All posts in NAR

Welcome to Tampa Real Estate News!

Thanks for visiting us at Tampa Real Estate News.  This is a blog developed by Realtors for Realtors, real estate agents and you, the general public.  We want you to feel free to express yourself here without worry for any political correctness.   We only ask that you keep it clean, truthful and within the confines of the NAR Code of Ethics (i.e., don’t badmouth other Realtors, etc.)  Hopefully we can share some insight into our local real estate, as well as our State and National Associations. Thanks for your participation.  Without you, there is nothing to say!

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Obama to step up housing reform

January 16, 2012

WASHINGTON (UPI) — After a push from Democrats and liberal activists, President Barack Obama is expected to take a more aggressive stance to protect homeowners, backers say.”There’s an understanding now in the administration that there needs to be a comprehensive strategy to diminish the foreclosure rate and clean up the housing problem,” said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.Frank said although the economy is showing good movement, the Obama administration needs to do something about housing, The Hill reported Sunday.

“There’s a lot of conversation going on,” Frank said.

Wade Henderson, president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a leader in advocating for homeowner relief, said the administration is gearing up for action.

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The Nation’s Housing: Deductibility takes a hit …

Kenneth R. Harney

WASHINGTON — Though its demise drew little attention because of the partisan year-end brawl over the payroll tax cut extension in Congress, a key mortgage financing benefit disappeared at the end of December: The ability of large numbers of homebuyers and owners to write off the premiums they pay for mortgage insurance.

The loss of that tax deduction — plus mandatory new fees imposed by Congress on all new conventional and FHA loans — could effectively ratchet up the costs of homeownership this year.

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NAR overestimated real estate sales by 14%

November existing-home sales up 12% from year ago

By Matt Carter, Wednesday, December 21, 2011.

Inman News®

<img title=”Balloon houses image via Shutterstock.com.” src=”http://www.inman.com/files/imagecache/article-photo/files/imagefield/shutterstock_59837908.jpg” alt=”Balloon houses image via Shutterstock.com.” />Balloon houses image via Shutterstock.com.

The National Association of Realtors says it overestimated home sales by more than 14 percent since 2007 because an adjustment that the trade group makes to data it collects from multiple listing services to account for sales that take place outside of MLSs got out of whack over time.

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Paying Too much for Real Estate dues?

TAMPA BAY REALTORS® ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR REAL ESTATE DUES?

Pasco—Central     $   75.00

Pasco—East           $ 110.00

Pasco—West         $ 170.00

Pinellas                  $ 168.00

 Tampa                    $ 120.00

Find out more at www.CentralPascoRealtors.org

 

 

Edina Realty Pulls Its Real Estate Listings from Third Party Aggregators

Citing a multitude of reasons that affect both consumers and REALTORS®, Edina Realty leadership decides to pull its real estate listings from third party aggregators Trulia.com and Realtor.com

Edina, Minn. – Nov. 18, 2011 – Edina Realty leadership has decided to pull the company’s real estate listings from third party real estate aggregators such as Trulia.com and Realtor.com. Edina Realty will no longer list its properties on Trulia.com starting Nov. 30, and Realtor.com in the “near” future.

“We’re confident that our decision to pull our listings from Trulia.com and Realtor.com is the right one for consumers as well as our agents and brokerage,” said Bob Peltier, president and CEO of Edina Realty Home Services. “Our clients are number one. And we have an obligation to represent them according to a specific code of ethics and state law. That means we are invested in the integrity of the information we publish on their behalf. The inaccuracies we’ve seen on third-party aggregator sites give us cause for alarm, and the reality is that we are no longer willing to surrender our business – or the consumer’s real estate experience – to third party aggregators, who are not required to operate under the same rules and laws as brokers.”

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MLS committee gives nod, in concept, to new ways to display property listings

Committee also recommends repeal of franchisor IDX indexing policy

By Glenn Roberts Jr.,  Saturday, November 12, 2011.

Inman News™

ANAHEIM, Calif. — A National Association of Realtors committee today recommended that the trade group’s board of directors, which meets Monday, erase a controversial policy relating to franchisors’ pooling and display of Internet Data Exchange listings on their websites.

The NAR Multiple Listing Issues and Policies Committee also approved, in concept, suggested language to broaden the group’s IDX policy to also apply to mobile apps and social media, while eliminating RSS feeds from consideration for the new policy language.

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NAR repeals franchisor IDX display

Presidential advisory group sees syndication as alternative

By Inman News, Monday, November 14, 2011.

