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Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas

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7 Steps to a Stress-free Home Closing

by Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas

Team-Thomas Stress Free Home Closing

By doing homework in advance, you’ll understand what you’re asked to sign when you close the sale of your home.


1. Set a closing date
Your real estate agent will work with the seller’s agent and title company to schedule your closing date. Be sure it meshes with the end of your lease or the sale of your existing home and a time when you’ll able to play hooky from work. If you’re tight on cash, schedule your closing for the end of the month because that’s when you’ll have to pay the least amount of interest at the closing table.

2. Gather your funds
You may be required to bring funds to the closing. If they’re not easily accessible, arrange early to transfer them to a liquid account to avoid last-minute problems. If the title company requires the funds in the form of a cashier’s check, also leave time to stop by the bank and pick one up.

3. Purchase title insurance
Title insurance protects the policyholder against trouble with a home’s title. Your lender will insist that you purchase a policy to protect it. You should also consider purchasing what’s called an owner’s title policy from the same insurer, which protects you from fraudulent claims against your ownership and errors in earlier sales.

4. Line up homeowners insurance
Get quotes and compare policies to be sure coverage will be in effect by your closing date. An annual policy should run $500-$1,000, depending on your home’s size, age, and amenities. If you live in an area where natural disasters occur, like earthquakes, floods, or hurricanes, you’ll need separate insurance to protect your home.

5. Review your good-faith estimate and HUD-1 settlement sheet
Your lender must provide a good-faith estimate of your closing fees. Some of those fees can’t change, and others can rise by 10%. Before you go to the closing, read your good-faith estimate, compare it with your HUD-1 settlement statement, and question any fees that increased.

6. Do a walk-through
Schedule an appointment to walk through the home one last time just before your closing. Make sure repairs you requested have been made, no major changes have occurred since you last viewed the property, and that the sellers left anything they agreed to leave and took all their belongings.

Also test electronics and appliances, such as the doorbell, dishwasher, washer and dryer, and oven, to ensure they’re functioning properly. Do the same with the hot water heater and heating and air conditioning systems. Walk the yard to be sure no plants or shrubs have been removed.

7. Resolve issues identified in your walk-through
If your walk-through uncovers problems, you can delay the closing until the seller corrects them. But that’s often not feasible because your lease is probably over and you’ve already scheduled movers. Another option is to negotiate a discount to your sales price to cover the cost of the work needed. If the air conditioning is on the fritz and a contractor says the repair will cost $500, ask that the sales price be reduced by that amount. If you make that request at closing, however, be ready for a delay while the title company redoes the paperwork.

A third option: Have the title company hold a portion of the seller’s proceeds in escrow until the dispute is resolved. Once that happens, the funds will be released to you or the seller, depending on the outcome.

 Buyers Road Map

Find The Home Loan That Fits Your Needs

by Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas

Home Mortgage

Find the Home Loan that Fits Your Needs

Understand which mortgage loan is best for you so your budget is not stretched too thin.


The most important features of your mortgage loan are its term and interest rate. Mortgages typically come in 15-, 20-, 30- or 40-year lengths. The longer the term, the lower your monthly payment. However, the tradeoff for a lower payment is that the longer the life of your loan, the more interest you’ll pay.

Mortgage interest rates generally come in two flavors: fixed and adjustable. A fixed rate allows you to lock in your interest rate for the entire mortgage term. That’s attractive if you’re risk-averse, on a fixed income, or when interest rates are low.

The risks and rewards of ARMs.  An adjustable-rate mortgage does just what its name implies: Its interest rate adjusts at a future date listed in the loan documents. It moves up and down according to a particular financial market index, such as Treasury bills. A 3/1 ARM will have the same interest rate for three years and then adjust every year after that; likewise a 5/1 ARM remains unchanged until the five-year mark. Typically, ARMs include a cap on how much the interest rate can increase, such as 3% at each adjustment, or 5% over the life of the loan.

Why agree to such uncertainty? ARMs can be a good choice if you expect your income to grow significantly in the coming years. The interest rate on some—but not all—ARMs can even drop if the benchmark to which they’re tied also dips. ARMs also often offer a lower interest rate than fixed-rate mortgages during the first few years of the mortgage, which means big savings for you—even if there’s only a half-point difference.

