Real Estate Articles 
Buying and Selling Real Estate during a Decline By: ccruiserboyy
Residential real estate markets generally move very slowly and trend in a single direction for long periods of time. Once these markets reach an inflection point, the direction of price movement changes, and the balance of negotiating power shifts from an advantage to one side to an advantage for the other. However, most market participants do not recognize this change for some time. Sellers continue to price and attempt to sell using tactics that worked during the rally, and they find they are unable to sell their properties. It often takes two years or more before sellers accept the reality of the new market and adjust their attitudes and behaviors to the new dynamics of a buyer's market.
The Housing Bubble - What Buyers Need to Know By: ccruiserboyy
During the decline of house prices in the deflation of the Great Housing Bubble, price levels will fall to fundamental valuations of historic levels of appreciation, price-to-rent ratios, and price-to-income ratios. The nominal price declines may be impacted by inflation and monetary policy of the Federal Reserve, but inflation adjusted prices will fall precipitously.
Unemployment and Residential Real Estate Markets By: ccruiserboyy
Prior to the Great Housing Bubble, house price declines had only been associated with economic downturns and increases in unemployment. As people lost jobs, they lost their ability to make house payments, and many lost their homes in foreclosure. Unemployment is devastating to housing markets.
Future Loan Terms and Residential Real Estate Markets By: ccruiserboyy
One of the primary mechanisms for inflating the Great Housing Bubble was the widespread use of exotic loan terms including interest-only and negative-amortization adjustable rate mortgages. The appeal of interest-only and negative-amortization loans is the lower payments they offer, or their ability to finance larger sums of money with the same payment. These loan terms are unstable, and they may not be offered to future buyers. If these loan programs were eliminated, the financing sums would decline, and home prices would decline along with them.
The Down Payment By: ccruiserboyy
A down payment is money that the buyer must pay up front to buy a home. When a person takes out a mortgage the lender or bank in almost all cases will require that the person borrowing the money make a down payment.
Essential Questions to Ask Before You Purchase Property By: Rakesh RaSEO
You’re considering purchasing property, which is great. Real estate crapper be a tremendous investment in your future. Even if the housing mart is down in the brief term, story indicates that it module yet rebound. When this happens, it crapper mean bounteous profits for those who got in at the correct time.
Understanding The Popularity Of Real Estate In Collingwood, Ontario By: ccruiserboyy
If you have been reading real estate news lately, you're probably wondering why there's so much fuss about property in the Collingwood area of Ontario and why the buzz these days is about how buying or renting property there is such a great idea.
The Real Estate Realities of the Current Economic Climate By: Pat Patrickson
Every evening the television brings a bit more bad news. Every day the newspaper paints an even gloomier picture than the day before. Where will it end? What is going to happen along the way? Although none of us can predict the future, there are a few expectations.
How to figure out how monthly interest and principle By: ccruiserboyy
The first thing you need to understand is the amount of interest you will pay each month will change.
It Is Different This Time... Not! By: ccruiserboyy
Each time the general public creates an asset bubble, they believe the rally in prices is justifiable by fundamentals. When proven methods of valuation demonstrate otherwise, people invent new ones with the caveat, "it is different this time." It never is.