The first month of the new year is over. Today I discuss the numbers for January 2010, how many homes sold in the metro phoenix area, how many new homes listed for sale, how many foreclosure homes, how many short sales and lastly the retail sales.
What does all this mean???
Please ask questions? Let me know what issues you want to hear about???

Are You Looking for an Arizona Foreclosure home? Are you sick of losing the bidding wars? Watch this video:  http://www.arizonabankdeals.com/how-to-buy-foreclosure-homes/

Are You having fiancial difficulties and fear losing your home? Do you need help? We would like to help! http://www.arizonabankdeals.com/upside-down-on-mortgage/

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TIRED OF LOSING ALL THOSE FORECLOSURE HOMES TO OTHER BUYERS? YOUR ANSWER IS HERE!
My team specializes in Foreclosure and Short Sale homes here in the metro Phoenix Real Estate Market. Since Spring of 2009, we have been experiencing multiple offers for our Foreclosure homes and been involved with bidding wars for our buyers trying to purchase foreclosure homes.
Getting out bid was very disappointing, I am sure you would agree. We realized that we get Advanced Notice to our Foreclosure listings and because we are working with several banks, we can see thier coming soon inventory too. We started marketing the homes before they were listed. It worked great. We sold many of our own listings. Many of the top Foreclosure agents are friends of mine, we meet at special conventions for top selling agents. They share their coming soon inventory with us, adding more Advanced Notice.
We started noticing that the banks didn’t always take the top offer. So we started tracking what made a difference. From there we put together a system of writing offers the way the banks like to see them, so they get accepted. Together with the Advanced Notice to the bank owned Foreclosure homes we call this our “Unfair Advantage.”
Recently we secured homes for 3 different buyers using this system. They were not the highest offers, nor cash offers, but their offers were selected.
Hi I’m Jeff Cameron with Keller Williams.

After plunging as much as 70%, the real estate market is on Fire. According to ASU Phoenix Foreclosure prices appeared to have bottomed in Spring of 2009. Some areas have seen huge bounces in values. Interest rates low and great deals all over.

So let me ask you a question: Why haven’t you found just the right home yet?

The biggest reason is that you aren’t working with an agent who has direct access to bank owned homes and foreclosures before they hit the market. You know the ones that are coming soon.

I would bet that every time you find that great house on all those endless websites you’ve been searching, its gone. SOLD!

So what we’ve done at The Cameron Team is we have created our Elite Buyer Group, for buyers that are really serious about buying a home today.

Go a head, give us call. If you are serious about finding your perfect home and your criteria meets what we are looking for in home buyers or investors, we can be a great match.

We have limited our Elite Buyer Group to 10 buyers that are very serious about beating everyone else out to those great deals today. We give our buyers, what we call the Unfair Advantage. Which includes advanced notice to bank owned homes and a system of writing offers in the way banks want them – So they choose them.

You see Eric was in our Elite Buyer Group, his offer wasn’t the highest and it wasn’t cash. But with the Unfair Advantage on his side, his offer was selected over all the others.

If you are interested in getting off those endless websites, actually finding a great deal and having an Unfair Advantage, now is the time. Remember we are limiting our Elite Buyer Group to 10 serious buyers.

I look forward to speaking with you!

Jeff Cameron

480-502-7699

Jeff@TheCameronTeam.com

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Grimaldi’s Coal Brick Oven Pizzeria at DC Ranch

by jeffcameron on February 5, 2010

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Stopped to get the family dinner. I was driving past the Market Place at DC Ranch and decided to stop for salad and Pizza at Grimaldi’s. I wasn’t sure if they were still open with this crazy world of Foreclosures and Short Sales! They are, so come on down.
Thinking this should give me some good energy to go mountain biking in the Mcdowell Mountains.
Wow, met a gal waiting to get food with a home for sale in McDowell Mountain Ranch. Hmmm… Chance meeting???
8-)

Thank you,

Jeff Cameron
The Cameron Team
Keller Williams Integrity First Realty
(480)502-7699 office

Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from thecameronteam’s posterous

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Have YOU visited the Gateway Discovery center

by jeffcameron on February 4, 2010

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This is a great place for me to escape from the world of foreclosure homes and short sales in Scottsdale.
Located south of DC Ranch, east of windgate Ranch and north of McDowell Mountain Ranch; it is very convenient for me.
I get into looking at the 3D map with all the trails and then raising my head to see the actual mountains.
There is a cool trail with all kinds of cool info right there, I’ll tell u bout that later. Time to work.

