Home
  • Pages
    • About US
    • Blog
    • Probate
    • Deal of the Week
    • Communities
    • Testimonials
    • Meet the Team
    • Contact Us

            

Miguel Nunez
Miguel Nunez

Use the widget to Set the sidebar

Archive for the ‘blog’ Category

« Older Entries

FHA could stop charging extra interest on mortgage payoffs

Posted by admin | Posted in blog

Consumer protection regulators press the FHA to revise a policy of collecting a full month’s worth of interest even when borrowers pay off their loans earlier in the month.

 FHA

 

WASHINGTON — Pressured by consumer protection regulators, the Federal Housing Administration is expected to end one of its most controversial practices: charging borrowers interest on their home mortgages for weeks after they’ve paid off the entire principal balance.

FHA officials declined to discuss the agency’s long-standing policy of collecting a full month’s worth of interest — hundreds of dollars extra in many cases — even when borrowers terminate their loans earlier. For instance, if you pay off your FHA loan July 3 to buy a new house with a conventional mortgage, the FHA will demand interest charges on your mortgage through July 31, collecting it out of the settlement proceeds.

But under the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s “qualified mortgage” rules, charging interest after a principal balance payoff “is the functional equivalent of a prepayment penalty,” according to the bureau. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which created the bureau, prohibits prepayment penalties on qualified mortgages — that is, residential loans that incorporate key consumer safeguards and are underwritten to limit risks for lenders and borrowers alike.

Qualified mortgages are expected to become the gold standard for home loans in the coming years and will offer the lowest rates and best terms available in the marketplace. The Dodd-Frank law designates the consumer bureau as the federal government’s drafter of rules spelling out what constitutes a qualified mortgage.

Among major players in the mortgage field, the FHA is the only one that requires full-month interest payoffs. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Department of Veterans Affairs all stop collecting interest on the day of payoff.

For more than a decade, the FHA’s practice has drawn congressional and real estate trade group criticism, most recently from Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.), who sponsored legislation during the last Congress that would have banned it. The National Assn. of Realtors also has been a vocal critic and has launched multiple efforts in recent years to persuade the agency to abandon its policy, all to no avail.

The realty group estimated that during one year alone — 2003 — the FHA collected $587 million in “excess interest fees.” With today’s lower interest rates, the sums involved probably would be lower, although the FHA’s loan portfolio and market share have increased.

Cardin, who typically is a strong supporter of the housing agency, complained in a statement introducing his legislation that “this is an issue of fairness. Homeowners should not have to pay interest on loans that they have fully repaid.”

The FHA’s policy, which is tied to a guarantee of a full month’s interest payments to investors in so-called Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed bonds, has had the side effect of encouraging many borrowers to seek to pay off their loans as close as possible to the final days in the month to avoid the hefty interest penalties.

However, when mortgage lenders, title companies and settlement firms are busy — as they have been lately — it’s often not possible to schedule an end-of-the-month settlement, causing some refinancers and sellers to pay more at the closing than they expected. Those extra payouts can be shocks to unwary sellers and refinancers who have modest incomes and resources, as many FHA borrowers do.

In its final qualified mortgage regulation, which goes into effect next January, the consumer bureau said it had “consulted extensively” with the FHA about its interest-charging practices and had agreed to allow the housing agency additional time — as much as a year extra — to implement the necessary changes.

The FHA is drafting a formal regulatory proposal aimed at bringing the agency into full compliance. At the end of that process, the FHA presumably will collect interest only through the date of payoff of a mortgage, rather than the full month.

That should be welcome news to critics, who say the FHA’s recent series of increases in monthly mortgage insurance premiums and its June 3 revocation of new borrowers’ rights to cancel premiums at any time during their loan terms are driving moderate-income borrowers away from the agency and making home-buying less affordable.

The take-away here: Until the FHA changes its policy, try to schedule any early mortgage payoff or closing on a refinancing as late in the month as possible to avoid punitive interest charges.

Tags: Apartments In Carmel Valley, Carmel Valley Homes, Carmel Valley House, Carmel Valley Houses, Carmel Valley Land For Sale, Carmel Valley Real Estate For Sale, Carmel Valley Realtor, Carmel Valley Realty, Only Carmel Valley Homes
Read more | Comments (0) | June 10th, 2013

We Are #1, Congratulations KW!

