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    connecticut real estate

    Explore " connecticut real estate" with insightful episodes like "Stay Connected with Connecticut (Real Estate) - David Lemel Tells All", "Impending Housing Crashes for Connecticut Cities? & The Florida Housing Market is in Flames!", "Amazon TurnKey Competition & Will the Housing Market be Recession Proof in 2020?", "The American Dream & Boob Lights" and "Bombshell REALTOR Lawsuit Is Getting Ugly" from podcasts like ""The Brad Weisman Show", "Closing Time Podcast", "Closing Time Podcast", "Closing Time Podcast" and "Closing Time Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    Stay Connected with Connecticut (Real Estate) - David Lemel Tells All

    Stay Connected with Connecticut (Real Estate) - David Lemel Tells All

    My good buddy and fellow Realtor, David Lemel, joins me for some chitter chatter about his market up in Connecticut.  They are crazy busy and experiencing many of the things we are here in Pennsylvania.  Listen as he walks you through the current market and his predictions for the future of their market.  Stay Connected w/ Connecticut!! 

    David runs a team called Team Powerhouse at Coldwell Banker in Connecticut, for more information go to his facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/TeamPowerhouseSells. 

    ---
    Welcome to The Brad Weisman Show (formerly known as Real Estate and YOU), where we dive into the world of real estate, real life, and everything in between with your host, Brad Weisman! 🎙️ Join us for candid conversations, laughter, and a fresh take on the real world. Get ready to explore the ups and downs of life with a side of humor. From property to personality, we've got it all covered. Tune in, laugh along, and let's get real! 🏡🌟 #TheBradWeismanShow #RealEstateRealLife #realestateandyou

    Credits - The music for my podcast was written and performed by Jeff Miller.

    Impending Housing Crashes for Connecticut Cities? & The Florida Housing Market is in Flames!

    Impending Housing Crashes for Connecticut Cities? & The Florida Housing Market is in Flames!

    Closingtimepodcast.com for the latest news from the real estate world, helpful tips for buyers, sellers and other agents, and all of our previous podcast episodes. Keep up with us on Facebook and Instagram. We also offer home video tours, Realtor branding videos, ariel shots, live streams and more.. closingtimepodcast.com and click on the CMG Real Estate Link..

    These 5 cities are at risk for housing crashes this year

    A new GoBankingRates study published on Tuesday looked at the number of underwater mortgages, home vacancies as well as delinquency and foreclosure rates to identify the cities most at risk of a housing crisis in the coming years. A crash is generally defined as a market in which large numbers of properties are in negative equity, or worth less than the owners’ mortgage.

    Here are the top 5 markets that are most at risk of a pending crash:

    Newark, New Jersey

    The housing market in Newark, New Jersey showed the biggest signs of trouble. Nearly 30 percent of mortgages have negative equity while vacancy rates for houses and rental units sit at 5.2 percent and 9.5 percent compared to the nationwide average of 1.7 percent and 6.1 percent, respectively. Approximately 6.5 percent of mortgage payments are in some sort of delinquency, which is more than six times the national average.

    Detroit, Michigan

    Post-crash, Detroit’s real estate challenges and opportunities have long been a nationwide topic of conversation. But in this study, Detroit came in second place for crash risk due to its floundering home values — $161,300 compared to the national median of $226,300. At 34.4 percent, the number of homes with negative equity is also the highest in the country while vacancy and delinquency rates are also higher than average.

    Bridgeport, Connecticut

    The largest city in Connecticut, Bridgeport has seen real estate values drop due to a high crime rate and low economic prospects. The median house in the city is worth $176,200 while 26.9 percent of mortgages are underwater.

    “The city’s high delinquency and foreclosure rates are not inviting to people looking for the best place to buy their first home,” reads the report.