But if rates go up, your ARM payment will jump dramatically, so before you choose an ARM, answer these questions:

How much can my monthly payments increase at each adjustment?
How soon and how often can increases occur?
Can I afford the maximum increase permitted?
Do I expect my income to increase or decrease?
Am I paying down my loan balance each month, or is it staying the same or even increasing?
Do I plan to own the home for longer than the initial low-interest-rate period, or do I plan to sell before the rate adjusts?
Will I have to pay a penalty if I refinance into a lower-rate mortgage or sell my house?
What’s my goal in buying this property? Am I considering a riskier mortgage to buy a more expensive house than I can realistically afford?
Consider a government-backed mortgage loan
If you’ve saved less than the ideal downpayment of 20%, or your credit score isn’t high enough for you to qualify for a fixed-rate or ARM with a conventional lender, consider a government-backed loan from the Federal Housing Administration or Department of Veterans Affairs.

FHA offers adjustable and fixed-rate loans at reduced interest rates and with as little as 3.5% down and VA offers no-money-down loans. FHA and VA also let you use cash gifts from family members.
   
Before you decide on any mortgage, remember that slight variations in interest rates, loan amounts, and terms can significantly affect your monthly payment.

Learn more here from our Video's

Warming Up at Home!

by Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas
fireplace to keep you warm 

 

 

 

 

 

Installing a fireplace is a popular project, but don’t expect a significant return on your investment.


While intangible benefits such as comfort and ambience may make a fireplace addition worth the cost for you, consumer attitudes toward fireplaces are changing. Here are the facts:

Fireplaces no longer are preferred features.

In 2007, the National Association of REALTORS® survey of homebuyers’ preferences listed fireplaces as the most preferred home feature. Almost 46% of homebuyers said they would pay extra (a median of $1,220) for a house with at least one fireplace, the most popular “desired feature” in the survey. However, more recent surveys from the National Association of Homebuilders show that support is slipping, and REALTOR® Magazine recently put fireplaces No. 1 on the list of “Home Fads That Are Falling Out of Style.” That means chances of receiving price support for your fireplace addition when you sell your home are diminishing.


According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 53% of new homes built in 2008 included at least one fireplace. That’s down from a peak of 66% in 1990, although the numbers may also reflect builders’ attempts to save costs for development houses.


A fireplace isn’t calculated separately in a professional home appraisal, making it difficult to assign increased value from your investment.
Match your fireplace budget to your house.  When you estimate how much a fireplace might add to the value of your house, consider your home’s overall value. A $10,000 fireplace holds its value in a $1 million house because buyers expect this feature in an upscale home. But a $10,000 fireplace might not be such a crucial component of a $100,000 house, especially if features that potential buyers consider more important are lacking.

Get value from your fireplace investment.  Equip your fireplace with energy-efficient glass doors and an exterior venting system that prevents heated air from being pulled out of rooms.

Negotiate Your Best Home Buy

by Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas

Negotiate For Best Deal

Negotiate Your Best House Buy

Keep your emotions in check and your eyes on the goal, and you’ll pay less when purchasing a home.


Here are six tips for negotiating the best price on a home.

1. Get prequalified for a mortgage
Getting prequalified for a mortgage proves to sellers that you’re serious about buying and capable of affording their home. That will push you to the head of the pack when sellers choose among offers; they’ll go with buyers who are a sure financial bet, not those whose financing could flop.

2. Ask questions
Ask your agent for information to help you understand the sellers’ financial position and motivation. Are they facing foreclosure or a short sale? Have they already purchased a home or relocated, which may make them eager to accept a lower price to avoid paying two mortgages? Has the home been on the market for a long time, or was it just listed? Have there been other offers? If so, why did they fall through? The more signs that sellers are eager to sell, the lower your offer can reasonably go.

3. Work back from a final price to determine your initial offer
Know in advance the most you’re willing to pay, and with your agent work back from that number to determine your initial offer, which can set the tone for the entire negotiation. A too-low bid may offend sellers emotionally invested in the sales price; a too-high bid may lead you to spend more than necessary to close the sale.

Work with your agent to evaluate the sellers’ motivation and comparable home sales to arrive at an initial offer that engages the sellers yet keeps money in your wallet.

4. Avoid contingencies
Sellers favor offers that leave little to chance. Keep your bid free of complicated contingencies, such as making the purchase conditional on the sale of your current home. Do keep contingencies for mortgage approval, home inspection, and environmental checks typical in your area, like radon.

