Archive for February, 2009

AZ Central – Fountain Hill named ‘Best Affordable Suburb’

Fountain Hills has been named Arizona’s “Best Affordable Suburb” by BusinessWeek, edging out other communities near Phoenix with populations of 5,000 to 60,000 people.

The national magazine featured the accolade in its Feb. 19 online story, “Best Affordable Suburbs in the U.S. 2009.” Locations were reviewed for their livability, education, crime, economy and affordability.

BusinessWeek lauded the northeast Valley town for its “natural beauty” and outdoor activities such as hiking, biking and golfing.

The article mentioned the town’s centerpiece fountain. The tourist magnet gushes water up to 560 feet in the air, which is higher than the Washington Monument.

The median home price in Fountain Hills is $380,182, according to BusinessWeek. Scottsdale, by comparison, had a median price for 2008 at $476,250. The median price in Phoenix for last year was $160,000.

Mayor Jay Schlum said Fountain Hills has “good real estate value.” Besides high-performing schools and low crime, the town has small town flavor and award-winning parks, he said.

“We are a community that is oriented to an outdoor active lifestyle,” Schlum said in an email, “And that draws out a youthful energy.”

In a 2008 market study, Arizona State University Realty Studies gave Fountain Hills a housing resale affordability index of 63, compared to 106 for all of Maricopa County. The highest rating was 135 for Avondale.

BusinessWeek limited the suburbs to within 25 miles of the most populated city, with median family incomes of $51,000 to $120,000 and low crime rates. Places with bad weather, lack of diversity, high divorce rates and few children were penalized.

Topping the list was Pewaukee, Wis., a small Milwaukee suburb with a “picturesque” fishing lake of the same name.

If you are looking for a home in the Fountain Hills area click here:

http://www.theholmgroupaz.com/FountainHills.htm

 

 

AZ Central – Survey offers Scottsdale some hope

by Peter Corbett – Feb. 19, 2009 08:52 AM
The Arizona Republic

It is unclear how long it might take for federal stimulus money to boost the local real-estate market.

What is clear, on the heels of President Barack Obama’s stay in Paradise Valley, is that Scottsdale is battling a big surge in foreclosures, an unhealthy dip in prices and tighter lending that is limiting sales of higher-priced properties.

In January, more than a third of 255 existing-home sales in Scottsdale were foreclosures, according to the latest monthly report from Arizona State University Realty Studies. That’s an increase in foreclosures of 63 percent from a year ago.

Scottsdale’s median price fell $170,000, or 31 percent, to $380,000. That’s one of the biggest declines in recent years and resets the median at levels not seen since 2004.

Foreclosures are keeping the total sales of 255 existing homes nearly on track with a year ago. The decline was just 5.6 percent.

In Scottsdale, 35 percent of existing-home sales are foreclosures; the foreclosure rate for Maricopa County is 52 percent.

In the past six months, Scottsdale has recorded 520 foreclosures of homes and 260 condominiums.

It’s a trend that is not likely to end soon.

“The local housing market will continue to be vexed well into the next year by eroding consumer confidence,” said Jay Butler, ASU Realty Studies director.

Consumers are reacting to the weak economy, job losses and tighter mortgage-underwriting guidelines, he added.

Scottsdale’s existing condo market in January saw sales fall 36 percent and prices dip 27 percent to $195,000 from a year ago.

Survey: Valley ranks high

Even as the market struggles, it is encouraging that people still want to move to Scottsdale and that eventually will help eat away at the inventory of houses and condos.

A recent national survey by the Pew Research Center reveals that Phoenix and its suburbs are among the top seven metropolitan areas where Americans would like to live.

One-third of 2,260 survey respondents said they would want to live in Phoenix. That is narrowly behind Orlando, Tampa and San Francisco.

Denver, San Diego and Seattle finished in the first three spots in the survey involving 30 cities. Cincinnati, Cleveland and Detroit were at the bottom.

It’s revealing that nearly half of those surveyed, 46 percent, said they would like to live somewhere else.

Thirty percent pined for small-town life, 25 percent favored suburbs, 23 percent liked urban life and 21 percent thought rural was right for them.

A hot-weather place was better than cold by 2 to 1.

All that seems to bode well for places like Scottsdale and other Sun Belt cities.

