Thursday, June 30, 2011

TOXIC MOULD IN HOMES

Mold-inspection-house

There have been 270 species of mould identified in Canada.  Health Canada recommends that all mould, regardless of species be cleaned and that the underlying problems which enabled the growth of the mould should be dealt with immediately, to prevent potential health issues.

Mould needs moisture and organic material to start and thrive.  Leaky pipes, roofs, or windows can provide the moisture it takes to start a colony. Improper ventilation in attics, kitchens, bathrooms and laundry rooms may also contribute to mould growth.

You can clean the mold yourself if the contaminated surface is small.  Water and dish soap or hydrogen peroxide and water can be used to treat small areas.  Hydrogen peroxide is far more effective in killing mould spores than bleach.  It also does not have the potential of releasing harmful gases that bleach may have. Bleach is not recommended as a mould eradication agent.

If you suspect a mould problem that you cannot solve on your own you should contact a trained Indoor Air Quality Investigator for advice on building related aspects of air quality.  These investigators can do a visual inspection to identify areas of concern and make recommendations for improving the situation.

All home owners need to fix the underlying cause of the mould whether due to water damage or excessive humidity. 

There are several things you can do to help prevent mould growth in your home:

  1. Repair basement, roof and pipe leaks as soon as you notice them.
  2. Always use the kitchen and bathroom exhaust fans to help keep your house dry.
  3. The clothes dryer hoses need to be properly connected and vented to the outside.
  4. Properly seal tubs, tub surrounds and sinks to prevent water from getting into the walls.
  5. If you have a flood or any type of water damage, be sure the flooded area is completely dry within 48 hours.
  6. The humidity in your home should be around 50% in summer and 30% in winter.  A dehumidifier can help reduce the relative humidity is necessary.
  7. Discard clutter and excess stored material and make sure you have enough clearance from walls to allow for proper air circulation.
  8. Keep you house clean by vacuuming regularly.
  9. Mould can grow on anything that collects dust and can hold moisture.

     Most home inspectors at A Buyer's Choice are trained to identify where mould could become a problem and advise you accordingly.

Kyle Deverill, License # 53543 from A Buyer's Choice Home Inspections - Burnaby.

 

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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation to the Canadian Cancer Society

Canadian_cancer_society

RightPricedRealty.com is very proud and honoured to donate nearly 2% of all our transaction proceeds to several different non-profit organizations, including:

·The Ride to Conquor Cancer

·Canadian Cancer Society

·Prince of Wales High School

·SPCA

·Theatre Terrific

·Festival Du Printemps- FrancoFun

·Canadian Red Cross Red Carpet Soiree

·Volunteer Burnaby Organization

·Volunteer Grandparents Organization

At RightPricedRealty.com we work hard to help our clients with their buying or selling goals. We hope at RightPricedRealty.com that this small token of our appreciation will assist these great non-profit programs and show you how much their hard work is appreciated in the community.

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Who has been buying in Vancouver since the begining of the year?

Good_tenants

Who is buying in Vancouver?
 
Each month the Vancouver Real Estate Board survey's it REALTORS to offer further insight into the buying demographics.
 
graph5

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Monday, June 27, 2011

Mid-year overview shows a steady residential Market in Vancouver

Market_trends

 

Here's a closer look at our  residential market to date.

graph1
graph2
graph3
graph4

Since January, the residential housing market within the Board area has enjoyed broad stability. Home sale and listing activity have maintained a steady pace, aligning closely with typical activity from a historical perspective.

Within this period of overall stability, regional ‘hot spots’ have emerged in areas like Richmond, Vancouver Westside and West Vancouver. These areas have garnered significant local, national and international attention.

In the last few months, Board President Rosario Setticasi has conducted interviews with the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg News, MacLean’s Magazine and several news outlets from China and other parts of Asia.

“Our stats tell us that there’s been more activity at the high end of our market this year than we saw one year ago. This is causing today’s average prices in the region to be less reflective of the total activity occurring in the marketplace,” Setticasi said.

“Fortunately, our Board has the MLS®Link Housing Price Index and communicates benchmark prices, which are much more accurate than averages that can fluctuate depending on the impact of higher or lower end properties.”

Demand in the detached home market has increased compared to 2010. Between January and May of this year, 44 per cent of all residential sales were of detached homes. This is up 4 per cent compared to the same period last year.

