Archive for the ‘Real Estate Investing’ Category

Location: What Edmonton Homebuyers Need

Friday, March 6th, 2015

Edmonton Real Estate Housing

A new review have been conducted that shows to offer key experiences that change the normal home purchaser profile, particularly for people that fall in the Millennial age section. Realize what area are related motivating to push numerous Edmonton home buys.

Edmonton Real estate buyers need better conveniences close to their home. In the report, members reviewed demonstrated the accompanying variables as considered what (generally) home purchasers might most want to have near to the home they plan to purchase:

* Grocery stores – 63% are fine with a snappy commute; 22% need a simple stroll to get nourishment supplies

* Restaurants and eateries – 56% say a short commute away is awesome; 20% just need to stroll there

* Parks, ways and group space – 40% are alright with a short commute; 35% organize inside a mobile separation

* Healthcare suppliers – 62% say a negligible commute lives up to expectations; 10% need a mobile separation

* Local shops – 57% short commute; 12% need the joys of a mobile separation

View the complete Goldman Sach’s  info graphic here.

Check out the latest Edmonton homes for sale on our new and improved Edmonton MLS listings.

Best Payment System For Your Edmonton Rental Home 2015

Tuesday, February 24th, 2015

Edmonton Investment Homes

Edmonton is one of the best places in Canada to own a rental property-that’s no secret. It’s growing population together with the strong economy creates the most conducive environment for such a venture.

(If you have not yet bought your first investment property, worry not! Check out our new and improved Edmonton MLS listings for a great list of properties for sale).

Today, we gathered a few methods that would help you collect rent faster and easier this 2015.

It ought to shock no one that most youthful school understudies have never really composed a check. Things are different now altogether! The old methods for paying rent are gradually getting to be dated and less great throughout today’s era of tenants. We should survey a mixture of installment strategies and the advantages and disadvantages for each.

Hard Cash:

Cash is king, as the platitude goes. This isn’t generally the situation with regards to paying lease however. Numerous Edmonton home owners with a space for rent inside their home would happily take money as installment; in any case, understudy lodging administrators, renting organizations and property supervisors will probably not acknowledge cash.

Asking why?

Cash should for the most part be acknowledged in individual. Proprietors and property owners would not need an inhabitant leaving  bricks of cash at the property or sending it through the mail.

Cash makes all the more a bother. The landowner would need to get the cash, give a receipt every month, and afterward make a bank deposit instantly.

Cash doesn’t leave as powerful a paper trail for records, particularly in the event that its not represented appropriately. There are far simpler systems for installment for both proprietors and occupants.

Individual Check:

Checks are most helpful for landowners and property supervisors, as the bookkeeping methodology is simplest. At the point when a check clears the bank, it in a split second makes a record of installment. The issue is that a great deal of understudy leaseholders don’t have checks, have never composed a check, or want to pay in an alternate way.

Different issues to consider are the potential for ricocheted checks, related managing an account charges, a helpful system to gather checks, and so forth.

Credit Card:

Credit Cards are a more helpful system for installment, in correlation to cash or checks. As a rule, most inhabitants will have a credit card(s) to utilize. Tenants can mastermind to have their month to month rent paid naturally to the landowner.

In any case, there are a few cons to think about. Landowners will quite often bring about a preparing expense for Credit Card exchanges, unless they exchange these charges to the inhabitant. Also, tenants can document chargebacks where they question the charge. For this situation, the landowner must quickly react to the question and give definite documentation to the exchange, to demonstrate that the sum ought not be discounted. Chargeback question are uncommon however when they do emerge, the Visa organization regularly agrees with the cardholder.

Electronic Deposit or E-Transfer:

Electronic store regularly includes an occupant exchanging the rental cash to a landowner’s ledger, straightforwardly through web managing an account. This alternative is getting to be desirable over understudies, as it is shabby (there may be insignificant expenses to the occupant for exchanging the stores), its greatly snappy and inconceivably helpful. Electronic stores or E-exchanges could be possible through any web managing an account administration and it just pauses a moment or two.

The main drawback for this sort of installment is that the landowner must furnish inhabitants with a financial balance number and numerous property managers would prefer not to reveal such individual data. As an answer, a few landowners select to make a different financial balance, particularly utilized for stores from their rental units.

