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101 Series: Selling Your Vancouver Home During the Winter Months- Consult with Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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Selling Your Vancouver Home During the Winter Months

Sweet winter homeMany people take their home off the market by December and leave it off until spring rolls around again. They simply can’t be bothered or figure it’s too much of a hassle to do a deal at this time of year.

This is a common sellers practice, but are you missing out if you do?

Why People Don’t Sell Their Homes in the Winter Months

Let’s face it; winter isn’t the most ideal time to sell a home for a number of reasons. One of the reasons why people don’t want to sell their house because it’s a lot harder to get another suitable home because so many other buyers have also taken their home off the market.

Then there’s the weather that you have to deal with. You might go through all the bother and prep work of getting your home ready for an all-day viewing and have a winter storm pick that time to strike.

You also are likely thinking about the kids if you have school aged children. Taking them out of school and going through the additional hassle of getting them enrolled at another school is one thing. It can also be very disruptive on the little ones who have to familiarize themselves with new teachers and new classmates.

Another reason is the mess. It can get pretty sloppy out there some days with the slush, or the rain and the mud. Even though you can get prospective viewers to take off their wet and muddy shoes, you still have to keep the entrance way or foyer constantly tidied up and mopped.

The final reason why many people don’t like to sell their home is that they are of the common belief that there will also be a lot less viewers for the same reason you don’t have your house up for sale.

Some Good Reasons to Sell your Home Suring the Winter Months

Although there are many reasons not to sell your home in winter, you could be missing out if your happen to be a motivated seller.

Why? Simply put, at any time of the year there are always motivated buyers out there. A motivated buyer is the best kind of potential buyer. If they want to see your house, then they have based the decision to view your home for a lot of good reasons and can be considered serious buyers.

You can avoid having to waste a lot of time with the “looky-loos” who have nothing better to do than look at homes which they have no intention of buying in the first place.

And, to use an old adage, “The early bird gets the worm.” Not only are there motivated buyers out but there are also potential buyers who want to buy a home before the warm weather starts to set in. They want to beat out all their competitors who might snap up their dream home before they even get a chance to put an offer down on the home.

Another reason to leave your home up for sale in winter is that many people who want a home have also developed some anxiety about the future prospects on interest rates. Mortgages have been at bargain-basement rates for so long, any delay could result in the rates rising a few basis points which can add thousands of dollars over the amortization of the mortgage.

Winter does have some disadvantages, but if you are keen to sell your home, keep it listed during the winter months and don’t wait because if you aren’t listed then you won’t sell.

Selling your home? Steer clear of biases like the ‘IKEA effect’

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CHRISTOPHER MYRICK- The Globe and Mail

The following article is from Canadian Real Estate Wealth Magazine.

Vancouver Mortgage bRoker

Couple with house key
(Jupiterimages/Getty Images/Pixland)

In classical economics it’s assumed that humans are self-interested actors who can make rational decisions toward their own goals. No economist would argue that homo economicus, economically rational man, exists in reality; they know that humans are emotional, have biases, act on bad information and make poor decisions. Still, in order to make predictions or policies, efficient-market theories assume that people on the whole will act in rational and predictable ways in order to improve their material well-being.

This view has been challenged by the relatively new field of behavioural economics, which looks at the ways people, both individually and collectively, often have a propensity toward economically irrational behaviour. In many cases, behaviouralists have shown that irrationality is the rule rather than the exception; people are not merely irrational but they are, as Duke University professor Dan Ariely titled his best-selling book, “Predictably Irrational.”

Through lab experiments and market analysis, behavioural economics has produced considerable research into the psychology of pricing, shining a light on common blind-spots and biases that can hamper a sale or lead to costly mistakes. Among their most well-established findings: people have a strong tendency to establish mental prices that don’t reflect market prices, people have deep trouble cutting losses, people will almost always overvalue objects that they own and, especially, the value of their own labour.

A good way to overcome irrationality, enabling you to make better investment decisions, is by being self aware and understanding how common biases arise. Here are some of the most common cognitive traps that afflict homeowners and investors alike.

Loss aversion

Loss aversion is a common psychological barrier that deters sales and prevents people from realizing losses. Research has shown that people are more strongly inclined to avoid losses than they are to seek gains. The emotional “pain” people experience from a loss is mentally greater than the benefit a person feels from an equivalent gain. The concept was demonstrated by Nobel-prize winning economist Daniel Kahneman and his late collaborator Amos Tversky, pioneers in behavioural economics who are often regarded as the discipline’s founders.

In markets, loss aversion can come into play when people are unwilling to sell an asset at a price for less than they paid for it. Distaste for losses means that people will often hold on to an asset – such as property or stocks – even if it seems highly likely that it will depreciate further. This effect is well-established in equities. To compensate for losses in a portfolio, investors will prematurely cash-out gaining stocks to make up for for losses in assets that they continue to hold, hoping that these will eventually break even.