Inman News™

ANAHEIM, Calif. — The National Association of Realtors board of directors today approved a repeal of a provision of multiple listing service policy allowing real estate franchisors to display an aggregation of affiliates’ Internet Data Exchange feeds in online search results at franchisors’ websites. The repeal is effective immediately.

Linda Bonarelli Lugo, a Realtor in Long Island, N.Y., spoke in opposition to the repeal, stating that “franchisors out there … have spent a lot of money and time,” in implementing the provision, and “it is an unfair burden if it gets passed.” She also said, “If we rescind this policy we are opening ourselves up to potential lawsuits,” including “restraint of trade.”

But Ted Loring, who led an NAR presidential advisory group to evaluate the controversial policy — which had pitted franchise companies against some large brokerage entities that are not franchisors — addressed the board and explained that the original “combatants” involved in the dispute had agreed to the repeal.

“I’d like to share with you my astonishment that the individuals who sat in that room to discuss whether or not the franchisor IDX provision should be retained, expanded or rescinded reached consensus,” Loring said. The parties sitting in that room — the folks who in May were combatants on this floor directly affected by the franchisor indexing provision — supported the motion that is here before you today.”

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NAR overestimated home sales …

New benchmarking standard will include revision of historical numbers

By Inman News, Monday, November 14, 2011.

Inman News™

The National Association of Realtors says it has overestimated the number of homes sold in recent years and will soon publish revised statistics based on a new benchmarking methodology.

The revisions will show fewer homes were sold than NAR previously estimated, but that there will be little change in previously reported ups and downs in home sales on a percentage basis. There will also be no change to median prices or months’ supply of inventory, NAR said in releasing its 2012 housing forecast.

Potential problems with NAR’s benchmarking methodology were first reported by the blog Calculated Risk in January, and further detailed in a report by analysts with CoreLogic that concluded NAR may have overstated home sales by 15 to 20 percent.

According to the Wall Street Journal, NAR discussed the issue as long ago as December 2010 with economists from the Mortgage Bankers Association, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Reserve, the Federal Housing Finance Agency and CoreLogic.

In February, NAR said it collects sales data from multiple listing services that handle about 40 percent of sales. In the past, NAR has benchmarked sales data against Census data, which it last updated in 2000. When NAR last benchmarked its data in 2000, it found it had underestimated sales by 13 percent, and revised 1990s data accordingly.

Now NAR says that because home sales data is no longer included in the Census, it has developed a new benchmarking approach “using an independent source to improve methodology and to permit more frequent revisions.”

Preliminary data for the new benchmark will undergo broad review by professional economists and government agencies, with revisions published “after any issues that may surface in the review process are addressed,” NAR said Friday.

Based on the existing model, NAR expects existing-home sales will total about 4.96 million this year, and grow by 4 percent to 5 percent in 2012. NAR expects new-home sales to soar by 23 percent next year from this year’s record low of 302,000.

In an Oct. 17 forecast, economists with Fannie Mae said they expect sales of existing homes will total 4.93 million this year, with more modest 0.6 percent growth in 2012. Fannie Mae economists expect new-home sales to grow by 4.9 percent next year, from a projected total of 306,000 sales in 2011.

How a Financial Pro Lost His House

One night a few years ago, when the value of our home had collapsed, our debt was out of control and my financial planning business was shaky, I went to take
out the trash.

There was this enormous window that looked right in on the kitchen table, and through it I could see my wife, Cori, and our four children eating dinner. It
was dark outside, so they couldn’t see me, and I just stood there looking at them.

After a while, I pulled up a bucket and I sat on it, just watching my children eat. I found myself wishing that I could get back there, connected to
the simple ordinary stuff of my family’s life. And as I sat and watched, filled with longing and guilt, two questions kept arising:

How did I get here?

And how am I going to get out of this?

There are many stories these days of people who lost their financial bearings during the housing boom and the crisis that followed, but my story is a bit
different from most. I’m a financial adviser. I get paid to help people make smart financial choices, and I speak and write about personal finance issues for this
publication and others. My first book comes out in January, “The Behavior Gap: Simple Ways to Stop Doing Dumb Things With Money” (Portfolio, a Penguin
imprint).

The thing that few people know, though, is that I learned a lot of this from experience. I made a bunch of mistakes, the very same ones that I now go around
warning people to avoid. So this is the story of how I lost my home, the profound ethical questions that arose along the way, and what my wife and I learned from the mistakes that led us to that point. It made me better at what I do, but it wasn’t much fun getting there.

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