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, communities, How is the market

Keller Williams - Number 1 Real Estate Company in North America

Read more | Comments (0) | February 18th, 2013

Asking prices up in 86 of 100 largest markets

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, How is the market

<a href="http://www.shutterstock.com/pic.mhtml?id=45868669" target="_blank">Trend</a> image via Shutterstock.

Asking prices of homes listed for sale on real estate portal Trulia.com in January were up from a year ago in 86 of the 100 largest U.S. metros, according to a monthly report released today.

The report, which covers roughly 4.5 million for-sale and for-rent properties listed on Trulia through Jan. 31, showed asking prices up 5.9 percent from a year ago, and growing by a seasonally adjusted 0.9 percent from December to January — the biggest month-over-month gain since March 2012.

In some markets, the strong growth in asking prices doesn’t necessarily indicate that worries are over, said Jed Kolko, Trulia’s chief economist.

“In many local markets today, dramatic price gains can mask serious red flags,”Kolko said in a blog post. “Strong job growth, low vacancy rate, and low foreclosure inventory — not huge price gains — are signs of a healthy housing market.”

Trulia identified San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, Denver and Salt Lake city as “booming” markets with strong fundamentals.

Tags: Apartments In Carmel Valley, Asking price increase, Carmel Valley Homes, Carmel Valley House, Carmel Valley Houses, Carmel Valley Land For Sale, Carmel Valley Real Estate For Sale, Carmel Valley Realtor, Carmel Valley Realty, home price increase, increasing housing price, Only Carmel Valley Homes
Read more | Comments (0) | February 5th, 2013

Housing to drive economic growth (finally!)

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, How is the market

The bursting of the housing bubble plunged the economy into a recession from which it has yet to fully recover. But economists say this could finally be the year that housing lifts us out of the doldrums.

 

“Homebuilding activity will likely remain the strongest growing component of the economy in 2013,” said Keith Hembre, chief economist of Nuveen Asset Management. “After several years of excess supply, demand and supply conditions are now in much better balance.”

Home sales rebounded to the strongest level in five years in 2012, as home building bounced back to levels not seen since early in the recession. Near record low mortgage rates, rising home pricesand a drop in foreclosures have combined to bring buyers back to the market.

The economists surveyed also forecast that there will be just under 1 million housing starts this year — roughly matching the 28% rise in home building in 2012. Moody’s Analytics is forecasting much stronger growth — a 50% rise both this year and next year, which it estimates will create more than 1 million new jobs.

“There’s a lot of pent-up demand for housing, and very little supply,” said Celia Chen, housing economist for Moody’s Analytics. “As demand continues to improve, home builders have nothing to sell. They’ll have to build.” She said that growth in building will mean adding not just construction jobs, but also manufacturing jobs building the appliances and furniture needed in the new homes, which in turn drives overall consumption higher.

And economists say the tight supply and renewed demand for housing should lead to higher home values — about a 3.7% increase according to the survey.

“One of the most significant indirect effects from the housing recovery is the ‘wealth effect’ on consumers due to the recovery in home prices,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist of Deutsche Bank, who said better home values can affect both consumer psychology on spending as well as their actual finances.

“Even small moves in home prices can have large effects on consumption, because housing comprises such a significant share of household assets,” he said.

But even with the bullish outlook on housing, economists are still forecasting only a modest rise in the overall economy this year. The consensus estimate is for economic growth of about 2.4% in 2013, only a modest improvement from the 2012 growth rate of about 2% they’re forecasting when the final numbers are in.

By far the biggest concern is a standoff on Capitol Hill. About three-quarters of those surveyed picked Congressional gridlock — which could result in a cutback in federal spending – as the biggest problem facing the U.S. economy. Other choices, such as theEuropean sovereign debt crisis, continued high unemployment and increased government regulation, were much less of a concern.

“Washington is now the primary impediment to stronger economic growth,” said Russell Price, senior economist of Ameriprise Financial.

 

Tags: Carmel Valley, housing recovery, Miguel Nunez, Palacio del Mar, probates, san diego
Read more | Comments (0) | January 28th, 2013

Home Values Rise Quickly but Unevenly

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, How is the market

A home for sale in California.

 

Home values rose nearly 6 percent in 2012, according to year-end data from the real estate Web site Zillow. But such increases aren’t likely to continue.

The increase is the largest annual gain since 2006, near the peak of the housing bubble, and is greater than the typical appreciation seen in healthy markets. Zillow forecasts an increase next year of about 3.3 percent, more in line with typical housing market appreciation. (Historically, annual appreciation averages about 3 percent, according to Zillow’s research.)

