Internet Home Buying Bank Owned and Other Properties

Love this article!! Its great! Hits the nail on the head! When looking on line.  I personally believe that you should look through many resources when trying to find that ideal home. I have a website that you can search homes for sale and bank owned homes. www.deannaforhomes.com

 

Six Secrets of Internet Home Buying
By Luke Mullins

With the worst housing slump in a generation slashing home prices across the country, the dynamics of the market have shifted squarely in favor of buyers. And as the real estate industry grows increasingly Web-savvy, house hunters can now scour through neighborhoods, inspect front porches, and even peek inside bedrooms from the comfort of their desktops. But while this surge of new information can help you find that perfect home, it can also–at times–make the whole process overwhelming. Here are six ways to ensure that your online real estate search is as efficient and effective as possible.

1. Know when to say when. There are plenty of ways to waste time on the Internet. When it comes to home buying, searching through properties you admire–but can’t afford–tops the list. So before you grab for that mouse, contact a lender and get preapproved for a mortgage. That way you’ll know exactly what you can afford. “It’s not difficult,” says Elizabeth Deal, senior vice president of ICBA Mortgage, a subsidiary of the trade group Independent Community Bankers of America. After contacting a lender, prospective home buyers will typically be asked to provide information about their income and debts, Deal says. (In some cases, lenders will want to see a credit report as well.) From that information, the lender will be able to issue a letter outlining the price range that the buyer can afford. The whole process can take as little as a half-hour, Deal says.

2. Find the right tools… Real estate search engines are getting better and better. Pat Kitano, a cofounder of Domus Consulting Group, which works with real estate brokerage firms on technology marketing strategies, calls Trulia.com “the most complete national site.” Kitano also recommends DotHomes. Jay Thompson, of Thompson’s Realty in Arizona, suggests using Zillow.com or Realtor.com, the official site of the National Association of Realtors. Realtor.com “has probably the most listings of any national site,” Thompson says. “Just about anything that is on a local [multiple listing service] will be on realtor.com.” But rather than limit your search to national search engines, Thompson says, it’s a good idea to visit the Web sites of real estate agents and brokers in the market that you are considering as well.

3. …and put them in a belt. Instead of trying to pinpoint the one “best” search engine, home buyers should put together a list of resources and use them in tandem. After all, no single search engine can provide a complete picture of the entire housing market. But by using several as a group, prospective home buyers can get a much better look at the inventory. “A consumer has to go to multiple sites to figure out the whole landscape,” Kitano says

4. Don’t forget the indies. The majority of Internet search tools enable users to look through homes that are being sold through agents. But if you use those exclusively, you will miss the sizable chunk of homes being sold independently. “Agents list about 77 to 78 percent of the homes on the market, so there is another 22 to 23 percent of homes that 10 to 15 years ago people wouldn’t be able to find,” says Greg Healy, vice president of operations at ForSaleByOwner.com, which markets the homes of sellers who are looking to cut out the agent and save on commission. “Using sites that are not agent-related is really critical.”

Joshua Dorkin, the founder and CEO of BiggerPockets.com, a real estate networking and information site, says that Craigslist is a great way to find non-agent-affiliated listings that might not show up on mainstream real estate search engines. “It’s the classified powerhouse of the world now,” Dorkin says.

5. Be alert. Some online real estate resources now offer e-mail alerts or RSS feeds that provide instant notification of new listings and other information of interest to prospective home buyers. Sign up! This is a great way to stay on top of the changing real estate market as your home search progresses. “Rather than actually pulling the information from a particular source, you want that information pushed to you,” says Douglas de Jager, cofounder of DotHomes. “It saves you time.”

6. Find a good blog. Few resources allow home buyers to take the pulse of the national and local markets like real estate blogs. “Real estate bloggers know in real time what is going on in the market,” Kitano says. Like anything else on the Internet, some blogs are better than others. Shop around. Use your favorite search engine to find a couple of blogs that cover real estate in the markets you are interested in, bookmark them and click through them every day. (Pay special attention to the blogs with the most comments and postings.) By and large, the real estate blogging community understands the dynamics of today’s housing market in the way few others do. They’ve emerged as an important voice on housing issues and a wonderful resource for prospective home buyers.

New rules of Home buying

Some great buyer information! This author Amanda Gengler makes some great points about buying bank owned homes and mortgage rates. You can’t just look at the price of the home you have to look at the rates and the location.

 

Money
New rules of home buying

 By Amanda Gengler, Money Magazine

There’s no telling how long the housing crisis will drag on. Here’s what you need to know before you start shopping in a rocky market.

Rule 1: You can’t time the bottom

Face it: The house you buy today will more than likely be worth less next year. That could get you thinking about trying to time the bottom. Resist. It’s harder to do than you think, and this is the best buyers have had it in two decades, with inventories up and mortgage rates low.

Pace yourself, find the perfect place and drive a hard bargain: Ignore the seller’s asking price and bid 10% below what comparable homes are selling for. If the seller balks, move on. Remember that if you’re trading up, your home could sit. So sell before you buy.

Rule 2: One reason to buy now – mortgage rates

Homes are plentiful and will remain so, but financing will be getting more expensive. True, the Federal Reserve has slashed interest rates, but fixed mortgages don’t directly follow the Fed. They reflect the bond market’s expectations about inflation, which remains a concern. The 30-year, now at 6.1%, will likely reach mid-6% by December and 7% in 2009, says Celia Chen of Moody’s Economy.com.

That means there could be a penalty for waiting to buy even if prices fall more. Today a $250,000 loan would set you back $1,500 a month. At 7%, a $1,500 payment gets you only a $225,000 mortgage. As for variable-rate loans, the spread between conforming ARMs and fixed loans is too narrow to do you much good.

Rule 3: Another reason to buy – rates on big mortgages

Mortgages in amounts greater than $417,000 – the limit for buying by federally sponsored mortgage agencies – usually run a fifth of a percentage point above conventional products. But investors are shunning jumbos, which now average 7.2% and are unlikely to drop much this year, according to HSH Associates.

Certain jumbo borrowers could get relief, however. A new law allows Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to buy loans as large as $729,750 in 71 high-priced areas. So far “jumbo conforming” loans average 6.6%. The program has gotten off to a slow start; you’ll need to shop around. And unless Congress acts, this bargain will disappear at year-end.

Rule 4: Don’t buy cheap; buy good schools

By now you’ve heard from somebody who knows somebody who got a great deal on a foreclosed property. But when you buy a house, you’re also buying into a neighborhood. And foreclosures tend to be bunched in areas where residents and speculators alike took out exotic mortgages to get into homes they subsequently found they couldn’t afford. That’s not a recipe for stability. Prices and quality of life could both decline further.

Similarly, avoid developments that popped up in the past few years. They too likely have a lot of owners with risky loans and little equity, says Mike Larson of Weiss Research. Instead, go for areas with highly rated schools. They generally fare better during downturns, and that pattern is holding today, according to a recent study by real estate site Trulia.com.

Rule 5: Make sure your agent has your interest at heart

The real estate game has a built-in conflict of interest, since the listing agent and your agent both get paid by the seller. And these days more sellers are offering extra cash to buyer’s agents.

So make sure you’re not being steered to a house that’s better for your agent than for you. Agree up front on his commission (typically 3%) and that any extra payments will go to you, says Jon Boyd, past president of a buyer’s agent trade group.

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