    Baltimore, Maryland

    Baltimore has been taking a hit from all sides lately — President Trump recently called parts of the city a “rat and rodent-infested mess” in attacks on local House Representative Elijah Cummings. But while the city’s low median home values ($119,200) and high negative equity rates (26.5 percent) put it fourth on the at-risk list, Baltimore in fact does see constant development and provides plenty of opportunities for investors.

    Hartford, Connecticut

    While only 22.4 percent of Hartford homes have negative equity, the capital of Connecticut has a high homeowner vacancy rate. At 4.3 percent, the rate is more than 2.5 times the national average. The number is even worse for rental units, which has a vacancy rate of 9.2 percent. A median home in Hartford is worth $130,900.

    Critics slam presidential hopeful's plan to 'tax the hell out of' the rich


    New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio came out last Wednesday night for his second presidential debate with his gloves off.

    “When I’m president, we will even up the score and we will tax the hell out of the wealthy to make this a fairer country and to make sure it’s a country that puts working people first,” de Blasio declared during his opening remarks.

    De Blasio repeated the comment at the end of the debate, while also plugging his new fundraising website TaxTheHell.com, and dropped the line again at the conclusion of the night during an interview with MSNBC.

    The line is a catchy one with a certain Trumpian ring — you can imagine people chanting “tax the hell” at a rally — but now, critics are arguing that the actual policies behind de Blasio’s comments would in fact lead to financial problems, particularly in the real estate industry.

    de Blasio’s proposal could negatively impact people who have their wealth locked up in property, which is valuable but not very liquid, wants to “repeal the estate tax… and replace it with a more aggressive inheritance tax.

    In any case, it’s highly unlikely at this point that de Blasio will get anywhere near the White House. Polling and news site FiveThirtyEight currently has the mayor in a multi-way tie for last place among nearly two dozen candidates.


    Beauty queen accused of interior design fraud by hotel mogul

    A couple who hired a former Miss Sweden to decorate their opulent property in The Bahamas is now accusing the one-time beauty queen of interior design fraud. Hotel magnate Henry Silverman and his wife Karen Silverman have filed a suit against interior designer Sofia Joelsson in Florida federal court. With a registered net worth of $300 million, Henry Silverman has at one point controlled hotel brands Howard Johnson’s Ramada, Super 8 and Travelodge.

    According to the complaint, Joelsson defrauded them out of millions of dollars by overcharging clients through a network of shell companies and inside vendors.

    The lawsuit calls Joelsson a “penthouse queen” of South Beach and claims that she misled them to believe that her company was a licensed interior design firm when it wasn’t.

    The Silvermans are asking for at least $7 million in damages based on alleged violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act and Florida Deceptive and Unfair Practices Act. They further claim that Joelsson would arrange for contractors to give overinflated invoices and then launder the funds through various real estate purchases while keeping several sets of records for each transaction to defraud tax authorities.


    NYC competitor sues Compass over allegedly poaching manager


    The well-funded New York City-based brokerage Compass has been hit with yet another lawsuit.

    This time, New York City-based competitor Elegran is suing Compass and one of its former managers over what it calls a “brazen scheme to unfairly compete with Elegran by stealing Elegran’s confidential information and trade secrets and using them to target Elegran’s other real estate brokers, clients, and potential clients.”

    At the center of the complaint is Zino Angelides, a former manager who defected to Compass from Elegran. Compass allegedly recruited Angelides and three other brokers while they were still at Elegran. On June 24, 2019, Angelides and the three other brokers abruptly resigned from Elegran with no prior notice, according to the complaint, and immediately began working for Compass. They also took what could potentially be $10 million in leads, assuming they all close.

    A Compass spokesperson, in a statement, told Inman that it is focused on providing the best experience for its employees, agents and their clients.

    Compass has been the target of a number of lawsuits from Competitors, including, most recently, a la...

    Amazon TurnKey Competition & Will the Housing Market be Recession Proof in 2020?

    Amazon TurnKey Competition & Will the Housing Market be Recession Proof in 2020?

