Archive for January 22nd, 2010

AZ Central – Housing thaw ahead?

by Stephanie Armour – Jan. 20, 2010 08:46 AM
USA TODAY

The springtime spurt in home buying may hit before the snow melts this year as buyers scramble to meet an April 30 tax credit deadline.

The spring buying season typically takes off in March and runs through May. But buyers who want to claim this year’s tax credit — up to $8,000 for first-time buyers and up to $6,500 for repeat buyers — must have signed purchase contracts by April 30. And they have to complete the deal by June 30.

“I expect the buying season will be moved up,” says Jim Gillespie, CEO of Coldwell Banker. Sales “are going to take off in February and March and really take off in April. … My concern is that the move-up buyer hasn’t thought what they need to do. Their window is really short. They have to coordinate closing dates.”

The average time it takes to get a home loan processed is about eight weeks now — two weeks more than it used to be, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The tax credit’s impact on 2010 home sales is uncertain. Some economists expect the credit to pull sales that would have occurred later in the year into the first half.

“The tax credit will absolutely have an effect,” says Pete Flint, CEO of Trulia, a residential real estate search engine. “It is going to shift demand from the later part of the year to the first part. January and February will be very strong. The next three months, there will be a surge in demand.”

The credit is pulling in some consumers now.

“I’m actually in the middle of house shopping, and I decided to do it now so that I could get the $8,000 tax credit,” says Amity Gay, 26, who’s looking for a cottage-style house in Tallahassee.

Sellers should be prepared to appeal to first-time home buyers, who still make up the majority of buyers, according to Pat Lashinsky, president and CEO of ZipRealty.

And buyers should expect rising prices in some markets, including San Diego, Dallas, Minneapolis, Chicago and Washington, D.C.

At MetLife

Home, buyers are being preapproved now for new housing developments; an increase in demand is being attributed to the expanded tax credit.

“Our spring market got moved up at least two months because of this,” says Kent Geschwender, branch manager.

The tax credit was scheduled to expire on Dec. 1, 2009, but was extended and expanded by Congress.

www.theholmgroupaz.com

AZ Central – Struggling Montelucia resort is purchased by lender

by J. Craig Anderson – Jan. 22, 2010 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

The financially troubled Scottsdale resort where President Barack Obama lodged is in the hands of its former mortgage lender – at least for now.

A trustee’s-sale auction for the InterContinental Montelucia Resort & Spa, 4949 East Lincoln Drive, generated only one third-party offer, from the property’s developer and former owner, Crown Realty & Development Inc.

 

Ed Balazs, a managing director for the resort’s new owner and Crown’s former lender, German bank Eurohypo AG, said his company wasn’t about to let its former client retake possession of the resort after defaulting on a $180 million loan. “One hundred sixty-seven million (dollars) was owed. They offered $120 million,” Balazs said, adding that Eurohypo countered with the winning bid of $122 million.

Eurohypo initiated foreclosure proceedings on the Montelucia nearly a year ago.

The bank does not intend to keep the resort, according to Balazs.

“There is a broker who has been engaged to list the property for us,” he said.

Morris Aaron, whose Phoenix financial-consulting firm was the Montelucia’s court-appointed receiver, was in charge of keeping an eye on management and review the operation’s financial-transaction records. He had the option of ousting the existing managers, British hotel-management company InterContinental Hotels Group, but said he saw no reason to do so.

Resort customers and residents should notice no real changes as a result of the sale, he said.

What ultimately drove the project into foreclosure was its opening amid a severe economic downturn, Aaron said.

“This is not one of those cases where people have been stealing or mismanaging the property,” he said. “They’re actually doing better, on average, than most of the resorts in the Valley.”

Obama stayed at the Montelucia in February when he visited the Valley to announce a home-foreclosure-prevention program.

Resort Managing Director Valeriano Antonioli said the Montelucia even has picked up some five-star ratings while in foreclosure.

According to Maricopa County Recorder’s Office documents, Eurohypo’s New York office issued a notice of trustee’s sale Jan. 26, 2009, to Irvine, Calif.-based Crown Realty, which opened the Montelucia in November 2008 at the Paradise Valley site where the Doubletree La Posada Resort once stood.

The trustee’s-sale notice cited failure to make scheduled payments on a $180 million promissory note.

Crown Realty also built 34 luxury villas, 22 of which it had pre-sold in 2006 at prices starting around $2 million. Aaron said two additional homes have sold since then, leaving about 10 in the lender’s possession.

Rick Carpinelli, the company’s senior vice president in Phoenix, did not return calls Thursday.

Several Valley resorts and hotel properties have changed hands during the past year, usually through foreclosure or bankruptcy. Most have cited a decrease in tourist activity and difficulty refinancing real-estate loans.


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