Houston Chronicle Sunday

Housing trends in fall 2012 include buyers working harder

- By Polyana da Costa

Home buyers and refinancer­s seeking the best deal possible, you are running out of time.

While it’s too early to consider calling this a seller’s market, buyers will have to work a little harder to find the home of their dreams at a bargain this fall. That’s especially true for those who want a newly built home.

Youmay get a good deal on a short sale as long as you are willing to wait. After new rules go into effect this fall, the short- selling process might be less painful than it is now.

If you are not interested in buying, selling or refinancin­g your home, thatmight be because you are too busy with home improvemen­t projects. If that’s the case, know you are not alone.

Potential home buyers entering the housing market this fall will face a harsh and somewhat confusing reality: It looks like a buyer’smarket, but it’s not.

The inventory of for- sale homes, including foreclosed properties, continues to shrink in many parts of the country. As a result, it will probably take longer for buyers to find their ideal home. And they may not necessaril­y find the bargains they expect.

“Yes, there are good deals today, especially in the distressed- property market,” said ShaunWhite, a vice president for the RE/ MAX real estate network. “But because the inventory is so greatly reduced, it is more difficult to get your offer accepted. There are bidding wars going on in many parts of the country.”

The average inventory of homes for sale nationwide was about 4.6months in August, according to the U. S. Census Bureau.

But the market hasn’t really turned into a seller’s market yet. Many underwater homeowners have taken their homes off the market, contributi­ng to the low inventory levels. And there are millions of foreclosur­es in the pipeline that eventually will hit the for- sale market.

“There are still a lot of foreclosur­e properties that we have to work through,” White said. “We won’t have a sustainabl­e recovery until that happens.”

Mortgage rates are being pulled in different directions. Borrowers who want to grab a low rate should act before the tug of war is over.

The Federal Reserve has been doing whatever it can to hold rates down, including printing billions of dollars per month to buymortgag­e bonds. But higher mortgage fees, imposed by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, will push rates up this fall.

Starting Nov. 1, FannieMae and FreddieMac will raise the guarantee fees they charge loan originator­s. On average, the increase translates into about a quarter of 1 percentage point in interest.

It’s almost like the higher fees will be canceled out by the Fed’s open- ended buying program, or QE3, said Brett Sinnott, director of secondarym­arketing at CMG Mortgage Group in San Ramon, Calif.

Rates likely will stay near the lows until the election, he said. What happens next is anyone’s guess.

“What if after the election, they say, ‘ We’re stopping ( the bond- buying program) tomorrow,’” Sinnott said.

It’s time to revisit that list of home improvemen­t projects you keep putting off. As home prices stabilize, more homeowners will tackle remodeling projects this fall.

Spending on home renovation­s is expected to increase to $ 120.7 billion in the fourth quarter of this year from $ 114 billion in the fourth quarter 2011, according to data from the Remodeling Futures Program at the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University.

Despite the growth in remodeling activity, homeowners needn’t worry about rising building material prices or potential shortages of labor, said StephenMel­man, director of economic services for the National Associatio­n of Home Builders.

“Some prices have gone up, but I don’t think that’s going to be a holdback on remodeling,” he said.

Fall is a great time to get materials at a discount as home improvemen­t stores unload their summer inventory.

As you decide which projects to tackle first, it’s wise to check your windows and consider adding insulation before winter arrives.

Kitchen and bathroom remodeling remain at the top of many homeowners’ wish lists, according to the NAHB. “The most popular large project has been bathrooms,” Melman said. “It’s also less expensive than doing a kitchen.”

A series of new short- sale guidelines that go into effect Nov. 1 are supposed to make the process of short selling easier and speedier.

FannieMae and FreddieMac will allow servicers to streamline the short- sale process for borrowers who are in financial hardship and homeowners who have to sell their homes because of a divorce, disability or job transfer.

Short- sale specialist Patty Da Silva said she hopes servicers will embrace the rules, but she is skeptical.

On average, it still takes at least six months to sell a house through short sale, said Da Silva, owner of Green Realty Properties in Davie, Fla.

Under Fannie and Freddie’s new guidelines, servicersm­ust respond to a short- sale request within 30 days and give the borrower a final decision within 60 days.

If you are on the market to buy a newly built home, expect to find fewer choices and scarcer discounts.

The inventory of new houses for sale is at a record low. As of July, there were about 142,000 newly constructe­d homes for sale in the United States, according to the U. S. Census Bureau.

Because of the low inventory, builders face less competitio­n. For buyers, that means fewer incentives and discounts.

That doesn’t mean you should pay what the builder wants. There is always room for negotiatio­n.

“I think the builders are going to continue to offer some incentives, but not to the extent they did in the depth of the crisis,” Melman said.

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