    Closingtimepodcast.com for the latest news from the real estate world, helpful tips for buyers, sellers and other agents, and all of our previous podcast episodes. Keep up with us on Facebook and Instagram. We also offer home video tours, Realtor branding videos, ariel shots, live streams and more.. closingtimepodcast.com and click on the CMG Real Estate Link..


    How to Get a $5,000 Amazon Credit: Buy a House Through Realogy


    Over the past year, the decidedly analog business of buying and selling real estate has been upended by a flurry of new money and start-ups trying to usher in a world where homes are bought and sold online. Now, Amazon is creating a partnership that goes in the opposite direction by using its gigantic retail platform to facilitate phone calls with human real estate agents.

    On Tuesday, Amazon said that it was working with Realogy, the nation’s largest residential real estate brokerage company and owner of Century 21, Coldwell Banker and other brands, to create TurnKey, a service that will help prospective home buyers find real estate agents. To entice customers, Amazon will give buyers up to $5,000 in home services and smart-home gear when they close.

    Amazon is now as much a search engine as it is a store, and the deal fits into the company’s effort to capitalize on its status as an online destination by making money on advertising and other services. It’s also a way to encourage people to adopt products like Alexa speakers and Ring doorbells and to promote its list of handymen, furniture assemblers and other home services.

    For Realogy, who will pay for those benefits, the partnership is a way of using Amazon to find home buyers and help its brokers separate the closers from the lookie-loos by rebating a portion of its commission, in the form of free Amazon stuff, to anyone who actually buys a house.

     

    Keller Williams and Compass leaders spar (politely) over tech


    Keller Williams Realty President Josh Team said Thursday during an Inman Connect panel that his brokerage is investing $1 billion into technology before directing a jab at Compass CEO Robert Reffkin: “Not buying marketshare.”

    During a discussion entitled “The Inman Interview: Can Your Technology Compete?” Reffkin touted purportedly unrivaled engineering talent and Compass’ vision of building a first-of-its-kind property search platform. Teamcountered that Keller Williams is already delivering top-shelf technology to its agents.

    The two executives never directly disparaged each other’s firms. But they traded some thinly-veiled barbs.

    “This isn’t hyperbole or vision,” Team said about Keller Williams’ tech platform, implying that Compass’ is just that. “This is real.”

    Keller Williams’ suite of tools combined with its integration of an in-house lender is helping agents guide customers from the time their contact information arrives in a database to the moment they order an appraisal, he said.

    NRT CEO compares Compass' agent recruitment to 'shoplifting'


    NRT CEO Ryan Gorman compared Compass’ recruitment of agents and efforts to gain market share in competing marketplaces to “shoplifting,” at Inman Connect Las Vegas Thursday morning

    NRT’s parent company Realogy is suing Compass over “unfair business practices and illegal schemes to gain market share at all costs.”

    “We don’t sue for show,” Gorman told interviewer Clelia Peters, the president of Warburg Realty. “This is the real deal… the industry should take it seriously.”

    Gorman encouraged everyone in the audience to read beyond the headlines and take a full look at the lawsuit. He said after reading it, people won’t wonder why Realogy is suing Compass, but rather why it took them so long to do so.


    Next recession will come in 2020 — but it won't be due to housing


    Half of the real estate economists and experts surveyed by Zillow this week believe that the next recession is coming in 2020, according to the second quarter Zillow Home Price Expectations Survey.

    Of the 100 real estate experts surveyed, half said a recession was likely to come in 2020 with 19 percent specifically pinpointing the third quarter of 2020 — which lines up directly with the months leading up to the presidential election. Thirty-five percent of those surveyed said they believe a recession is likely in 2021, meaning 85 of 100 experts believe a recession is coming in the next two years.

    Although experts say housing won’t cause of the recession, the potential slowdown will have an impact. More than half of those surveyed said they expect home buying demand in 2020 to be significantly lower than in 2019, while about a third of those surveyed said they expected it to be about the same.