PayPal:

PayPal can be a decent alternative for both proprietors and occupants. A great many people are acquainted with the stage and it just takes minutes to sign up for a record. On the off chance that both the occupant and proprietor have PayPal records, they can undoubtedly exchange the cash utilizing the payee’s email address. Robotized installments can be set up also.

The significant drawbacks to PayPal, notwithstanding, are the expenses connected with a vendor account and the exchange charges. Exchange expenses are by and large around 2% and a dealer record on PayPal expenses give or take $30 every month.

At last, every Edmonton investor must pick which installment system works best for both themselves and their inhabitants. A savvy, helpful and simple to-utilize rent accumulation procedure is a top need for proprietors.

Oil Prices Down, Alberta Economy Looks Up. Here’s Why

Friday, February 20th, 2015

Edmonton Alberta real estate

There is a considerable measure of media and savant buzz about Al­berta being in earnest straits because of the drop in oil costs. However, in 2009, oil costs tumbled to US$50 a barrel and we heard the same figures then. Also take a gander at Alberta now.

 

Each area ought to have these issues.

 

Alberta created a large portion of the occupations in Canada a year ago, has close full job and the most astounding earnings in the nation.

 

The territory has estimate an overflow of almost $1billion in 2014-15, while direct oil sovereignties represent just 18 every penny of Alberta’s incomes, as indicated by the prov- incal government.

 

In the event that Alberta were its own nation, it would rank No. 3 on the planet in the matter of the Human Development Index, an United Na­tions worldwide measure of pay, training and future, as per the Center for the Study of Living Standards.

 

With only 4.1 million inhabitants, Alberta has a terrible local result of $84,390 every capita, third most astounding on the planet, in light of rankings from the International Monetary Fund.

 

The territory has the second­ most reduced unemployment rate in Canada and the most noteworthy wages, at more than $1,100 every week.

 

And the third-biggest pet­roleum holds on the planet, Alberta has one of the world’s most gainful agrarian parts, with more than 50 million sections of land under harvests and animals.

 

Normal yearly venture every capita is $27,617 in Alberta, more than twofold the Canadian normal and characteristic of the area’s startup, heads-up, non-stop state of mind.

 

Today, just 2 every penny of Al­berta’s demonstrated oil stores are being mined and it will keep on delivering oil for a vitality hungry world for quite a long time, maybe cen­turies, to come.

 

A late study from the Canadian Energy Research Institute estimates Alberta oilsands creation will achieve 3.7 million barrels a day by 2020 and 5.2 in 2013.

 

Yet Alberta is a great deal more than oil.

 

This is a broadened economy where fund, land and development create as much as the oil and gas industry.

 

In modern land, as only one measure, Calgary and Edmonton make up 33% of all the new development in the nation.

 

Alberta overflows with opportun­ities, and its huge hearted, low-assessment welcome guarantees it will remain a destination of decision for speculators and business visionaries from Canada and around the globe.

Check out the available homes for sale in all of Edmonton and its neighboring areas on our new and improved Edmonton MLS listings. 

Edmonton Home Buyer Negotiation Tips 2015

Wednesday, February 18th, 2015

Purchasing an Edmonton home is an essential choice in your life. It’s thought to be one of the greatest speculations an individual makes. In the event that you are wanting to purchase an Edmonton house, you have to consider numerous things. rous key arrangement tips will help you to get the best house at the best cost. The following are some of them:

1. React quicker

Edmonton home buyers need to be snappy in their reaction. They can’t keep the venders holding up for a long stretch. On the off chance that you wish to purchase a house, you have to react rapidly to the counteroffer. On the off chance that you don’t, the vender may discover an alternate purchaser, which may cause an offering war. The dealer might likewise begin ignoring you and contact different purchasers. It’s imperative to react quicker or atone later on. On the off chance that offering begins, then on the reasonable value you could have had may be lost. Don’t let this happen. React quickly and act quick.

 

2. Get your work done

 

Edmonton home buyers ought to get their work done before finishing any arrangement with the seller. It’s discriminating to invest this exertion with regards to purchasing a home. There are many alternatives accessible on the web, purchasers can investigate them and get to know the home costs in their zones. A definite investigation of the salary levels, educational system, demographics and property assessment rate will help in arrangement. Subsequently, homebuyers ought to do their legitimate research before taking care of business with the merchant.

