Did you pay too much for your house? Real estate or stocks? Milking the bubble Rev up your resale value "Prices fell so much that people owed more on than their mortgages than their homes were worth," said David Weil, an economics professor at Brown University. " They'd drive to the bank and drop off their keys to their homes and just leave." Houston isn't the only city where home prices have fallen when the local economy languishes badly. Take the stock market crash of 1987, which hit New York City's financial industry hard. Prices peaked at $183,000 in 1988, and anyone who bought then had to wait until after 1997 to get to even money. Another victim? Hartford, CT. From 1984 to 1988, the typical home price soared 92 percent to $167,600 from $87,400. Then the insurance industry started laying off or moving out. Hartford's population growth slowed to zero. And home prices starting falling. In fact it wasn't until last year that someone who bought at the 1988 price would have made their money back. Fast run-ups in housing values Are markets that have soared quickly especially prone to a bust? That's a question no doubt troubling many homeowners. But the answer isn't simple. Certainly, there have been plenty of hot markets that suddenly turned sour. Consider Honolulu, Hawaii, for example. Back in 1995, the average tab for a house in this community hit a record $360,000 -- a whopping 122 percent increase from the decade before. Then suddenly, prices began to drop. By 1999, a $360,000 island retreat was being unloaded for $290,000, a 19 percent discount, according to NAR. Prices started to finally rise in 2000, but anyone who bought at the island's real estate peak didn't recoup their money until this year. Hawaii's housing woes were tipped off by several factors, not the least of which was the decline in the Japanese economy, which squelched real-estate investment in Hawaii. Honolulu was also in trouble in part because few fundamentals, other than investment dollars -- were pushing the market. In fact, during the boom years, the island's population was climbing at a 1 percent rate, too low to justify the massive run-up in housing values. Bottom line: it's important to look at what drives housing spikes before you assume there will be a catastrophe, said Winzer. Rising interest rates "People tell you that housing never goes down, but that's just not true -- you try to sell a house when interest rates have gone up," said Stephen Cauley, associate director of the Ziman Center for Real Estate, Anderson School at UCLA . To illustrate his point, Cauley points to the early 1980's, when double-digit interest rates were being used to fight inflation. That made the cost of borrowing money for a home almost prohibitively expensive. "It was horrendous for the housing market," said Cauley. "There were no transactions." By 1982, the number of existing home sales had slid to 1.92 million, the lowest number on record, according to NAR. Many markets -- notably Detroit, Providence, Chicago and Philadelphia -- saw home prices stay flat or fall between 1979 and 1982. These days, of course, high interest rates seem a distant threat, though they are beginning to creep up. Current mortgage rates are hovering just above 6 percent for a fixed, 30-year loan. But even if rates go up a full percentage point, rates are still low, said Cauley. How will all this play out? If history is any guide, there won't be one big pop, the kind that usually come with stock-market crashes. But that doesn't make it any less painful. --* Disclaimer Selling? Buying? Click to compare top local real estate agents More on YOUR HOME Your Home: Bracing for higher rates Refinancing demand lags again A rose is (not) a rose TODAY'S TOP STORIES Most overvalued housing markets Risks to the economy in 2006 Which was the worst ad of all in 2005? CNN Money contact us | subscribe to Money magazine advertising -- | site map | glossary | RSS | press room OTHER NEWS: CNN | SI | Fortune | Business 2.0 | Time © 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.
Home Equity Account Services
Bank of America | Home | Personal Locations • Contact Us • Help • Sign In Search Online Banking Sign In View demo | Learn more | Enroll Enter Online ID Save this online ID Enter Passcode: Account in: the following geographical location Canada ---------- Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Forgot or need help with your ID? Reset passcode " width="190" height="28" border="0" / Sign In to Other Services Service My Mortgage Online Investing Future Scholar Military Bank Online Account Shortcuts Open an Account Checking Accounts Savings Accounts CDs Credit Cards Mortgages Home Equity Account Services Reorder Checks Set up direct deposit Request a Check Card Link accounts Change Address Change Phone Number ATMs & Banking Centers Address: City: State: Choose State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming or ZIP Code: Banking Centers ATMs More Location Search Options " / " / Online Services Online Banking with Bill Pay | Other Online Services Checking & Savings Overview | Checking Accounts | Savings Accounts | CDs | Keep the Change™ Cards Credit Cards | Check Cards | Gift Cards Loans & Home Buying Overview | Mortgages | Refinance | Home Equity | Auto Loans | Education & Other Loans | Movers Resource Center | Real Estate Center Investments & Wealth Management Investment Services | Premier Banking & Investments | The Private Bank | Family Wealth Advisors | IRAs | Columbia Funds | Trust Services | 529 College Savings Plans | Charitable Giving Program Specialized Banking & Additional Services Military Bank | Student Banking | Accessible Banking | Insurance | Foreign Currency / Travelers Cheques | SafeSend Money to Mexico Financial Education & Tools Overview | Savings & Budgeting | Home Purchase | Loans & Credit Cards | Credit Management | Investing | Retirement | Estates | Taxes | Education | Car Purchase En Espaol Your Security and Privacy Partner Learn how we're committed to your security Protect yourself against fraud Guard against scams with the free Bank of America Toolbar " border="0" hspace="5" vspace="5" / Online statements provide security you can bank on. Learn more " border="0" hspace="5" vspace="5" / A simple way to invest online. Now trade for as low as $7. Learn more " border="0" hspace="5" vspace="5" / Home Equity Line of Credit. No fees to get it, use it or keep it. Learn more Visa® Platinum 0% fixed introductory APR* and no annual fee. Learn more Shopping for competitive auto insurance? Get a convenient and free rate quote today. Learn more " border="0" / Service agreement Privacy & Security • Careers • Site Map Investment products provided by Banc of America Investment Services, Inc.®: Are Not FDIC Insured May Lose Value Are Not Bank Guaranteed Banc of America Investment Services, Inc is a registered broker-dealer, member NASD and SIPC and is a nonbank subsidary of Bank of America, N.A. Bank of America, N.A. Member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender © 2005 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved.