Republicans are particularly drawn to the Phoenix area and Democrats favor San Francisco.

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AZ Central – The Valley’s priciest home sales

Feb. 18, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

An owner of a local furniture store, the head of a political-consulting firm and a helicopter pilot are among the buyers and sellers in this week’s priciest home sales.

$3,500,000.

SKSO LLC, an Arizona limited-liability company whose sole member is the OS Revocable Trust in Scottsdale, bought a new home east of the Arizona Biltmore Resort in Paradise Valley. The home was sold by 14 PVF LLC, an Arizona limited-liability company whose sole member is Douglas Sandahl. Sandahl has built more than 1,000 luxury homes in the Valley. He also owns and operates Greer Lodge Resorts and Red Setter Inn in Greer.

$3,295,000.

Robert D. Keller and his wife, Angela, purchased a 6,790-square-foot home with 1,360-square-foot pool originally built in 2006 at Biltmore Estates in Phoenix. Robert and Angela Keller are the sole members of Ferris Ventures LLC in Phoenix. The home was sold by Michael Sensing and his wife, Cheryl. Sensing is president/CEO of the Sensing Management Group and an owner of Pruitt’s Furniture Store in Phoenix.

$2,750,000.

Roger and Diane Mann of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, paid cash for a 5,288-square-foot home with pool originally built in 2007 on the eastern side of the Las Sendas Golf Course in Mesa. The home was sold by Nathan Sproul and his wife, Tiffani. Sproul is the head of Sproul and Associates in Tempe, a political-consulting firm, and the former Arizona State Republican Party executive director.

$2,500,000.

PV Farms 46 LLC, a Nevada limited-liability company, paid cash for a 6,584-square-foot home with 1,000-square-foot pool originally built in 1997 on the western side of the McCormick Ranch Golf Club in Scottsdale. The home was sold by Compass Bank in Phoenix.

$1,900,000.

William A. McLean purchased a 5,691-square-foot home with pool originally built in 1999 on the eastern side of the Ancala Country Club in Scottsdale. The home was sold by Kenneth and Lorraine Thiele. Ken Thiele founded Skyview Traffic Watch with Dave Chamberlain in 1985 and flew a helicopter over the Valley to report traffic conditions. They sold the company years ago but continued to work and fly for the company.

http://www.scottsdalerealestatemaponline.com/

AZ Central – Obama unveils $75B mortgage relief plan

MESA – President Barack Obama confronted head-on a key source of economic anxiety for millions of Americans – the foreclosure crisis – promising mortgage refinancing options for those struggling to keep up with payments and relief for unemployed workers worried about losing their homes.

In a 22-minute speech Wednesday in Mesa, Obama detailed how the housing industry woes bedevil everyday Americans and Arizonans – even those who are not among the approximately 150,000 in the state in foreclosure or facing it. Even homeowners who can weather the mortgage meltdown suffer because their home’s value is diminished as neighbors are uprooted and their street is lined with empty houses and neglected yards.

“You can’t afford to leave, you can’t afford to stay. So you cut back on luxuries,” Obama told the more than 1,000 people crowded into Dobson High School’s gymnasium. “Then you cut back on necessities. You spend down your savings to keep up with your payments. Then you open the retirement fund. Then you use the credit cards. And when you’ve gone through everything you have, and done everything you can, you have no choice but to default on your loan

Unlike other tough times, families today can’t just sell their house and move into a more-affordable one. Phoenix area home prices have fallen 43 percent since 2006 and many homeowners now own houses valued far below their mortgages, Obama said.

The dire situation, Obama said, “is unraveling homeownership, the middle class and the American Dream itself.”

The Obama plan, estimated to cost $75 billion, would:

 Give up to 5 million of Americans access to low-cost mortgagen refinancing.

 Get rid of a restriction that stops mortgage giants Fannie Mae andn Freddie Mac from refinancing mortgages they already own or guarantee.

 Create a $75 billion “Homeowner Stability Initiative” to keep sinkingn homeowners in their houses and protect neighborhoods.

 Let the Treasury Department and then Federal Reserve continue buying securities backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages to provide “stability and liquidity in the marketplace.”

The proposal’s goal is “rescuing families who have played by the rules and acted responsibly,” Obama said. No help will go to the irresponsible housing-market speculators whose gambles helped drive up home prices during the boom or dishonest lenders.