    The combination of slowing demand and an impending recession could be good news for potential buyers in the short-term and cause further slowdowns in overall U.S. home value appreciation going forward.

    Home values are currently growing at a 6.1 percent annual p...

    The American Dream & Boob Lights

    The American Dream & Boob Lights

    Closingtimepodcast.com for the latest news from the real estate world, helpful tips for buyers, sellers and other agents, and all of our previous podcast episodes.
    Keep up with us on Facebook and Instagram. We also offer home video tours, Realtor branding videos, aerial shots, live streams and more.. closingtimepodcast.com and click on the CMG Real Estate Link.


    Why homeownership truly is the American dream


    The three main reasons why owning a home is still a big component of the American dream.

    1. There are proven psychological, physical and financial benefits to homeownership.

    “You own your little corner of the world. You can customize your house, remodel, paint, and decorate without the need to get permission from a landlord.” That’s pride of ownership. 

    But aside from the positive psychological effects of owning a home, homeowners in strong markets build equity. 

    2. Homeownership positively impacts American families.

    From having room for your kids to play to being able to entertain to having space to do the things you love, owning a home helps people realize their full potential.

    It also provides a greater sense of stability and opportunity, while growing personal wealth. Homeownership by those who make down payments, and who stay in their houses over long periods of time can result in better academic and emotional outcomes for children.

    3. People who invest in their home, invest in the community, and thus improve the local economy.

    Nearly 60 percent of Americans own their homes, and for good reason. The National Association of Realtors points out the many social benefits, which include civic participation, financial education and poverty improvements.

    Plus, a person who cares for their home is more likely to care for their community through donations and volunteer efforts that keep their neighborhood and schools safe, livable and thriving. In other words, you help yourself and others contribute to a fundamental sense of belonging and responsibility to the wider community.  

    Homeownership also plays a critical role in the economy. 

    According to the National Association of Home Builders, building 100 average single-family homes generates 305 jobs, $23.1 million in wage and business income, and $8.9 million in taxes and revenue for state, local and federal governments. 


    Rents are rising, but the US lacks sufficient middle-income housing


    Rents are climbing and more higher-income Americans are choosing to lease rather than buy, but while those conditions are a boon to investors many middle-income earners are nevertheless facing a lack of housing supply.

    New research from data firm CoStar paints a picture of an overall booming U.S. rental industry that has seen uneven growth across different parts of the market. For starters, much of the multifamily housing being built today tends to be high-end luxury units.  The number of renter households in the U.S. has grown the most among those earning more than $100,000 per year. And those renters are being attracted to the locations and benefits of living in well-connected urban hot spots. 

    CoStar found that since 2015 rent has grown by about 4 percent each year, which is between 1 percent and 1.5 percent more than incomes. The current tendency of people to move out of pricey states as they face affordability woes and into more affordable ones is well-documented, and is typical of what happens as an economic cycle reaches its high point.

    All of this represents something of a two-edged sword: On the one hand conditions are tough and getting tougher for renters, but on the other those people who can afford to step onto the investment ladder stand to make reliable returns as rents continue to rise.


    Home price growth accelerates for first time in 14 months


    For the first time in 14 months, home price growth is accelerating.

    Nationwide, home prices grew by 3.6 percent in May year-over-year and 0.9 percent from April, according to the latest data from CoreLogic. At 10.7 percent, Idaho had the highest growth rate out of all the states. Utah and South Dakota followed at 7.8 percent and 7.7 percent, respectively.

    The growth can be attributed to a strong job market and decreased mortgage rates, according to CoreLogic. 

    CoreLogic predicts that home prices will see even steeper growth in the coming year — 0.8 percent by next month but 5.6 percent by May 2020.

