Saturday, August 22, 2009

The time to buy is now to take advantage of the First Time Home Buyer's Tax Credit

Hoping to take advantage of the First Time Home Buyer's Tax Credit? If so, you only have about 4-5 weeks to find a home before the November 30th deadline. With the tougher lending standards closing times have been extended from 6 weeks to about 8 weeks. So if you're thinking about buying a home to take advantage of this opportunity, pick up the phone and call your Realtor. Time is running out. If you're not under contract by the end of September you could miss out on this great opportunity.

For more information on the First Time Home Buyer's Tax Credit visit:

http://www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com

Or watch our YouTube Video



Andres Garcia
Sales Associate, CDPE
RE/MAX Gold Coast Realty
56 Newark Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
Direct: 201 795-5200 x340
Andres@MileSquareRealty.com
http://www.MileSquareRealty.com

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Monday, December 22, 2008

Buying becomes more attractive. . . especially when you can afford the bigger home

Most people know that the lower your mortgage interest rate, the less money you waste in interest payments to the bank. However, did you realize the lower your mortgage rate, the faster you build equity in your home

Let's say our friend in Hoboken is currently paying $1,000 a month in rent, and would rather spend that $1,000 a month on a mortgage payment instead (I know, you'd be hard pressed to find a $1,000 Hoboken rental but work with me, it's a nice round number). If he got a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 7%, that would cover a $150,000 loan. Since $1,000 a month for 360 months works out at a total of $360,000 in mortgage repayments, on average about 42 cents of his mortgage-payment dollar will go towards building equity. What's more, most of that is back-ended: after five years, he will have paid down his principal amount outstanding by just $8,820.64, or less than 15% of his total payments.

On the other hand, a $1,000 payment on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 4.5% would cover a $200,000 loan -- which means that 56 cents of every dollar you spend on your mortgage goes towards equity. And after five years, he will have paid down his principal amount outstanding by $17,450.82, which is 29% of his first five years' payments.

So yes, the house is $50,000 more expensive, but it's just as affordable, and you're building up more equity, not less, with the lower mortgage rate. If you look at an amortization curve for a high-interest-rate mortgage, it starts off pretty flat: most of your mortgage payments are going to interest. The lower that mortgage rates fall, the more equity you build up in the early years.

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Fed steps in and trys to say, this is the bottom!!

The Federal Reserve attempted to end price declines in the housing market on Tuesday with two new programs aimed at making it easier for consumers to obtain loans for homes, cars and on credit cards.

Under the new mortgage program, the Fed will buy up to $100 billion of debt issued by government-sponsored mortgage enterprises Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks. It will also buy up to $500 billion of mortgage securities backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. The Fed said that the actions were taken "to reduce the cost and increase the availability of credit for the purchase of houses, which in turn should support housing markets and foster improved conditions in financial markets more generally."

Fannie Mae's current-coupon 30-year mortgage-backed security, which is tightly correlated on a spread basis to Freddie Mac's weekly survey of consumer mortgage rates, has fallen 38 basis points on the day, which means that the 30-year mortgage rates are likely to fall a similar amount. If they do, it would bring the average rate to 5.66%, its lowest since January when the average 30-year mortgage rate was 5.48% (the 2008 average is 6.11%). In Hudson County rates were as low as 5.50% as of Tuesday morning.

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Thursday, November 15, 2007

Rentals on the Rise

With all the condo conversion over the past decade taking hundreds of rentals off the market, it's no surprise rents in Hoboken are at an all time high. However, with Upper Grand's 1000 Jefferson switching to rental at the last minute, the dearth of new rental construction is coming to an end. With 1000 Jefferson now experiencing brisk leasing activity more of the new buildings you see going up are likely to be rentals.
The buildings going up on 7th St between Grand and Adams and the new Upper Grand building going up south of ShopRite are two buildings designed and being built as rentals. However, other building originally conceived or designed as condos have now switched course as well. Recent additions to the rental supply include Velocity at 6th and Jackson as well as The Cliffs on the west end of town on Paterson Plank Rd. This new supply will likely not lead to lower rents since it will only put a dent in the local rental shortage. Hopefully though, it will at least make the process of finding an apartment in Hoboken a little less painful.

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

A look at the housing market finds that Hoboken, as usual, is slump-proof

Excerpt from NJ.com Morning Rush for Thursday, Aug. 16
by CraigThursday August 16, 2007, 8:01 AM

The Star-Ledger has a look at the housing market today, and finds that most real estate agents are grim. There are too many houses on the market and not enough buyers. There are 72,000 unsold homes in New Jersey right now, compared to just 39,000 in June 2005. Statewide, the number of homes contracted for sale dropped by 5 percent from May to June. But in Hoboken (and Jersey City), sales activity is actually up by 12 percent.

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Adams Square featured in New York Times "THE HUNT"

July 1, 2007
New York Times
The Hunt
Falling in Love With Hoboken’s Prices

UNTIL their marriage last fall, Elana and James Nanscawen weren’t fussy about their living situation. Their one-bedroom rental in the financial district was perfectly adequate, if small.

“We planned so that the wedding was our focus, and we got that financial piece of it out of the way,” Mr. Nanscawen said. The same held for their honeymoon in Mexico. By spring, though, they were growing impatient to buy a bigger place where it would not be so inordinately difficult to do everything — cooking, entertaining, doing the laundry to her liking and keeping the place tidy enough for his.

When the two met three years ago, Elana Sebring, now 25, was sharing a three-bedroom rental in East Midtown with three friends from Marist College in Poughkeepsie, where she had studied fashion. The group paid about $2,400 a month.

Mr. Nanscawen, 34, an Australian, was living in a studio in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, for $800 a month. After he graduated from the University of Tasmania in Hobart, he headed for Kalamazoo, Mich., where his mother is from. He is now an information technology manager for the Thomson Corporation in the financial district.