The endowment effect: Overvaluing what you own

Homeowners may be even more susceptible to loss aversion than other property investors due to an emotional attachment to their homes. Research on the Boston condo market by economists David Genesove, of Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Christopher Mayer of the University, of Pennsylvania ‘s Wharton School, found that that homeowners are likely to suffer much sharper losses than investors who own but do not occupy a property… often twice as large.

While there are many reasons why a homeowner would be resistant to sell, such as cash concerns or the work required for a household move, Genesove and Mayer speculated that the psychological pain of selling one’s own home at a loss is greater than that of selling a pure investment property. This is what behavioural economists’ refer to as “the endowment effect.” Essentially, people are strongly inclined to assign a higher value to things that they themselves own than they would to identical items in the market.

“The endowment effect is that when you hold on to something it becomes more valuable to you,” says Dilip Soman, professor of marketing and Corus Chair in Communications Strategy at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. “It accounts for a lot of the gap in [perceived] value between a buyer and seller. If I lived in a house for five years there will be a lot of latent factors about the house that I can articulate – the ease at which a screen door opens – but that a buyer may not appreciate.”

While the endowment effect is a clear problem for homeowners, it can also apply to investors. You will find many real-estate investors who will express love for their own investment properties. Further, people will also develop attachments to non-physical assets like stocks.

“In equities, people are often buying stock in the companies they work for to the exclusion of other companies because they think ‘this is a great company,’ and that’s not a good strategy at all,” says Harvard Business School professor Michael Norton. “You see the same thing in housing, you believe that your house is a great house even though the foundation is crumbling and you will invest more money to fix your home rather than sell it and move to a new house.”

Putting good money into a property that would be better off sold exemplifies how the endowment effect can result in bad investment decisions. It also demonstrates the difficulty people have in recognizing or accepting “sunk costs,” or expenses that have already been incurred and are unrecoverable.

The principal of sunk costs is well established and featured prominently in financing and accounting courses well before the psychological basis for it was explored. Large enterprises and individual consumers both fall victim to it by pouring money into unrecoverable investments and compounding losses. It is known as the “Concorde effect” after the money-losing supersonic plane which was completed in spite of financial overruns and a known inability for cost recovery. It is also known as the fallacy of the “money pit,” a term that became the title of a 1980’s Tom Hanks comedy about a couple who kept sinking costs into home repairs.

“Sweat equity” and the IKEA effect: A downside to DIY

Most homes aren’t “money pits,” and investing in a property through renovations is usually a proven route to building value. However, investing in renovations can also increase the endowment effect and distort a homeowner’s or investor’s ability to valuate a property. A Harvard Business School (HBS) paper by Norton, Duke’s Ariely and Daniel Mochon of Yale, describes what they have dubbed “the IKEA effect”: people have a strong tendency to overvalue things on which they have contributed labour, whether it be flat-packed IKEA furniture, origami or a home.

“We asked novices to fold origami, and gave other people origami that we had made by origami experts,” says Norton, briefly describing one of their experiments. “Even though the origami made by experts looked really beautiful and was objectively better, we found that people would pay just as much for their own lousy creations as they would have paid for those made by experts. And, they thought that other people would also pay a lot for theirs, as well. It’s not just that we value things that we make more than we should, but we also think that everyone else thinks they are beautiful.”

For investors, one takeaway from this is to remember that while home renovations can increase value, they may not increase it by as much as the person renovating the property may imagine. Homeowners or investors who take a hands-on, do-it-yourself, approach to renovations, may especially have a propensity to overvalue their contributions.

“From our experiments, we see that the harder it is to make something or finish a product, the more you will overvalue it. The more ‘sweat equity’ you put into something, not only the more will you value it but you also think that for some reason other people will like it,” says Norton. “Why anyone would care how much you sweat over the product is unclear, but we believe that somehow a person will overvalue something because of the amount of labour we have put into it.”

Valuing a job done poorly; discounting one done well

This leads to a further oddity is that the more amateur a person’s efforts – the longer it takes them to finish a job – the more likely they are to overestimate the value their work compared to a skilled professional. “When people get very good at making something they will value it less highly, not because the thing is any worse – and in fact it’s probably better because they’re become better at making it – but because they haven’t put as much labour into it, they therefore think other people won’t value it as highly,” Norton notes.

While behavourial economics can measure how people’s labour results in an exaggerated sense of valuation, Norton notes that people also overestimate their own good taste. This is conventional wisdom and successful realtors, home stagers and investors will all note that properties should be “depersonalized” before a sale (that a fuchsia kitchen, for example, would look better in a neutral colour). Norton advises that sprucing up a property before attempting a sale can enhance market value, but putting work into personalization may distort a seller’s valuation.