“In short, this plan will not save every home, but it will give millions of families resigned to financial ruin a chance to rebuild,” Obama said. “It will prevent the worst consequences of this crisis from wreaking even greater havoc on the economy. And by bringing down the foreclosure rate, it will help to shore up housing prices for everyone Undoing the housing mess will require a new level of responsibility on the part of everybody, the president said.

“Government has to take responsibility for setting rules of the road that are fair and fairly enforced,” Obama said. “Banks and lenders must be held accountable for ending the practices that got us into this crisis in the first place. And each of as individuals must take responsibility for their own actions. And all of us must learn to live within our means again and not assume that housing prices are going to up 20, 30, 40 percent every year.”

Although the gym event had the appearance and feel of a campaign rally, the crowd was for the most part subdued. Only a few minutes before Obama appeared did part of the crowd start chanting Obama’s name. When he entered the room, though, the crowd went wild with cheers, foot-stomps and camera flashes. Obama was interrupted several times by applause as he ticked off various parts of his plan. As he left, someone cried, “Mister President, we love you!”

Obama’s anti-foreclosure prescription earned kudos from members of the crowd.

Jerry Blake, 44, is an Air Force master sergeant stationed at Luke Air Force Base. He has orders to leave, but can’t sell his Surprise house.

“There’s hope. There’s hope,” Blake said. “I’m the same as everybody else, upside-down on my house payments.”

Nina Stewart, a 46-year-old Phoenix resident, was ecstatic that she got to shake the president’s hand. She praised his plan for extending to homeowners who haven’t defaulted yet.

“I have a job and I’m paying my mortgage, but I think my interest rate is higher than it needs to be,” said Stewart, an IT manager at Honeywell who “absolutely” supported Obama in the last election. “And, of course, my house value is lower, so how do I refinance at a lower interest rate? I’d hate to have to go into foreclosure to benefit (from government relief.)

Obama delivered his remarks from a lectern in front of eight U.S. flags. He was accompanied on the trip to Arizona by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairwoman Sheila Bair.

Local dignitaries in attendance included Republican Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer; Democratic Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard; U.S. Democratic Reps. Ed Pastor, Raul Grijalva, Ann Kirkpatrick and Harry Mitchell (in whose district the president appeared); GOP Maricopa County Supervisors Don Stapley and Max Wilson and Democratic Supervisor Mary Rose Wilcox, Mesa Mayor Scott Smith and a litany of mostly Democratic state lawmakers.

The Mesa audience also included high-profile Arizona Democrats such as Jim Pederson, a former state Democratic Party chairman and unsuccessful 2006 U.S. Senate candidate, and Carolyn Warner, a former state superintendent of public instruction and the 1986 Democratic nominee for governor.

John Goodie, the longtime Mesa activist who was instrumental in the city’s adoption of a Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, led some of the chanting.

U.S. Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., did not attend, citing previous obligations.

 

AZ Central – Montelucia in PV is targeted for foreclosure

The lender behind the new Montelucia InterContinental Resort & Spa in Paradise Valley has begun foreclosure proceedings against the project.

Eurohypo AG has filed a notice of default against the property at 4949 E. Lincoln Drive, its 293-room resort and 12 unsold single-family detached villas.

The project’s developer, Crown Montelucia Associates LLC, wants to avoid foreclosure, “has worked diligently to avoid this outcome,” and is working on several solutions, according to a statement issued by resort owner and developer Robert Flaxman. bank.

The amount owed to Eurohypo AG is “significantly less” than the original $180 million loan, Flaxman added. Eurohypo AG is a German-based real estate

The 34-acre Montelucia opened Nov. 4, 2008.The resort remains open and will continue to exist regardless of the foreclosure proceedings due to a previously established long-term management agreement.

Valeriano Antonioli, resort and spa managing director, said it will be business as usual, noting that the proceedings are a legal matter between the resort and its owner. He said the resort has exceeded its goals for its first three months of operation, and this week has operated at 100-percent occupancy.

Eurohypo AG also believes it is in its best interests to keep the resort open and advanced funds to pay bills this week, according to the statement.

www.theholmgroupaz.com

AZ Central – Auction set for high end condos – Artesia

A plunge in the condominium market has left a McCormick Ranch project with a steep challenge in finding buyers.