Stan Humphries, Zillow’s chief economist, said he expected the housing recovery to continue this year, but at a “more sustainable” pace. Tight inventory in some markets, combined with strong demand and a slowing pace of foreclosures, contributed to the rise in values, he said. As values rise, fewer homeowners are underwater, or owe more than their home is worth, and may be more willing to put their homes on the market. The increase in inventory, in turn, should moderate future price increases.

As home values rose in the fourth quarter, foreclosures slowed, to 5.22 of every 10,000 homes nationwide in December. That was the lowest pace since November 2007, when the rate was 5.18 per 10,000 homes, Zillow said. Sales of foreclosed houses stood at 12 percent of the market, down 4 percent from the end of 2011.

The housing recovery, however, is uneven. Phoenix, for instance, which has had strong investor interest, showed an increase of more than 22 percent year-over-year, a pace reminiscent of the real estate bubble. Cincinnati and Chicago, meanwhile, showed slight declines. Seven of the top 30 metropolitan areas in the study, however, showed an increase in home values of 10 percent or more.

While it’s encouraging to see housing values rise rather than fall, there’s a risk that consumers may get used to such large increases and expect them to continue, Mr. Humphries said. And that’s probably not a good thing. The recent volatility in the housing market makes it easier to think of housing as a shorter-term, speculative investment, he said, rather than as a place to live. “Housing should be thought of as a long-term investment.”

Has the recent rise in home values changed your perspective on housing as an investment?

Tags: Apartments In Carmel Valley, Carmel Valley Homes, Carmel Valley House, Carmel Valley Houses, Carmel Valley Land For Sale, Carmel Valley Real Estate For Sale, Carmel Valley Realtor, Carmel Valley Realty, Home Values Rise Quickly but Unevenly, Only Carmel Valley Homes
Read more | Comments (0) | January 24th, 2013

Builder confidence holds steady in January

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, communities, How is the market

Workers build a home in Rancho Santa Fe

An index measuring home-builder confidence  failed to post any gain this month, remaining unchanged after eight consecutive months of increases.

The National Assn. of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index held at 47, which was its highest level since April 2006. Any reading over 50 indicates that more builders view conditions as good rather than poor.

“Conditions in the housing market look much better now than at the beginning of 2012, “Barry Rutenberg, chairman of the association, said in a news release. “An increasing number of housing markets are showing signs of recovery, which should bode well for future home sales later this year.”

The components of the index, which is derived from a monthly survey, were mixed. The current sales conditions part of the index was unchanged at 51. The part measuring sales expectations in the coming six months fell 1 point to 49.  The part of the index measuring traffic at model homes from potential buyers gained one point to reach 37.

Tags: Builder Confidence, Carmel Valley Home Sales, Carmel Valley Investors, Carmel Valley Real Estate, Carmel Valley Short Sales, Miguel Nunez, Real Estate Short Sales, San Diego Probate Sales, San Diego Short Sales
Read more | Comments (0) | January 17th, 2013

5 Signs the Market is Recovering Fast

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, How is the market

Sold Home For Sale Sign in Front of Beautiful New House.

Confession: I cyber stalk real estate agents. I watch your Facebook statuses. I read your tweets, likes and shares. And, from time-to-time I even scan your Spotify feeds to figure out what new artists I should check out.

Why? Well, not because agents have the best taste in music (though I have seen some pretty good tracks on your playlists…)

The truth is, over time I’ve found that if you really want to know what’s going on in the real estate market, all you have to do is watch the conversations agents are having.

Recently, my cyber observations have made me feel like we’re in the dead heat of a market turnaround. It seems like agents are feeling better, doing more business, and generally positive about the market prospects in the year ahead.

But, I had to ask: is this anecdotal recovery I’m feeling real? And if so, where are the signs?

Here are six answers I found that support the notion that things are looking up for the real estate industry.

Take a look, share them, blog them, and shoot me a comment in the box below to let me know what signs of change (if any) you’re seeing in your area.

1. Both asking price and rents jumped 5 percent from last year

Trulia’s latest Price and Rent Monitorsshowed a big boost in asking prices across the U.S. – up 5.1 percent year-over-year. This a drastic change from the double digit declines of previous years.

The relevant news for your buyer and seller prospects isn’t just that home prices are climbing, but that renting is getting more expensive as well. The statistics showed rents are up 5.2 percent year-over-year.