“When people put effort in themselves, when they are out there and slaving over landscaping, they believe that it will provide value for a buyer. They believe that the more of their own work they put into sprucing it up, the more the buyer will value the house,” he says. “That doesn’t make much sense: if the buyer likes the house, the buyer likes the house and, if anything, if you’re making it idiosyncratically match your preferences, you are making it less likely to be valued by a buyer who will have to come in a repaint all the walls because you’ve painted them a horrible colour.”

Anchoring: Mental prices aren’t market prices

Few people go into a marketplace blind with no sense of the price of goods or services, especially for large purchases such as property. People establish reference prices, or anchors, on which to base their buying or selling decisions. At its most basic, this means looking at the market and establishing reference prices based upon actual conditions. But because people also develop their own anchors based upon personal experiences or on completely irrelevant information.

“Conventional economic theories say that people know how to value objects and services, but one of the big findings of behavioural economics is that that is the furthest thing from the truth,” says Rotman’s Soman. “What people do is look at the market price, they anchor on that and then they adjust, but when there’s no clear market price, people will tend to anchor on absolutely irrelevant things and start adjusting.”

People will base anchors upon their personal tastes and experience – such as setting a price based upon the endowment effect or the amount of “sweat equity” employed in renovations – and on information that strikes them as being of key importance (such as purchase price or peak-market high). After these personal reference points are established, people will not easily abandon them for new anchors based on current market information.

“Reference prices are quite important for both buyers and sellers. What people paid for their home is their reference for their minimum selling price, but a potential buyer could not care less about that price,” says Norton. “Especially in a downmarket, using reference points is problematic because sellers will feel they are being cheated.”

Sellers aren’t the only ones who make costly mistakes, and irrelevant anchoring can lead people to make poor decisions on the buying side. “In Toronto we have people moving in from different parts of the country or different parts of the world, and they will bring in their own anchors. Moving from New York City, these anchors are set higher than Toronto,” says Rotman’s Somon. “People who move from ‘point A’ to ‘point B’ tend to use the anchors that they have established in their home towns which could lead them to either underbid or overbid.”

This tendency was measured by Wharton’s Uri Simonshon and Carnegie Mellon University’s George Loewenstein. Using data from 928 movers and their rental choices, they found that renters coming from more expensive cities will initially rent units in their new cities at rates that are above market prices. They will subsequently move to lower-rent units as they establish a new “framing” for what fair prices should be.

Investors should also be aware that also likely have similar biases when looking at properties that are outside their familiar home markets. While a three-bedroom condo in Detroit may seem cheap when viewed by an investor from Vancouver, property and rental prices are driven by local market conditions. Without a local framing reference, gained through experience or research, an investor may be more likely to make a bad purchase decision or miss out on a great deal.

Fooled by numbers

Another problem for buyers is an inability to conceptualize the significance of numbers as scale increases. If one candy bar costs $1 and another costs $2, all things being equal a person will buy the $1 bar and possibly be outraged at the markup. If a television costs $500 but the same model can be bought 10 kilometres away for $400, most people will make the drive… but they won’t likely feel the same grievance about the $100 markup as they would about the $1 one.

As numbers grow, people will lose their initiative to seek bargains. If a furniture set costs $5,300 at a nearby outlet and $5,200 at an outlet 10 km away, people will be much less inclined to make the drive, even though the savings is the same as they would receive for the television. People will not put in the same amount of effort to save the same amount of money.

For big-purchases like housing, blindness to the meaning of numbers becomes magnified. “If you were buying homes and one home is $1-million on a home and another one is $1,010,000 it feels as though that were exactly the same price,” says Harvard’s Norton. “When numbers get so large, people become very insensitive to changes. They will go with their gut and think ‘we are already spending hundreds of thousands of dollars so what’s another $10,000?’”

The way the human mind processes large numbers has other unexpected effects. One example comes from a study on home offer pricing by University of Florida professor Chris Janiszewski and research assistant Dan Uy. Looking at five years of data, they found that sellers who set relatively precise listing prices, ending in $100 or $1,000 increments, had closed sales at amounts that were closer to their initial offers than sellers who set less-precise initial asking prices, ending in increments of $10,000 or $100,000. By establishing more precise anchors through their offer prices, sellers were able to secure a higher floor on price negotiations.

Pulling up anchors: The importance of refreshing your views

While investors may have a better sense of market prices than homeowners, it doesn’t necessarily mean that the most experienced participants will automatically have a clearer idea of market pricing. Because price anchors tend to be reinforced over time, a long-active investor may develop entrenched views, especially if they were established over a period where there has been market stability or a consistent trend. A new participant may take a fresh view and set reference points based on current conditions.

“If I have been a buyer who has been bidding on houses for the past two years, I will have my established anchors and I may stick to those old anchors,” said Rotman’s Soman. “But if I am a first-time buyer or someone who someone has just started looking after seven years, I will have to start working with the current data as opposed to my historic beliefs, and I will be establishing my anchors.”

