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Oct
17


Long Beach California Luxury Home Market Update

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Long Beach California is home to the West Coasts most affordable beach real estate.  Set in sunny Southern California we enjoy moderate temperatures year round, sweet ocean breezes and a resort atmosphere.  With our purchase prices so reasonable is it any wonder snowbirds are flocking here?  Palm Desert, 2 hours inland, is fantastic, but nothing compares to luxury oceanfront property and the beach is just more fun!

Long Beach has an endless array of entertainment to suit any lifestyle or age from water-sports to nightlife, theater and fine dining.  This is the perfect place to do everything, do nothing or to just go fly a kite!


Yes we have golf courses!  Long Beach is centrally located making access to all Southern California golf courses just a short drive.


Long Beach is conveniently located just 20 minutes south of Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), 20 minutes north of John Wayne Airport (SNA) in Irvine, and home to our own Long Beach Airport – which we love.  We are also just a 20 minute drive into Downtown Los Angeles – in case you were thinking about catching a Lakers game; attending a concert at the fabulous Staples Center or a performance at our beautiful Music Center.  Fantabulous and incomparable, 8 time Grammy award winner, Tina Turner
is performing at the Staples Center as I write this, had I known that ahead of time I would be there tonight singing along……..What’s love got to do with it? La la la… Gotta love that woman!


Did I say we were centrally located?  A 2 hour drive north will find you in beautiful Santa Barbara.  Head north just a little further and enjoy a day, or a romantic weekend, in wine country.  A leisurely drive south will take you into lovely San Diego.  Catch a Padres game or spend a day at the San Diego Zoo or perhaps SeaWorld with the family then head into the Downtown San Diego gaslight district for a delicious dinner and some relaxing down time.


Surfer? 10 minutes to surf city – Huntington Beach, where you will catch some of the finest waves on the west coast.


Long Beach is slated to become the new home of the largest movie studio in California.  A deal has been struck to take over the Boeing facility near the Long Beach airport. This will infuse new life into Long Beach and will certainly attract celebrities to our lovely waterfront homes and high rise condominiums.  How could they resist?  You never know who your new neighbor may be!


Did you know that Hollywood got its start in Long Beach?  Long Beach was known as the motion picture capital of the world until post World War I when Hollywood developed around the glitz of the era.  With its perfect Southern California climate, Long Beach afforded the perfect setting for the industry.  There were eight film houses, two stock companies,  roller-coasters and bath houses at the historic Pike, along the shore of Downtown Long Beach.  This was the home of the Balboa Amusement Production Company, the  world’s most prolific silent-film studio.  W. C. Fields and other stars lived in beautiful mansions in the Bluff Park neighborhood along Ocean Boulevard and First Street, many of which remain in the families to this day.


Speaking of historic districts, Long Beach has 17 of them, California Heights being the largest.  We love our historic homes here.  You can find out more about the history of Long Beach here as well.


Redevelopment in Alamitos Beach and the bustling Downtown Long Beach communities has birthed fabulous luxury high rise condominiums with endless ocean views, Manhattan style lofts and many fabulous new dining opportunities.


The luxury home market is generally a cash market.  Brian Brady’s 2009 Real Estate Market outlook predicts that disappearing jobs and financing will likely drive the price of luxury properties down in our waterfront and higher end communities.  While that is tragic for the owners of these Long Beach properties it is an incredible opportunity to purchase the Long Beach home, condo or vacation property you, the buyer has been waiting for.


The Long Beach real estate market has gone through several tumultuous years, this winter is certain to be a difficult time for sellers of Long Beach luxury homes, condos and income properties.  FHA loan limits, currently capping at $729,750 for single family home purchases are slated to be decreased to around $625,000 on January 1, 2009.  Decreasing buyer purchasing power is certain to affect prices in the mid-market range of $700,000 to about $1,000,000.


What does this mean for sellers?  If you are planning on selling, you should plan on closing your escrow before the end of the year and should price it to do so. It would be our pleasure to provide a home value assessment.


What does this mean for buyers?  This is an incredible opportunity to purchase your new home at an incredible price.


International buyers are flocking to the United States to purchase real estate at our current depressed prices, there is limited financing for foreign nationals, most are purchasing with all cash.  Long Beach prices have become very attractive to these buyers. You can start your search for Long Beach homes here.  VIP service is provided with the ability to set up custom searches with an automatic email alert system.


If you are interested in purchasing a Long Beach luxury oceanfront home or a high rise luxury waterfront condominium, this winter is the time to make that purchase. It would be our pleasure to assist you.

Long Beach California City and Relocation Resource Guide

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Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor (562) 212-5420

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Main Street Realtors Belmont Heights 244 Redondo Avenue Long Beach California 90803

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Long Beach Real Estate BlogLong Beach Real Estate Website

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Long Beach California Luxury Home Market Update
Posted on October 17, 2008 by Laurie Manny
Sep
18


Long Beach Own Your Own-OYO-Owners Are Organizing for Condo Conversion-Breaking Long Beach Real Estate News

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Breaking Long Beach Real Estate News:


Long Beach Own Your Own (OYO) Owners Are Organizing for Condo Conversion.  Back in May the Long Beach Real Estate Home Blog published an article on OYO’s.  So many buyers were inquiring about this form of ownership it made sense to publish an article, explaining this form of ownership, to be found on the Internet.  Well it has been found, by several thousand Long Beach and potential Long Beach residents who have indeed read it, including many frustrated Long Beach OYO owners.  Several days ago I was contacted by the lovely Deb Dobias, a Long Beach OYO owner who is a major contributing force in the quest to organize OYO owners to push state and local officials to loosen the reigns and convert the last of the existing Long Beach OYO’s to condos.  Deb went on to explain what these owners have been up against and the efforts they have put forth.  We invited her to write an article here and are very pleased that she accepted our offer. 

