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Glendale Westgate City Center

  • Westgate_city_center_glendale_047
    Westgate City Center in Glendale AZ. University of Phoenix Stadium. Site of the 2008 Super Bowl.

Phoenix Skyline

  • Phoenix_development_036
    Photos taken from Central and Encanto of entire Phoenix Skyline

Westgate City Center

  • Westgate City Center
    The newest photos from Westgate City Center in Glendale, AZ. Yard House is open as are a few other restaurants and shopping. There were many workers on site. You can also see the progress on the Alexan Apartments and Westgate Townhomes.

44 Monroe

  • 44 Monroe
    Located next to the San Carlos Hotel, 44 Monroe is a 34-story high-rise residential tower.

Portland Place Condos

  • Portland Place Condos
    Under construction near I-10 and Central.

Tartesso

  • Tartesso_026
    Tartesso Buckeye Arizona 27 January 2007

Wildlife World Zoo

  • Wildlife_world_zoo_132
    A day at the West Valley Zoo

Summit at Copper Square

  • Summit at Copper Square
    Located next to Chase Field

Travel

January 13, 2008

Westgate City Center Glendale Arizona

Westgate_city_center_glendale_016 Margaritaville has opened at the Westgate City Center in Glendale, AZ. As I mentioned in my earlier post Westgate City Center and the University of Phoenix Stadium will be the place to be during the next few weeks Super Bowl activities.

New Westgate City Center photos are posted. Tomorrow I will publish a list of the area restaurants and the scheduled activities leading up to the Super Bowl. The University of Phoenix Stadium parking lots are filled with tents for the NFL experience and many other pre-game activities.

January 07, 2008

SUPER football BOWL Game in Glendale Arizona

It is almost here. The Super Bowl will be held in Glendale, AZ February 3, 2008. Recently this site has been getting a lot of visitors viewing the photos of Westgate City Center and Zanjero. Both are the major shopping tourist venues near the University of Phoenix Stadium site (still the dumbest name possible for the stadium but I digress).

I will update the photos of Westgate City Center and of Zanjero this weekend. The ones I have now are about 9 months old and so much has changed since then. Many of the restaurants have opened including the Fox Sports Grill and Yard House. Hotels have finally opened including theRenaissance Glendale Hotel and Spa at Westgate City Center. It is within walking distance of the stadium and right next door to Jobing.com Arena (aka Glendale Arena).

Some other hotels near the stadium include theResidence Inn by Marriott Glendale and the Spring Hill Suites in Glendale. Both are located across the street at Zanjero where you can stop by the huge Cabela's and take a gander at the stuffed (albeit dead) animals.

If you are interested in specific information about the area and things to do, let me know and I will post. More coming soon.

January 01, 2008

Understanding the Foreclosure Process

Understanding and Navigating Your Way Through the Foreclosures Process
By Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac Vice President of Marketing

Foreclosure properties can be a terrific investment, or give home buyers a much more affordable option than traditional properties in this time of escalating prices. But, before you jump in assuming this is "real-estate for dummies" or the next get-rich-quick scheme, think again! You really need to know your stuff when it comes to navigating your way through the process and making sure you're getting the most bang for your buck.

"For people willing to do some homework, the foreclosure market offers some of the best opportunities in real estate today," explains James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer at RealtyTrac, the leading online foreclosure marketplace.

Web-based services like RealtyTrac can help investors and homebuyers tap into this previously hidden market by providing access to foreclosure and pre-foreclosure information typically available only to professional real estate brokers and investors. Today, homebuyers can use these services to identify and research potential home purchases, as well as to find the tools and professional resources they need to help them close the deal.

When offering advice to buyers interested in taking advantage of the foreclosures market, Saccacio stresses the importance of educating oneself about the types of properties and the processes involved. Even seasoned real estate investors have something to learn when it comes to approaching this market. It's important to go in with the appropriate knowledge.

Types of Properties Available at Various Stages of the Process
Serious buyers must first understand the difference between the varying types of foreclosure properties. It's important to review the basic types of properties, each representing a different stage in the foreclosure process.