    Due to years of consistent home price increases, many buyers are worried about their ability to afford a home. According to CoreLogic, 28 percent of homeowners are worried they won’t be able to afford buying a new home in the future. Only half are satisfied with the number of options available in their market while 40 percent believe they will have to relocate


    Trump creates affordable housing council, taps Ben Carson as chair


    Amid a growing sense of national crisis over the cost of housing, President Trump created a new government council Tuesday and tasked it with clearing “regulatory barriers,” such as zoning, that get in the way of building new homes.

    Ben Carson — who leads the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development — will now also serve as the chair of the White House Council on Eliminating Barriers to Affordable Housing. In an executive order, Trump said the role of the council would be to increase the supply of homes in the U.S. in an effort to meet demand.

    Trump also singled out an array of specific regulations that he argued are getting in the way of housing construction. The regulations include zoning, limits on population density, “undu...

    Bombshell REALTOR Lawsuit Is Getting Ugly

    Bombshell REALTOR Lawsuit Is Getting Ugly

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    Bombshell lawsuit takes a new turn

    The class-action lawsuit that could upend the real estate industry by effectively forcing changes in how buyer’s agents are traditionally compensated has been amended, adding more plaintiffs and defendants and emphasizing the role commissions play in steering buyers and raising costs for sellers.

    Nine law firms filed an amended complaint consolidating two previous complaints with nearly identical claims: the first filed by home seller Christopher Moehrl on March 6 and another filed by homeseller Sawbill Strategic Inc. on April 15.

    The June 14 amended complaint alleges NAR and the named real estate brokers and franchisors have violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by “agreeing, combining and conspiring to impose, implement and enforce anticompetitive restraints that cause home sellers to pay inflated commissions on the sale of their homes.”

    The main restraint the complaint refers to is a NAR rule requiring listing brokers — and their agents who represent homesellers — to make a “blanket unilateral offer of compensation” to buyer brokers when listing a property in a Realtor-affiliated multiple listing service.

    That offer of compensation must be made regardless of the fact that buyer brokers represent the buyer, not the seller, and because it is a blanket offer, it cannot vary according to the buyer broker’s experience, the services the buyer broker is offering or the buyer broker’s financial arrangement with the buyer, according to the complaint.

    Unlike the original complaints, the amended complaint does not argue that the blanket offer of compensation is non-negotiable. But the amended lawsuit cites NAR’s Standard of Practice 3-2 and Standard of Practice 16-16 as evidence that NAR impedes effective negotiation of the offer of compensation.

     

    Ikea rebuilds rooms from Friends, Simpsons and Stranger Things

    A new Ikea campaign recreates the living rooms of three iconic TV shows with furniture that can be bought in its stores.

    Titled ‘Real Life Series,’ the Ikea United Arab Emirates campaign features living rooms from “Friends,” “The Simpsons” and “Stranger Things.” Each room is created with furniture and accessories from the Ikea catalog. While the campaign was designed by Publicis Spain, the rooms will only be set up in select Middle East stores and through an online catalog checklist.

    The “Friends” room recreates Monica and Rachel’s apartment with the purple walls and a beige armchair while “The Simpsons” room has an orange couch and bright round carpet. The “Stranger Things” room has the flowered wallpaper, Christmas tree lights and striped couch. Because the campaign has no financial ties to the iconic television shows, Ikea describes the “Simpsons” room simply as for “families,” the “Friends” room for “mates” and the “Stranger Things” room for “everyone” without calling out their titles by name.

     

    Red Flags When Looking For Your Next Home

    1. While there may be other houses on the street for sale, especially during the "busy" seasons of spring and summer, an overwhelming number of houses on the market for an area can be a warning sign.

    2. Class size in a school system says a lot, schools should be adding enrollment, not losing it.

    3. If the neighborhood has lots of empty storefronts, be wary. Empty storefronts point to the area in decline.

    4. If limited parking at the house you're looking at is something that you noticed while you were visiting the house for the first time, it has the potential for forever being an Achilles heel of the property.