5. Remain unemotional
Buying a home is a business transaction, and treating it that way helps you save money. Consider any movement by the sellers, however slight, a sign of interest, and keep negotiating.

6. Don’t let competition change your plan
Great homes and those competitively priced can draw multiple offers in any market. Don’t let competition propel you to go beyond your predetermined price or agree to concessions—such as waiving an inspection—that aren’t in your best interest.

 Learn more here with our Video's

Vote "YES" on Amendment 3

by Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas

It's Time To Say "YES" to NO MORE TAXES

Vote "YES" on Amendement 3

Buyers rush to beat FHA tightening

by Inman News

Demand for FHA-backed loans up 17.2%

Homebuyers rushing to beat new FHA credit score and downpayment requirements last week may have helped push demand for purchase loans last week to their highest level since the expiration of the federal homebuyer tax credits, the Mortgage Bankers Association said in releasing its Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey.

Applications for purchase loans jumped a seasonally adjusted 9.3 percent during the week ending Oct. 1, thanks largely to a 17.2 percent increase in applications for FHA-backed loans, the MBA said. Applications for conventional loans were also up 3.6 percent from the previous week.

Under changes announced in July, FHA borrowers assigned case numbers after Oct. 4 will need a 580 FICO score in order to purchase a home with the minimum 3.5 percent downpayment.

Borrowers with scores between 500-579 must make downpayments of at least 10 percent to qualify for the government-backed mortgage insurance program, and those with scores below 500 won't qualify for the program at all, HUD said in a Sept. 3 letter to lenders.

It was the second straight weekly increase in purchase applications, pushing demand to levels not seen since the first week in May.

Interest Rates Preparing To RISE?

by Team Thomas Realtors, Randy & Jenny Thomas
Interest rates on the rise?

House pricing in Springfield is past the bottom and on the rise.

Historically, interest rates will follow.

If you are a Home Buyer, are you prepared with your home financing?

Have your pre-approval in place, when you write your purchase contract.

You may want to consider "locking" your interest rate, in the event the interest rate goes up. 

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Springfield, Missouri Top 10 Markets Most Likely to Appreciate

by Forbes Magazine

Forbes

Forbes magazine turned to real estate research firm Local Market Monitor to figure out which markets have the greatest likelihood of price appreciation because they offer a mix of jobs weighted toward growth industries.

These are the top markets, the research company concludes:

1. Raleigh-Cary, N.C.
2. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas
3. Austin-Round Rock, Texas
4. Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro-Franklin, Tenn.
5. San Antonio, Texas
6. Colorado Springs, Colo.
7. Albuquerque, N.M.
8. Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, Colo.
9. Springfield, Mo.
10. Indianapolis-Carmel, Ind.

Source: Forbes, Francesca Levy (09/13/2010)

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Is Social Media A Fad?

by Socialnomics

Or is it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution? This video details out social media facts and figures that are hard to ignore. This video is produced by the author of Socialnomics.

 

 

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How the new government HAFA program can help you.

by Team Thomas, Randy & Jenny Thomas

What is HAFA?

HAFA is the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative.  It is a government program that provides incentives and rules to financial institutions to allow home owners who cannot continue to make payments on their property to Short Sale their property for less than they owe and to even walk away with up to $3,000 in relocation expenses.  In addition, HAFA requires that the lender fully release the buyer from any further obligation.

How can it help me?

HAFA allows for the home owner to retain a real estate agent to list and sell their property.  It is in the home owners best interest to employ a Realtor to help facilitate their transaction and handle the paper work.  It costs the home owner no extra money and can save time and headaches when dealing with the lender, prospective buyers, and negotiating the contract and coordinating home showings and inspections.

How is it administered?

HAFA requires the submission of documents to initiate the process with the lender and that forms be submitted when a qualified buyer submits an offer.  As experts in the Short Sale process we can assist you with the process and again, the best news of all is that it costs you nothing as commissions are paid by the lender.

How do I get more information?

We can answer questions you might have regarding HAFA, the short sale process, or any other Real Estate related questions you may have.  Just give us a call or email us at  info@TeamRandyThomas.com  

 

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Team Randy & Jenny Thomas (Murney Associates, Realtors): Real Estate Agent in Springfield, MO