Of all residential properties sold on the MLS® in Greater Vancouver in 2011 to date, 21 per cent sold for $1-million or higher. The number of $1 million property sales has increased 8 per cent as a proportion of total sales compared to this time last year.

A closer look at this year’s $1 million sales to date shows that 77 per cent of these homes were located in West Vancouver, the Westside of Vancouver or Richmond.

Board-wide, conditions continue to favour sellers. Today’s sales to active listings ratio of 23 per cent indicates seller’s market conditions, although activity has eased away from the near record-setting pace experienced in March.

“When you review Board-wide stats, it’s important to note that there’s considerable variation in activity across the region. This causes home sale and price trends to differ depending on the area,” Setticasi said.
 
Source: Real Estate Board

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Is it time to buy U.S. real estate?

American_real_estate

One of the advantages of living in a globalized economy is that it's relatively easy to draw lessons from events in other countries. For Canadian housing sector stakeholders, the ideal reference point is the United States, where current residential real estate trends shed light on what is happening here.

During the past five years, housing prices in the two countries have gone in dramatically different directions. The most recent data supplied by the Canadian Real Estate Association show that the average price of homes sold in Canada by its members during April was $372,000, up 35.3 per cent from the $277,000 average price during 2006 as a whole.

On the other hand, the median price (which is slightly different than the average price) of homes sold in the United States fell by 41.7 per cent, from $281,000 (in Canadian dollar terms) to just $163,700 during the same period. In short, during the past five years Canadian and U.S. residential real estate prices have moved in completely opposite directions. So what does this all mean?

* Gallery: Top homes with outrageous add-ons

Why the change?
The difference in U.S. and Canadian house price trends largely boils down to the very different way that both countries emerged from the recent financial crisis and recession. For example, both job creation and economic growth have been far stronger here in Canada than south of the border. The U.S. is further hampered by its involvement in costly wars in Libya, Iraq and Afghanistan, which leaves it with less money to provide social assistance to those hit by economic travails.

Canada also weathered the financial crisis better than did its southern neighbour. For example, no major Canadian financial institution went bankrupt or went through major restructuring. That meant mortgage lending here, while tighter than pre-crisis levels, has not tightened nearly as much as it has in the United States.

On top of it all, Canada's housing sector was not nearly as overbuilt as it was in the United States, which continues to suffer from significant inventories of unsold houses. House price declines have hit U.S. households hard. For example, as of the first quarter of this year, 23 per cent of U.S. mortgage borrowers owed more money on their houses than their properties are worth. Worse, eight per cent of the volumes of negative equity homes are currently in the foreclosure process. This will put further downwards pressure on prices during the coming months.

There are no comparable downward pressures in Canada, though Marc Pinsonneault, an economist at National Bank Financial, predicts that housing starts here will taper off slightly this year.

Sadly, the situation down south is unlikely to get better anytime soon, says another expert: "So far we are not seeing any indication that the U.S. housing market is about to start a sustainable recovery," notes Benjamin Tal, an economist with CIBC World Markets. "In fact, given current trends, we do not see the market clearing before 2013-2014, with house prices falling."

Time to buy U.S. real estate?
Anytime there are such broad divergences in the prices of assets in Canada and the United States, there are investment implications. Despite their many differences, the two countries are broadly similar in many respects. Both are rich western nations, with substantial natural resources and comparable per capita incomes. So if home prices are more than twice as high in Canada as they are in the U.S., it may mean that real estate there may be bottoming out — or that prices here are getting out of hand.

While for most families real estate is not a good speculative investment, for those Canadians who are thinking about buying U.S. property, either for vacation purposes or because they are thinking of moving there, the coming months may not be such a bad time to jump in.

That said, the high spreads between real estate prices in the two countries also tell us a lot about the Canadian market, which, by many accounts, is becoming frothy, particularly in areas such as Vancouver.

However, experts are divided on whether prices here will fall slightly or whether they will merely move sideways for some time as homeowners consolidate recent gains.

Peter Diekmeyer is a Montreal-based freelance business writer.

