Monday, August 20, 2012

What your home is really worth!


When it comes to assessing a home's value, real estate agents and homeowners tend to be an optimistic bunch.
In the post-bust world, appraisers are a different story. They have to predict a realistic value for your home that the bank can use to extend credit to a borrower -- and that number can make or break your sale or refinance.
Appraisers say the following five areas are where homeowners often misjudge the worth of their abode.
1. The outside
The appraiser sees: Overgrown bushes and chipped paint.
What he does: Slices as much as 3% off the value of an average-size home.
Why: Curb appeal is primo. And an unkempt yard is a sign that there may be other issues.
"A good-looking lawn and bushes imply that you also take care of the internal systems in the house," says Jonathan Miller, president and CEO of a New York City-based appraisal firm that works throughout the tri-state area.
Moreover, the more meticulous your neighbors are about grooming, the more your appraiser will downgrade the value of your home.
"If a lot of the nearby properties are professionally maintained, the one that sticks out like a sore thumb will get a harder adjustment than in a subdivision where there's more variation," says San Diego appraiser Armando Ortiz.
2. Basic systems
The appraiser sees: A brand-new roof.
What he does: Nothing.
Why: Just as a knee replacement won't make you look 20 years younger, a new roof, furnace, or boiler isn't considered an improvement to your home.
That said, if your roof is in disrepair, replace it: Signs of leaks or discoloration can knock a significant amount off the home's value.
"When people buy a home, they expect the roof to be working," says Columbus appraiser Mike Armentrout. "So while a new one isn't an added feature, it will help your chances of a sale."
3. The basement
The appraiser sees: A recently finished basement with a half bath.
What he does: Adds about 2% to the value of the home.
Why: Yes, your finished basement adds value -- but don't expect it to count like first-floor space.
The addition of a bedroom and quarter bath on the ground floor could increase your home's value by up to 20%, especially if you've got only one other bathroom.
"A below-ground basement normally isn't included in the square footage of the house," says Miller.
The same rule applies to outbuildings like a pool-house casita, painting shed, or studio.
4. The market
The appraiser hears: Two nearby homes just went into contract above their asking prices.
What he does: Nothing.
Why: While a broker might pump up a home's asking price based on the sense that the market is "hot," by and large, appraisers are bound by the data of recent comparable sales.
What if prices are suddenly up in your area, and you're nervous that your house won't appraise for contract price? In that case, you might want to delay your appraisal until one of those recently contracted sales closes.
5. A remodel
The appraiser sees: An expensive, custom-made, built-in entertainment center.
What he does: Makes a negative adjustment to the valuation.
Why: "Cost doesn't equal value," says Miller.
Renovations that are at all trendy -- or not in keeping with the historical period of the home -- will be assessed at the cost of ripping them out.
Timeless improvements, on the other hand, such as a deep sink or new wooden cabinets in the kitchen, will add value.
So if you're thinking of remodeling, ask a local real estate agent to tell you what's on the wish list of today's buyers.

Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
(910) 523-0903 mobileEmail Mewww.KenKeegan.com Click here for more information on Brunswick, County Real Estate St. James Plantation



Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Lawn care: How to mow like a pro!

