Real Estate, Updates, News & Tips - Deborah Morrison - iPro Real Estate

REALTORS: How to Balance Your Work, Personal Schedules

As agents and brokers go about their business on their own time, clocking in and out during regular business hours isn’t exactly the norm. However, with flexible hours comes the risk of having a poor work-life balance. A survey by Sage Small Business found that small-business owners today work longer hours than they did six years ago in 2012. It’s easy to get lost among scheduling chaos and everyday business, but these tips from a recent Ent

Read More

REALTORS: Protecting Your Transactions From Wire Fraud

One of the fastest growing cybercrimes in the U.S. is wire fraud in real estate. About 9,600 people were victims of wire fraud in the real estate and rental sector in 2017, with losses of more than $56 million, according to FBI data.The highest reported fraud in real estate last year was Business Email Compromise/Email Account Compromise. Fraudsters will assume the identity of the title or real estate agent and forge the person’s email and othe

Read More

720-Day Foreclosure Timeline Is Actually an Improvement

Foreclosures can take a long time to process, but they are getting faster. Properties foreclosed in the second quarter took an average of 720 days from the first foreclosure notice to completion. That is down from 883 days a year ago, according to a new report released by ATTOM Data Solutions, a real estate data firm.The states with the longest average timelines for foreclosures completed in the second quarter were: Hawaii: 1,553 days Florida: 1,

Read More

Owners, Appraisers Closest to Agreement Since 2015

The gap continues to narrow between homeowners’ and appraisers’ perceptions over home values. The latest Quicken Loans Home Price Perception Index shows that the average home appraisal in June was only 0.25 percent lower than what owners had estimated—this puts the two different value perceptions at their closest since February 2015.Homeowners provide their home value estimate at the beginning of the refinance process; that is then matched

Read More

How Will Bike-Sharing Change Cities?

With ride-sharing companies such as Lyft and Uber entrenched in cities and changing how their residents move about, a move into bicycle sharing may bring their users even more flexibility.Lyft paid a reported $250 million earlier this month for Motivate, which operates bike-sharing programs across the country under a variety of names, such as Citi Bike in New York and Divvy in Chicago.With some 35 percent of vehicle trips involving travel of two

Read More

The 10 Most Undervalued Cities in 2018 for House Hunters

Despite housing prices on the rise in many places, real estate is still considered a bargain in a handful of cities, according to a new analysis released by SmartAsset, a personal finance website. SmartAsset analyzed data of 200 cities by using a model that projects home value per square foot based on how desirable a city is to live in, considered its livability score. Researchers factored in livability metrics like crime, unemployment, weather,

Read More

Do ARMs Still Spook Borrowers?

As mortgage rates rise, borrowers may be more likely to consider an adjustable rate mortgage, but ARMs’ sour reputation from the housing crisis may prevent them from taking one. ARMs tend to offer lower introductory rates for a set period of time, such as five or seven years, before resetting higher. Even a decade after the financial crisis, ARMs, which took a lot of blame for rising defaults back then, are still relatively low. The s

Read More

Loan Demand Takes Sudden Leap From Home Buyers

The number of homes for sale is growing in some markets and that may be the main factor behind the latest rise in mortgage applications, economists say. Mortgage applications for both home purchases and refinancings increased 2.5 percent last week on a seasonally adjusted basis, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported Wednesday. The rise was fueled entirely by an uptick in home purchase applications. Mortgage applications for home purchase

Read More

Wall Street Is Taking an Even Bigger Bet on Rentals

Investors are bullish that more Americans will choose to be renters, and they’re buying up even more single-family homes to make sure they are ahead of the trend. The number of homes purchased by major investors in 2017 was about 29,000, up 60 percent from the previous year, according to Amherst Capital Management LLC, a real estate investment firm. That is also the first time since 2013 that investors purchased more homes on an annual basis.In

Read More

3 Vintage Kitchen Designs Making a Comeback

Several vintage and retro elements from the 1960s or even 1930s are oozing back into kitchen design. Realtor.com®’s Jamie Wiebe recently highlighted a few of these comeback trends, including:Decorative flooring: Vintage black-and-white and patterned tiling are making big statements in kitchens once again. Hardwood flooring may be the norm in new-home builds, but more renovators are opting for decorative flooring styles that were once common i

Read More

This website includes images sourced from third party websites including Adobe, Getty Images, and as otherwise noted.