 

3. Don’t demonstrate your enthusiasm

 

As a purchaser, you may be aching to purchase a home and may likewise have a settled timetable. You ought to never demonstrate your enthusiasm to the merchant however. In the event that the home seller thinks about your avidness, he may raise the value and may not arrange further. He comprehends your need and can even exploit it. Hence, you have to verify that you don’t let the purchaser think about your issues. Regardless of the possibility that a broker is included in your exchange, verify that this broker does not to reveal the data. Here at Team Leading Edge, your emotion is safe with us!

 

4. Associate with your Edmonton home seller

 

On the off chance that you are wanting to purchase a house, its imperative for you to join with your home seller. When you associate with the merchant, speak with him and let him know all the subtle elements you like about the house, it assembles an association between you. It’s great to unite with the vender and manufacture relations with him in setting to your future home.

 

5. Make inquiries and clear up your questions

 

As a purchaser, you ought to never imagine all is well. Be clear, make inquiries and clear up questions. A productive moderator is not apprehensive in light of the fact that he or she makes inquiries. You are that arbitrator concerning your decision of home. Don’t keep yourself from illuminating a worry. That worry could result in issues later on.

 

6. Organize your needs

 

As a purchaser, you ought to organize your needs while arranging with your merchant. You have to make sense of what you need most and put it forward in like manner. Case in point, choose whether you need a lower cost or the dealer to make repairs. Organize your needs and act in like manner. In the event that you have done this, you can easily arrange with the dealer.

 

7. Report the arrangement

 

Never expect anything, as suspicions dependably make perplexity. You, as a purchaser, ought to make a point to archive the arrangement, get it in composing. In the event that the dealer lets you know that he will give the dishwasher and the clothes washer, get it in composing. Indeed the little points of interest ought to be archived. This will keep inconveniences from being made later on.

Check out all the Edmonton homes for sale with our new and improved Edmonton MLS listings.

Do You Buy or Sell First When You’re Ready to Move?

Thursday, March 6th, 2014

buy_sell-300x195

Homeowners who decide they’re ready to become move-up buyers face a chicken-or-egg dilemma: Should they sell their current home first and then buy another, or buy a new one and then sell? The answer depends on several factors, including your local market conditions, your financing options and your feelings about potentially moving twice if you sell your home before your next residence is available.

Market Conditions

Before you blithely assume that your real estate market is a buyer’s market or a seller’s market, you need to realize that you must be very specific about the market for your particular neighborhood, the style of home you own, and the price range for your property. In addition, you need to assess the availability of homes that meet your criteria. You’ll need to work with a knowledgeable, professional REALTOR® who can talk to you about how quickly homes that are similar to yours are selling and for how much. On the buying side, you should do some preview shopping to get an idea of what you want and how easy it is to find it. For example, if you must live in a particular, popular school district, you may want to consider buying a home first so that you’re sure you have a place you want.

Financial Options

In an ideal world, everyone would have the funds to pay cash for their next home, but the reality is that most people need the equity from the sale of their current home for the down payment on the next house. One option is to sell your home and then negotiate to rent it back from your buyers, but remember THAT you’ll need to pay them for the rental. Also, lenders will limit the rent-back term to a maximum of 60 days because a rental lasting longer than that would be considered an investment property.

Alternatively, you can temporarily live with friends or family or in a short-term rental while you’re between homes. In that case, you might need to pay for a storage facility for your possessions.

A drawback to selling your home first is that you may be unable to find a home to buy, or you may feel rushed into taking a place that doesn’t meet your expectations.

If you can qualify for the mortgage loan on both your current home and the next home, you can access the equity in your current home with a line of credit. You’ll need to take out the line of credit before you put your home on the market and then you can pay it back at settlement.

You may also be able to borrow money for a down payment from relatives that you can repay after your home sells.

Some lenders also offer bridge loans for transitioning homeowners as long as they have excellent credit and sufficient equity in their current home. A lender can help you evaluate your options.