Thank you,

Jeff Cameron
The Cameron Team
Keller Williams Integrity First Realty
(480)502-7699 office

Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from thecameronteam’s posterous

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Sunrise over McDowell Mountain Ranch Scottsdale

by jeffcameron on February 4, 2010

To My friends in the colder parts of the country. What a beautiful Scottsdale day it will be, low of 50 moving into the mid 60,s today. It will be an awesome day!
Scottsdale is on sale! There are foreclosure homes and Short Sales that are great deals! This is a great opportunity!photo.jpg.scaled.500 north-scottsdale-mcdowell-mountain-ranch-and-sourrounding-community

Thank you, 

Jeff Cameron
The Cameron Team
Keller Williams Integrity First Realty
(480)502-7699 office 

Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from thecameronteam’s posterous

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I saw this article in Newsweek and am compelled to share. This writer does a fantastic job of putting perspective on how these low interest rates are a “gift of a lifetime.” When the market bubble was highest, everyone was talking about the coming crash. But it took so long to come, we thought maybe it wasn’t coming. The talking heads have been talking about interest rates going up for a long time now.

With the Fed ending their purchase of Mortgage Backed Securities, the demand will go down. The logical response is higher interest rates. Those should be here in the next couple of months. With the amount of borrowing the government is doing, inflation must off set that and with inflation comes higher interest rates. Remember interest rates = inflation + investor ROI. So, with 3% inflation(target amount) and 4% return to investors(1% is transaction fee) you get a target rate of 7%. With more inflation, say 5%, you have 9% interest rates. With 12% inflation, you have 16% interest rates.

I hope you enjoy this article. If you are even thinking of buying a home, you need to take this point into consideration. If you are waiting to buy a home, don’t, now is the best opportunity to buy. Of course every situation must be evaluated with a professional before finalizing that conclusion.

If You Don’t Buy a House Now, You’re Stupid or Broke

Interest rates are at historic lows but cyclical trends suggest they will soon rise. Home buyers may never see such a chance again, writes Marc Roth

Well, you may not be stupid or broke. Maybe you already have a house and you don’t want to move. Or maybe you’re a Trappist monk and have forsworn all earthly possessions. Or whatever. But if you want to buy a house, now is the time, and if you don’t act soon, you will regret it. Here’s why: historically low interest rates.

As of today, the average 30-year fixed-rate loan with no points or fees is around 5%. That, as the graph above—which you can find on Mortgage-X.com—shows, is the lowest the rate has been in nearly 40 years.

In fact, rates are so well below historic averages that it should make all current and prospective homeowners take notice of this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

And it is exactly that, based on what the graph shows us. Let’s look at the point on the far left.

In 1970 the rate was approximately 7.25%. After hovering there for a couple of years, it began a trend upward, landing near 10% in late 1973. It settled at 8.5% to 9% from 1974 to the end of 1976. After the rise to 10%, that probably seemed O.K. to most home buyers.

But they weren’t happy soon thereafter. From 1977 to 1981, a period of only 60 months, the 30-year fixed rate climbed to 18%. As I mentioned in one of my previous articles, my dad was one of those unluckily stuck needing a loan at that time.

Interest Rate Lessons

And when rates started to decline after that, they took a long time to recede to previous levels. They hit 9% for a brief time in 1986 and bounced around 10% to 11% until 1990. For the next 11 years through 2001, the rates slowly ebbed and flowed downward, ranging from 7% to 9%. We’ve since spent the last nine years, until very recently, at 6% to 7%. So you can see why 5% is so remarkable.

So, what can we learn from the historical trends and numbers?

First, rates have far further to move upward than downward; for more than 30 years, 7% was the low and 18% the high. The norm was 9% in the 1970s, 10% in the mid-1980s through the early 1990s, 7% to 8% for much of the 1990s, and 6% only over the last handful of years.

Second, the last time the long-term trends reversed from low to high, it took more than 20 years (1970 to 1992) for the rate to get back to where it was, and 30 years to actually start trending below the 1970 low.

Finally, the most important lesson is to understand the actual financial impact the rate has on the cost of purchasing and paying off a home.

Every quarter-point change in interest rates is equivalent to approximately $6,000 for every $100,000 borrowed over the course of a 30-year fixed. While different in each region, for the sake of simplicity, let’s assume that the average person is putting $40,000 down and borrowing $200,000 to pay the price of a typical home nationwide. Thus, over the course of the life of the loan, each quarter-point move up in interest rates will cost that buyer $12,000.

Loan Costs

Stay with me now. We are at 5%. As you can see by the graph above, as the economy stabilizes, it is reasonable for us to see 30-year fixed rates climb to 6% within the foreseeable future and probably to a range of 7% to 8% when the economy is humming again. If every quarter of a point is worth $12,000 per $200,000 borrowed, then each point is worth almost $50,000.

Let’s put that into perspective. You have a good stable job (yes, unemployment is at 10%, but another way of looking at that figure is that most of us have good stable jobs). You would like to own a $240,000 home. However, even though home prices have steadied, you may be thinking you can get another $5,000 or $10,000 discount if you wait (never mind the $8,500 or $6,500 tax credit due to run out next spring). Or you may be waiting for the news to tell you the economy is “more stable” and it’s safe to get back in the pool. In exchange for what you may think is prudence, you will risk paying $50,000 more per point in interest rate changes between now and the time you decide you are ready to buy. And you are ignoring the fact that according to the Case-Shiller index, home prices in most regions have been trending back up for the last several months.