Market booms and busts

Behavioural economists have been eroding the long dominance of “efficient market” theorists for several decades, and at an accelerated pace since the 2008 financial crisis when financial models seemed to fail tragically. But in spite of the insights it offers on human behaviour, it does not make predictions that can help us forecast booms, busts or the long-term price direction for real estate markets.

Nevertheless, by expanding our knowledge of human behaviour and enlightening us to our own biases, it may help us be more rational market participants and bring us one step closer to becoming homo economicus.

“At the end of the day, the way you frame a purchase decision can change t he way you will value a property: if you frame as an investment as opposed to framing it as a home. The moment you frame something as an investment, you become closer to thinking about the property the same way an average Joe will think of it,” says Rotman’s Soman.

From Canadian Real Estate Wealth Magazinea monthly publication focused on building value through property investment, covering topics such as values and trends, mortgages, investment strategies, surveys of regional markets and general tips for buyers and sellers.

Myths About Selling a Home – Ask Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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Myths About Selling a Home

real-estate-olympia---mythsWhen it comes to selling a home, there are many commonly held beliefs that some things work better than others. This is of course true, but there are also many home selling myths which can actually impair your ability to sell a home faster or make more money from it.

Here are some of the more popularly held myths that should be on guard against when it comes to selling your Vancouver Home.

1. Buyers Want a Fixer-Upper

Some people who are selling home may not want to bother with investing some money for repairs or renovations before they put the home up for sale. They may be of the belief that there are plenty of DIY folk out there who are looking for a bargain and would like to do the repairs or renovations to fix up the home their way.

The truth is that most buyers really don’t want a “work-in-progress” and don’t want to the unnecessary time and expense to have to bring the home up to speed. And, if you were planning to sell a home in disrepair at a market value similar to other homes being sold in your neighbourhood then think again. If you do get an offer, the prospective buyer is going to want a chunk of change deducted from the asking price so they can pay for those repairs or rennovations.

2.  It’s Better if you Show the Home Yourself

Another myth is the common belief that a prospective buyer would be more comfortable having you, the owner, show them the house.

This is not the case as most prospective buyers are actually uncomfortable when the owner shows the home. They find it distracting and prefer to have an agent show them through the house. There is also the issue of trust. A prospective buyer may be less convinced that you are being entirely honest about disclosing any detracting issues they should be made aware and are more confident about disclosure when being shown a home by a realtor.

3. Buyers Expect a Counter-Offer and Negotiation

Many people who sell their home are often of the belief that any offer made by a buyer will be expecting a counter-offer. This is actually a myth as most buyers don’t really allow a lot of room when it comes to a counter-offer. Your selling strategy can also be very dependent on whether the market is either a “buyers” or a “sellers” market. You might be well advised to discuss your sales approach with the realtor and what they advise about negotiating.

4. Pricing your Home at A Higher Price Will Earn you More Money

Another popular myth out there is that if you advertise your home at a higher asking price than it was appraised you stand to make more money from the negotiation process. This is also untrue as most likely you will simply fail to sell your home quickly. Buyers are not naïve and they are also likely using savvy realtors who know what homes are going for in your neighbourhood.

Most people won’t bother to look at an overpriced home and if they do make an offer, you are likely only going to get offered market value in any event.

Home Series: Will Baking Cookies Sell Your Home Faster? – Consult with Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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Will Baking Cookies Sell Your Home Faster?

Will Baking Cookies Sell Your Home FasterWill Baking Cookies Sell Your Home FasterThere is a common belief out there that if you’re trying to sell your Vancouver home faster you should bake some homemade cookies beforehand. The idea is that the scent of homemade cookies harkens our memories back to when we were children and the scent of freshly oven baked cookies reminds us of the home in which we were raised.

The question is whether there is any validity to the commonly held belief. Well, as you can guess – when it comes to marketing, they study and test everything and this includes this common urban myth about whether the smell of fresh baked cookies will entice a buyer into the right mindset.

So, is there any truth to this common held belief?

Baking Cookies Will Not Sell Your Home Faster

That’s right, baking cookies before you open up the home to buyers will not sell your home any faster. The new research shows that if anything, baking cookies not only doesn’t sell your home more quickly, it may even have the reverse effect.

That might sound odd but it seems that cookie baking may even be more of a distraction than a help when it comes to selling your home. In a recent WashingtonStateUniversity report, the smell of baking cookies is considered to a “complex scent.”

A complex scent actually distracts people who are trying to critically examine your home because they wonder what comprises the scent. They spend time trying to identify what type of cookie was baked.

And, if you’re thinking that putting out a tray of baked cookies will help when you are showing your home and will entice viewers into a positive mindset then you can also throw that idea out the window as well. Most people who followed the realtor’s advise and put out a tray of cookies for prospective viewers most often ended up with an untouched tray of cookies at the end of the day.