Risk Aversion and a Plan B

You’ll have to ask yourself what scares you most: selling first and having nowhere to live or buying first and being stuck with two mortgage payments. The answer depends on your finances and your local market, but in either case you should have a back-up plan to deal with the worst case scenario – either another source of income for those mortgage payments or an identified place to live for a few weeks or months while you shop for a home.

Source: Realtor.com

Team Leading Edge
RE/Max Elite
780-634-8151

Edmonton Real Estate Market Update – March 2014

Tuesday, March 4th, 2014

To View & Search All MLS Listed Houses for Sale Visit Us At:
www.EdmontonHomesforSale.biz

Team Leading Edge
Direct: 780-634-8151
Office: 780-406-4000

Foreclosure – North Edmonton Condo

Tuesday, November 26th, 2013

1 - Front 1

Foreclosure. Great 2 bedroom, 2 bath unit in Palisades Park Villas located near all amenities. Ideal for a first time buyer. Property is sold as is where is as of the possession. Seller makes no warranties or representation in respect to this property. For more information view realtor’s website.

Click here to view more info or call today to view in person 780-634-8151.

To View & Search All MLS Listed Homes for Sale Visit Us At:
www.EdmontonHomesforSale.biz

Team Leading Edge
RE/MAX ELITE
Direct: 780-634-8151
Office: 780-406-4000

Youthful buyers continue to drive Edmonton housing sales in October

Tuesday, November 5th, 2013

bigstock-Young-couple-buying-new-house-17006093

The REALTORS® Association of Edmonton released market housing statistics for the month of October based on sales through the Multiple Listing Service® in the Edmonton CMA. The all-residential average price in the Edmonton CMA is $337,599 as compared to $332,232 in October 2012, a +2.5% change. The median price for a home in Edmonton is up at $327,250 compared to $315,600 last October.

All-residential sales totalled 1,454 (adjusted for late reported sales, 1,346 reported) in October, a positive change of 15.6% from the same month last year when there were 1,258 residential sales. There were 888 (822) adjusted SFD sales, 449 (416) adjusted condo sales and 90 (83) adjusted duplex/rowhouse sales (reported sales in brackets).

“Total annual sales are the highest they have been for five years and we had the best October in five years as well,” said RAE President Darrell Cook. “There is a 74% sales-to-listing ratio which means that sellers have a better than usual expectation of selling their property. At the current level of sales there is adequate inventory (4,807) for 2.7 months which is lower than normal in this market. The youthful nature of our city (average age 36) and good job prospects means that the demand for housing remains high.”

The unemployment rate declined from 5.2% in August 2013 to 5.1% in September 2013. City of Edmonton economist John Rose states that; “These numbers demonstrate that Edmonton has become one of Canada’s most attractive locations for individuals seeking work.”

The average price for a single-family dwelling in October was $397,613 (up 2.5% Y/Y) and an average condo sold for $235,680 (up 2.1% Y/Y). The average price for a duplex/row house was $326,195 (up 5.2% Y/Y). Median prices for SFDs was $375,000, for condos $222,750 and for duplex/rowhouses, $318,900.

“The first time buyer or young person moving into this market will often choose a condo because of the lower price point,” said Cook. “About 60% of all condo sales are under $250,000 and that represents 17.6% of all residential sales. Condos priced over the average price of a SFD represent only 1.5% of total residential sales.” There were 584 SFDs sold for under $250,000 which is less than 4% of all residential sales.

The average days-on-market was 54, down from 60 days last year. For real estate advice or further explanation of the market conditions, consult a REALTOR®.

Source: Realtors Association of Edmonton

 

Team Leading Edge
Re/Max Elite
Direct: 780-634-8151
Office: 780-406-4000

Video: Edmonton Real Estate Market Update

Thursday, October 31st, 2013

 

To View & Search All MLS Listed Houses for Sale Visit Us At:
www.EdmontonHomesforSale.biz

Serge Bourgoin
Senior Managing Partner
Team Leading Edge
RE/MAX ELITE
780-995-6520

5 Things Homebuyers Should Know, but Don’t

Saturday, October 19th, 2013

house

A house is the biggest asset that the majority of Americans will ever own. But while most of us delude ourselves into thinking that we actually know something about real estate, the truth is that few of us have any idea what we’re talking about.

