THE HOUSING RECOVERY IS NOT FOR ALL

Posted by Leonard Steinberg on May 9th, 2014 The New York Times has an opinion editorial by Peter Dreier about the housing recovery. While housing has recovered extremely well in large Urban centers and some other parts, reports about rising home prices suggest that the tens of millions of people whose homes lost value just have… [Read More]

IS THE ANSWER TO U.S. UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE NAME STEVE JOBS?

Posted by Leonard Steinberg on October 6, 2011 With Steve Job’s passing, certainly one of the greatest losses of 2011, it may be a good time to look at his company as a case study for the future of other companies in the USA. I write this on a MAC, own an I-pad, I-pod and… [Read More]

THE STUPIDITY OF GOVERNMENT-THINK BANKS

Posted by Leonard Steinberg on June 29th, 2011 Some banks are being like governments right now: stupid. When banks do not want to lend to highly qualified, super-reliable, well educated, credit worthy clients, we should conclude that we have a MAJOR problem. When these same banks make everything in the application process so  difficult, cumbersome,… [Read More]

FORECLOSURE MESS WILL COST ALL: YES, EVEN IN MANHATTAN.

The foreclosure mess could hurt homeowners in Manhattan in an indirect way: The costs of buying an apartment and paying off the mortgage are likely to go up, say housing experts. The rising costs will come both during the closing and throughout the life of the loan. At the closing, the cost of title insurance,… [Read More]

HOUSE SWAP, ECONOMY-BOOSTER STYLE?

The economy is experiencing a unique problem:  unemployed people who are able to find good jobs in alternative cities are unable to take the jobs as they cannot sell their homes as many mortgages are worth more than the homes in this current market. Why not introduce a NATIONAL HOUSE-TRADE BANK/DATA BASE, whereby someone could… [Read More]

IS THIS THE BOTTOM?

Something very newsworthy is happening in the luxury Manhattan real estate market…….for the first time in many years we have experienced (while renting out an apartment in Tribeca) prospective, qualified renters withdrawing their applications after realizing that buying would cost almost the same as renting, and opting to buy. We have not heard this in… [Read More]

FORECLOSURES HIT THE RICH

More than one in seven homeowners with loans in excess of a million dollars are seriously delinquent, according to data compiled for The New York Times by the real estate analytics firm CoreLogic. In an article in this morning’s TIMES, the point is made that the housing bust we are witnessing right now is not… [Read More]