Starpointe Communities has turned to an auction Sunday to sell 20 brownstone condos, originally priced at up to $1.5 million, for prices starting at $340,000 to $520,000, depending on the unit. Called Artesia, the project is northeast of Scottsdale and Indian Bend roads.

“It’s time to create some energy for the project,” said Robert Lyles, Starpointe partner. has endured a major correction, and Starpointe is hoping the auction will generate interest in Artesia, he said.

Overall, the real-estate market

Construction on the 44-acre project started two years ago just as the market was cooling off. Built on the former Radisson Resort grounds, Artesia includes 52 townhouses, 329 condos, 15 penthouses and nine live-work units that have office space on the first level.

Starpointe has completed 31 of its brownstone condos and 61 other condos, along with underground parking for Artesia, Lyles said.

It includes the Roka Akor restaurant and other retail space along Scottsdale Road.

Starpointe has completed the major part of the project’s infrastructure and has solid financial partners to complete the community, he said.

“We’re getting a lot of winter-visitor activity,” Lyles said, noting that interested buyers include some Canadians.

Kennedy Wilson, a California firm, is conducting the Artesia auction at 1 p.m. Sunday at the Doubletree Paradise Valley Resort, 5401 N. Scottsdale Road.

Potential buyers must be prequalified and have a $5,000 cashier’s check at the auction in order to bid, said Rhett Winchell, president of Kennedy Wilson’s Auction Group.

AZ Central – Tempe’s first new hotel in 10 years

Road Warriors of the business world can rejoice: a hotel haven for them opens in Tempe Thursday.

Jamie Metzger is manager of the new five story, 68,000 square feet, $25 million aloft hotel at Rural Road and the 202 Freeway, and though he smiles when he refers to business travelers as “road warriors” he says some 30 years of traveling 40 weeks and more per year on business has taught him what those weary warriors want.

He says the business of aloft will be to deliver just that

“When you travel on a plane you’re told you must sit here, there’s no food, can’t use your phone or computer, fasten your seat belt, don’t use the restroom—you have no control,” Metzger said. “But at this hotel, from the moment you check yourself in, choose your own room and get your key at a kiosk by the front door-or use the check-in desk– you are in control.”

Metzger said that aloft provides amenities that business travelers crave. Metzger calls this aloft’s, “anything/anytime culture.”

Part of the culture: The “a” is not capitalized.

Each of its 136 rooms has two phones, is set up for wireless or wired computer use, has a generous, well-lit workspace, easy-access closets, comfortable beds, tasteful furnishings, a 42 inch high definition television and a refrigerator. There’s a fitness center, a bar where food is served, a “gourmet” snack center, a gift shop and a swimming pool with “backyard” entertainment area.

“There are no barriers here; you get control back into your life,” Metzger said. “You wake up at 3 a.m. and want a snack, the re-fuel gourmet center is open 24 hours-so is the gift shop; so is the fitness center. We want to remove the barriers and make everything easy.”

Having everything made easy isn’t exactly cheap. Room rates run from $189 to $359 a night-which, nevertheless, is competitive in the Valley hotel market.

Tempe officials have welcomed the new hotel-the first to open in the city in ten years– and predict it will do a brisk business. They say its location near the airport, near Arizona State University and at the junctions of three freeways, will make it attractive to visitors doing business in any part of the east Valley.

Tempe Convention and Visitors Bureau officials say the reason for the long drought in hotel construction is that in 1998 new hotel construction added 17 percent more rooms to Tempe’s inventory, and it has taken a decade for demand to exceed supply. The new hotel brings Tempe’s hotel room inventory to 5,497 rooms.

Convention and Visitor’s Bureau vice president Michael Martin said he believes aloft “will do very well.”

“It’s a trendy, hip, new place that will be very attractive,” Martin said. “And in this time of economic downturn, when corporate business travelers are hitting the streets and they’re watching their bottom line, they want to be where they can save on transportation costs; that bodes well for aloft and all airport area hotels.”

Martin noted that the location of the hotel is also handy to some big Valley athletic events.

“They’ll get plenty of business travelers, but they’re also near the finish line of the Rock & Roll Marathon and the Ironman race-and that will bring them a lot of customers too.”