 
 
SOURCE:
By Michelle Warren, Bankrate.com, June 3, 2011

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Sincerely, your friend in the real estate business,

 

Roland Kym
Remax Select Properties
Cell : 604 970-0393

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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Kits 1 bedroom for sale at $299,000

I just finished uploading this Condo for sale, 303 2173 6TH Ave W, Vancouver West, British Columbia

One bedroom apartment in central Kits. Quiet, mature-treed location within walking distance of beach, 4th and all amenities and transit. Private balcony. Solid, well-maintained building. Pets and rentals welcome.

Call us for a private showing of this great kits 1-bedroom.

604-970-0393

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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

What’s your take on the U.S. market versus the Canadian market? How do you think U.S. real estate differs from Canadian real estate? Do you think your real estate market is a bubble ready to burst?

When sizing up Canadian markets alongside their U.S. counterparts we often hear that what’s happening south of the border is sure to make its way north. Given that approach, there has been a lot of talk lately about the Canadian real estate market heading for an implosion.

Statistics Canada has reported a steady price climb with its new housing price index rising 1.9 per cent since last April. And Scotia Capital reported that Canadian real estate prices had increased five per cent in the first quarter of this year compared to the same period in 2010.

Taking what may look like healthy growth a step further, CIBC warned last month that 17 per cent of Canadian homes are overvalued. A five to 10 per cent price correction is likely to take place in the next two years, the report added. The report went on to say that homes in B.C. are overvalued by 20 per cent, 17 per cent in Alberta, 13 per cent in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Quebec, 11 per cent in Ontario and 8.6 per cent in Atlantic Canada.

And this week, Bank of Canada chief Mark Carney issued concerns that fear and greed in the Canadian housing industry is driving real estate prices through the roof.

If these predictions suggest the Canadian real estate bubble is about to burst, Toronto broker Peter Powers thinks otherwise.

“People are reading about the U.S. market and thinking this correlates to the Canadian market and nothing could be further from the truth,” says Powers of Royal LePage’s Johnston and Daniel division in Toronto. “The more likely scenario is that home prices will stabilize giving incomes a chance to catch up. The Canadian real estate market is on solid footing.”

Preceded by a boom in the housing market for the past decade, Powers believes the Canadian housing market is at or near the top of a cycle and that it will normalize, not by means of a major correction in house prices, but instead by a softening of the market and more stable prices.

“Generally, Toronto’s housing prices have been increasing at five per cent,” Powers said. “If the market starts increasing at 15 to 20 per cent, I’d be nervous.”

The concept of a Canadian real estate market or an American real estate market is simply too broad to paint with one brush, says Canadian real estate author Don Campbell.

“That is the equivalent to taking the temperature of everyone in the hospital,” says Campbell, “taking the average of those temperatures and using that  ‘average’ to determine the health of one specific patient.”

Investors need to look at specific local markets, he says. For example, hot U.S. markets right now are in the sun-belt states yet they have low economic forces so inevitably those markets cannot be sustained. On the other hand, Houston and Dallas have great job and population growth and as a result will continue to do well as they are supported by healthy economics and job growth. In Canada, the same can be said. In Windsor, for example, the economy struggles and so does its housing market. However, in other cities such as Edmonton, Surrey and Kitchener, where job creation is prompting population growth, increases in real estate prices are being supported.

Interest rates, banking, mortgage styles don’t really matter, says Campbell, if there isn’t some sort of underlying strength to the job market and the population growth. Without these, you only have hope and speculation, he adds.

Campbell also questions why so many are concerned about foreign investment propping up the Canadian housing market while they aren’t at all worried about plunking their cash south of the border in markets that are fully supported by foreign investment.

“There is a lot of hullabaloo and media coverage around the danger of foreign investor funds propping up Vancouver and Toronto – yet zero coverage on the dangers of this occurring in these hot U.S. cities,” says Campbell. “I wonder what the coverage will be when the U.S. dip takes another ride downward, taking Canadian profits with it.”

People need to be reminded that cheap doesn’t mean good when buying real estate. Growth in what you buy only comes from GDP and job growth. With those two factors come population growth, increased rental demand, higher rents, property purchase demand, which eventually leads to a hike in property prices.

“As boring as that may sound, it is the underpinning of all real estate markets,” Campbell says. “By the way, the reverse of the formula is also true – no job growth leads to lack of long term demand on property, so what looks like a deal today will look like an even better deal two years from today - and that is the sad fact we are witnessing come true.”