Also, it was discovered that the smell of baked cookies may even make some prospective buyers suspicious that you using the smell of fresh baked cookies to mask some other underlying scent.

What Scents Are the Best When it Comes to Selling a Home?

Researchers discovered that there are simple scents which are more pervasive and enticing to prospective buyers.

Many prospective buyers imply want the house to smell clean. However, there are also a several simpler scents that are less distracting and actually may entice a more positive buying prospective for some potential home buyers.

The most appealing scents were found to be lemon, orange, green tea, basil, cedar, pine, and vanilla.

Researchers also found that you should also be careful with using too much potpourri as this is also considered a complex smell and may be to strong for those who are actually allergic too strong smelling scents.

The bottom line when it comes to selling your home is to forget about baking cookies and focus more on giving your home that clean smell instead. And, as a bonus, you won’t have to do all that extra cleaning up afterwards.

Think living in suburbia’s cheaper? Think again – Consult with Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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ROB CARRICK – The Globe and Mail

Home for sale (Andy Dean/Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Home for sale
(Andy Dean/Getty Images/iStockphoto)

There’s no refuge in the suburbs from Canada’s housing affordability problem.

You can buy a house for less money in the suburbs than you can in a big city, but the cost of commuting may kill almost all your savings. Some number-crunching by a public-spirited mortgage broker in the Toronto area makes this point quite clearly.

David Hughes, with the Mortgage Group Ontario Inc., divides his clients into a couple of groups with respect to attitudes toward living in suburbia: One group wants to live in the suburbs and is fine with the idea of commuting, and then there are those who want to live downtown, but can’t afford the prices. “They either buy a fixer-upper, or they run screaming to the suburbs and living with the two cars.”

Now, he finds people talking more about the cost of two working parents commuting by car every day. He explains this shift as being a result of the bigger mortgages people are taking on, and the considerable cost of buying and owning a car. “Gas at $1.30 a litre will do that to you,” he said.

No question, you’ll find house prices are cheaper outside big cities. Toronto Real Estate Board numbers suggest a spread of almost $250,000 between city homes and those in the neighbouring suburbs. But as shown in a spreadsheet created by Mr. Hughes, suburban living loses its cost advantage if you have two adults commuting by car each day. Add the effect of stress and time spent in gridlock, and suburbia looks even more costly.

Mr. Hughes uses some contentious assumptions, but his spreadsheet is a great conversation starter and a must-read for home buyers who are searching for affordability in the suburbs.

Imagine you’re part of a couple that has $50,000 for a down payment and must decide between a $500,000 house in the suburbs and a $720,000 house downtown. The suburban lifestyle comes with two cars in this example; the city dwellers get by with public transportation, taxis and car sharing or rentals. To keep things simple, we’ll assume here that your mortgage rate will be a constant 3.5 per cent and that you’ll take 25 years to pay it down.

Suburban living costs less in this example, but by only $63 per month if you add mortgage and transportation costs. And that’s with some conservative estimates by Mr. Hughes on car costs.

Using the 2013 edition of the Canadian Automobile Association’s Driving Costs publication (pdf) as a guide, he set the annual cost of commuting at $9,500 a vehicle, or $19,000 for a pair. Included in these costs are variable factors such as fuel and maintenance, and fixed expenses such as insurance, licence and registration, depreciation and financing.

Your actual car ownership costs could be lower if you drive a reliable older vehicle that has been paid off. But you may well pay more. Mr. Hughes’s CAA numbers were based on owning two Honda Civics – many families are driving at least one fancier vehicle. The estimated total number of kilometres driven each year was in the low 20,000 range – you could easily drive further in a year if you have a long commute.

The downtown household pays $6,000 annually for a pair of monthly transit passes and occasional use of taxis, car rentals or car sharing. Maybe it’s not realistic to believe a family with kids can live downtown and not own a car. But while owning a car for periodic use makes city living more expensive, it doesn’t do a thing to mitigate the high cost of commuting from the suburbs.

The case for cheaper suburban houses is undermined most when you take a long view that factors in your transportation needs both before and after your mortgage is paid off. Mr. Hughes figured on the suburban household moving to just one car after the mortgage is done, while the downtowners stay car-less.

Let’s add up what happens over 40 years – 25 with a mortgage and 15 afterward. The suburban household pays a total of $1.3-million on mortgage principal and interest and transportation. The downtown household pays just a little bit less – $33,865, to exact.

If you plan to live outside the city where you work, commuting costs must be part of your housing affordability analysis. Mr. Hughes said he delicately makes this point to clients that come in with thoughts of suburban living. “I don’t want to see anyone impoverished by their choice.”

