Archive for March, 2009

Coldwell Banker became the first national real estate brand to develop a home search application for the Microsoft Surface. The Coldwell Banker Home Search application allows one to search for properties, browse neighborhoods, amenities and more through the touchscreen interface. How cool is that? Of course, you can’t actually BUY the MS Surface yet, but it is available for commercial use, so you’ll have to come into the office to give it a try.

frank-mckinney

Wow. This is too good to be true. Win a 1 hour private “Personal Success Coaching” with Frank McKinney http://www.frank-mckinney.com/personal_coach.aspx …… a $2,500 value, according to Mr. McKinney.

Here is how you can enter to win:

1. Read 1 or all 3 of Frank McKinney’s latest books.

AND

2. Between today and May 1, 2009, go to the Amazon book page to post a review of the book or books you purchased (I assume you are to write a glowing review.)

Here are the books:

The Tap

Burst This! Frank McKinney’s Bubble-Proof Real Estate Strategies

Dead Fred, Flying Lunchboxes, and the Good Luck Circle

In a note from Mr. McKinney:

That is all you have to do to enter your name in a drawing to win a one hour “Personal Success Coaching” with Frank McKinney (worth $2,500.00.) By posting your review, you could also inspire others that are considering purchasing the books.

Warning rattles some local Realtors. I should think so.

The Seattle PI’s last day as a printed newspaper is today, leaving Seattle a one-newspaper town. The PI will be moving totally online and will try to succeed with a limited staff of writers and advertising salespeople.

Not only were some seasoned writers asked to stay on board, but the citizen bloggers were also asked to continue writing, and though I’m sad to see the Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s printed version go, I’m happy to see it continue on in the virtual world.

I’ve moderated the Seattle Real Estate Professionals column for several years now, and am glad to stay on to write and moderate that blog. Some voices are louder than others there, but it’s always interesting.

This aired the same day I got my new iMac. I had to load Fusion on there to run Windows too so I could use the MLS and update my website, neither of which worked with the Apple OS. I had Office for Mac, but then I discovered that my spellcheck wouldn’t work without Office for Windows too, so that’s more software I have to download (my old Office for Windows disc says it’s good for 3 computers, so why can’t I get this new one to recognize the disc? Geez.) This is about as clumsy as, well as………

Watch next Monday to see if Steve gets voted off the show….

A real estate executive with CB Richard Ellis Group, flung himself out of a window at the MetLife Building Tuesday, falling to his death as onlookers watched.

Death plunge in New York.

How did Seattle become the home for technology companies that want to help you buy or sell … a home? Sure, it’s where Microsoft and Amazon are based, and it’s a well-educated, tech-savvy community, and the University of Washington churns out more than its share of software engineers.

But why real estate?

A lot of really smart people read that real estate was a multi-billion dollar business and they wanted a piece of the pie. They figured that even a tiny slice was probably worth millions.

But what they didn’t understand was that the oft-quoted “multi-billion dollar business” was based on the total value of all of the real estate involved, not how much money one could make from buying or selling it, which was just a small percentage of each sale.

A big miscalculation.

Virtual Realty: The Online Real Estate Detente


After too many years of financing Homer’s annual Mardi Gras party on home equity loans, Homer and Marge’s adjustable-rate mortgage skyrockets.

The Simpsons (Full Episode)

CNBC’s Rick Santelli is angry about the homeowner bailout for that 2nd bath:

Agents who have participated in a short sale transaction knows there may come a moment when the lender announces a reduction in the commission it will approve as a condition of accepting an offer. A great deal of angst circulates around this issue because, despite what the seller agreed to pay in the listing agreement and notwithstanding the advertised SOC, the transaction cannot close without the lender’s approval which is often a “take it or leave it” position. The seller and buyer want the transaction to close and agents do not want to be a road block to that outcome. Balanced against this is an agent’s and broker’s need to earn a reasonable income and justify their own expenses and liability incurred in a transaction. If lenders condition acceptance of short sale terms on agents’ willingness to accept a reduced commission, agents really have no power – except to decline to list, show or write up deals on short sale properties in the first place (as Redfin does).

Fannie Mae was made aware of this pattern and the adverse consequences of agents and brokers avoiding short sales. As a result, Fannie Mae announced a revised policy that took effect March 1. Now, “closing of preforeclosure sales may not be conditioned upon a reduction of the total commission to be paid to real estate agents to a level below what was negotiated by the listing agent with the borrower, unless the fee exceeds 6 percent of the sales price of the property in aggregate.” This policy applies to Fannie Mae loans only and only to those loans where the borrower is in default. Nevertheless, it should give agents and brokers a degree of comfort in knowing that the agreed and earned commission will be paid on many short sale transactions. For a property secured by a Fannie Mae loan, where the seller is in default, the lender may no longer condition acceptance of buyer’s short sale offer on the agents’ and brokers’ agreement to reduce their commission below a total transaction commission of 6%.

The new Fannie Mae policy says the following:

Servicing Guide, Part VII, Section 504.02: Contacting Selected Borrowers

Effective March 1, 2009, closing of preforeclosure sales may not be conditioned upon a reduction of the total commission to be paid to real estate agents to a level below what was negotiated by the listing agent with the borrower, unless the fee exceeds 6 percent of the sales price of the property in aggregate. Servicers are reminded that they must continue to obtain any approvals that may be required by interested third parties in connection with preforeclosure sales.

The federal government realizes that a less than 6% real estate commission may hinder the sale of a property and this reality might spur a conversation with other sellers about sales commissions of less than 6% for non-distressed properties too.

(And watch for a major press release, a Q-and-A on Tech Flash and a guest column in Tech Crunch announcing Redfin’s new Short Sale policy….)