Your Money Master

Your Money Master my mission is to educate and empower people in their finances to manivest wealth & Abundance

06/07/2023

this movie ran in Austin last week a must-see on the what and why of our current situation.
i need all my friends and family to go to
plandemicseries.com

We're hosting another Biblical Citizenship class come in person or via Zoom can't wait to see you there!Roger Hauf or Jo...
06/05/2023

We're hosting another Biblical Citizenship class come in person or via Zoom can't wait to see you there!
Roger Hauf or Joanne Johnson
[email protected]
(720) 329-6666
Class Dates: June 21 - August 9, 2023
6:30-8:30 PM MST
Online & In-person
REGISTER at:

Now more than ever, our nation is in need of Biblical citizens who grasp the dynamic unity of citizens of the Kingdom of God and citizens of this great nation! This course offers a quick-start guide to the longest-standing Constitution in history, complete with an overview of all the Articles, and A...

10/21/2019

Here is where the markets are focused today and this week:

Brexit. The UK parliament delayed a vote on the proposed Brexit deal during a special Saturday session of parliament. It is possible a vote could occur this week. The delay on Saturday took away Prime Minister Johnson’s momentum, but it looks like he still may be able to get enough cross party votes to get the deal approved this week. Investors are viewing that there is a good probability that the UK will leave the EU by October 31.

China Trade Talks. Discussions are continuing with US and Chinese officials, and reports back indicate these efforts to memorialize in writing the prior verbal “Phase 1” agreements, appear to be progressing. The declining growth rates announced last week for the Chinese economy, in particular the slower growth for their domestic demand, are leading the markets to believe that China would like to strike at least a small deal now, and this will continue to drive a slight market optimism until more concrete news comes out, good or bad.

The Fed. The Feds FOMC (Federal Open Markets Committee) is scheduled to meet October 29 and 30. Their announcement on any changes in the Fed Funds rate is scheduled to be released the afternoon of the 30th. The markets are expecting about a 91% probability that the Fed will cut rates 25 basis points. As a reminder, the Fed Rate is the overnight rate that Fed member banks loan to one another. If the Fed announces a 25 basis point cut, this should have no impact on mortgage rates, because the market has already priced this expectation into current market prices, and changes to the rates for 1-day loans, do not usually correlate to changes in how the market is pricing loans with terms of 10+ years. Because a 30-year fixed rate mortgage typically prepays well before its 30-year maturity date, most investors view mortgages to more closely match 10-year loans.

10/06/2019

Interested in Passive Multifamily Investments??

07/16/2019

Cap Rates on Apartment Acquisitions Take a Slight Dip in the First Half of 2019

Multifamily investors are still eager to buy apartment properties, pushing cap rates even lower.

Bendix Anderson | Jul 16, 2019

      

For years, apartment experts predicted that yields on investments in apartment rental properties would rise. Years passed, but cap rates in the sector remain historically low, and are getting lower.

“Cap rates have not risen in the last five years,” says Chris Espenshade, managing director with real estate services firm JLL. “Why should we expect they would rise in the next five?”

New investors keep finding reasons to buy apartment properties, and prices for these assets keep rising. That strong demand from buyers seems likely to keep cap rates low.

“New investors are coming in at a rate that I have never seen before,” says Brian McAuliffe, president of CBRE Capital Markets. “The multifamily investment market continues to be very active.”

Favorable rates

Investors continue to pay higher and higher prices for apartment properties, though prices are not growing as quickly as they once did.

“Prices are still increasing… just at a slower pace,” says Will Mathews, managing director and platform leader of the east
region multifamily advisory group with real estate services firm Colliers International.

Prices for apartment properties grew by 8.8 percent over the 12 months that ended in May 2019, according the Commercial Property Price Index (CPPI) tracked by real estate research firm Real Capital Analytics (RCA). That’s a lot faster than inflation. It’s also faster than the 7.2 percent rate of growth for commercial properties overall over the same period. But it’s below the 12.8 percent rate of growth recorded for apartment properties over the same period the year before.

On average, prices are rising relative to the income from apartments properties, pushing low investment yields even lower. Cap rates are dropping again, according to experts interviewed for this story.

Cap rates on infill apartment properties averaged 5.20 percent in the first half of 2019, according to CBRE. That’s down five basis points from the second half of 2018. Cap rates for suburban properties averaged 5.49 percent, down six basis points compared to the same period a year ago.