Pre-foreclosure Properties
A property enters pre-foreclosure after a default notice is filed by the foreclosing lender against the borrower who owns the property. The different notices that are filed during pre-foreclosure include Notice of Default (NOD), Lis Pendens (LIS), Notice of Trustee Sale (NTS) and Notice of Foreclosure Sale (NFS). For most consumers, buying a pre-foreclosure property from a private homeowner is the most favorable of options. This is a best-case scenario because the seller is able to get out from under a mortgage without destroying his or her credit rating, the lender is saved the time and expense of foreclosing on the property, and the buyer gets a below-market price on a home. In addition, buying at this stage of the process allows you, the buyer, a chance to fully evaluate the property before making an offer.

The disadvantages associated with purchasing a property during the pre-foreclosure stage are few, but worth mentioning. As with any major purchase, negotiations between the buyer and seller can be difficult, especially since the seller would typically prefer not to have to sell the property in the first place. Secondly, transactions are time-sensitive, since there is pressure to complete a sale before the property goes to auction.

Auction Sales
Foreclosure auction sales are typically the domain of the professional investor. These properties are formally in default, and sold to the highest bidder at an auction. Buyers are required to be physically present at the auction and must be prepared to pay 100 percent of the sale price in cash on the spot.

Though foreclosure auctions can offer significant savings as well as immediate property ownership, they are not for the faint of heart or the uninformed! Unless the buyer is already familiar with a particular property, there is usually little time to examine it. And, the buyer will be competing against professional investors—and sometimes even the lender—at the auction.

Real-Estate-Owned Properties
Once the lender officially reclaims a home, it is classified as Real Estate Owned by the lender (REO). While REO properties typically offer more time for evaluation and a more standard bank-managed transaction, their prices are usually very close to full retail market value. Therefore, they offer buyers the lowest potential savings.

It's definitely possible to find great deals in the foreclosures market. You just need to know where to look and be able to differentiate exactly what you're looking at. With an understanding of the pros and cons of buying at each stage of the process, you'll be well on your way to a successful purchase you can be proud of.

December 31, 2007

Will You be a Foreclosure Statistic?

Will You Be A Foreclosure Statistic?
By Peter G. Miller   

Most owners who lose their homes in a foreclosure never thought it would happen to them. It always happens to someone else — you know — the people who get sick, laid off, have an accident, that sort of thing.

So you might think: Foreclosure. That will never happen to me. No way. But lurking in millions of mailboxes each month is a financial time bomb, a threat to homeownership never before seen in this country.

For the past few years the nation has been flooded with forms of financing which allow buyers to purchase homes that were once unaffordable. The essential deal is this: You buy now, pay less than you should each month and then within five years sell at a big profit or refinance.

Truth is, it's been a great ride. Many people have followed the formula and made a ton of money. But like musical chairs, you just know that a bunch of people will be caught in the wrong place at the wrong time.

In a growing number of metropolitan areas, the wrong time is now. Just look at what's happened to home prices during the past five years:

                               Metropolitan Area Home Price Trends

Second Quarter By Year

Number of

Metro Areas 

Metro Areas with

Double Digit Increases

Metro Areas with Declines

2002

113

28 (24.7%)

10 (8.8%)

2003

126

40 (31.7%)

0 (0.0%)

2004

128

49 (38.2%)

11 (8.5%)

2005

149

67 (44.9%)

7 (4.7%)

2006

151

37 (24.5%)

26 (17.2%)

Source: National Association of Realtors

"The meaning of this chart is plain," says James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac, the leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties. "In the summer of 2003, when mortgage interest rates reached bottom at 5.21 percent, no metropolitan area saw a price decline in the second quarter. The market was at its top in 2005 when almost 45 percent of all metro areas saw double-digit price increases. In 2006 the marketplace radically changed. Now we have the greatest percentage of second-quarter price declines in the past few years, virtually double any comparable period."

Okay, so why are falling metropolitan prices a problem? If you're not selling and you're not refinancing, who cares?

Falling prices are not a problem for those with fixed-rate loans. But for millions of borrowers with the latest forms of low-ball financing, falling prices can be financially lethal.