If you are someone who is looking to buy or upgrade in the $350,000-to-$800,000 home price range, and many people out there are, then you’re borrowing $300,000 to $600,000. At 7%, the $300,000 loan will cost just under $150,000 more over the lifetime, and the $600,000 loan an additional $300,000, if rates move up just 2% before you pull the trigger.

What I’m trying to impress upon everyone is that if you are planning on being a homeowner now and/or in the foreseeable future, or if you are looking to move your family into a bigger home, then pay more attention to the interest rates than the price of the home. If you have a steady job, good credit, and the down payment, then you really are being offered the gift of a lifetime.

See the story here with Newsweek:  http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/dec2009/bw2009127_753974.htm

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front-300x225 north-scottsdale-mcdowell-mountain-ranch-and-sourrounding-communityCheck out this great home!  With three spacious bedrooms and two full bathrooms, a large open floorplan, and entertainers backyard.  Kitchen with an island and breakfast bar.  Living room is bright and spacious.  Master bathroom has separate tub & shower along with double sinks and a walk in closet.  And don’t forget to admire the backyard with extended covered patio, elevated pavers patio, built in fire pit, and large grassy area.  This home is 1854 square feet and also has a three car garage.  Contact The Cameron Team today to take a look.  Available for 12 month lease and for only $2000 per month.

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I have always wondered about all the different “health” products out there and whether they are contributing to America’s bulging waist line???? First it was eat carbs to grow and mature. Then carbs were bad, go low fat. But all those “low fat” products were filled will carbs or sugar. Then it was high protein. Wait till you see what is in some of those protein bars—Yuck! I am trying to old mix of vegys, fruit, less fat, less starchy carbs and well just over all to stop over eating. Let’s see how that works over the long run. Less is more syndrome. That is my focus through the Greatest Loser contest at my gym, the village at DC Ranch.  Anyway, below is an article form Men’s Health. I hope you find it helpful!  Jeff Cameron

The Truth About Energy Bars

One word describes what Americans want from their diet these days: Convenience. So stock the supermarket with compact “energy-on-the-go” food touted to fight fatigue, fuel muscle growth, or help you lose weight and it’s guaranteed to fly off the shelves. That’s why sales of energy bars have seen incredible growth over the last decade, with more than $700 million in sales, according to research in Dietitian’s Edge.
 
Cut through the hype and flashy packaging, and you’re often left with a hefty (and expensive) dose of sugar, oil, and a mass of added vitamins and minerals. With little research to back up the bars claims, many are nothing more than protein-containing candy in disguise.  So do you really need any of this stuff?  Eat This, Not That! took a look at some of the biggest and boldest bars around to find the answer.

Some meal-replacement bars may not have as much protein as you think. You won’t find pig’s feet or cattle hide listed in the fine print, but that’s because they’re hidden behind names like gelatin, hydrolyzed collagen, or hydrolyzed gelatin. Both collagen and gelatin lack an essential amino acid required to make them a complete protein. That means the quality of the protein is inferior to products that lack gelatin or collagen.

Read the rest of the story: http://www.enewsmail.rodalenews.com/cts/click?q=1;77927;oVVuk2QH5FOxzukI8AePX8FRTbP8rdCm

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Last Saturday my friends Dan Johnson, Gregg Tucek and I, Jeff Cameron, went mountain biking. This was right after those huge storms hit the Scottsdale area. We left at 745 and it was freezing cold. Our trail was the lost dog trail head, but we went up the Sunrise Trail. It is a long drag up into the McDowell Mountains of Scottsdale. This video is coming down from the top. I must say, I was cold and tired, plus I was not looking forward to making my first crash video.(I got a little too far in my head coming down the mountain.) The ground was wet and soft, I guess I am trying to say I was a granny on the trail that day. 8-(
It is always nice to get away from the real estate world, Foreclosure homes in Scottsdale, the Short Sales everywhere and just relax and ride. These trails are so close to everything, it is awesome living in Scottsdale. Normally we ride from my garage. This is a long tough trail, so we drove over to 124th Street and Via Linda, then east on 124th St to the lost dog trail head.


This was the next section, some reasonable downhill if you are not in granny mode!


This last part is real rocky.

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How is the Real Estate Market???

by jeffcameron on February 1, 2010

 

So many people ask me, “How is the Market?” For my market review today, I discuss the 3 different markets we are experiencing and how each is reacting. Within each of those markets are the Foreclose homes, Short Sales and Retail home sales. The dynamics of each are different. Please don’t hesitate to call me, Jeff Cameron, with Keller Williams Integrity First at 480-502-7699 or email at Jeff@TheCameronTeam.com

Remember, if you are looking to get a deal on a bank owned home, You need the “Unfair Advantage.” After dredging through this evolving market and facing multiple offers we analyzed what our asset managers were using for their decision basis and created a method of writing offers that is getting our offers accepted over others. Our Elite Buyer Group gets the Unfair Advantage, which is advanced notice to foreclosure listings – networking with the major hitters in the foreclosure world and our negotiating techniques.

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