Follow me on Twitter: @rcarrick

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Guarding Against Vancouver Real Estate Scams  

Vancouver Mortgage BrokerInvestment scams come in all shapes and sizes. It’s a sad reflection on our society that we can no longer rely on the simple handshake to seal a deal. Even a signed written contract can be rife with sneaky “small print” that can bleed us financially dry.

Every investment of our hard earned money has to be approached with performing some form of “due diligence.” It is always wise to be use common sense and take the time to do some research. This also applies to the realm of real estate where you can also encounter scamsters and con artists.

Let’s take a look at some of the more common scams involving real estate in more detail.

Property Title Fraud Scam

These types of scams are a lot less common now than they use to be but you still have to be on guard against them. It occurs mainly with a home whose mortgage has been paid off as the scam is easier to perpetuate in those instances. Essentially, the con artist uses faked documents which they register when transferring the sale of property.

When the mortgage goes through, the scam artist can grab the mortgage money and leave you holding the bag and the deed to a property which you don’t own.

You can avoid this scam by using a real estate lawyer and especially protect your interests and investment by buying “Title Insurance.” This type of insurance also protects you from unexpected liens or where encroachment becomes a litigious issue.

Home Foreclosure Scams

This is a scam to be careful about if you find yourself in a cash crunch and might be facing foreclosure on your home by the lender. You might be approached by a supposed lender who offers you the opportunity to consolidate your loans if you transfer the property title to them and pay them some upfront fees.

The con artist will take the money you pay in upfront fees and then neglect to pay off the bills. Then, since they have the property title, they will renew the mortgage, take the money and leave you with the debt.

Scams Involving Property Investment Seminars

Always be wary of those info commercials and online advertisements about how you make tons of money investing in real estate. Although some of these seminars advertised are run by genuine financial advisors, some as not above board and are run by unscrupulous entrepreneurs who are more interested in separating you from you money.

 As it is difficult to differentiate between which ones are legitimate and which ones are less so, you should do some serious research before you pay to take these courses.

In some instances, the less legitimate seminars will try to get you to invest more money by promising some “sure to make you some big money” investment. Always remember the old adage that “if it sounds too good to be true – it probably isn’t.”

Cons Involving Home Improvement Projects

Far too many people fall victim to unscrupulous contractors or those purporting to be a contractor. Beware of any so-called contactor who comes knocking on your door and tells you that they can re-do your roof or pave your driveway on the cheap because they have some left –over materials.

These scam artists will always want to get some money up-front. However you make the up-front payment it is likely you will never see these guys again. Sometime, they may even make pretence of starting a job so they can collect that extra payment. Then, they disappear leaving you with a bigger mess. You will have to contact a legitimate contractor and pay additional money to complete the project.

Always research a potential contractor to ensure that that they are not only legitimate but that they have a solid reputation.

With anything involving real estate, your home or property investments, just remember that you should always be cautious and perform research before you invest.

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Open, Closed and Convertible Mortgage Basics

Vancouver Mortgage BrokerChoosing the right type of mortgage for your particular circumstances can be daunting. Asides from choosing between a fixed versus a variable mortgage you also have to decide on the length of the term and the amortization period for your mortgage. Every decision you make can mean the difference of thousands of dollars over the life of the mortgage.

If that wasn’t a tough enough decision to make, you also have to decide between an “Open” mortgage, a “Closed” or “Convertible” mortgage which is the focus of this article. What’s the difference and how do you decide which is the best choice?

What is an Open Mortgage?

An open mortgage is simply a mortgage which can be repaid either partially or in full during the term of the mortgage. The additional amounts you re-pay can be done so without pre-payment costs.

Such pre-payment features allow you to significantly reduce the mortgage principal. Open mortgages may also allow the additional flexibility of changing your term and without having to pay an additional fee.

These are usually the most suitable types of mortgages for those who plan to pay off their mortgage fairly early, or as soon as possible. The one drawback is that interest rates tend to slightly higher for these types of mortgages.

What is a Closed Mortgage?

For those of you who are don’t foresee your paying off the mortgage in near future then a closed mortgage might be a better option. Generally, these types of mortgages allow you to get a lower interest rate over the life of the term or mortgage.

The biggest disadvantage is that you want to renegotiate the interest rate, or make an additional prepayment, or to pay off the remaining mortgage balance, you will have to pay additional fees which can vary from lender to lender.

Most lenders allow you make a prepayment up to a percentage amount which may be as high as 20% of the value of the original mortgage.

What is a Convertible Mortgage?

A convertible mortgage is very similar to a closed mortgage. However, like the name implies, it also gives you the additional feature of converting an open mortgage to a much longer closed mortgage without having to make any prepayment fees.

Additionally you will still to able to make additional prepayment fees but the overall percentage amount may not be as high as a closed mortgage. You could be restricted to a percentage as high as 10% as of the original mortgage amount.

Which Type of Mortgage is Best?

It really depends on you current circumstances versus what you anticipate on doing over both the short term or long term. It can also very much depend on whether you choose between a fixed term or a variable term.

