Heather Bise

Archive for May 2008

Renting in NYC

In NYC Renters on May 28,2008 at 10:02 am

Renting in New York is unlike any other city in the country. At times my rental clients feel as if they are actually purchasing instead of renting. The process is somewhat tedious, which is why I have highlighted the steps for you (for a rental building).  Keep in mind condo rentals and co-op sublets may require more documentation (and an interview by the board).
Affordability A simple rule to keep in mind: you can expect to pay 25% of your gross annual salary for rent.

 Financial Qualifications Most landlords require that you annually earn 40 to 50 times the amount of the monthly rent. Outstanding loans and liquid assets are additionally considered.

Lease Guarantors For the renter that does not meet the Landlords financial qualifications, you may need a guarantor to guarantee the lease. Landlords prefer a family member who lives and owns property in New York, New Jersey or Connecticut. The guarantor must earn ample income.

Expatriates If you do not have a Social Security number and do not pay taxes in the United States, your eligibility is weighted differently. You will need to work closely with your employer, relocation coordinator and your real estate agent.

When you plan your home finding trip to New York City, you will need to bring the following items

Personal Documents

*Letter of employment and salary verification
*Names, addresses and phone numbers of previous landlords
*Names, addresses and phone numbers of personal and business references
*Bank account numbers
*Credit card numbers
*Expected bonus (employer to verify)
*Driver’s license or passport

New York Landlords will not accept personal or out-of-state checks

Required Funds

*Credit Check: $25 to $180
*Two months rent for the security deposit and first month rent (additional funds may be required for security). If you do not have a NYC bank account you may bring Traveler’s Cheques that can be converted.
*The Brokerage Fee: Is paid by the tenant and is typically 12-15% of the annual rent. The landlord does not pay the fee – the tenant is responsible.

Once you have chosen your new apartment an application will be submitted, credit check performed and your references will be verified. Upon approval: leases will be signed and certified checks will be submitted.

 

 

Fuel in NYC to Real Estate in Saudi Arabia

In Beyond NYC on May 26,2008 at 9:21 am

Years ago when I was a sales agent (in another city)I used to drive my clients to view properties in my car.  Well, until they realized that I was an awful driver – and decided to follow me in their own vehicles! One thing I have not missed being a Broker in NYC – I do not need a car.  If I need a car, I hire a driver.   

This week, was a week that I needed a driver for my clients.  On the way to pick up my clients, the driver was complaining about current gas prices.  I know gas is roughly, $4 a gallon, but never really thought about filling up the tank.  In a moment of lightheartedness, I mentioned that he should fill-up in Venezuela next time (he did not get my joke).  When he said it cost him $85 that morning for his Towncar – I was shocked and even more so, did not miss the responsibility of owning a car.

Which fueled my mind in another direction: real estate in the Middle East – Saudi Arabia.

According to a recent report of the Council of Saudi Chambers, investments in the Saudi real estate sector are set to grow at the rate of 2.9 percent in view of the fast population growth in the Kingdom. The real estate industry will achieve 6.7 percent growth over the next five years thanks to commercial and residential projects in addition to the demand for land and houses.

 

Recent article (something to ponder as you are filling up at your local gas station):

 

Saudi Arabia: Climate For Change

Real Estate Sector Set to Transform Kingdom

 

Saudi developers are seeking foreign partners and expertise to meet the king’s demand for thousands of new homes for his people

Saudi Arabia may have plenty of oil and a great deal of space, but, remarkably, it has a shortage of housing.

The government estimates that more than 500,000 people require new homes annually, equivalent to about 100,000 units a year. To meet the need, scores of house building projects are rolling off the architectural drawing boards, and the property business is booming.

In the last three years, 50 new real estate developers have received licenses from the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority and regional property firms are entering the market that, until now, has been mostly centered in Riyadh.

Many of the new developments are spectacular mega-projects. The $26.6 billion King Abdullah Economic City, which is being built on the Red Sea coast north of Jeddah, will have three luxury residential districts that will house 75,000 residents.

A second project, Jeddah Hills, which is to be built in Jeddah at a cost of $11.2 billion, will consist of 20,000 top range residential units.

Al Oula Development Company, operating under the umbrella of Emaar Middle East, is responsible for building the properties on almost half of the 5,432 acre site. Ayedh Bin Farhan Al-Gahtani, president of Al Oula, says it will be developed in phases and will be the single biggest residential building project in Jeddah.

Al Oula has projects in all the kingdom’s major cities, says Al-Gahtani, who believes that the real estate business in the kingdom is just starting and the potential for development is great, due to an alarming shortage of home ownership properties in the kingdom. He expects to see many more such developments and says that Al Oula will take the biggest share in the market in developing residential units.