Great Article From CNN Real Estate

I'm one of the last guys on the block still mowing his own lawn. This saves about $1,500 a year and, I'd like to think, shows that I'm handy, youthful, earthy, and well attuned to my small property.
As I zig and zag, I can spot a thirsty hydrangea, a wasps' nest, or a loose porch screen. Plus, since I so often write about yard care, it's important to actually do yard care.
Witness these time -- and money -- saving tricks learned in the Saturday morning sun.
Treat your gas. The secret to getting power equipment to start on the first pull isn't hauling it in for $50 to $90 tune-ups. It's all about the gas, which begins to degrade as soon as you pump it.
After a couple of months (never mind a whole winter), it will gum up the carburetor, and you could shred a rotator cuff trying to start your mower.
There's a simple solution: a few drops of fuel stabilizer. One $6 bottle of Sta-bil has kept my tools purring like lions for two years and counting.
Don't bag clippings. Every turf scientist and workaday landscaper I've questioned recommends forgoing the collection bag and setting the mower to mulch. That pulverizes the clippings and recycles them into the soil, saving water and fertilizer costs. It also keeps me honest.
With the bag, I might get lazy and let the lawn reach meadow height before finally chopping it down (bad news since removing more than a third of their height harms the plants), but the mower can't effectively mulch that much material. And my better half won't abide the clumps of hay it leaves behind. So unless I want to rake, I have to mow often.
Let the pros fertilize. Passing joggers and dog walkers may think I'm some sort of grass whisperer, but fertilizer is beyond me. I can't interpret the back-of-bag chart, and I once applied a weed-and-feed mix when the temperature was over 80° F and burned out the backyard. Now I hire a crew to fertilize (and aerate in the fall), for around $600 a year.
Edge twice. It's easy to get lazy about edging, which is really a two-step job -- a horizontal cut anywhere the mower can't go, then a vertical one to slice a line wherever the lawn meets beds and walks.
Trouble is, this eats up trimmer string. So I attach extra precut pieces to the wand with Velcro tape. I can pop in replacements quickly, and I'm back inside for lunch.


Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
(910) 523-0903 mobileEmail Mewww.KenKeegan.com Click here for more information on Brunswick, County Real Estate St. James Plantation



Thursday, July 19, 2012

Year-To-Date St. James Real Estate Stats

Active Listings: Single Family Homes
Active Listings: 143
Average List Price: $409,134
Average Days On Market: 225
Minimum List Price: $124,900
Maximum List Price: $1,125,000

Sold Listings: Single Family Homes
Sold Listings: 45
Average Sale Price: $339,531
Average Days On Market: 360
Minimum Sale Price: $111,500
Maximum Sale Price: $675,000


Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
(910) 523-0903 mobile
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www.KenKeegan.com
Click here for more information on Brunswick, County Real Estate
St. James Plantation

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Advantage Makes Rankings Jump Among Nation’s Top Real Estate Companies

Rankings in the recently-released 2012 REAL Trends 500 report make it very evident that the merger of Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Realty and Coldwell Banker Advantage earlier this year has created a regional real estate powerhouse and reflect a continued upturn in to real estate market.
The REAL Trends 500 report is released annually by REAL Trends, Inc., the residential real estate industry’s leading source of analysis and information. The REAL Trends 500 report ranks the country’s top residential real estate companies by closed transactions and by sales volume.
In 2011, Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Advantage closed 6,757 sales, a 4.8% increase over Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Realty and Coldwell Banker Advantage’s sales figures from 2010. This year, the company ranked No. 55 in the list of “The 500 Largest Brokers in the U.S.” ranked by closed transactions. Last year, Sea Coast Realty ranked No. 120 and Advantage ranked No. 129.
Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Advantage closed $1,267,352,456 in sales volume in 2011, propelling the company to No. 83 in the list of “The 500 Largest Brokers in the U.S.” ranked by sales volume. Last year, Sea Coast Realty ranked No. 140 and Advantage ranked No. 145.
Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Advantage ranked #5 out of more than 1,000 Coldwell Banker affiliated companies in the United States. Last year, Sea Coast Realty ranked No. 16 and Advantage ranked No. 17.
Coldwell Banker was ranked as the country’s #1 real estate franchise this year, closing more than $117 billion in sales and more than twice as many sales transactions as the next leading real estate franchise.
Locally, Coldwell Banker Sea Coast Advantage performed similarly well. In 2011, it closed more than 2.5 times as many sales as the next leading company. Sea Coast Realty has claimed the title as southeastern North Carolina’s top selling real estate company for 12 years in a row.
"We are extremely proud of our entire organization for the continued success,” said Sea Coast Advantage president Tim Milam. “Our firm continues to outperform the current market conditions and competitors, plus 2011 was a phenomenal year. We are fortunate to have professional sales associates, staff, and managers who maintain a high level of service to our customers and clients."

Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
(910) 523-0903 mobile
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www.KenKeegan.com
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St. James Plantation

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

30-year mortgage rate hits record low

The interest rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage reached a new low this week, falling to an average of 3.66%, according to a weekly survey of rates from Freddie Mac.
That was 0.01 percentage point below the previous record set two weeks ago. The rate for a 15-year, fixed dropped to 2.95%, a tick above the record low. The lows mirror bond yield performance.
"Treasury bond yields eased somewhat this week on some worsening economic indicators, bringing mortgage rates back into record low territory," said Frank Nothaft, chief economist for Freddie Mac (FRE). (Most affordable U.S. cities to buy a home)
He noted declines in industrial production, consumer sentiment andhiring as indicators that the economic recovery had slowed.
Homebuyers can't complain. The drop over the past year saves them $48 a month in mortgage payments for every $100,000 borrowed, compared with what they would have paid 12 months ago, when rates averaged 4.5%. To top of page
Original Article

Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
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St. James Plantation

Fourth of July Festival: Tuesday and Wednesday schedule

The 2012 N.C. Fourth of July Festival continues in Southport this week with most activities occurring at Franklin Square Park or along the waterfront.
Tens of thousands of visitors will attend this year’s festival, which runs through the Fourth of July, and is highlighted by the annual festival parade in Southport at 11 a.m. on Wednesday and the concluding fireworks at 9 p.m.
“Incorporated as the ‘N.C. 4th of July Festival’ in 1972, the festival committee strives to keep the focus of the festival on honoring our nation’s birthday with a little fun thrown in,” said Bob Krasnow, chairman of this year’s 41st annual N.C. Fourth of July Festival.

Following is the schedule of events for Tuesday, July 3:
9 a.m. – Children’s games: Southport Waterfront Park, registration at 8:30 a.m,. with T-shirts while they last (Southport Parks and Recreation event).
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. – N. C. Maritime Museum at Southport: Open for visitors at 204 E. Moore Street
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. – Historic Chapel of the Cross: Self-guided tours at St. Philip’s Church, corner of E. Moore and Dry streets.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. – Summer Regional Art Show: Franklin Square Gallery, building located at Franklin Square Park (event of Associated Artists of Southport).
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. – Arts and crafts sale: at Franklin Square Park (sponsored by Our State Magazine).
11 a.m. to 10 p.m. – Food concessions: at Waterfront Park area, South Howe Street.
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. – American Red Cross Blood Drive: donors receive a T-shirt at the community blood drive, bloodmobile will be parked at Waterfront Park; event of Cape Fear Chapter of the American Red Cross.
12:30 to 3:30 p.m. – Old Jail Tours: see the historic old jail at Nash and Rhett streets (event of Southport Historical Society).
Waterfront Stage Entertainment – bands and performers at Southport Waterfront Park
1 to 1:40 p.m. – Unity Quartet - gospel
2 to 3 p.m. – Coastal Collective - jazz
7 to 9 p.m. – Craig Woolard Band
7 to 10 p.m. – Country Street Dance – The Craig Woolard Band performs at Southport Waterfront Park main stage
3 p.m. – Old Smithville Burying Ground Tour: historic look at the cemetery at Nash and Rhett streets (event of Southport Historical Society).
3 to 3:45 p.m. – Brunswick Concert Band Concert: free concert on the Fort Johnston Garrison lawn.
3:30 to 5 p.m. – Voter registration drive: register to vote at the Southport Community Building; event of Brunswick County Board of Elections.
4 p.m. – Naturalization Ceremony: open to the public as people from various countries take the oath to become United States citizens on the Garrison Lawn, Fort Johnston.
6 p.m. – Flag Retirement Ceremony: Old flags are properly disposed of at the BB&T flagpole at the corner of Howe and Moore streets (Daughters of American Revolution Brunswick Town Chapter and Cape Fear Council of Boy Scouts sponsors).
8 p.m. – Sea Notes Choral Society Concert – Patriotic musical celebration held at Southport Baptist Church (event of Sea Notes Choral Society).