For most people who don’t anticipate paying off the home sooner or making really large prepayments, and who prefer a lower rate of interest, you might be more comfortable with a closed mortgage.

If you’re not certain which way to go, then you might be best advised to discuss your options with a mortgage specialist such as myself so I give you a better idea of the pros and cons as it relates not only to your situation but also for different lenders.

Vancouver Home Renovations That Don’t Pay – Consult with Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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Vancouver Home Renovations That Don’t Pay

Vancouver Mortgage BrokerAsides from everyday normal maintenance that you have to perform on your Vancouver home, some folks like to go the extra distance. Major home renovation projects are usually made with the idea of increasing the property value and making the home more attractive to a prospective buyer.

Indeed, some home renovation projects can give you a great return on your investment. Re-doing and upgrading the bathrooms or kitchen are two the more profitable types of renovations you can perform. Also, adding additional space which is functional such as a family room can also help recover a considerable portion of your cash outlay for these projects.

However, there are also projects which you should seriously avoid especially if you are planning to use these projects to sell your home. Otherwise, they may be okay if you just moved into the home and plan to stay there for awhile.

Here are top home renovation projects you should avoid if you are planning to sell you home.

Don’t add a Swimming Pool

A swimming pool is great to have for the long term, but if adding one in the expectation that it will help to sell your home faster or add value to the home this could be a big mistake. Not only is a pool very expensive to install, it really doesn’t add a lot of value to your home and can actually detract a prospective buyer. A swimming pool also comes with expensive maintenance costs, potential liability issues and can be a turn off to couples who have young children.

Don’t Make the Neighbourhood Look Bad

You might think that your expensive project will “wow” prospective buyers by making it stand out from the surrounding homes. However, a project such as adding on a second story or some major remodelling to the exterior might stick out too much.

Sure, you can sell advertise the home for an additional $100,000 above the going price in the neighbourhood, but people who want to spend that type of money will generally stick to neighbourhood where homes sell in that price range throughout that enighborhood.

You can spend that $100,000 to improve your home but if you think you’re going to easily recoup that money, then you might be in for a sobering surprise.

Avoid Excessive Landscaping

Some people go overboard with landscaping projects which is fine if you plan to live in your home for a long period of time. However, you have to keep in mind that everyone has different tastes. A buyer may love you house but hate the yard and have something completely different in mind for their space. Also, extensive landscaping also requires maintenance which a prospective buyer may not wish to undertake.

Landscaping really doesn’t add a lot of value to a property. If you need to perform some landscaping to improve the appearance of your property keep it very basic and conservative.

Avoid Partial High-End Upgrades

Take a critical look at your home when you are considering upgrades. Rather than put all your renovation expenses into a single project, consider trying to spread the money about the home on smaller projects.

The reason is that if you put all your renovation money into a single project, and the rest of the home of the home is still stuck in a 1975 design, then that single high end project is going to stick out like a “sore thumb” and make the home look like a work in progress.

A prospective buyer is going to think it’s going to cost them a lot of cash to make the home look consistent throughout. So, ditch the shag carpets, get rid of the old linoleum, add some new fixtures instead and you can achieve a lot more to enhance the overall value.

Canada’s Top 100 investor neighbourhoods revealed – Ask Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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By Grainne Burns

Vancouver Mortgage BrokerFor brokers looking to encourage their property-investor clients into the marketplace, this may be the tool you need.

Rocky Mountain House. Brossard South. Doon. These place-names may mean little to investors now, but they have just been listed in the coveted Top 100 Neighbourhoods to invest. They — and the rest of the list — could help brokers steer their investor clients in the right direction and deepen their roles as advisors in a confusing market.

Investors should seek local expertise to navigate the mortgage funding process. Familiarity with the real estate and mortgage financing markets is the key to a sound investment strategy in these markets,” says John Kelly, COO of Verico Financial Group.

“This is particularly true in towns with a smaller and less diverse economy, employment base, and rental market. A mortgage specialist with access to both national and local lenders as well as traditional and private financing sources is often essential to make the investment proceed, and make the investment perform,” Kelly adds.

Kelly was speaking at the launch of the Top 100 Neighbourhoods to Invest, a comprehensive guide that analyzes the top micro markets that are set to lead the country in growth.

Such exclusive data as evaluation data as media price, cash flow projections, local economic barometers, cap rate and vacancy rate are included in neighbourhood evaluation.

The guide was produced by Canadian Real Estate Wealth Magazine, with the support of RE/MAX andVerico Financial Services. “It is a massive undertaking and this year is no exception,” says Canadian Real Estate Wealth Editor Nila Sweeney. “But with so much change in the market, we felt that it was absolutely imperative we arm CREW readers with up-to-date neighbourhood-specific information.”