Before considering investing in foreign markets, do your homework, advises Campbell. Know the economics of the region you are investing in and if you don’t know, learn all you can about it.

Tom Burk helps Canadians buy in the U.S. As a realtor who does business on both sides of the border, Burk, who is president of CanAm Properties in Calgary, says the U.S. market is far from tanking.

“It’s dangerous to say prices are crashing in the U.S.,” Burk says. “Prices are not falling everywhere. In Seattle and better parts of Phoenix and Scottsdale Canadians are paying more. The real premium properties are in high demand and there is much less supply than a few months ago. We’re seeing prices rise.”

Burk also stresses that it’s important to look at the local or regional market you’re interested in. There are still a lot of good U.S. markets and many uncertain ones – ones that have the potential of dipping down further. Canadians should not look at the national U.S. figures, he says, because that simply makes everything look bad, which is unfair and wrong.

Because Burk has been buying U.S. real estate for 25 years for Canadians, he recommends Canadians be vigilant about a number of potentially scary and damaging details when purchasing south of the border.

When it comes to titles, for instance, a good realtor will explain that a title search will not always reflect what’s on a title in the U.S., which is very different from our system in Canada. To protect the buyer from potential liability, title insurance, which is essentially unheard of here, should be purchased.

The other point that throws Canadians off buying in the U.S. is how they handle conditional sales. Often U.S. banks don’t approve or reject funding based on conditions on offers until mere hours before closing which can invariably lead to a postponed closing and much frustration especially for buyers not prepared for that uncertainty.

Another constant problem Burk encounters centres around the way contracts are written. If you have a condition that is contingent on, for instance, a spouse’s approval you have to send a waiver to the listing agent to act on the condition. In the U.S., if the listing agent doesn’t hear from the client, it’s assumed the deal is on.

“People are getting confused and they thought they were killing the contract because they did nothing and, in fact, they were moving it forward,” Burk says. “Americans don’t realize that closing a real estate deal in Canada is a different process. There’s nothing wrong with buying in the U.S. But you need a realtor who understands what you understand about the process.

Often and understandably so, they think you understand the whole process.”

SOURCE: Property Wire

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Kits 2 bedroom & 2 bathroom, for sale @ $548.800

I just finished uploading this Condo for sale, 310 2028 11TH Ave W, Vancouver West, British Columbia
Bright, spacious, open-planned 2 bdrm home in The Maples, a solid concrete building on a quiet, treed street near Arbutus Walk. Features 9' ceilings, Brazilian Walnut floors, new stainless fridge and dishwasher, large in-suite storage room. Stroll to all the best Kits has to offer.

Call us for a private showing of this great apartment... your next home!

604-970-0393

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Monday, June 20, 2011

RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation in Kind to Theatre Terrific.

Theatre_terrific

RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation in Kind to Theatre Terrific.

RightPricedRealty.com is very proud and honoured to donate nearly 2% of all our transaction proceeds to several different non-profit organizations, including:

·         The Ride to Conquor Cancer

·         Canadian Cancer Society

·         Prince of Wales High School

·         SPCA

·         Theatre Terrific

·         Festival Du Printemps- FrancoFun

·         Canadian Red Cross Red Carpet Soiree

·         Volunteer Burnaby Organization

·         Volunteer Grandparents Organization

At RightPricedRealty.com we work hard to help our clients with their buying or selling goals. We hope at RightPricedRealty.com that this small token of our appreciation will assist these great non-profit programs and show you how much their hard work is appreciated in the community.

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Sunday, June 19, 2011

OPEN HOUSE 1:00pm to 4:00pm in Kits (2 bed & 2 Bath)

Open_living

We are proud to announce that this Jun 19th, 12:00 PM to 4:00 PM we will be hosting an Open House at 2190 8TH Ave W in the Kitsilano neighborhood, Vancouver West. This is an opportunity to visit this excellent Condo for sale in beautiful Kitsilano.

Please come with any questions you may have. In the meantime you can take a virtual tour of this Kitsilano Condo for sale.

As always please do not hesitate to give me a call at 604-970-0393 if I can answer any questions before the open house, or if you would like to book a private showing.

