The real estate market is constantly changing, based on a range of economic factors. When you’re a real estate professional, keeping up with the trends in the market is essential to properly tailor your marketing and build your business.
There is a universal, immutable law called the Law of Cause and Effect. This law simply states that whatever the results you are looking to achieve, there is always a cause behind it - simply a reaction to something. That means that whatever results or effect you have, something must have caused it. Every effect has a definite cause.
What makes real estate investment worth your time is stability. There are faster ways of making money, but the steady returns and guaranteed eventual remuneration of your initial investment - assuming you did your homework - make properties the go-to money storage device for the world's most powerful people.
It is an illogical notion to assume that the real estate boom in the Egyptian market has gone unnoticed. Almost all major highways feature prominent billboards and advertisements of one housing project or the other.
Every year brings new trends in the real estate market. If you're wondering what 2020 has in store for the real estate market, keep reading. There are a few interesting changes you can expect to see as the new year approaches.
If you are thinking of putting your house up for sale, you may be considering listing it and selling it on your own. And that thought may make you feel empowered, may make you think you can easily do it and save yourself some money in the process. And of course, you can do it. After all, many people do it all the time.
According to Daft.ie latest Ireland Sales Report, home prices in the second quarter of 2019 were 3.7% higher than a year previously, the lowest rate of inflation since late 2013. The average price nationwide in the second quarter of the year was €263,000, up 0.9% on the first three months of the year.
A short drive from Manhattan yet worlds away from the hustle and bustle is a palatial mansion in Saddle River, New Jersey inspired by the iconic Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia. Known as Stone Palace on the Hill, the sublime estate valued at close to $30 million will go up for auction July 23-26.
In today's digital/mobile world, most of the purchase transactions we perform are done in a modern, convenient fashion. Most Americans' online shopping patterns have evolved from buying commodity items like books to more personalized items like clothes and groceries. More recently, transactions that historically were more expensive or complex are becoming more commonplace.
Staying one step ahead in the uncertain and competitive real estate space can be a challenge. We started out the year with many experts predicting that sustainability would once again be a "trend" for 2019. This is not an "aha" moment for most of us: Green building and sustainability have been enduring trends in the industry for the past couple of decades.Sustainability can no longer be considered a niche. In fact, consumers demand and expect it from most aspects of their lives. Even professional sports leagues, like the NFL, now have formal sustainability initiatives in place. According to a recent survey by Nielsen, 81% of consumers around the globe believe it is extremely or very important for companies to have environmental improvement as an objective.Full Article
If you recently moved from your home and leased it out, or inherited a rental property, you're in one of the largest demographics of real estate investors: accidental landlords. When it comes to leasing, the learning curve is a harsh one.
You have worked hard to select a market, choose the submarket, find a deal, underwrite it, submit a letter of intent (LOI) and get awarded your next income-producing asset. One of the quickest ways to kill your asset and turn it into a liability is by hiring the wrong property management company.
According to ATTOM Data Solutions May 2019 Foreclosure Market Report, U.S. foreclosure filings -- default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions -- were reported on 56,152 U.S. properties in May 2019, up 1 percent from the previous month but down 22 percent from a year ago for the 11th consecutive month with an annual decline.