    5. If the solution to the parking situation at your house is off-street parking, what's the traffic like? Are there cars lined up and down the street? Will you potentially have to drive around a while in search of a spot to park? That inconvenience can quickly become a major hassle, especially with a car full of groceries or small children to bring into the house.

     

    Yes, You Can Trust Your Real Estate Broker

    A Manhattan Real luxury Real Estate broker wrote a great blog in Forbes Magazine entitled, Yes, You Can Trust Your Real Estate Broker.

    According to a 2018 Gallup poll on the subject of most- and least-trusted professions, 19% of Americans consider the ethical standards of real estate agents as either low or very low, while 54% of the population consider our honesty to be just about average. You may conclude that we real estate brokers have nothing to complain about, especially compared to members of Congress, whom, according to the poll, 58% of Americans consider to be unethical.

    But when almost one-fifth of the country's population thinks of the profession that I’ve been dedicated to for two decades as not worthy of their trust, it makes me upset. I find such public opinion unfair, especially because the very thing that gives true value to our work is the ethical foundation upon which it's built.

    The job of a real estate broker is trust-based. There is serious capital involved in every transaction, especially for those of us who specialize in luxury transactions, and in order for us to succeed in helping our clients achieve their goals, we must be trusted. Brokers who don’t earn their clients’ trust can’t close deals and don’t stay in business.


    President Trump’s Onetime Greenwich Estate Relists for 29% Less

    A Greenwich, Connecticut estate where President Donald Trump and his ex-wife Ivana Trump lived is returning to the market for $38.5 million—almost 29% less than its onetime $54 million asking price.

    The Trumps bought the property after they were married in the early 1980s for about $4 million. When they divorced in the early 1990s, Ms. Trump kept the house. She sold it to the current owners, financier Robert Steinberg and his wife Suzanne Steinberg, for $15 million in 1998.

    &n...

    Amazon Sells Homes With Free 2 Day Shipping But Is It Worth It?

    Amazon Sells Homes With Free 2 Day Shipping But Is It Worth It?

    Guest this week

    Attorney Jose Palacio is quickly becoming a household name advocating on behalf of those who live in Connecticut. He is exceptionally experienced in Immigration, Real Estate, and Family Law.

    He later earned his Juris Doctor from Quinnipiac University School of Law. Attorney Palacio has since partnered with Hartford-based attorneys, learning and practicing various forms of law culminating in the establishment of his firm.

    Jose Palacio is a member of the Connecticut River Valley Chamber of Commerce and serves on their board of Directors. Palacio is an active and dedicated member of his community volunteering at town, city, and statewide events. Attorney Palacio is fluent in both English and Spanish and can speak workable Portuguese.

    STATE OF THE STATE IN REAL ESTATE

    https://www.hartfordbusiness.com/article/realtors-economist-cts-housing-scene-not-all-grim

    Lawrence Yun, the chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, came to the Hartford Golf Club, with a reassuring assessment of the Greater Hartford, Connecticut and U.S. housing markets and economies. Yun told about 100 members of the Greater Hartford Association of Realtors (GHAR) that Hartford’s housing market held its own in 2018, while much of the nation’s housing markets struggled and he said prospects for a recession later this year or next year are dim, especially with a presidential election just around the corner, meaning interest rates should remain low enough to spur home sales and  mortgage refinancing.                                                     Statewide, the median price of existing houses sold in 2018 rose for the third consecutive year, despite a 2 percent sales decline.  Connecticut’s housing performance ranked among the top 10 U.S. housing-sales markets in 2018, but the state’s continued loss of residents, or outmigration, remains a concern. Fewer residents reduce demand for housing, fewer homes on the market that take longer to sell and at lower prices.

    Steady appreciation in real estate prices and values means more Hartford area and Connecticut residents can afford a home, or at least qualify for a mortgage to acquire one.

     Yun forecasted improvement in the inventory of new and used houses for sale, which GHAR recently noted has been problematic for Realtors and prospective buyers.