If you understand supply and demand, it’s obvious that these two facts point toward more real estate moves happening, and that consumers have gotten over the angst of previous years and shifted into the “recovery mindset.”

To follow along or view past data releases from Trulia, check out the Pro Blog’s Industry Feed where you can find graphics and facts you can share to help boost consumer confidence in your market.

 2.  Mortgage rules got a renovation.

Predatory lending practices linger near the top of many economists’ blame lists for the most recent market decline.  And, after years of fallout from bad mortgages, capable buyers have been, understandably, slow to purchase.

For those buyers who’ve been anxious about the mortgage process and skeptical of the predatory lending, this Thursday brought great news and a sure “go” sign for them to jump into the market.

Thursday the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released it’s new mortgage guidelines which are “a set of standards that protects consumers from bad loans” according to David Stevens, CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association.

The new guidelines show that banks and the government are working out their differences to create a safer, more secure environment for homeowner hopefuls. In addition, the new guidelines give those buyers access to mortgage best practices upfront to help them ensure they’re ready for application and ownership from the start.

For a great summary of the new guidelines, check out CNN’s article “New Rules Aim to Make Mortgages Safer”.

 3. Delinquency & foreclosures are at record lows.

Declining delinquencies aren’t just fluffed headlines, the numbers support what it seems many agents are feeling.

Delinquencies are down. According to Trulia’s Chief Economist, Jed Kolko, “ In November, 10.63% of mortgages were delinquent or in foreclosure, down a hair from 10.64% in October. The combined delinquency + foreclosure rate is at its lowest level in four years and is 41% back to normal.”

These stats are good news for buyer’s agents whose clients and prospects need a boost of confidence.

4. 93% of Millenials plan to buy.

Last quarter we released Trulia’s American Dream Survey and one of the top facts from our study showed that 93 percent of current millennial renters plan to buy.

This is good news for an industry that’s suffered from years of skittish home shoppers and a lot of talk about home buying no longer being a part of the American Dream.

5. Investors rush in.

Another sign that we’re on the way to a high-paced recovery is that investors are making major moves to capitalize on today’s opportunity.

A recent story from Bloomberg covered how Blackstone Group, the largest U.S. private real estate owners, sped up it’s purchases of homes to try to beat out fast rising prices.

This is a sign for on the fence buyers to start their hunt before the weather heats up and they face more competition than they can handle.

These are some of the national signs that show the recovery is well under way. Comment below and tell us what you’re seeing, reading, and witnessing in your local market.

Read more | Comments (0) | January 12th, 2013

Agency Expects More Short Sales in 2013 with Debt Relief Act’s Extension

Posted by admin | Posted in blog, How is the market

 

YouWalkAway.com, a foreclosure agency, conducted a survey of its clients and revealed 78 percent of those who responded said they were walking away from their primary residence. In addition, at least 74 percent of all respondents would be eligible for tax relief through the Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007.

The Mortgage Debt Relief Act allows forgiven debt through a short sale, loan modification, or foreclosure to be excluded as taxable income.

The act faced expiration December 31, 2012, but Congressextended the act for another year on January 1.

“This extension hasn’t been well publicized but it is important to homeowners and realtors nationwide. Had this law not been

extended, it could have brought a drastic halt to short sales and had a devastating effect on underwater homeowners,” said Chad Ruyle, YouWalkAway.com co-founder.

In a report, the foreclosure agency explained the one-year extension is not likely to encourage a new wave of mortgage defaults in early 2013.

While it could be argued that extending the act will encourage underwater homeowners to strategically default, YouWalkAway.com does not expect to see new defaults. Strategic default occurs when borrowers decide to stop making payments on a mortgage they can afford.

Rather than seeing new defaults, YouWalkAway.com expects the one-year extension to provide tax forgiveness for just the homeowners currently in the foreclosure process since new defaulters would have only a year to receive tax forgiveness, which is not enough in certain states with lengthy foreclosure timelines that exceed a one-year period.

On average, 85 percent of YouWalkAway.com clients have not made a monthly mortgage payment in 14 months. Thus, the agency concludes, a 12-month extension is not encourage new strategic defaulters.

Instead, the 12-month extension will motivate homeowners to seek options outside of the lengthy foreclosure process and seek alternatives such as a short sale, deed-in-lieu, or a modification, the agency explained.