Saudi Arabia lagged behind its Gulf neighbors in liberalizing its real estate sector. As a consequence, the kingdom’s property development companies, while posting impressive profits, have not so far experienced the hyper-growth that has been achieved in other Gulf states.

Many of the larger Saudi firms have actually made some of their largest investments outside of the kingdom. Al Oula is in Egypt developing a new diplomatic quarter in Cairo. The project has been embraced by the Egyptian government and a number of embassies and additionally Al Oula is focusing on Syria and Jordan.

Many of the larger Saudi firms have targeted the United Arab Emirates, lured by a more open market and higher returns.

Al Hanoo, one of the kingdom’s leading real estate developers, formed a $136.2 million company called Ewan to build and sell the first phase of Star Islands, the largest commercial, residential and tourism development project in the emirate of Sharjah. Another major Saudi company, Tanmiyat, acquired the residential and commercial components of Legends, a $2 million theme park and resort development in Dubai.

Nevertheless the real estate business in the kingdom is gathering pace. High oil prices are leading to increasing personal prosperity for many Saudi citizens and a great deal of liquidity.

With a population of 27 million to cater for, the kingdom certainly has a much larger real estate sector than the other Gulf states, and so has potential for far greater returns on investment.

Economic expansion has also increased the need for accommodation as expatriates arrive in the established industrial centers of Yanbu and Jubail and the newer sites growing at Rabigh and Ha’il.

Dr Saleh Al Habib, executive director of Jiwar, a leading real estate company, points out that 60 percent of Saudi citizens do not own a house.

“They may not own a house, but the money is there to do so,” he says. Furthermore, with an estimated 60 percent of those citizens aged under 25 and the population growing at the rate of 7 percent a year, the demand for new homes is rising fast.

Al Gahtani of Al Oula maintains that it would be no exaggeration to say that the real estate sector in Saudi Arabia is second only to oil in terms of its economic contribution.

Saudi Arabia is underdeveloped in real estate terms, he says. This is due to political and financial elements. Banks have been traditionally cautious about engaging in real estate development projects because of regulations that did not allow them to mortgage the properties. This meant that developers had to raise their own financing, usually through private initiatives.

“Now things are changing on both the political and financial sides,” says Ibrahim Bin Fahad Al Assaf, Al Oula’s executive vice-president. “Banks are starting to realize the importance of real estate development. In the past, they were running away from these projects, and today they are running to them. Mortgage regulations are in the process of being approved by the government. We expect these to be realized before the end of the year. This will set the groundwork for a mortgage system in the kingdom.”

Expatriates – from other Arab states, the West and the Indian subcontinent – who have lived in the country for ten years continuously can now apply for citizenship, and thus qualify to buy property.

The lack of mortgage facilities has acted as a bottle-neck limiting development, says Al Assaf, and when this problem has been resolved he believes the market will expand quickly with developers selling on a mass level. “We are moving slowly but surely. In Saudi Arabia drastic change does not happen easily but we are continuously changing.”

The company president, Al-Gahtani sees himself as a tool, carrying out King Abdullah’s vision of the kingdom’s future, and believes that Al Oula will expand to five times its present size in the years to come.

He says the changes since King Abdullah’s accession have been dramatic. “He has challenged Saudis to repatriate their money and has made the kingdom a welcoming environment for investment.”

It was this attitude that persuaded the Dubai-based Emaar Properties to enter the Saudi market. In June, Emaar, the largest listed company in the United Arab Emirates, bought John Laing Homes, the second-largest privately held U.S. homebuilder, for $1.05 billion cash, making it one of the world’s largest property companies in terms of capital.

When it entered the Saudi market, Emaar linked up with Al Oula.

This, says Al-Gahtani, is because the two companies share a common vision and a common structure. He explains that Al Oula was the first company in Saudi Arabia to be established by a group of companies, rather than by an individual or a family and therefore is an institution not a family business or any one individual’s dream.

To emphasize the real estate potential in the kingdom, Al-Gahtani says: “Emaar has completed some incredible projects in Dubai, but Dubai is only the size of one Saudi city. Saudi Arabia will require probably 20 more projects equal to what is the biggest at present, the King Abdullah Economic City, to meet our society’s needs. So there is room for more entrants in this market.”

Al Habib of Jiwar has a similar enthusiasm for an international partnership. Jiwar is a subsidiary of the Saudi Binladen Group, the kingdom’s biggest construction company. Launching Jiwar after four years as a professor specializing in media and marketing, he saw that the kingdom’s real estate sector lacked feasibility studies.

“An important aspect of real estate that was missing was identifying the needs of the people. You have to know what they want in their homes, what they want in their malls, what services they require. This information was not present. So we obtained it. We do our studies, take the numbers and implement them into the design of our projects.”