The new aloft is built by Starwood Hotels & Resorts, Triyar Hospitality and Warburg Pincus Real Estate.

www.theholmgroupaz.com

 

Money Magazine – Snag a great deal on a short sale

Short sales – where a lender agrees to take less than it’s owed on a mortgage – are rising sharply. Here’s how you can profit.

By Joe Light, Money Magazine staff reporter

January 28, 2009: 6:06 AM ET

(Money Magazine) — When Brian Gavitt, a physician, and his wife Gayleen, a stay-at-home mom, started to eye homes in Sacramento last winter, they knew they were looking in the hardest-hit areas of the housing bust. So the couple, who were relocating from Lansing, figured they could land a fantastic bargain in no time at all.

The part about the bargain turned out to be true. The Gavitts bought a five-bedroom house in the upscale Natomas Park neighborhood (“Even now, you don’t see FOR SALE signs up anywhere,” says Gayleen.) And it was a steal at $300,000, a full $200,000 less than they would have paid just two years ago.

The amount of time it took to land the deal was another story. It was more than six months from when the Gavitts first saw their dream home to the moment they held the keys in their hands. The reason: The home they bought was a short sale.

Not along ago, few people had even heard of a short sale, which occurs when the bank agrees to discount the loan balance for a seller who owes more on his mortgage than the home is currently worth.

If you’re in the market for a home today, you’re almost guaranteed to be looking at some short sales. Nationwide, 14% of homeowners are currently underwater on their mortgages, calculates real estate website Zillow.com. And in many areas, it’s far more: In the Gavitts’ zip code, for example, over half of homeowners would owe more than their home is worth if they sold today, calculates Dee Schwindt, the Gavitts’ realtor.

The good news is that short sellers are likely to still be living in the home and some may even be current on their payments. That means these aren’t the run-down, distressed properties that you often find among foreclosures; in fact, there’s a good chance that some of the most deluxe homes for sale in your market are underwater.

Before you get too excited about buying a short sale, know that they generally aren’t, well, short. For the sale to go through, the seller’s lender must approve the price and agree to take the shortfall as a loss. That extra step can cause the process to drag on three times as long as a normal home sale.

But as the Gavitts discovered, the hassles can be well worth it. Some buyers and realtors don’t want to deal with short sales, leaving many choice homes with very few bidders. So if you’re willing to brave the intricacies of the process, you’ll be far more likely to land the home you always wanted. The key to snagging a good deal is knowing how to avoid the land mines.

Know what you’re getting into. In a short sale, you are dealing with several parties: the sellers, their agent and the sellers’ lender. That’s why a short sale can take anywhere between two and six months to execute, compared with about 30 days for a typical sale. Though many banks are willing to take a loss on a mortgage in a short sale if it means avoiding an even bigger loss in a foreclosure, with so many owners trying to unload properties, the lender’s negotiators are flooded with short-sale offers. So if you’re moving or selling another property, keep in mind that you’ll likely need to budget for a few months’ worth of rental payments so you have somewhere to live in the interim.

Find the right pro. Lenders often make realtors who work on short sales take a hit on their commission, so some brokers may be loath to show you the listings. But don’t even think about going solo. These deals take a lot of work and persistence, says Loni Parmelly, author of Success in Short Sales. Before you sign up with an agent, ask him how many short sales he’s closed. If he hasn’t done at least two, find someone more experienced.

Weed out candidates. In most cities, home listings will indicate in the description whether the property is a short sale. Ideally, you want to knock off ones that come with extra complexities. If possible, pass on any home that has more than one lien against it; having to negotiate loans with two lenders can greatly increase the amount of time it takes to complete the deal. Also avoid homes where the seller has other offers. That’s because if another offer is pending, the seller’s agent isn’t likely to even submit yours for approval until the first one is rejected, meaning you’ll have to wait for another negotiation to play out before you even get a chance.

Set the right price. The first step is to have your agent submit your offer to the seller. Don’t just rely on the current list price to come up with your initial bid, says Bill Richardson, a district sales manager for the Keyes Co. Realtors in Boca Raton, Fla. The seller’s agent may have far underpriced it in hopes of attracting buyers, but the bank likely won’t accept a lowball offer. Ask your agent to determine the home’s fair market value by searching comparable sales in the area, with an emphasis on other short sales and foreclosures (or get a rough estimate yourself at zillow.com). If the fair market value is lower than the list price, set your offer 10% lower than that.