     

    Outlook for US mortgage rates remains stable, housing crunch continues.

    https://www.inman.com/2019/06/04/outlook-for-us-mortgage-rates-remains-stable-housing-crunch-continues/

    Six months ago, when mortgage rates neared the 5 percent mark and were expected to continue climbing, the real estate business was concerned that home buying in 2019 would be a fraction of what it could be.

    Now, though, rates have receded by 50 basis points (a basis point is 1/100th of a percentage point), and all is well. (If all is not well with housing more broadly, at least loan costs aren’t the reason buyers aren’t jumping in.)

    Stability is critical, of course, not just for realty sales, but also for mortgage originations. Any jump in loan rates throws both markets into a tizzy. And once things settle down, another increase starts the process all over again.

    The Chief Economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association is forecasting the rate on 30-year conventional mortgages to average 4.4 percent this year and 4.6 percent in each of the next two. Rates averaged 4.3 percent in 2017 but jumped up to an average of 4.8 percent last year.

    The supply of new homes necessary to meet demand fell short by 337,000 units — more than a third of a million.

    Numerous economists have cited labor, land, and lenders as the reasons builders are not building houses at the rates they should be. But, the “most acute” problem is with the lack of building sites. The cost of a lot is becoming more expensive than the house itself.

     

    Compass sued over a single decimal point

    https://www.inman.com/2019/06/05/compass-sued-over-decimal-point/

    When it comes to contracts, attention to detail is essential. Sometimes a misplaced decimal point can mean the difference between thousands of dollars and nearly $1 million.

    That’s the situation with a new lawsuit filed by Residential Realty Advisors (RRA), a real estate advisory firm for multifamily projects, against fast-expanding NY-headquartered brokerage Compass, over what RRA claims is underpayment — the company wants $871,000 instead of the $8,710 it received — due to what it says was a simple error in a contract for work it completed for a company later swallowed up in a chain of acquisitions that ended, most recently, with Compass.

    Specifically, RRA claims there was a “scrivener’s error” in its contract with The Mark Company, a real estate sales and marketing firm acquired by Pacific Union International in 2015, which was subsequently acquired by Compass last year. 


    Amazon is selling entire houses for less than $20,000 — with free shipping.

    https://www.marketwatch.com/story/amazon-is-selling-entire-houses-for-less-than-20000-with-free-shipping-2019-05-22?fbclid=IwAR2nkOKaz1pNgPLP8KTJxu9ceX_HWBRaoY_H_p6rVmQWimhD061tYrjeO14

    Residential builders have found a new home: Amazon.

    Prefabricated and modular housing — with homes prebuilt in factories — is having another moment. From 2013 to 2018, industry revenue grew an annualized 8.6% to nearly $10.5 billion, including the growth of 4.1% in 2018 alone, according to research firm IBISWorld.

    The homes can be built in 2-3 days with two adults.. There are a number of charming cabins and homes for sale on the internet giant — their prices may be shockingly low, but there are often additional costs and significant downsides. 

    We are going to dive deeper into the tiny house movement in the next episode. This isn’t weird.. retailers have sold homes before. Sears House Kits of the 1920s.

    Among the catalog giant’s astounding range of offerings were house kits, which the company began marking in 1908. The kits came in 447 different designs, from the grand “Magnolia” ($5,140 to $5,972) to the more humble, but popular “Winona” ($744 to $1,998). Sears advertised the kits with the promise that “We will furnish all the material to build this [house design]. All the parts arrived (usually by train) precut and rea...

    Grand Theft Open House

    Grand Theft Open House

    Abby and Joe discuss ways agents can protect themselves and their sellers while hosting an open house. Ten things sellers will ask and how to answer their questions in preparation for the appraisal process. Digital notary, Notarize has made over $1B by making Real Estate transaction super easy for all parties. Learn about all that and more on this weeks episode of The Closing Time Podcast.
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