“Cap rates, as compared to last year, have compressed moderately,” notes Matthews.

Low interest rates have helped push prices higher, and cap rates lower. The yield on 10-year Treasury bonds has dropped by more than 100 basis points since the fourth quarter of 2018. “The decline in interest rates, that has been a real accelerant for property sales,” says McAuliffe.

Investors make fewer deals

Even though prices are rising, so far this year, the volume of investment sales of apartment rental properties is about 5.0 percent below the same period in 2018, according to market-watchers like JLL.

“We are seeing a little bit of a slowdown,” says Espenshade. “There are plenty of deals to go around, though not as many deals as this time last year.”

That’s partly because sellers have not offered as many large portfolios for sale so far in 2019. Those who put up apartment portfolios for sale in 2018 did not earn much higher prices than sellers that sold properties one at a time.

“They put portfolios on the market looking for a portfolio premium—and they did not get it,” says Espenshade.

Also, many investors, including private equity funds, are now in the part of their usual five-year cycle in which they buy and hold properties, rather than sell. “We don’t have as many of those funds that are maturing,” notes McAuliffe.

Investors look to secondary markets and suburban submarkets

Investors are also looking at new markets to buy apartment properties. “We are seeing more volume in the Sunbelt,” says Espenshade. “There are more jobs there and properties are less expensive.”

“We have seen the growth of secondary and tertiary markets and declining cap rates,” says McAuliffe.

At the same time, investors are buying fewer properties in core markets like New York City, where the competition between newly completed projects has forced many landlords to offer deep concessions to attract renters. “The hardest place to buy and sell is in core real estate markets [like New York],” says Espenshade. “If you buy a new, beautiful building, someone is going to build right next door.”

Instead, a growing number of investors is drawn to suburban areas, where the barriers to new development are higher, according to Espenshade. The yields that investors can earn by buying stabilized apartment properties also tend to be higher, with cap rates often averaging in the 5.0 percent range.

As investors become more comfortable with shopping for suburban apartment assets, they are looking at a different set of metrics to identify the best geographic locations. The quality of the local school district now matters more than how many shops and services are within walking distance of the property, Espenshade says.

“Investors are looking at greatschools.org,” he notes. “Now we put the schools and their rating on page one of our marketing materials. A property’s WalkScore still matters, but we put it in the back of our marketing materials for suburban properties.”

07/15/2019

I'm putting together an educational course for people who are interested in getting into multifamily investments.

Those of you who know me realize i have been in the real estate investment arena for decades. Currently I am affiliated with B.I.G. (Bariskill Investment Group) who is in the business of buying and managing multifamily investments properties.

I have a FREE informational / educational class I will be offering in the near future about what to look for and how to get involved with multi family apartments projects on a passive basis.

Be looking for additional information in the near future about the time and location of this informative course.

07/15/2019

Owning a home has great financial benefits.

In a recent research paper, Homeownership and the American Dream, Laurie S. Goodman and Christopher Mayer of the Urban Land Institute explained:

“Homeownership appears to help borrowers accumulate housing and nonhousing wealth in a variety of ways, with tax advantages, greater financial flexibility due to secured borrowing, built-in ‘default’ savings with mortgage amortization and nominally fixed payments, and the potential to lower home maintenance costs through sweat equity.”

Let’s breakdown 5 major financial benefits of homeownership:

1. Housing is typically the one leveraged investment available

Homeownership allows households to amplify any appreciation on the value of their homes by a leverage factor. A 20% down payment results in a leverage factor of five, meaning every percentage point rise in the value of your home is a 5% return on your equity. If you put down 10%, your leverage factor is 10.

Example: Let’s assume you purchased a $300,000 home and put down $60,000 (20%). If the house appreciates by $30,000, that is only a 10% increase in value but a 50% increase in equity.

2. You’re paying for housing whether you own or rent

Some argue that renting eliminates the cost of property taxes and home repairs. Every potential renter must realize that all the expenses the landlord incurs (property taxes, repairs, insurance, etc.) are baked into the rent payment already – along with a profit margin!!

3. Owning is usually a form of “forced savings”

Studies have shown that homeowners have a net worth that is 44X greater than that of a renter. As a matter of fact, it was recently estimated that a family buying an average priced home this past January could build more than $42,000 in family wealth over the next five years.