They were introduced by mutual friends who invited them sailing. Only Mr. Nanscawen knew he was being set up. “On this sailing trip, I met my husband and my future,” Mrs. Nanscawen said.

Tired of the long commute from Bensonhurst, Mr. Nanscawen moved to Liberty Tower on Liberty Street, the neo-Gothic office building that was converted to a co-op in 1980. He rented a one-bedroom there for $1,750, which later rose to $1,950. His bride-to-be joined him.

They enjoyed the building — especially the doormen — but over time, little things loomed large. The neighborhood shut down early, and few of their friends visited. Construction noise was everywhere.

Worst of all, “It became agitating because there was no space in the apartment to put anything,” Mrs. Nanscawen said. Their wedding gifts sat at her mother’s house in Stroudsburg, Pa. Their two closets overflowed. Only once did the couple have a dinner party, inviting four guests for risotto. Everyone squeezed around a card table that doubled as the kitchen counter. “Never again,” said Mrs. Nanscawen, an accomplished cook.

She often ripped out magazine recipes, “and James was mad because there was no place to put them,” she said. “When I put something away in our tiny little apartment, I would end up forgetting about it, so I would leave the clippings out to remind me I wanted to make the recipes. We would have weekends where we would power-clean and find recipes everywhere.”

She longed to do the laundry herself, too. Their building wasn’t even near a coin laundry, so they spent at least $20 every week for pickup and drop-off service.

“Being in fashion, I care about my clothes,” said Mrs. Nanscawen, who works for Cockpit USA, which makes military- and Americana-inspired clothing.

“Tank tops would turn into tube tops,” she said. “We had a lot of stuff shrunken or ruined, texture-wise.”

They began their hunt with a budget of $550,000 to $700,000 for a two-bedroom apartment, an amount that was low for Manhattan. “We had some married friends hunting at the same time, and they would come back to us with the same numbers we were finding,” Mrs. Nanscawen said. So they asked themselves, “Do we want to fall in love with an apartment and find out it costs a million dollars, or look at things we can afford and then fall in love?”

A good friend who lived in Hoboken, N.J., had no trouble persuading them to look there. “Take the same amount of money, and it is night and day in terms of amenities you get,” Mr. Nanscawen said. Hoboken seemed to fit their personalities, too. “You walk up and down Washington Street and it’s all strollers, a fun atmosphere,” Mrs. Nanscawen said.

A listing for a duplex condominium on Madison Street led them to Katherine Petsinis, an agent at Liberty Realty Hoboken. They found the layout awkward, but Ms. Petsinis began culling listings for them. “They wanted something luxury but not too luxury, somewhere in the middle,” she said.

Most places they saw were perfectly fine, but “it just wasn’t something where you felt it was definitely it,” Mrs. Nanscawen said. “It was always a little, little issue that we didn’t want to settle on.”

For example, they loved the apartments at 1100 Adams Street, part of the Upper Grand development, but thought they were too far from the heart of Hoboken.

The Nanscawens liked another Madison Street apartment with a large kitchen. But it was a third-floor walk-up, and they worried about access for their parents.

“We were trying to talk each other into it,” Mr. Nanscawen said. “We were saying, ‘Can we handle it? The stairs are carpeted, maybe it’s not so bad, it’s only a gradual slope.’ ” But they immediately reconsidered. “What are we doing?” he said. “This is our first home and we are committing to it, so we want to make absolutely sure that this is absolutely the place, no doubt.”

Ms. Petsinis contacted them as soon as a two-bedroom, two-bathroom condominium in their price range became available in Adams Square. The 1870 building, formerly Public School 3, the Daniel S. Kealey School, was converted to rentals in 1996 and is now being converted to condominiums.

Inside, they found 12-foot ceilings, an open layout, a dishwasher, lots of light and overhead storage. The second bedroom could function as a combination guest room, home office and future nursery. “I looked at James and gave him the eyebrows-up this-is-it look,” Mrs. Nanscawen said.

The price was $615,000, with common charges of about $350 a month, and taxes of $7,600 a year.

To keep themselves from acting impulsively, the Nanscawens had not brought a checkbook. Now they feared someone else would like the place as much as they did. So they grabbed the PATH train home and returned the same afternoon, check in hand.

In the month since their move, Mrs. Nanscawen has been organizing her recipes in a binder and planning the menu for a dinner party for 12. She bought a color-coded set of laundry bags on a rolling rack. “It is awesome” to do laundry in the building’s laundry room, she said. “We let everything accumulate because we were so busy. I did five loads at once. I was happy as could be.”

When their new furniture was delivered, the delivery man told them he had gone to school there. “He said, ‘I’ve lived here in Hoboken my whole life, and I was really excited to see they did something good with this place,’ ” Mr. Nanscawen said.

For more on Hoboken Real Estate visit

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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Tarragon's Upper Grand gets approval for 12-story condo building

Tarragon Corp. and locally-based URSA Development Group have received the necessary approval to begin construction on a 12-story, 112-unit condominium project in Hoboken, N.J. On Friday, the city's zoning board of adjustment granted final site plan approval for 900 Monroe, which is to be the first luxury high-rise development and seventh residential building in Tarragon and URSA's Upper Grand community.

With the approval in place, the developers will begin construction in June of this year. 900 Monroe is planned to include one-, two- and three-bedroom units, including 10 two-bedroom duplexes. In addition, the building will feature 7,600 square feet of retail space and an outdoor café. The development will be located adjacent to the 9th Street light rail station. In February of 2007, the Upper Grand community was awarded the National Association of Homebuilders' Best in American Living Award for "Best Urban Smart Growth Neighborhood/Community.

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