What the kingdom needs now, he says, is more foreign expertise.

“We need companies with the sort of experience that leading American companies have,” he says. “Our plan for Jiwar is to get our name out into the public arena and attract some partners.

To build the Jiwar brand name, the company invested $13.3 million in sponsoring The World Cup soccer competition and has hired a leading international advertising agency to market its name globally.

“This is the time when we need the American companies and businessmen to come and help us with their knowledge and expertise,” he says. “We have the cash, but we need help to cope with the change, the booming population, the heavy liquidity and the mega-projects.”

Investors in real estate can expect returns of not less than 30 percent, he says, with no taxes and an open environment.

 

Foreclosures in NYC

In Buyers in NYC, For Brokers, New York, Sellers in NYC on May 13,2008 at 4:25 am

Even though the consensuses amongst real estate brokers in Manhattan feel that property owners will not be affected by the national housing crises…By the numbers, it is time to get realistic.

 Not too mention I have seen a huge amount of “expired” listings in the listing systems. It should not take more than six months to sell an apartment in NYC – if it is priced accordingly.  It is time for brokers to step it up and start walking the talk with more realistic pricing. What is the point of having an exclusive listing if you cannot sell it?

 

BY THE NUMBERS


For New York City:
74% Increase in mortgage payments late by 60 days in the first quarter from a year earlier
66% Increase in foreclosures in the first quarter from a year earlier

 

 

 

 

Foreclosure fight moves to NY Senate

From CRAIN’S NY BusinessBY Daniel Massey
Published: May 11, 2008 – 5:59 am

A showdown looms in the state Senate over a bill that would impose a one-year moratorium on foreclosures.

The legislation, which the Assembly passed by an overwhelming majority last week, has drawn the ire of the banking industry and some Republicans, who seem prepared instead to support a bill proposed by Gov. David Paterson.

Foreclosure filings in the state rose 40% in the first quarter from the year-earlier period, to about 14,000, according to RealtyTrac, and more New Yorkers are falling behind on their mortgage payments. With federal legislation stalled, state Democrats and Republicans and their allies say that something needs to be done, but that’s where the agreement ends.

“The industry’s answer is ‘We don’t need regulation,’ but that’s what they were saying 10 years ago, and you see the mess we’ve gotten into,” says Josh Zinner, co-director of the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project.

Democrats and housing activists say that a one-year moratorium combined with a strengthening of the governor’s plan—which focuses on assisting those facing foreclosure and avoiding another crisis—would help address the issue.

But the idea of stopping the clock for subprime borrowers who make minimum monthly payments determined by a judge is anathema to lenders, who say it would make it harder for creditworthy New Yorkers to get mortgages.

Senate Republicans appear to be getting behind the Paterson bill.

Emphasis on governor’s bill

“If something is going to happen in this area, it’s going to involve the governor’s program bill,” says Hugh Farley, R-Schenectady, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

But housing advocates are gearing up for a fight in the chamber, where, spearheaded by Acorn, they have persuaded Republican Sen. Frank Padavan of Queens to sponsor the moratorium measure.

“If Sen. Padavan and his colleagues are serious, they will follow the Assembly’s lead and pass this legislation without delay,” says Acorn Executive Director Bertha Lewis.

The Paterson legislation, which came out of the Banking Department, steers clear of the tricky moratorium question. It would require lenders to send a notice to borrowers at least 60 days before beginning a residential foreclosure action and would mandate that the parties meet with a judge to work out a settlement. It also expands the state’s anti-predatory lending laws and rules governing borrowers’ ability to repay loans.

Advocates say that bill needs even more protection for borrowers, but mortgage industry experts say it goes too far and would inhibit lenders’ ability to provide credit.

Hearing today

The debate will continue before the Senate Banking Committee today as mortgage and housing groups testify on the governor’s proposal. It’s unclear how the Assembly would react if a watered-down Paterson bill is approved by the Senate.

Banking and financial services companies spent $7.3 million on lobbying statewide in 2007, according to the state Commission on Public Integrity. Banking industry political action committees donated a total of at least $426,000 to Senate and Assembly members—a significant amount in a nonelection year—according to the New York Public Interest Research Group.

At least $168,000 of that amount went to Senate Republicans, and at least $107,000 was donated to Assembly Democrats.

Observers of state politics say that the moratorium might have served a purpose, even if it doesn’t become law.

“What it does is provide an impetus and momentum to bring attention to the issue,” says Patricia Salkin, director of the Government Law Center of Albany Law School. “Somehow, you always wind up with a new law where all the different perspectives have had a chance to weigh in.”