Tags: Carmel Valley Home Sales, Carmel Valley Investors, Carmel Valley Real Estate, Carmel Valley Short Sales, Miguel Nunez, Real Estate Short Sales, San Diego Probate Sales, San Diego Short Sales, Short Sales
Read more | Comments (0) | January 10th, 2013

4 Ways to Get Clients Who Will Close in 2013 from the Web

Posted by admin | Posted in blog

iStock_000018868111Small

Your website can be a great tool for building relationships outside of the sales cycle and driving hyper-local content creation can be the foundation for a successful long-term, long tail search engine optimization strategy.

The short-term downside with both of these approaches is they are time consuming and can take years to fully bear their fruits. Time is money and most agents need to drive real results in the days and months that are right around the corner.

As you’re working to make 2013 the most prosperous and efficient year ever, we invite you to take a look at a few web engagement strategies designed to realize more results faster. Use these to target web visitors that are ready to buy, and push that traffic directly to you.

1. Organic traffic from Google search results

Ranking number one for Springfield Real Estate (or whatever city you market in) sure would be a great way to drive a ton of traffic, right? Unfortunately, all of your competitors all agree, which means ranking for general terms has become very difficult. Some real estate professionals have had success in ranking for “long tail” results instead.

To do this, they write about everything in their community – schools, restaurants, events, etc… While this often works, it takes a long time to write all that content, and the people who find it aren’t necessarily interested in buying or selling a house.

To achieve similar success in a lot less time, don’t go quite so “long.” People who are ready to do a transaction are essentially searching for the answers to at least one of three questions:

  1. How much is my house worth?
  2. Which houses are for sale?
  3. How is the local market? (Or, is now a good time to buy or sell?)

Once a week, create content that addresses one of these three questions. Give these stories a title that matches – for instance: “New houses for sale in Lakewood, Colorado” or “What are houses selling for in Alameda, California?” You may even want to drill down to specific neighborhoods.

It will take a few months of consistent writing on these topics to move meaningfully higher in your local home search market, but this is the shortest path to success in the long tail search results game.

2. Mobile ready, single property listing landing pages

This one is fairly straightforward. If you have a for sale sign planted in a yard, make sure the consumer standing in front of it can access information about it on their phone.

To do this, you need

  • a URL that’s easy to type,
  • a landing page that renders nicely on a smart phone, and
  • capture tools that make it easy for the consumer to give you their contact information.

Long & Foster recently announced a program that provides these tools for their agents.

If you aren’t a Long and Foster agent, you can copy and paste you’re the custom Trulia listing URL into Bit.Ly or Goo.gl and make your own custom short web address to connect prospects to a mobile friendly landing page.

It’s a small tactic that’s becoming more and more important as real estate search becomes more mobile.

3. Target your advertising

If you’ve been in real estate for more than six months, you‘ve asked, “What marketing really works?” Well, the answer depends on what you consider “working.” When you’re shopping for real estate ads, make sure you focus your efforts on the zip codes, areas, and avenues that offer you measurable focused result.

You don’t need every lead that ever graced a web page. You also don’t need to promote yourself in every publication in your city or town.  You do need leads that are serious buyers and sellers.

The key to shopping for advertising these days is setting your goals and targets before you get into a conversation about tactics. Once you’ve decided on your goals, make sure your sales rep or account manager understands them and can show you how to measure the result before you shell out the cash.

4. Trulia and other web portals

In addition to generating your own traffic, make sure you tap into the traffic from the nation’s largest web portals. If you have listings, make sure your profiles are complete and have the proper email address, phone number and URL for consumers to reach out to you.

If you’re a buyer’s agent, make sure your real estate profile lists your expertise and consider answering consumer questions on forums like Trulia Voices.

Finally, take a look at the products we provide to deliver traffic to you. Remember, time is money. Sometimes it’s more profitable to focus on converting leads into clients than it is to spend all your time generating your own leads.

These four strategies are all great sources of traffic for you website. But once the traffic comes your way, you need to have a strategy for converting that traffic into clients. We’ll tackle that in a few future posts and some of our upcoming trainings.

 

Tags: Apartments In Carmel Valley, Carmel Valley Homes, Carmel Valley House, Carmel Valley Houses, Carmel Valley Land For Sale, Carmel Valley Real Estate For Sale, Carmel Valley Realtor, Carmel Valley Realty, Get Clients from Web, Miguel Nunez, Only Carmel Valley Homes
Read more | Comments (0) | January 4th, 2013

4 Social Shares to Catch the New Year’s Hot Clients

Posted by admin | Posted in blog

 

If you’ve worked, used, or talked to anyone who uses social media for business you’ve heard the question “What posts are going to generate business?” Unfortunately, the answer hasn’t always been easy for real estate agents.

