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The Potential of VRBO Properties

The Potential of VRBO Properties

Tips for purchasing a VRBO property

Research your competition…thoroughly.

1. Read the reviews. What are prior guests saying?

2.  Don’t assume a booked calendar means no vacancy.

3. How long have these properties been around and renting to furnished guests?

4. What is their peak season as well as their low season rate?

5. How many average nights do their guests stay? Do you want to offer something different?

6. How do the competitors comply with the HOA rules (if any)?

A cheaper property manager may not be better.

1. If the manager does not bring guests or “quality” renters you have lost in the long run. Does your manager book any reservations away from OTA’s (Airbnb or VRBO). What percentage of their guests return or are booked via a referral?

How much does it cost o moderately furnish a vacation or corporate rental?

Estimate…….. $10,000 per bedroom.

One bedroom / one bath condo =$10000

Three bedroom / two bath home = $30000

Five bedroom/ three bath = $50000 +

This is to furnish on a budget….luxury home with all the accessories up to $20000 per bedroom.

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Eyes West Podcast with the Angelo group

Eyes West Podcast with the Angelo group

The Benefits of moving to the Valley

The Angelo Groups sits down with the Eyes West Podcast to talk about the perks of moving to the Greater Phoenix Area and how they put relationships above all in their business.

Greater Phoenix: John & Amy Angelo

by Eyes West Podcast | The Angelo Group

eyes west podcast with the angelo group

North American Referral Network

North American Referral Network

Real Estate Help Anywhere in North America

Did you know we have access to a nationwide network of experienced REALTORS® who work by referral….just like us! If you or someone you know is looking to buy or sell anywhere in the United States or Canada, please allow us to connect you with one of our trusted colleagues. They will be able to guide you and take care of you…before, during and after the sale!

May Market Minute: Forbearance and your options

May Market Minute: Forbearance and your options

You Have Options

Many people have opted into forbearance status on their mortgage towards the end of 2020 and 2021 due to Covid-19 and the impact on their financial situation. John with The Angelo Group in Phoenix Arizona goes over possible options if you are in forbearance with your lender. There are some effective options that some people might not know about.

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December 2020 Market Update

December 2020 Market Update

I hope everyone had a fantastic Thanksgiving Weekend. The market is still moving higher. Also, a great commentary from Michael Orr about comparing 2020 with 2004-2006.

We have been short of supply since 2015 and the situation has become steadily more severe. There are just not enough homes to buy for people who want them. Millennials who continued to rent long after earlier generations are now anxious to get their foot on the ladder. Investors are back in volume having taken a pause during the second quarter. However, unlike in 2004, investors remain a relatively small part of the demand. Most of the people buying homes are doing so because they want a primary residence.

December 2020 Market Update_cromford update

During October the intended use for single-family and condo/townhouse properties in Maricopa and Pinal counties was as follows:

1. Owner-occupied primary residence – 77.3%
2. Investment – 12.2%
3. Owner-occupied secondary residence – 8.6%
4. iBuyer for re-sale – 1.6%
5. Unknown – 0.3%

People who are worrying about mortgage delinquency rates should remember that foreclosures did NOT create the huge excess supply of 2006. The excess supply arrived 2 years before the foreclosures started in earnest. When the bank owned homes hit the market, it was already dreadfully over-supplied, so their prices dropped sharply. If we saw a new wave of distressed homes right now, they would be soaked up very quickly by eager buyers and prices would continue to rise.

It would help move the market back to a more normal balance, so prices would rise at a more moderate pace. Most distressed homes would be unlikely to get to foreclosure because almost all of them have substantial owner equity and can be marketed as normal sales, or at worst pre-foreclosures, not short sales (which can often be tricky to close).

The current situation is very different from 2004 or 2005. Then a large number of newly built homes had been purchased by investors with 100% loans and were lying unoccupied with no tenants interested in renting them, despite record low rental rates. Many other homes had been purchased by owner-occupiers on fraudulent loan applications, who never even made the first monthly loan payment, living in their new home for free with minimal money down.

Loan fraud was rampant in 2005 and 2006, largely driven by the mortgage industry itself rather than the borrowers. Wall Street firms (like Lehman Brothers) demanded mortgages to chop up and sell as securities and mortgage brokers could not supply enough without resorting to abnormal practices focused mainly on sub-prime loans. Remember Countrywide and Washington Mutual? Stated income loans? No documentation loans?

I repeat – 2020 is nothing like 2005. The 2020 housing market is not abnormally pumped with artificial credit, just starved of supply. Forecasting the future is extremely difficult, but drawing parallels with 2005-2008 is not helpful, nor is it logically appropriate.

by Michael Orr – Cromford Report