Imagine that you bought a property a few years ago. Since values were going up it made sense to buy the biggest home you could afford and to buy that big house you got a $400,000 interest-only loan at 5.6 percent, a mortgage amount that covered 100 percent of the purchase price.

For the first five years the loan was wonderful: Monthly payments were $1,867 plus taxes and insurance. But after five years, the loan automatically converted to a one-year ARM. The one-year LIBOR rate that was originally at 3.60 percent five years ago reached 5.45 percent this August. Combine the LIBOR index rate with a 2.0 percent "margin" and your loan rate jumped to 7.45 percent.

After five years not only does the rate go up, the mortgage bill now includes the expense of monthly principal payments to reduce the loan balance. The monthly cost for principal and interest? It's now $2,943. Taxes and insurance are again extra.

“Those low-payment loans that looked so good a few years ago are going into their second phase,” says Saccacio. “Each day more and more borrowers are finding that the low 'start' payment is gone and that steeper, fully-amortizing payments have now kicked in. At the same time, homes that were once easy to sell are now harder to market. It's a brutal combination and what we're seeing in the Fall of 2006 is likely to get worse.”

The instant solution to high monthly costs is to sell the property. During the past five years many areas have seen huge price increases. The odds are good in most markets that a seller with several years of ownership at this can readily sell, often with a significant profit.

But as the market evolves the odds may become less attractive. Not all markets have seen double-digit growth. In such areas price stagnation or actual declines can lead to huge inventory increases. To sell in down markets homes owners will be forced to offer not only price discounts but other incentives such as "seller contributions" to help buyers at closing, new carpets, new kitchens, moving allowances, etc.

But selling also may not be an option. Not only can a sale in a down market produce a bankrupting loss, but losses on the sale of a personal residence are not tax deductible.

What can you do to avoid being a foreclosure statistic, to not get caught in the impossible position of loan costs that are too high and market values that are too low?

"Act now," says RealtyTrac's Saccacio. "Don't wait for the hammer to fall. If you see a mortgage problem looming in the next year or so, refinance to a long-term, fixed-rate loan before your credit report shows any late or missed payments. Take a careful look at traditional loans with liberal qualification standards such as FHA or VA financing. Speak with your lender about a loan modification and see if your adjustable-rate mortgage has a conversion feature, a right to switch to a fixed-rate within the first few years of the loan term. Because a conversion is a loan modification and not new financing, conversion can be quick and cheap."

If you find a situation where the property cannot be reasonably refinanced, if unaffordable monthly costs are certain, then it makes sense to sell now and move to a less-expensive home with reduced debt, lower monthly costs and fixed-rate financing. Moving is a way to avoid foreclosure and dodge bankruptcy — two events no property owner should experience.

_____________________

Peter G. Miller is the author of The Common-Sense Mortgage and is syndicated in more than 90 newspapers

December 08, 2007

Foreclosure Information

November 11, 2007

Veteran's Day Thank You

This year has been the hardest year of my life in many ways. So many wrong paths and broken roads. Through it all my dear husband has been there for me. I am not an easy person to be there for. He is a hero.

On this Veteran's Day take a look at your world and be thankful for the freedoms you enjoy and take for granted. In this country we travel freely, we burn our flag, and we speak poorly of our President. We do these things because there are brave men and women willing to pay the price for us to do so.

My Brother-in-Law returned from his tour in Iraq a few weeks ago. His son is currently serving in the Air Force. My Father-in-Law served 20 years in the Air Force including a tour in Vietman. My Husband, the dear man who tolerates me, served 20 years in the Air Force. These are brave men. These are my heroes. They get up, they go to work, and if necessary they go to war. They have spent their lives defending something important. They are the backbone and the foundation on which this country was built.  Because they do this, we can sit in our homes and watch TV and not exercise our right to vote.

It is so easy to sit back and question the choices being made by the leaders of our country. It is easy to disagree. When we are safe in our homes with our families it is easy to question the judgement of those in charge. It is our right. But we should never, ever forget the soldier who is protecting our right to make those judgements.

If you are reading this, thank a soldier. Hug a Veteran. Hang your flag in pride. You are free.