Over the past few years, the ebbs and flows of the market, wavering consumer confidence, and some overly negative press have made it so agents and industry blogs were plagued with only hum drum sad news to share.

But 2012 has been the year of change for agents, bloggers, and anyone who’s job involves “talking” real estate online.

Here’s the proof. Here are 4 social shares help you start 2013 off with Facebook updates, tweets, and other shares that show your clients and prospects that this year could be one of their best opportunities to close a real estate deal.

1. The housing market is recovering fast

If you haven’t already seen, Trulia’s Housing Barometer has been tracking the housing market’s recovery each month.

The most recent release shows that the housing market is 50% back to normal and housing prices are up another 6 percent. This is great news for building buyer confidence in your area or convincing skittish sellers that now is a good time to sell.

Read the latest Trulia’s Housing Barometer update on the housing market’s recovery for more details.

2. Foreclosures have a hit a post-crisis low

A late 2011 study showed that foreclosures have a major effect on buyer confidence. Sharing the recent news that foreclosures have a hit a post-crisis low is a great way to build confidence and catch the eyeballs of your next potential clients online.

For the story on foreclosures and other good news for 2013, check out Housing in 2013: What’s In, What’s Out.

3. Housing inventory has dropped for the 9thmonth in a row

The National Association of Realtors reported housing inventory has dropped for the 9th month in a row.

For buyers, that means that now is the time to act before they miss out. For sellers, now is the time start marketing their home as more buyers move off the fence. For you, the agent, now is the time to become the source of good news about the market.

Check out the data on NAR’s website and use it to fuel your own blogs and social sharing.

4. Help for first-time sellers

NAR stats show that one of the biggest market opportunities of 2013 will be first-time sellers. To help you engage these prospects and turn them into clients, we’ve come up with this brandable guide to help you tap this hot niche market.

Download it, add your brand and contact info, and share this on your website or as a printed handout for potential sellers in your area.

Tips for sharing the news

Simply hitting “share” or “tweet” is not enough to build your expertise. Here are a few ways to use housing headlines to boost your expertise locally.

 1. Start a local conversation

National headlines and facts can do a great job of garnering attention, but at the end of the day buyers and sellers want to know what’s happening in your market.

Use the national headlines or quotes from some of the shares in this post as an intro for blog post about what’s happening in your market.

2. Share it with your spin

To convince prospects you’re an expert they need to hear from you.  When your sharing these facts, stats, and helpful tips make sure you add your own commentary on the news you’re re-sharing.

3. Send it in your follow-up

Your ads, social shares, and any of your other marketing tools are pointless if there’s no substance in your follow-up.

Check out Trulia’s Agent Download Center for helpful handouts to include in your client follow-up. You can download them to use in your e-mail follow-ups or feature them as downloads on your own blog or website to help capture new clients.

 

Tags: Apartments In Carmel Valley, Carmel Valley Homes, Carmel Valley House, Carmel Valley Houses, Carmel Valley Land For Sale, Carmel Valley Real Estate For Sale, Carmel Valley Realtor, Carmel Valley Realty, Only Carmel Valley Homes, Social Media leads
Read more | Comments (0) | January 2nd, 2013
« Older Entries



 

Subscribe to Us!

  

Follow Us!

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on LinkedInFollow Us on E-mail

       Featured Videos

  • Sunstone Home for Rent
    Sunstone Home for Rent
  • Cam Exquisito
    Cam Exquisito
  • Vista Lujo 2
    Vista Lujo 2

Recent Posts

  • FHA could stop charging extra interest on mortgage payoffs
  • We Are #1, Congratulations KW!
  • Asking prices up in 86 of 100 largest markets
  • Housing to drive economic growth (finally!)
  • Home Values Rise Quickly but Unevenly
  • Builder confidence holds steady in January
  • 5 Signs the Market is Recovering Fast
  • Agency Expects More Short Sales in 2013 with Debt Relief Act's Extension
  • 4 Ways to Get Clients Who Will Close in 2013 from the Web
  • 4 Social Shares to Catch the New Year’s Hot Clients


Contact Miguel By U.S. Phone: 858.481.1029
12780 High Bluff Dr., Ste #130 San Diego CA 92130
DRE#01220521 • Copyright • 2012 • All Rights Reserved
Copyrights © Miguel Nunez Realtors

Switch to our mobile site