At this point, you’ll also want to get pre-approval for a mortgage; many banks won’t even consider your offer if you don’t have one, says Schwindt.

Protect yourself. Next, the seller’s agent will submit your offer to the seller’s lender. At this point, you’ll be asked to sign a sales contract. See if the lender will agree to pick up all closing costs as part of the contract, says author Parmelly. Also ask your realtor to specify that you won’t do an appraisal or inspection of the property until the offer is approved. That way you won’t have to shell out hundreds of dollars until you know you realistically have a good chance of getting the home.

Finally, though most lenders will require you to make some kind of deposit along with the contract, don’t put down more than $3,000 before your bid is accepted. That will give you room to put offers on other homes or even to pull out of the sale if it drags on for too long.

Be a pain in the neck. After your offer is submitted to the lender, you’re likely to hear nothing for weeks, if not months. This is no time to relax. Call your agent at least once a week, and make sure the seller’s agent is contacting the bank’s negotiator nearly every day.

“These negotiators may have 400 files on their desk. They’ll want to get rid of the squeaky wheels,” says Parmelly, who worked as a loan negotiator for lenders for 16 years. To help the seller’s realtor in her negotiations with the lender, it’s a good idea to have your agent show her which comparable homes you used to arrive at your number.

If the clock keeps ticking and you’re reaching the end of your rope, try playing hardball. After months, the lender the Gavitts negotiated with was still dragging its feet and their pre-approved loan rate was about to expire. “We said, ‘We need an answer by Friday or we walk,’ ” Gayleen says. The bank responded by week’s end.

Keep your eye on the market. When the bank finally sends its counter-offer, use it as a guideline rather than an ultimatum. Most of the time, the lender’s number is based on its own research, that of a local realtor it hires and the outstanding loan balance. Usually its goal is to sell for at least 90% of the home’s value, says Amy Bohutinsky, a spokes-person for Zillow.com.

The lender’s offer may not be what you’d hoped for, but don’t despair: You have a chance to counter. If the market has been flat since your initial bid, try for 5% to 10% less than the bank’s number. If the market has been sinking rapidly, however, you may be able to prove that the home’s value has shrunk further and offer even less. Once you have the lender’s ear, the new offer should take less time to process.

Despite all the legwork and wait, the Gavitts are thrilled with their new home. “I’m glad people are turned off by short sales,” says Brian. “It just means more choices for the rest of us.”

AZ Central – Realtors’ leader predicts tough 2009

Feb. 4, 2009 12:00 AM

Tom Farley took the helm of the Arizona Association of Realtors last year. It’s a turbulent time.

Here are some of his concerns and projections from a recent interview.

Question: What’s your forecast for the housing market 

Answer: This will be a very tough year from every economic viewpoint. Anemic consumer confidence, rising unemployment numbers and fewer people moving to our state and the sale of foreclosed properties will continue to challenge the Arizona residential real-estate market.

Some buyers will focus on one variable alone and speculate when the “price” bottom will occur so they can get the best sales price. Buyers need to look at all the factors when purchasing a home and not solely focus on when the bottom may . . . be reached, as most will not guess accurately.

Mortgage rates, location, availability and several other factors must not be forgotten. This will be a year when properly advised home buyers will find deals . . . that haven’t been seen in years.

Nationally, it has been reported that a second wave of mortgage loans is to reset – the Alt-A and Option ARM mortgages. This next wave of loans about to reset will probably not bring a default rate as high as the subprime-loan wave.

From a national perspective, we are better positioned for this second speculative wave because of the amount of money the federal government has and will pump into the economy. We are better prepared because of the painful lessons of the previous year.

Some national economists are predicting an economic recovery by mid-2009. That has been translated into a housing-price recovery as well.

My best estimate is that a housing-price recovery in harder-hit states like Arizona, Nevada, California and Florida will not happen until late this year or even in early 2010.

When home prices dip, affordability rises. Increasing affordability has been one positive outcome of this current real-estate cycle. Sellers are dealing, supply is still higher than normal and finance rates remain at historic lows.

Q: What will be the big legislative issues?

A: Arizona lawmakers are facing a historic budget crisis. . . . We must make sure the state’s economic recovery is not hampered by new regulation that could stifle job creation or increase costs.

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