November 02, 2007

Fair-ly Fun

Today was Armed Forces Day at the Arizona State Fair. My dear husband had the presence of mine to devote 20 years of his life serving his country so we could go to the Arizona State Fair today for free. OK, maybe he wasn't thinking about the fair when he spent a year freezing his butt off in Korea, but let's pretend he was.

The fair is not a big attraction for me. I won't eat the food. The thought of deep fried Dr. Pepper is scary. I don't ride the rides (also scary, but for safety reasons) and I'm not a big fan of carnival games. So why, you ask, go to the fair?

Cows. Pigs. Horses.

And a Zebra.

Arizona_state_fair_008 I pet this Zebra. A first for me. My husband pet the Zebra too. Do you think he was glad it was a free day at the fair for us?

Arizona_state_fair_040_2

  I thought this guy looked a bit like Silvio on the Sopranos. At least they share the same barber.

Arizona_state_fair_042

Looks like someone forgot to comb his hair today.

Arizona_state_fair_046 Cows. Wouldn't be a Fair without cows.

Arizona_state_fair_012_2  Happy Pig Family

October 29, 2007

Renting Your Property for The Super Football Bowl Game

Phoenix is hosting multiple sports events during the beginning of 2008. The FBR Open. The Fiesta Bowl and the Super Bowl are just some of the events happening in the area during January and February 2008. If you haven't been paying attention, the FBR Open is occurring the same week as the Super Bowl. This will present a challenge for those seeking hotel rooms but presents an opportunity for those with properties available to rent.

If you are one of the many Phoenix and Glendale area homeowners who has been struggling to find a tenant for your vacant property, you might well consider making it available for a short term rental. Many out-of-town visitors will be here for more then just a few days and would prefer to stay in a home rather then a hotel. There are many different ways of promoting your property as a vacation or weekly rental and you might be shocked at the going rates.

If you would like more information, email me.

July 30, 2007

Phoenix Real Estate Market Statistics July 23 - July 29, 2007

This is residential only. Derived from the Arizona Multiple Listing Service. It should give a good snapshot of what is happening in the market.

These are the statistics for 23 July to 29 July 2007.

Total Active Properties: 54833

Active - 2387 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

0

0

0

$ 33,000

$0

0

Avg

2019

3

2.30

$ 373,098

$0

3

Max

8769

7

6.5

$5,600,000

$0

7

Expired - 525 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

560

0

0

$ 39,500

$0

0

Avg

2070

3

2.31

$ 384,161

$0

169

Max

16000

7

9

$ 7,900,000

$0

691

Sold – 1025 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

0

1

1

$ 29,500

$28,000

0

Avg

1903

3

2.21

$ 340.603

$ 325,661

118

Max

9300

7

8.5

$ 4,700,000

$ 4,400,000

1282

Cancelled – 1167 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

544

0

0

$1,500

$0

0

Avg

2090

3

2.35

$ 392,506

$0

135

Max

7800

7

2.5

$4,300,000

$0

713

July 22, 2007

Phoenix Real Estate Market Statistics July 16 - July 22, 2007

This is residential only. Derived from the Arizona Multiple Listing Service. It should give a good snapshot of what is happening in the market.

These are the statistics for 16 July to 22 July 2007.

Total Active Properties: 54754

Active - 2781 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

140

0

0

$ 45,000

$0

0

Avg

1999

3

2.28

$ 371,625

$0

3

Max

7986

31

24

$5,775,000

$0

7

Expired - 519 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

450

1

1

$ 74,900

$0

0

Avg

2040

3

2.26

$ 395,845

$0

169

Max

8200

6

7

$ 4,570,000

$0

788

Sold – 1008 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

506

1

1

$ 55,000

$35,000

0

Avg

1869

3

2.18

$ 341,595

$ 328,676

111

Max

8028

6

6

$ 3,600,000

$ 3,175,000

719

Cancelled – 1128 Properties Found

Square Feet

Beds

Baths

List Price

Sale

Price

Cumulative DOM

Min

626

0

0

$53,900

$0

0

Avg

2108

3

2.34

$ 409,496

$0

131

Max

7678

42

6.5

$4,495,000

$0

710