Roland Kym
Remax Select Properties

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Friday, June 17, 2011

CMHC Predicts Return to Stability through 2011-2012

Market_sign


CMHC predicts that the housing market will stabilize in 2011, and that housing starts are expected to keep reflective of ‘demographic fundamentals’ through 2011-2012.

Housing starts are forecast to be in the area of 166,600 to 192,200 units in 2011, with a point forecast of 179,500 units. In 2012, housing starts are expected to be in the range of 163,200 to 207,500 units, with a point forecast of 185,300 units.

CMHC predicts that existing home sales will be between 429,500 to 480,000 units in 2011, with a point forecast of 452,100 units. In 2012, MLS sales will move up and are expected to be in the range of 410,000 to 511,900 units, with a point forecast of 461,300 units.

The average MLS price nationally has been propped up by a buoyant property market in regions like Vancouver, where a run on luxury housing and an influx of foreign property investors has contributed to significant price appreciations.

There is expectation though, as 2011 unfolds, that MLS prices will begin to fall in line closer to stable expectations. That said, there is still an expectation that the average MLS price will increase through 2011. In 2012, they expect that the market will shift towards stability and more balanced conditions, and that price growth- while still forecast, it expected to be much more moderate.

The report says, “We expect the average MLS® price to be between $347,700 and $374,300 in 2011 and between $349,500 and $385,000 in 2012. CMHC’s point forecast for the average MLS® price is expected to move up to $361,100 in 2011, while 2012 will see a further increase to $364,200.”

Looking at different regions, CMHC expects that BC will see the smallest declines in housing starts. In 2012, they predict that the greatest increase will be in BC and in Alberta. Ontario also will see a slight decline in 2011, with positive employment and economic recovery contributing to an increase in 2012.

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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Price Reduction, Kits 2-bedroom for sale for $490,000

FULLY RENOVATED, with $40,000 invested, it produced a modern & spacious 800 sqft 2 bedroom & 1.5 bath apartment in the popular Westwood Villa complex. This top floor, corner suite with SE exposure features a large wrap-around balcony,  in-suite laundry, lots of storage, amazing kitchen with new stainless steel appliances and new EVERYTHING! Combined with 1 parking stall, 1 storage locker and a great floor plan. Enjoy the community and amenities nearby in this amazing Kits location. Please see REALTOR'S website for further information.

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RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation in Kind to Canadian Red Cross Carpet Soiree

Red_carpet_soiree

RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation in Kind to Canadian Red Cross Carpet Soiree

RightPricedRealty.com is very proud and honoured to donate nearly 2% of all our transaction proceeds to several different non-profit organizations, including:

· The Ride to Conquor Cancer

· Canadian Cancer Society

· Prince of Wales High School

· SPCA

· Theatre Terrific

· Festival Du Printemps- FrancoFun

· Canadian Red Cross Red Carpet Soiree

· Volunteer Burnaby Organization

· Volunteer Grandparents Organization

At RightPricedRealty.com we work hard to help our clients with their buying or selling goals. We hope at RightPricedRealty.com that this small token of our appreciation will assist these great non-profit programs and show you how much their hard work is appreciated in the community.

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Friday, June 10, 2011

B.C.'s non-residential building permits plunge in April

Building_permits

The value of building permits plunged much more than expected in April, led by a big drop in Ontario
 

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Sincerely, your friend in the real estate business,

 

Roland Kym
Remax Select Properties
Cell : 604 970-0393

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Thursday, June 9, 2011

RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation to Ride to Conquer Cancer

Ride_to_conquor_cancer

RightPricedRealty.com recently made a donation to Ride to Conquer Cancer

RightPricedRealty.com is very proud and honoured to donate nearly 2% of all our transaction proceeds to several different non-profit organizations, including:

·The Ride to Conquor Cancer

·Canadian Cancer Society

·Prince of Wales High School

·SPCA

·Theatre Terrific

·Festival Du Printemps- FrancoFun

·Canadian Red Cross Red Carpet Soiree

·Volunteer Burnaby Organization

·Volunteer Grandparents Organization

At RightPricedRealty.com we work hard to help our clients with their buying or selling goals. We hope at RightPricedRealty.com that this small token of our appreciation will assist these great non-profit programs and show you how much their hard work is appreciated in the community.


