5 bedrooms / 4.5 bathrooms, 4 bedrooms upstairs / 1 downstairs, Beautiful floor plan, very spacious and open high ceilings throughout with stained crown molding, Bright entry with 3 skylights, Living room with fireplace, Formal dining room
Remodeled home, 1 block east Beverly Glen, 1 block north Olympic. Granite kitchen with 6 burner viking stove, spacious master suite, opening out to backyard through french doors. Master bath with huge shower, mosaic tile and frosted glass. Junior suite with 3/4 bath has own deck. Formal living room with fireplace. Open formal dining/family room. Wood floors, Extra Storage, flagstone patio, new backyard landscaping.
Stunning ultra bright front corner unit. Above quiet single family residential neighborhood. Spacious Kitchen with breakfast area. Large open Living room with fireplace. Wrap around terrace. Separate bedroom suites. Lots of windows, extra storage.
$659,000
Contact Realtor Bruce D. Stuart
(310) 403 -7439; (888) 777-7WEB
blindo@blindo.org
OR
Rada Roberts
radaroberts@coldwellbanker.com
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Contemporary and large for the money, ground floor has 2 car garage entering into a large recreation room with fireplace, bonus room and bath. It’s almost like a guest quarters with spiral stairs leading to upper, main floor. Where we find four bedrooms, 2 baths, living room also with fireplace, adjoining dining room area, kitchen and long center hallway out to back patio.
$1,250,000
Contact Realtor Bruce D. Stuart
(310) 403-7439; (888) 777-7WEB
blindo@blindo.org
OR
Nourmand and Associates Realtors
Peter Fleming
(310) 454 - 1373
peterfleming@earthlink.net
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$859,000Vintage Spanish Cottage filled with sunlight and charm. Beautiful hardwood floors. French doors open to sun drenched patio. Small grassy front and back yards and garden. Bright, immaculate, and ready to move right in. Prime Santa Monica neighborhood.
See video of our listing at 524 15th Street, Santa Monica, Ca.
House is two blocks north of Montana, has 6 bedrooms and four baths, is 3600 sq feet on a 7500 sq foot lot. Built in 1992. On quiet street yet walking distance from Montana commercial district.
Mortgage rates around the country fell this week, with rates on 30-year mortgages sinking to their lowest level in 10 months.
Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported Wednesday that 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.18 percent for the week ending Nov. 22. That’s down from 6.24 percent last week and was the lowest rate since the week ending Jan. 26, when 30-year mortgage rates averaged 6.12 percent.
It marked the second week in a row that mortgage rates dropped, a development that economists attributed to easing inflation pressures. Inflation is calming down amid stabilizing energy prices, slower overall economic activity and the housing slump.
“Slower growth usually means less inflation and less inflation means lower interest rates. Hence, the drop in mortgage rates this week,” said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac’s chief economist.
After five years of booming activity, the housing market has lost its sizzle this year. Sales have fallen, home builders have cut back on construction and home prices have lost considerable altitude, falling in some markets or rising more slowly in others.
The housing slump was the major culprit behind the slower economic growth rate that was logged in the late summer.
All categories of mortgage rates surveyed by Freddie Mac showed declines this week — offering some welcome news to those wanting to buy a home.
Rates on 15-year, fixed-rate mortgages, a popular choice for refinancing, averaged 5.91 percent. That’s lower than last week’s rate of 5.94 percent.
For one-year adjustable rate mortgages, rates fell to 5.49 percent, compared with 5.53 percent last week.
Five-year adjustable rate mortgages dropped to 5.99 percent this week, from 6.04 percent last week.
The mortgage rates do not include add-on fees known as points. Thirty-year and 15-year mortgages each carried a nationwide average fee of 0.5 point. One-year and five-year ARMs each carried a fee of 0.6 point.
A year ago, 30-year mortgages averaged 6.28 percent. Fifteen-year mortgages stood at 5.81 percent, one-year ARMs were at 5.14 percent and five-year ARMs averaged 5.75 percent.
Debbie Sforza sold a Palm City lakefront home in only two months.The 2,200-square-foot structure with three bedrooms, two baths and two-car garage showed well and, at $475,000, was priced right, said Sforza, a broker’s associate at Realty Executives in Palm City.
Still other South Florida homes are sitting on the market anywhere from six months to a year.”If it’s overpriced, it’s going to be on the market for a long time,” she said.
“For Sale” signs sit on front yards everywhere but aren’t as effective as professionals who can offer aggressive pricing information to get buyers in the door, said Will Rosselle, a broker at Rosselle Real Estate Group in Port St. Lucie.
The number of homes for sale has tripled, even quadrupled, since last year, according to Rosselle, who is primarily seeing buyers from more pricey points south.
The 2004 and 2005 hurricanes, along with rising property taxes and insurance, also have been causing South Floridians to move to areas such as the Carolinas, according to area Realtors.
But the supply vs. demand situation is part of a nationwide cycle that will change, they say.
Glenn Sudnick attributes the current bent on the supply side, in part, to a lack of “flippers,” or investors who purchase properties to profit on them in a short amount of time.
The current real estate market is “normal — one where people are purchasing homes because they want to live in them,” said Sudnick, the broker and owner of Palm Beach Florida Properties and chief administrator of the Palm Beach School of Real Estate, both in Juno Beach.
John Reichard, owner and president of Southwind Construction and Homes in West Palm Beach, builds new homes from Boynton Beach to Port St. Lucie, where he has a model along Southwest Mercedes Avenue selling for between $285,000 and $325,0000.
To move the properties, he has increased broker commissions and tried making upgrades such as granite countertops and paver driveways standard. Still, he said, he’s seeing home prices in general fall somewhere between 12 percent and 18 percent.
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U.S. mortgage applications fell for the first time in three weeks despite a dip in mortgage rates to their lowest level since January, an industry trade group said Wednesday.The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and purchasing loans, for the week ended Nov. 17 decreased 3.7 percent to 623.6 from the previous week’s 647.5.
Borrowing costs on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, excluding fees, averaged 6.13 percent, down 0.02 percentage point from the previous week and well below a four-year high of 6.86 percent touched in June.
Interest rates were also below year-ago levels of 6.26 percent.
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was at its lowest level since the week ended Jan. 20 when it reached 6.04 percent.
The MBA’s seasonally adjusted purchase index, widely considered a timely gauge of U.S. home sales, fell 2.8 percent to 401.4. The index was substantially below its year-ago level of 472.3.
The group’s seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications decreased 4.3 percent to 1,935.3. A year earlier, the index stood at 1,584.1.
The refinance share of applications increased to 48.6 from 48 percent the previous week, remaining at its highest level since February 2005, the MBA said.
Fixed 15-year mortgage rates averaged 5.88 percent, up from 5.85. Rates on one-year adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) increased to 5.88 from 5.87 percent.
The ARM share of activity was unchanged at 25.5 percent of total applications.
The MBA’s survey covers about 50 percent of all U.S. retail residential loans. Respondents include mortgage banks, commercial banks and thrifts.
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