Following is the schedule of events for Wednesday, July 4:
7 to 10:30 a.m. – Pancake Breakfast: annual event at Trinity United Methodist Church, Nash Street, to benefit church missions and evangelism (Trinity United Methodist Church event).
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. – Historic Chapel of the Cross: Self-guided tours at St. Philip’s Church, corner of E. Moore and Dry streets.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. – Summer Regional Art Show: Franklin Square Gallery, building located at Franklin Square Park (event of Associated Artists of Southport).
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. – Arts and crafts sale: at Franklin Square Park (sponsored by Our State Magazine).
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. – Food concessions: at Waterfront Park area, South Howe Street.
10:30 a.m.  – Flag Raising Ceremony: Official flag raising event before the parade at BB&T flag pole, corner of Howe and Moore streets (Organized by Brunswick Town State Historic Site, Southport-Oak Island Chamber of Commerce, sponsor).
11 a.m. – N. C. Fourth of July Festival Parade: Annual parade marches along Moore and Howe streets, televised later at 8 p.m. on WECT-TV 6 (Dosher Memorial Hospital, sponsor).
11 a.m. to 4 p.m. – Shine and Show Classic Cars: Car show lines up along Bay Street at Southport Waterfront Park (Cape Fear Cruisers sponsor).
12:30 to 3:30 p.m. – Old Jail Tours: see the historic old jail at Nash and Rhett streets (event of Southport Historical Society).
12:30 to 4 p.m. – 20th N. C. Co. K War Between the States Re-enactment: held at Waterfront Park area.
12 to 6 p.m. – Military Equipment Static Display: Military display along Waterfront Park.
1 to 5 p.m. – N. C. Maritime Museum at Southport: museum open to the public at 204 E. Moore Street.
Waterfront Stage Entertainment
1 to 1:40 p.m. – Ava Johnson - old and new
2 to 2:40 p.m. – Velvet Jane - rock
3 to 3:40 p.m. – Rod Rodskom - old standards
4 to 4:40 p.m. – Richard D’Anjolell - rock
6 to 9 p.m. – Waterfront Stage Entertainment – Peace and Love performs at the Waterfront.
TBA – CFYC/Pilot Commodore’s Regatta – sailing competition along the Cape Fear River, watch from the Southport Waterfront (event of Cape Fear Yacht Club with assistance from The State Port Pilot).
3 p.m. – Old Smithville Burying Ground Tour: historic look at the cemetery at Nash and Rhett streets (event of Southport Historical Society).
3 p.m. – Sea Notes Choral Society Concert – Patriotic musical celebration held at Southport Baptist Church (event of Sea Notes Choral Society).
5 p.m. – Associated Artists of Southport raffle – winners announced at Franklin Square Gallery (Associated Artists of Southport event).
8 p.m. – Parade televised on WECT-TV6 – delayed broadcast of the N. C. Fourth of July Festival parade, sponsored by Dosher Memorial Hospital.
9 p.m. – Southport Lions Club Boat Raffle – Southport Lions Club draws the winning ticket for a 19-foot Bayliner at Waterfront Park stage.
9 p.m. – Fireworks – Patriotic fireworks display along the Southport waterfront (Bald Head Island Limited, sponsor)
The Fourth of July Festival events schedule includes times, dates and information as available at press time. Some times are subject to change. For the most current schedule, check this week’s issue of The State Port Pilot or visit www.nc4thofjuly.com.
Original Article

Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
(910) 523-0903 mobile
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www.KenKeegan.com
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St. James Plantation

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Mortgage rates keep plunging: 15-year dips below 3%

Mortgage rates continued to plunge to new lows this week, with interest rates on the 15-year fixed rate mortgage dipping below 3% for the first time on record.
The 30-year fixed mortgage, the most popular mortgage product, fell by 0.03 percentage points to 3.75%, setting yet another record for the fifth week in a row, according to a weekly survey by Freddie Mac. Last year, 30-year loans averaged 4.55%. The new low can save borrowers about $47 a month for every $100,000 borrowed. Over a 30-year term, that comes to $16,756.
Rates on the 15-year fixed mortgage, which is popular among those looking to refinance, fell to 2.97% -- the first time it has dropped below 3% since Freddie Mac began tracking the weekly data. Down from 3.74% a year ago, the new 15-year rate would lower borrowing costs to $689 a month for every $100,000 borrowed, a $37 savings compared to last year.
The continued slide in mortgage rates is, in part, due to ongoingeconomic turmoil in Europe, according to Freddie Mac's chief economist, Frank Nothaft.

Ken Keegan Real Estate Broker
(910) 523-0903 mobile
Email Me
www.KenKeegan.com
Click here for more information on Brunswick, County Real Estate
St. James Plantation