Now is the time to LIST YOUR HOUSE

All MLS Areas Jan. 2011 Jan. 2012 Houses Sold
657
742 Average Selling Price
$154,236
$154,606 Median Selling Price
$125,000
$125,000 # of Listings Placed into Pending Status During Jan.
775
970 Active Listings at January 31
6675
7331
Overall Market Comment:
Members of the Greater Louisville Association of Realtors® posted 742 sales during the month of January 2012. January’s total sales continued a seven-month trend of outpacing the same period last year, which posted 657 sales during January 2011. The sales volume trend was notable as it revealed the 2010 Home Buyer Tax Credit produced a surge in activity in the 2nd quarter of 2010, leaving a lean 3rd and 4th quarter in its wake. The average selling price paid for single family and condominium homes in January was $154,606, down $5,796 from December, but nearly even with January 2011’s average of $154,236. Average sales prices have retreated from the past 12 months peak of $179,758 posted in July 2011, but remain above the past 12 months low which was posted in March 2011 at $152,801.
Inventory, or the number of homes for sale, snapped a 12 month declining trend, and rose to 7,331 units, from 7,294 in December ’11 and 7,825 in November ’11. The number of homes for sale continues to exceed 2010 levels, but January’s supply remained the 2nd lowest in the past 12 months. GLAR’s inventory of active listings increased to a 9.8 month supply in January; inventory levels near a 6 month supply are often associated with an in-balance market.
Overall, GLAR members begin 2012 with optimism as January records a nearly 13% increase in sales volume and a 25% increase in listings reported pending, when compared to a similar period year. Market segment performance varies, but in sum, the warm start to 2012 offers a few degrees of positive news.
Jefferson County Jan. 2011 Jan. 2012 Houses Sold
456
525 Average Selling Price
$155,306
$152,338 Median Selling Price
$123,250
$124,000 # of Listings Placed into Pending Status During Jan.
546
661 Active Listings at January 31
3976
4510
Jefferson County Market Comment
Realtors® posted 525 closed sales in Jefferson County in January, a decline of 87 units from December, but a 15% gain over January 2011. For January, the county’s average selling price posted its worst performance of the past 12 months, falling to $152,338, from $160,652 in December, and reflected a loss of 1.9% from a similar period last year. The supply of homes on the market in Jefferson County
stands at 4,510 units, up 2% from December and up nearly 13% from a similar period last year. The current inventory in Jefferson County stands at an 8.5 month supply. In sum, Realtors® remain watchful of the decline in average sales prices, but welcome the increase in sales volume when viewed against this time last year.
Oldham County Jan. 2011 Jan. 2012 Houses Sold
39
38 Average Selling Price
$257,024
$235,955 Median Selling Price
$183,000
$187,500 # of Listings Placed into Pending Status During Jan.
42
73 Active Listings at January 31
409
444
Oldham County Market Comment:
The number of homes that were sold & closed in January 2012 was about the same as 2011 (38 vs 39 respectively). However, the number of of homes that went under contract and placed in a pending status was up substantially (73 vs 42 respectively). Oldham county sales statistics are a more volatile than Jefferson county due to the smaller sample size, which is about 1/10th the size of Jefferson county. With this smaller sample size we saw the average sales price down in January 2012 at $236k vs $257k in 2011. However the median sale price, which in this case is a more representative value than “average,” was up 2.5% to $187k from $183k in the same month one year ago. The inventory of homes for sale is up 9% in January 2012 vs January 2011 (444 vs 409 respectively). In summary, the median price is up 2.5% versus one year ago and the number of homes that went into pending status (contract signed) was up sharply compared to January 2011.
Bullitt County Jan. 2011 Jan. 2012 Houses Sold
58
59 Average Selling Price
$125,510
$139,649 Median Selling Price
$116,750
$129,950 # of Listings Placed into Pending Status During Jan..
45
62 Active Listings at January 31
454
522
Bullitt County Market Comment:
Realtors® posted 59 closed sales in Bullitt County in January, an increase of 7 units from December 2011. January ‘12 sales mirrored January ’11 volume with 59 units and 58 units respectively. The average selling price in the county for January fell to $139,649 from December’s $143,788, but the 2012 figure was up $14,139 from January 2011. Supply, or the number of homes on the market, increased to 522 units, from 507 in December, reflecting an 8.8 month inventory.

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: | Leave a comment

Housing Market Gets A Boost

Housing Boost

Categories: Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Under Water In Your Home?

6 ways to save your underwater home
Mood of the Market
By Tara-Nicholle Nelson, Tuesday, January 3, 2012.