Details of the special guide, which is on newsstands today, will be presented live at the upcoming Canadian Real Estate Wealth Investor Forum Vancouver this weekend, October 5 and 6, at the Vancouver Convention Centre.

U.S. and Canada are altering the way housing finance works so taxpayers aren’t stuck bearing the brunt of risks – Consult with Bruce Coleman, Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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Canada and the United States are both contemplating changes to the way we finance housing

Vancouver Mortgage BrokerLast Wednesday Scotiabank sold the first Canadian bonds backed by consumer lines of credit in 12 years. The highly rated issue sold at market, according to a Bloomberg report, at an impressive 78 basis points over similar-term Canadian government bonds.

Critics may worry that such events signal a continuing explosion in household debt and a return of the boom and bust “wild West,” U.S.-style marketplace.

But there is another way to see it. The bonds’ risks will be borne by the issuer and investors, not unwilling and unknowing taxpayers, who back most of the mortgage risk in Canadian and U.S. housing markets.

And change is afoot in the North American housing finance system. The U.S. and Canada are market-testing new ideas, while more of them bubble through the heads of policymakers and legislators.

In the U.S., the Obama administration had swept into office amid a housing-triggered financial market crisis. Other than defending the ubiquitous and dubious middle-class “right” to home ownership and a 30-year mortgage, the administration has until recently mostly been wishing the issue away.

More activity in Congress. The most aggressive house bill, the “PATH” act championed by Jeb Hensarling, would attack head-on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled, taxpayer-backed mortgage insurers and securitizers. The agencies would be gone in five years – too long for some. A good idea, but unlikely to survive aggressive lobbying by U.S. homebuilders and mortgage originators and brokers, or to make it through the Democrat-controlled Senate, or to survive administration foot-dragging.

More narrowly focused, and aimed at smoothing the house-price rollercoaster, is a proposal from Bill Foster. The personable Representative Foster is one of those engaging gems the congressional system occasionally produces. Having cofounded as a teen an extraordinarily successful lighting controls company, and having spent a career as a particle physicist at Fermilab, Foster recently turned his understanding of control theory to politics and housing finance.

With the moral and intellectual backing of Roger Myerson, the University of Chicago Nobellist (mechanism design theory), Foster would tie maximum mortgage loan-to-value ratios, or minimum downpayments, to regional house price trends. The faster prices trend up, the higher the minimum downpayment.

The Holy Grail of housing finance – a market without taxpayer risk

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This control mechanism is simple, and markets would always trend towards their natural equilibria, with lower peaks and shallower valleys. But it also would slow market responses to price signals. If bristling resource prices are driving demand for people and skills in North Dakota – or northern Alberta – why would we want to make it harder for people to move there?

Gaining bipartisan traction is the Senate’s Corker-Warner bill, for which the Obama administration kind of, sort of, has announced its backing. Corker-Warner also would fold up Fan and Fred, and replace them with another federal agency that reinsured marketable, mortgage-backed securities.

The twist is that the new securities would be 90% backed by the new federal insurer. The issuers would sell a risk-bearing 10% first-loss tranche in the private securities market. So rather than the federal agency fully guaranteeing timely payment of interest and principal, some securities buyers would take a hit if the underlying mortgage assets sank underwater.

Corker-Warner hardly removes the taxpayer from the risky mortgage market but it does hold the possibility of some risk landing with investors. That is better than having taxpayers bear the first risk and all the rest, as they now do in the U.S., and as is mostly the case in Canada.

These moves have sparked market and institutional responses. Perhaps owing to existential threat, Freddie Mac recently brought to market securities with just those characteristics, but bearing lower first-loss provisions, which the market was willing to bear at low interest rate spreads over U.S. Treasuries. Fannie Mae last week launched its roadshow for a similar product.

These are steps on the way to what market-watchers call the Holy Grail of housing finance – a residential mortgage-backed securities market that contains little or no taxpayer risk exposure.

Canada seeks the same grail – neither is there here a true private RMBS market. Finance minister Jim Flaherty has taken some steps towards it, by limiting the growth of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s insurance book, encouraging the growth of a covered bond market, and barring new insured mortgages from covered bond pools or from backing securities other than those issued through CMHC.

The question of the day is whether a private market for taxpayer-lite RMBS soon can sprout in the U.S., or in Canada.

That brings us back to the Scotiabank bond issue. Scotia’s bonds sold at the low spreads they they did because buyers are protected from the first 17% of potential losses, enough to weather a significant market hit. That is a far cry from exposing buyers to the first 10% of losses, to be sure, but there is a world of difference between this arrangement and traditional CMHC-backed structures, whereby taxpayers, not securities investors, are exposed to 100% of potential losses.

Taken together, these are positive signs, and a message. Capital markets will work, if we let them. Political markets work too. We need not fear for their ability, eventually, to produce change.

Finn Poschmann is vice president, research, at the C.D. Howe Institute in Toronto.


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