Archive for March 5th, 2009

What does a $6,000 home in Detroit look like?

Continue Reading Add comment March 5th, 2009

The median home in Detroit fell 39% to $7,000 in January compared to a year earlier. Yes, it’s cheaper now to buy a house in the Motor City than it is to buy a car.

It got me thinking. What does a $7,000 house look like. I asked Stanley Inges that question a few days ago. Inges, a 58-year-old Realtor in Detroit, says he bought 8 foreclosed homes with cash in the past year in the Schoolcraft/Grand River area, on the west side of the city. All of the homes were brick and the prices ranged from $1,000 to $14,000. And of course, each of these homes required significant work. At this price range, homes aren’t in move-in condition. The $1,000 home required $18,000 of work. He had to replace all the radiators in the $14,000 house because they were stolen by vandals. But that home has 8 bedrooms on two levels and a three-car garage.

He’s living in a 3-bedroom home with a new roof that he purchased from a bank last year for $6,000. He put in about $10,000 to redo the kitchen and bathrooms and he says it’s beautiful now. Check out this photo of his living room, which is equipped with a pool table:
Inside a $6,000 home.jpg
He’s renting out a few of these units for $700 a month, he said. But he says he’ll really make money when the market turns around and home prices start to climb again.

“I want to save money and buy some more houses,” Inges said. “One day I’ll be a millionaire. I’m on my way.”

Many out-of-state investors have come into the market to do exactly what Inges is doing. They are buying up houses with cash and filling them with tenants. But it’s not necessarily as simple as it might seem. Marion Tindle, a Realtor in the Detroit suburb of Farmington Hills, cautioned that there are risks associated with buying rental properties in Detroit.

For one thing, it’s hard to find reliable tenants in a fast-deteriorating economy. Home prices are falling in part because Detroit has a staggering 20% unemployment rate. And it’s possible to get stuck with a vacant house that requires high tax payments and other fees, she said.

Tindle, whose coverage area includes Detroit and its suburbs, says it makes more sense to pay $30,000 for a decent house in a more stable suburb such as Oak Park than to buy in the city.

“You might spend money fixing up a place in Detroit and then you could just be sitting around a while until you find decent renters,” she said.

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Former KB Home Chief Indicted

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karatz.jpg

Bruce Karatz, the former chairman and CEO of KB Home, was indicted on 20 counts of fraud and making false statements to the Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with an investigation into the backdating of stock options at KB.

The federal prosecutor in Los Angeles claims that over a seven year period ending in 2006 Karatz and another senior executive went back and found the lowest priced days on which to award stock options rather than pricing them on the day the contracts actually should have been awarded. Karatz left the company in 2006 after accusations of backdating schemes began making headlines at KB and other firms.

In February 2007, the company recognized more than $36 million in additional expenses and a $70 million increase in liabilities from the options. KB’s former head of human resources pled guilty on Feb. 6 of this year to conspiring with Karatz to obstruct justice by filing a misleading report with the company’s audit committee to ward of an SEC investigation.

Karatz, 63, is expected to make his initial court appearance on March 26 in
federal court in Los Angeles. If convicted of all the charges, he faces a
maximum sentence of 415 years in federal prison. Karatz, who ran KB for two decades, was known as an innovative marketer, launching a line of homes with Martha Stewart, who has some experience with federal prison.

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Confusing credits for homebuyers

Continue Reading Add comment March 5th, 2009

Question: I purchased a home last December and qualified for a $7,500 first-time homebuyer’s tax credit that I must repay. But I now see that the stimulus package is offering an $8,000 first-time homebuyer credit for purchases from January 1 through November 30, 2009 that doesn’t have to be repaid. Will I still have to pay back the $7,500 even though I bought my house just two weeks before the beginning of this year? This sort of timing would be just my luck. –Jeremy, West Lafayette, Indiana Read more »

As Office Rates Sag in Manhattan, Tenants Gaining Upper Hand

Continue Reading Add comment March 5th, 2009

With the industry’s current struggles dragging down office leasing rates in even normally robust Manhattan, tenants are finding that for the first time in a long while, the balance of power is tipping in their favor.

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