We are building a web collection of Magnificent 7 Finalists and the best of Larry Cragun written articles on Real Estate. The site is free while we are building the collection. The completed result will bring to one place a tremendous assortment of real estate and mortgage consumer advice. The Magnificent 7 are 7 consumer articles I select each month off the web as the best consumer articles of the month. At the end of each year the Magnificent 7 for the year are chosen.Enjoy.... Lar

Putting the Cart before the Horse: Making a Contingent Offer byRich Jacobsen on what’s the best strategy for buying your next home?

February 6th, 2008
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Putting the Cart before the Horse: Making a Contingent Offer byRich Jacobsen o what’s the best strategy for buying your next home? Click Here

Is it better to put your house on the market first, get it under contract with a qualified Buyer, and then find your new home?

Or, should you go out and find just the perfect house first, THEN put your house on the market?

The Market Will Always Go Up - Housing Can Never, Ever Reach These Levels Again - Myth

February 6th, 2008
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The Market Will Always Go Up

Housing Can Never, Ever Reach These Levels Again

Over the long haul, real estate follows inflation and job growth. In the United States, the former number always points up (Japan proves the other way isn’t impossible), but job growth varies drastically from region to region.

Days-On-Market (DOM) Tells You Important Information About a Property - Myth

February 6th, 2008
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Days-On-Market (DOM) Tells You Important Information About a PropertyPeople often make assumptions about a property based on the number of days it’s been on the market (DOM). But the number alone doesn’t provide enough information to make a judgment call on a property.

You Should Only Buy in Neighborhoods With Good Schools - Myth

February 6th, 2008
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You Should Only Buy in Neighborhoods With Good SchoolsThere’s no doubt that children are an important part of the home buying decision, but occasionally, you’ll run into parents who want to buy a bigger home than they need in a fancier neighborhood than they would normally consider because junior’s educational needs.

You Can Always Sell When You Need To - Myth

February 6th, 2008
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You Can Always Sell When You Need ToSelling a home is a lot of work. Making it look presentable is one thing, but keeping it presentable to the (hopefully) large number of prospects and agents coming through your home requires constant diligence. Having to find a place for your valuables and putting away many of the more personal items that may turn off prospects or prevent them from “seeing the house as their own” makes selling a lived-in home much more challenging.

You Should Treat Your Home The Same as Other Investments - Myth

February 6th, 2008
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You Should Treat Your Home The Same as Other InvestmentsYes, your home is an investment and one of the areas I research diligently for my clients is the probability of asset appreciation. But the house you live in isn’t not your stock portfolio, college fund, or that rental property you own in Sun Valley. What you would do for an investment property is very different from what you do with the house you live in.

Ten Commandments For Mortgage Applicants by Mark Flanders

February 6th, 2008
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Ten Commandments For Mortgage Applicants by Mark Flanders

The mortgage approval process is forgiving of many things, but these items will throw a serious wrench in the works. The following is a list of things that I see most often as a Loan Officer, that derail the process of getting approved for a mortgage loan.

2–Seventeen Reasons to have New Construction Homes Inspected

February 6th, 2008
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Seventeen Reasons to have New Construction Homes Inspected

by Kelly Koehler: Click Here

Get A Lender That Can Help

February 6th, 2008
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1– Click here for “The Flip Side of the Sub-Prime Story” by Ardell DellaLoggia:

No one was more surprised than I, when I got the mortgage and closed on my home.

A FSBO nightmare: Scene 1 of 2.

February 5th, 2008
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Every transaction in this story was a FSBO:(For Sale By Owner)

The story begins 30 years ago. A Boeing Engineer and his wife, I’ll name them the Johnson’s purchased 160 acres of beautiful waterfront land. The Johnson’s subdivided the land into 20 waterfront parcels, a few non waterfront lots, a parcel for a waterfront park to serve the waterfront lots, and a very large water view parcel for their own home. They raised their family on this large piece.The waterfront lots were sold shortly after the subdivision was completed.

After living on the land for 20 years they sold the large parcel to Dave. He bought it on a contract calling for monthly payments to the Johnson’s. The Johnson’s moved to Arizona, using the monthly payments from Dave as part of their retirement.

Dave then sold 40 acres to friends from church, Ron and wife. This was on a real estate contract also.

Ron and wife sold 3 lots to people they knew, also on contract. These 3 people all started to build homes on their lots, while at the same time paying Ron and wife montly payments. All the time this was going on, Ron and wife were paying Dave per the contract they executed to buy the property and home.

This all seemed great to Ron and wife, Dave, and the 3 friends. They had prime water view property. Houses were being built, all seemed well. Even the neigbhors on the watefront lived the happy life, seeming to not be involved in what was going on across the street.

Then the hammer fell. Actually it took months to fall, but it began when one of the people building a home decided to get a construction loan to complete their house. They ordered a title report. They saw Ron owed Dave and Dave owed the Johnsons; they began to be very concerned. Ron and wife quickly paid Dave off and asked for a Deed to their property. Dave stalled. Months went by and Ron and wife were under so much pressure they hired an attorney.

These were the facts surfaced. Dave had not made payments to the Johnson’s for years. Not needing the money, the Johnson’s hadn’t thought too much about it. Dave owed the Johnson’s more than Ron and wife owed Dave. All three friends owed less than Dave owed the Johnson’s.

The 3 friends got together to sue Ron and wife. Ron and wife didn’t know what to do with Dave their friend from church.

Who is at risk here? Everyone but the Johnson’s.

Being brought up to date on things, seeing the mess, the Johnson’s decided they better foreclose on Dave. That meant Ron and wife and the three people they had sold lots to would be foreclosed, possibly losing all rights of ownership of their properties.

I still don’t believe this happened but it did.

No one used an escrow company. No one bought title insurance. No one used an agent. Everyone trusted Ron and wife and Dave. Dave was a scoundrel.

So now the problem was brought to me. It was too much for me to give advice on. I sent Ron and wife to a top real estate attorney.

The resolution was interesting. I will tell it tomorrow. In preparation I will tell you: the people who bought the waterfront land got hurt. Ron and wife didn’t lose money, but moved away. The three friends that purchased lots got hurt. Dave didn’t do anything to help. The Johnson’s came out ok.