4. Owning is a hedge against inflation

House values and rents tend to go up at or higher than the rate of inflation. When you own, your home’s value will protect you from that inflation.

5. There are still substantial tax benefits to owning

We know that the new tax reform bill puts limits on some deductions on certain homes. However, in the research paper referenced above, the authors explain:

“…the mortgage interest deduction is not the main source of these gains; even if it were removed, homeowners would continue to benefit from a lack of taxation of imputed rent and capital gains.”

Bottom Line

From a financial standpoint, owning a home has always been and will always be better than renting.

03/29/2019

Home-affordability outlook is rosy but could be short-lived

For mortgage originators with clients who've been waiting for the right time to buy a home, it may be a rosy spring buying season, according to First American Financial Corp.

“While 2018 was largely characterized by declining affordability, ending the year with a five percent yearly decline in house-buying power, this trend reversed sharply in early 2019,” said First American chief economist Mark Fleming. “Moderating home prices, in conjunction with gains in household income and declining mortgage rates, boosted affordability for potential home buyers.”

“Mortgage rates in January fell 0.18 percentage points compared with the previous month and household income increased 0.3 percent. The result? House-buying power increased 2.3 percent in January,” Fleming added. “Additionally, nominal house price appreciation in January sank to the slowest pace of growth since February 2015, according to the DataTree by First American’s House Price Index. As a result, real house prices fell 1.9 percent, the second largest monthly decline since April 2017.”

“As wages continue to grow & mortgage rates remain low, we expect demand to rise causing a rebound in price appreciation, so the power play may be short.”

03/15/2019

U.S. adds fewest jobs since September 2017

U.S. employers added only 20,000 jobs in February — the fewest number of jobs added since September 2017.

JobsWeather may have played a part in the slow gain as last month was marked by bouts of harsh winter weather across the country. Weather-sensitive industries, such as retail trade and construction, posted monthly declines in February.

Last month was a disappointment, given that economists had expected between 175,000 and 180,000 jobs to be added. On the rosier side, however, February marked the 101st straight month of job gains and the unemployment rate decreased from 4 percent in January to 3.8 percent in February. The number of unemployed people fell by 300,000 over the month to 6.2 million — a decline that reflects, in part, the return of federal workers furloughed in January due to the partial government shutdown.

Despite the weaker-than-expected report, Fannie Mae chief economist Doug Duncan said that the labor market remains “healthy.” Duncan noted that average hourly earnings were up 3.4 percent year over year in February and that “recent reports of continued improvement in productivity suggest that these gains are unlikely to stoke faster inflation.”

“Amid mixed signals from the labor market, well-contained inflation, and the dovish shift by the [European Central Bank], we believe the Fed is likely to remain patient,” Duncan added. “We expect the Fed to raise rates only once more this year, in June, before pausing. Meanwhile, in the residential construction sector, another weather-sensitive industry, the number of jobs fell in February. However, the sharp increase in housing starts and continued improvements in builder sentiment suggest that this month’s decline does not signal a continuation of weakness in the industry.”

02/06/2019

Guild Mortgage Company is pleased to announce our very own Lock and Shop Program to allow your borrowers to lock owner occupied and second home purchase transactions for 90 days without an actual property address!

This program is for conventional, FHA and VA conforming loan programs. The borrower must have a fully executed sales contract within the first 45 days of the lock. A one-time float down option is available when property is found or within 45-15 days prior to closing with credit approval. If the borrower does not find a property within 45 days the commitment is subject to cancellation.

01/10/2019

The slowdown is great news for buyers. "This is not a crash, just a re-calibration of unrealistic pricing as the markets move to a more normal balance between buyers and sellers. A slower rate of home price growth will help keep affordability from declining too quickly.

This isn't like 2007-08, when we were overbuilt, risky loan products in the market and home prices in many areas had been driven up by an artificial market.

Now the U.S. is under-built, mortgages are very carefully underwritten and most potential buyers remain conservative due to things they or their parents had happen during the past housing crash.

the latest predictions conclude that the likelihood of local housing bust in the next two years is unlikely. so go out there and buy yourself some property!

Address

Aurora, CO
80015

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Your Money Master posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share