Data Loading...

Buying a Home Guide from Rachel Doppelt

247 Views
65 Downloads
8.38 MB

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Copy link

DOWNLOAD PDF

REPORT DMCA

RECOMMEND FLIP-BOOKS

Selling Your House Guide from Rachel Doppelt

Selling Your House Guide from Rachel Doppelt THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN SELLING YOUR HOUSE SUMMER 2020

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from George Dilieto

Buying a Home Guide from George Dilieto THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION TA

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Chris Jelani

Buying a Home Guide from Chris Jelani THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION TABL

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Daniel Bourke

Buying a Home Guide from Daniel Bourke THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION TAB

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Allyson Bruetsch

Buying a Home Guide from Allyson Bruetsch THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Hamza Sawal

Buying a Home Guide from Hamza Sawal THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION TABLE

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Allison Buffinga

Buying a Home Guide from Allison Buffinga THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SUMMER 2020 EDITION

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Christine Rifice

Buying a Home Guide from Christine Rifice THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Kevin Leonard

Buying a Home Guide from Kevin Leonard THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SUMMER 2020 EDITION TAB

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Kelly Konecky

Buying a Home Guide from Kelly Konecky THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME SPRING 2020 EDITION TAB

Read online »

Buying a Home Guide from Rachel Doppelt

THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN BUYING A HOME

SUMMER 2020 EDITION

TABLE OF CONTENTS

3 6 8 WHAT’S HAPPENING IN THE HOUSING MARKET? WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW BEFORE YOU BUY Why This Housing Market Is Not Like 2008

Two Things in Your Corner: Mortgage Rates & Home Prices

How Technology Is Enabling the Real Estate Process

10 11 13

Buying a Home: Do You Know the Lingo? The Power of Having a Real Estate Professional on Your Side

What You Can Do Now If You Want to Buy a Home

WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN BUYING A HOME 15 17 19

Ready to Make an Offer? Four Tips for Success Things to Avoid After Applying for a Mortgage

5 Reasons to Hire a Real Estate Professional

2

Why This Housing Market Is Not Like 2008

There are so many questions swirling around today about where the housing market is headed amid this economic slowdown. In order to best understand the current state of the market and how expert projections may play out, it’s best to look at our economic history, and how today is vastly different than the housing crisis of 2008, known as the Great Recession. Many of us experienced financial hardships, lost homes, and were out of work during the Great Recession – the recession that started with a housing and mortgage crisis. Today, we face a very different challenge: an external health crisis that caused a pause in the economy and a major shutdown in many parts of the country. We’re simply not in the same boat as we were in 2008. Here are five big reasons why that can give you greater confidence if you’re thinking of buying a home this year. 1. Home Price Appreciation

Annual Home Price Appreciation

When we look at appreciation in the visual here, there’s a big difference between the 6 years prior to the housing crash and the most recent 6- year period. Leading up to the crash, we had much higher appreciation in this country than we had coming into this year. In fact, the highest level of appreciation most recently is below the lowest level we saw leading up to the crash. Prices were rising going into this economic slowdown, but not at the rate they were climbing back when we had runaway appreciation.

12.5%

11.4%

8.6%

8.5% 8.7%

6.5%

6.4%

5.2% 5.5%

4.8% 4.7%

4.4%

The 6 years leading up to the housing crash

The last 6 years

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

Black Knight

3

2. Mortgage Credit Availability The Mortgage Credit Availability Index is a monthly measure by the Mortgage Bankers Association that gauges the level of difficulty to secure a loan. The higher the index, the easier it is to get a loan; the lower the index, the harder. Today we’re nowhere near the levels seen before the housing crash when it was very easy to get approved for a mortgage. After the crash, however, lending standards tightened and have remained that way ever since.

Housing Bubble 858.7

Historic >Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12 Page 13 Page 14 Page 15 Page 16 Page 17 Page 18 Page 19 Page 20

Made with FlippingBook - Online Brochure Maker