Inman News®

Distressed homeowner image via Shutterstock.com.What seemed like a housing market downturn is now nearly universally seen as the new normal. Accordingly, many homeowners are taking a tough look at their mortgage situations in this stark light.

This New Year’s season, I’ve received a massive influx of reader questions — quasi-challenges, really — asking me why they shouldn’t just walk away from their underwater homes and upside-down mortgages.

If you’ve read my work at all, you’ll know that I almost never give an absolute answer to such an important question. The decision whether to walk away from your home is too big and too personal, and there are simply too many variables — legal, financial, credit, tax, personal, lifestyle, family, etc. — at play for me to give a glib black-and-white answer.

If you’re trying to make this decision now, it absolutely behooves you to consult with a reputable real estate broker, mortgage broker, local attorney and local tax professional — at minimum.

Article continues below

Advertise with Inman
However, I’ve also noticed that most upside-down homeowners don’t really want to default on their mortgages. If you count yourself in that number, I thought I’d take the opportunity this New Year’s week to encourage you to harness the renewed energy and commitment that comes along this time of year and provide you with some direction for it, in the vein of avoiding foreclosure if you decide that is the right path for you.

Here are six alternatives to walking away, some more obvious, some less, but all underutilized, from my vantage point.

1. Get rid of your credit card debt. Again, this might seem obvious, but I’ve encountered a number of people who say they can’t afford their mortgage payments who actually could afford them if they dealt with their credit card and other debt.

Call your creditors and make an effort to settle your debt; many will take a lump sum payment much lower than your balance. While this might have tax and credit score implications, it might also help you keep your house. Or work through steps No. 2 and No. 3, below, to just eliminate those balances, by any means necessary.

2. Get a second job. This seems obvious, too, but I believe it’s simply not done nearly as often as it should be, mostly out of pride and emotional defeatism.

You already work 40 hours a week. You’re already tired. But you know what? I know MBAs who got into a bad debt situation and are climbing their way out with high-end, table-waiting tips. It won’t last forever and, again, could be very much worth it.

If you’re not up for this sort of hustle, and you’re a white-collar professional, there are tons of consulting or contract gigs out there to be had, which can help you catch up on missed mortgage payments or bring down your debt.

3. Start a side business. Sites like Etsy, TaskRabbit and elance allow people to monetize their spare time, quirky hobbies and special skills. I know a journalist who nearly matches her day-job income dog-sitting while she writes.

4. Rent a room — or two — out. Put your man cave on Trulia or Craigslist for rent. If you can’t stomach the idea of a permanent roommate, check out Airbnb and see if you can generate some extra cash renting out your rooms to those visiting for short periods of time.

5. Apply for everything. Decide right now to simply refuse to be deterred by the first roadblock that comes up in your pursuit of a loan modification — and there might be many. Commit, instead, to applying for everything for which you might possibly qualify, and don’t make assumptions about what programs might work for you (many loan mod programs have loosened their guidelines or gotten more efficient over time).

Apply through your lender to the federal HARP program, and also to the lender’s own loan mod program. Visit this federal site to determine whether there are additional state programs available to you under Treasury’s Hardest Hit Fund. Apply to the wildly successful (as these things go) Home Save program run by NACA.

It ain’t over till it’s over.

6. Short-sell it. Banks are now taking a couple of years, on average, after the first missed payment to foreclose on and repossess a home. If you list your home for sale with a local agent who has experience closing these transactions right this moment, your chances of selling it and having the short sale complete in time to qualify for the income tax exemption that expires Dec. 31, 2012, are actually better than your chances of qualifying for the exemption if you stop making your mortgage payments right now.

Again, it’s ubercritical that you work with professionals, from the folks at NACA to a local agent and attorney and certified public accountant (CPA) if you’re seeking a loan mod or a short sale. Beyond advising you about implications to be wary of, the pros can help educate you about the full scope of options available to you.

Your best bet is to run even getting a second job past your trusted advisers before you do it, as it might impact your prospects of getting relief from your lender.

Fortunately, your options for avoiding a foreclosure are not so limited as they might seem at first glance.

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: | Leave a comment

Inman News Update

Third-quarter data showed a 2.5 percent rise in GDP, compared with 1.3 percent in the second quarter. NAR expects U.S. GDP growth of 1.8 percent for the full year in 2011, with 2.3 percent GDP growth in 2012. A previous NAR forecast, released last month, anticipated U.S. GDP growth of 1 percent this year and 1.3 percent in 2012. Actual U.S. GDP rose 3 percent in 2010 and declined 3.5 percent in 2009.

Categories: Uncategorized | Leave a comment