Buy Property
Global-Investor Bookshop : The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad by Liz Hodgkinson Global Investor | GI Bookshop | Harriman House | Financial Conferences | Finance Glossary | Investor Education | Derivatives | Financial Gurus -- Home Search Shopping basket Search the bookshop Bestsellers New Bargains Bundles Classics Free stuff Recommendations Coming soon Gurus Investment research Global-Investor > Bookshop > Books > The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad by Liz Hodgkinson Review this product The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad by Liz Hodgkinson - OUT OF PRINT - As an alternative, consider The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad Product code: 16241, ISBN: 0749440260, 288 pages, paperback, published by Kogan Page , 2nd edition, 2003 Description of The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad This book covers all the financial, legal and lifestyle aspects of buying your perfect home abroad. The prospect of owning property abroad is tantalisingly seductive. At one time the preserve of the very rich, owning an enchanting hideaway home in another country is now becoming increasingly within the financial reach of ever more people. Its glamorous and exciting but there are also many practicalities to consider, such as: - How would I finance the purchase? - Am I looking for rental income? - How important is hot sun and good weather? - Which country should I choose and why? - Is it better to buy into a brand-new development, or go for a romantic tumbledown wreck? - Do I want just a holiday home, or somewhere in the sun to retire to permanently when the time comes? - Is it a good investment? - Will I have to pay tax? The answers to all these questions and more are to be found in this authoritative, informative and down-to-earth book that covers all the financial, legal and lifestyle aspects of buying your perfect home abroad. It is also packed with a wealth of exhilarating, inspiring and amusing real-life stories from those who have taken the plunge and made their dreams come true. Contents of The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad Introduction 1.Beginnings 2.The reality 3.The important questions 4.Money 5.France 6.Spain 7.Portugal 8.Italy 9.Greece and Cyprus 10.North America 11.The Caribbean 12.Other destinations 13.Timeshare and other options 14.Conclusion Resources Index About Liz Hodgkinson Liz Hodgkinson is a prolific author and journalist who has written over 40 books. She writes regularly on property matters for the Evening Standard and the Daily Mail, and also contributes to The Guardian, The Independent and various magazines and Web sites. She is the author of the highly successful Complete Guide to Letting Property and The Complete Guide to Buying a Property Abroad (both published by Kogan Page). « The Complete Guide to Buying and Selling property The Complete Guide to Buying Property in France » With Christmas fast approaching, we're doing some special offers on top books from 2005 and have some great ideas for stocking fillers. See Christmas offers » Last UK posting dates 1st Class Royal Mail 20th December 2005 CityLink courier 22nd December 2005 Please contact us if you wish to check stock availability and dispatch times. Need bulk copies? If you need bulk copies of The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad , please contact us for a quote. Spotlight Samos by Brian and Eileen Anderson Our price: £9.89 Normally: £10.99 Read more... Buyers of this product also bought The Midas Touch The Midas Touch See other products on Living Abroad Property Other books by Liz Hodgkinson The Complete Guide to Letting Property The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad The Complete Guide to Letting Property The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad The Complete Guide to Renovating and Improving Your Property The Complete Guide To Letting Property The Complete Guide to Buying Property Abroad Bargains! Market Rap Our price: £9.00 You save: 50.00% More bargains Free Company Reports Report service from WiLink FREE! - no purchase required Request your free: Myplaceabroad.co.uk Email this page to as Text HTML View a print friendly version of this page Global-Investor 2005 | Ordering & Delivery | Terms & Conditions | Privacy policy | About us | Contact us