It’s for this reason that I solicited the advice of several highly respected real estate professionals to help our readers navigate the process of both buying and selling their homes. What follows, in turn, are five things that most homebuyers should know, but don’t.

1. When you buy a home, you’re making two purchases
Of all the advice that I came across, this was probably the most insightful: “When you buy a home, you actually are making two purchases,” Dave Ness of Denver’s Thrive Real Estate Group told me. “You are buying the home, and you are buying the money to buy the home.”

 

It’s tempting for homeowners to think of a mortgage as an incidental expense. But the reality is that the loan itself may be the most significant piece of the transaction.

“For every 1% rise in interest rates, home prices must fall by 10% in order for you to maintain the same monthly mortgage payment,” Ness says. “And at the end of the day, that’s what matters, the monthly payment. So take advantage of low rates; they add much more buying power to your purchase than low prices.”

2. Homes are like people — they all have problems
This was a point multiple real estate professionals that I spoke with made. “All houses have issues,” Hilary Bourassa of Portland’s Oregon First Real Estate told me. “Some just have more than others.”

The shock generally comes when prospective buyers get their inspection reports back. “Inspectors are professional pessimists, which is why we love them,” Bourassa said. “But many issues only require simple and/or inexpensive fixes.”

Along the same lines, Ness analogized the experience to “when someone knocks over the DJ table at a wedding and the music stops.” All of a sudden, the bliss from going under contract goes away.

“Most inspection reports will be 40 to 50 pages long, and most inspectors will take close-up, HD photos of problems,” Ness went on to note. “So while the actual listing shows gorgeous pictures of granite countertops, the inspection report will show awful pictures of a cracked driveway. By the end of the report you’ll be thinking, ‘This house is a total and complete lemon.'”

3. Your real estate agent is a partner, not a salesman
My industry sources were obviously biased on this point, but there’s a lot of truth to what they said.

“Your Realtor should be focused on helping you find a great property, not selling you something,” Bourassa advises. Before settling on one, she urges homebuyers to “interview at least a few in order to find the fight match.”

The flipside of the coin is that you, too, are a partner in the relationship. And that means knowing and respecting the boundaries.

“Sometimes clients forget (particularly first-time buyers) that Realtors have other clients and lives outside of work,” Ness says. The key is to make sure that both parties have a clear understanding of communication expectations.

“What is their normal response time? How much lead time do they need to arrange showings? What medium of communication is best — text, call, email, or something else?” These are the types of questions that Ness encourages homebuyers and real estate agents to settle at the outset.

4. HGTV does not resemble reality
My wife and I love to watch cooking shows. We’ve watched so many, in fact, that we’ve deceived ourselves into believing that we could actually compete on them. Of course, given the opportunity, we would most certainly — and I do mean “most certainly” — crash and burn in the most humiliating fashion.

And the same can be said about the proliferation of “realty” television shows on real estate — think HouseHunters, Flip That House, Holmes on Homes, Property Virgins, and Property Brothers, among others.

“The reality is, hundreds of hours or footage is shot and edited down to a 16-minute show (when you take out the Lowe’s commercials),” Ness pointed out. “Yes, they’re real buyers, but you don’t see the half of it. So don’t think you’re going to waltz into your market and find the perfect house right away, beat out all the other offers, and then walk into the sunset with your significant other. Finding a home can be tough, and take time.”

Ness’ advice? “Gear up for the homebuying process. It’s worth it, but it ain’t Hollywood!”

5. Always think about resale
This final piece is something that all people buying assets should always keep in mind: At some point you’re going to resell it and will want to maximize what you eventually get.

“When you’re buying your home, you’re probably not thinking of the day that you will have to sell it,” Bourassa said, “but you will be thanking yourself one day if you remember three little things … location, location, location!”

The bottom line
Most if not all of us will buy at least one house in our lives. With that in mind, you should save yourself the trouble of making the same mistakes that most of your peers will. Take these five pieces of information into consideration. You’ll be doing yourself a favor if you do.

Source: Wikimedia Commons

The data included on this website is deemed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed to be accurate by the REALTORS® Association of Edmonton. The trademarks REALTOR®, REALTORS® and the REALTOR® logo are controlled by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) and identify real estate professionals who are members of CREA. Used under license.