 

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

NEW LISTING: #110- 2405 Kamloops Street, Vancouver East, BC

I just finished uploading this Condo for sale, 110 2405 KAMLOOPS Street, Vancouver East, British Columbia

Bright, South facing, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms & den (can be a 3rd bedroom) featuring new Kenmere appliances, fridge, dishwasher, stove, new washer, comes with 1 secured parking, 1 locker, well looked after building with new roof in February 2011. Short walk to hip, trendy, commecial drive, minutes to Skytrain, schools, shops, & restaurants. Call us for a private showing at 604-970-0393

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Housing rush scrutinized from Overseas Buyers of Canadian Real Estate

Canada-flag

Overseas buyers of Canadian real estate gauged to see just how much foreign investment.
 

Canada's top banking regulator is on a fact-finding mission to gauge the scope of foreign investment in residential real estate.

Industry sources say the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions is sizing up the market, most likely as part of its active campaign to "stress test" the country's big banks to measure how they would be affected by volatility in various market segments.

OSFI is taking a broad look at bank exposure to household debt and how the financial in-situations are monitoring loan portfolios amid growing concerns over the ability of Canadians to handle their debt load.

In the case of the housing market, sources point to global trends that could affect investment in Canada -like China's recent policies to curb speculative real estate investment in that country -as evidence that Canada is operating in a fast changing market that could be adversely affected by decisions made in other countries.

They suggest OSFI wants to know how big a factor foreign investment in Canada's housing market is, and how big it is likely to become, so the regula-tor can measure the potential impact on banks if demand were to dry up.

"It's something they are trying to get information on," said a source close to the situation. "It's not something they can find out so easily."

 
 
Read the full article here http://ow.ly/5c9Ko #vancouver #canada

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Sincerely, your friend in the real estate business,

 

Roland Kym
Remax Select Properties
Cell : 604 970-0393

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

What is the Point of making extra mortgage payments?

What is the Point of making extra mortgage payments? 

 

Paying extra amounts on your mortgage can make a big interest saving over time. When we select a mortgage company, privilege payments options are something that we look for. A 20% privilege payment will allow you to pay off up to $20,000 per year on a $100,000 mortgage. It is important that the privilege payment also be flexible to allow you to pay smaller payments on the mortgage and as often as you wish. An extra $1000 periodically paid on a mortgage can help you become mortgage free faster.


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Following is the link to the REBGV May 2011 Housing Market Update

Vancouver_real_estate_board_ne

Following is the link to the REBGV May 2011 Housing Market Update  Video, great visual and audio overview of what is happening in the Greater Vancouver Market Place for the month of May.
 

Sincerely, your friend in the real estate business,

 

Roland Kym
Remax Select Properties
Cell : 604 970-0393

Posted via email from rightpricedrealty's posterous

Monday, June 6, 2011

Realtor vs. FSBO: A Balanced Perspective

Balance


To get legal advice, you visit a lawyer; to get medical advice, you go and see a doctor; most people, to get their car repaired, leave it in the hands of a trained professional. Even to get your hair cut, you go to someone who is trained to do that job. In all of these instances, the average consumer, without specific training and resources in a given area, defers to a qualified individual. So what is it about Real Estate that is so different?

There was a wave of response from many of our readers, much of it negatively geared towards PropertyWire.ca giving voice to these kinds of organizations. Therefore, in the spirit of objective journalism, we now wish to present a counterpoint to the findings of this particular poll.

Because of the sensitive and highly controversial nature of the conversations our journalist had with our Realtor readers, many of those who commented did not wish to be identified. Amidst many of the comments there were several common themes expressed by many of our readers.

The beliefs purported by the findings of the Propertyguys.com poll seemed to be posing the question- read, a rallying cry, to our Realtor® readers, of “Why are Realtors® necessary?” Our readers responded passionately- answering not just that question- but “Why are the services that Realtors® provide necessary?" Here are some common themes:

Much depends on the property itself

Many readily admit, Realtors® included, that some properties- and some people- are excellent candidates for private sale. But the fact of the matter is that it often comes down to the property itself.

When all the stars align-price, location, state of the property & market conditions- some properties “sell themselves” in a matter of hours or days. However, as many of the statistics that we were presented with would suggest, for the most part, this is not indicative of the average selling experience.

What our readers told us is that you need to rely on a number of variables for these stars to cross- and it is, often times, in enlisting the services and support of a Realtor® that these variables can not only be harnessed, but turned into opportunity.

As an example, a Realtor® who is well experienced in rural properties with unique challenges, or a Realtor® who offers extensive knowledge of a municipalities, bylaws and areas- or a Realtor® who is very skilled in finding buyers to meet very specific property needs, or are skilled negotiators- all offer something that sellers simply do not have access to privately. These things (and many more identified by our readers) are simply what they feel distinguishes the services of a Realtor®.

Commission vs. Service

The debate over commissions is ironic really, because at its’ core, it has nothing to do with money, although messaging and advertising would lead consumers to believe that. The heart of this debate is really about service and choice. If you ask most consumers, it is not about what you pay- it is about what you get in return for what you pay. Again this comes down to understanding your own professional value and articulating it.

Other issues that private sellers may not have thought of

As many Realtors® have expressed to PropertyWire.ca, they can offer assistance even with things like safety (by screening people and qualifying leads), offering sellers access to their databases and networks, acting as an emotional break between a property they may not be able to be objective about & handling paperwork. A good Realtor will offer even more services than this. PropertyWire.Ca explored this is more detail in our recent article "Consumers Should Weigh Up The Risks Before Going It Alone In Real Estate".

Mixed Messages

By and large, our Realtor® readers are not discounting the existence of FSBO / low fee brokerages. They recognize their place within the market and that there are clients out there for whom private selling is a good option. As one of our commenter's expresses "Propertyguys has the right to compete and consumers have the right to use them".

What we heard from the bulk of those we spoke with is that they are frustrated with the messages, and the half-information that is being distributed by polls like the one that we reported on in the last story; for the public as a result, as reflected by our reader opinion, there is a predominant sense that that the message of “Why do we need Realtors®, when we can do this ourselves?” is being delivered. So who is responsible for delivering the other side of the coin to the consumer and are they doing a good job?

The real issue is that when consumers ask themselves "Why not go it alone?" they do not receive all of the answers they need to make an informed decision, and they end up armed with a little bit of information- which can end badly.
 
SOURCE: Property Wire

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Sunday, June 5, 2011

OPEN HOUSE TODAY: 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM we will be hosting an Open House at 7360 CORONADO Drive

Coronado7360_snack_jpeg

We are proud to announce our open house today, June 5th, 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM
 
We will be hosting an Open House at 7360 CORONADO Drive in the Montecito neighborhood, Burnaby North. This is an opportunity to visit this excellent Townhouse for sale in beautiful Montecito.

Please come with any questions you may have. In the meantime you can take a virtual tour of this Montecito Townhouse for sale.

As always please do not hesitate to give me a call at 604-737-8865 if I can answer any questions before the open house, or if you would like to book a private showing.

Sincerely, your friend in the real estate business,

 

Roland Kym
Remax Select Properties
Cell : 604 970-0393

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Friday, June 3, 2011

We have the Best Clients!!-- Another Testimonial, of our great service at Right Priced Realty.com

134

June 2011

 
We were selling in Vancouver for the first time. We were fortunate that a friend recommended Roland Kym.  This is a Realtor who creates a stellar marketing plan, goes above and beyond, delivering a great level of service and dedication!     

 Roland provided a market assessment and put together a marketing and promotions package and answered all our questions, listening to ensure our needs were addressed.

 Roland was committed to marketing his listings and while we were lucky to have ours sold in just over a week, we also got multiple offers and obtained a higher selling price.   

The marketing plan consisted of professional photos of our home, a sign outside that had bright colourful pictures of our home with spec sheets in a box,  regular open houses (we had two the first weekend) with excellent signage that caught the eyes of passersby’s with attached spec sheets to pique the interest. On-site he provided water bottles, snack packs with  our home address and the bright colourful pictures of our home and an attractive MLS listing with professional pictures inclusive of an  excellent descriptive write up.

 We were very comfortable with Roland’s professionalism, humanism, realism and would be happy to do business with him in a heartbeat and/or recommend him our friends and family without hesitation. He made this a stress free process.

He delivered on everything that he said he would and more.  If all things in life could be so stress free, we would be a healthier society!   Excellent Job Roland, thank you from the bottom of our hearts, you took the worry away while allowing us to begin the next chapter of our lives.

Thank you for all you have done for us!

>     Tammy and Colin

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