 

It is our sincere hope that the District Weekly, Curbed LA, the Grunion and Downtown Gazettes, the Press Telegram, the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register will also pick up this article or will contact Deb and assist in this noble effort with an article of their own to help these troubled OYO owners. It is our further hope that both California state and local officials will get out of the box and make this happen. 


Please understand that many of these owners are in deep trouble.  They cannot sell their Own Your Own (OYO) homes because there is little or no financing available.  Due to the problems plaguing this form of ownership many owners have rented their units out and have moved on.  In doing so they have decreased the level of owner occupied units in the remaining OYOs which has eliminated any chance for a Long Beach buyer to obtain financing to purchase. 

 

In July 2008 the Long Beach Real Estate Blog offered the communities of Long Beach a place to be published.  This is another in a series of articles by Long Beach residents.  Do You Want to be Published?

 

 

 

OYO
Conversions
– An
untapped resource for Affordable Housing

Author:  Deb Dobias

 

Long Beach Own Your Own (OYO) Condo ConversionsThe City of
Long Beach Housing
is under-served in providing affordable housing to
“first-time home buyers” and seniors on fixed incomes. “While Long Beach Housing Trust” continues to
build new projects for affordable housing, low income or fixed income buyers
are still unable to have enough funding to pay the down payment. Building costs
keep the price of these “Affordable” Long Beach homes high.


Purchasing Own
Your Own Apartments (OYO)
in Long Beach is a means to becoming stakeholders and being
able to afford to buy apartment homes for reasonable sums.  OYOs were the pre-cursors to Condos, usually
built before the 1960s.  Long Beach has a large number of these
charming, well-kept, usually small buildings. 
Most Long Beach OYOs, even after Condo Conversion, would sell for less than newer
“Affordable Housing”; this could
significantly add to the City’s Affordable Housing.  Best of all, making it possible for people to
buy these affordable Long Beach homes would leave the Housing Trust funds for more
housing in Long Beach.


Little Problem…

 

Someone
who wants to buy a Long Beach OYO usually cannot get financing like Condos can.  When a bank does offer loans, it usually
requires a high owner-occupancy in the OYO complex.  For the past few years, only Long Beach investors could
cough up the cash to buy these places, so owner-occupancy is often low.

 

Which causes more problems…

 

  • Long Beach Own Your Owns (OYO) Owners are OrganizingOne lady in our building got sick and
    couldn’t work for a while.  Our building, a Long Beach OYO,
    had some serious maintenance issues so we had to levy some special assessments,
    which she couldn’t pay.  The City of Long Beach has Rehab Loans for low-income owners of houses or Condos, but not for
    OYOs.  This poor lady wound up having to sell
    her OYO home for a very low price and move in with family.  Had we been able to convert, she could have kept
    her home.


  • Many Long Beach OYO owners are elderly.  Reverse mortgages are not available to OYOs in Long Beach.


  • No home equity loans are available to
    OYOs.  This often causes owners to vote
    against maintenance assessments or to avoid maintaining their own units.  These are older buildings, so this affects
    Long Beach neighborhoods and tenants as well as owners.

 

  • A lady who lived in her OYO home told me that she wanted to take out an
    equity loan so she could invest in another property.   Renting that property would help her to pay
    bills when she retires.  She has
    excellent credit and owes nothing on her OYO.  
    She cannot do this simply because her OYO complex can’t prove who lived
    there in 1982! 

 

 

Why can’t OYOs just convert to Condominiums?

 

California has an outdated law that prevents many OYOs
from converting.  This law requires that
an OYO complex prove that they were at least 75% owner-occupied in 1982. 


Why? 
Since OYOs are already individually owned, there is a section of laws
that allows OYOs to convert in a different way than rental buildings.  Part of this law was written to prevent
developers from owning OYOs, then converting them to condo for profit more
cheaply and easily than converting a rental building.  They figured this 1982 owner-occupancy
requirement would close that loophole. 
Twenty-six years later, this law not only doesn’t serve its intent but
very few people can come up with that kind of proof because no one keeps
records that long.

 

 

We
tried to fix it. 

 

Long story short -
the City of Long Beach won’t grant exceptions to this because it’s a California State Law.  We couldn’t get the California State Law corrected via
an Omnibus Bill sponsored by Senator Lowenthal because a Tenants Rights group
objected.  The next step is to try to get
separate bill sponsored by a legislator.

 

 

Wait.  Why would a Tenants Rights group object?

 

Understandably,
they worry about the large number of rental buildings that have been converted
to Condos in Long Beach.  When they do that, it boots
people out of their Long Beach homes and makes fewer rental apartments available so the
rents are higher.  When it comes to OYOs,
though, it’s a matter of converting units that have already been individually
owned for 50 years.  Who owns these
places won’t change with conversion. 
Some OYO owners may sell their unit/s after conversion; many of those would sell
whether they are converted or not.

 

 

Conversion
helps tenants, too!

 

 

Rental Availability 

 

OYO’s in Long Beach provide an
approach for “Mom & Pop” owners to enter into the investment/rental market
which can continue or increase the availability of rental units.   Once loans are made available, these new
rental unit owners will be motivated to maintain and upgrade their units.

 

 

Maintenance 

 

Of course,
maintenance isn’t a tenant’s job since they are paying rent.   Because there is no financing available to
OYO buildings, owners have less money available to them for maintenance and
upgrades.  It lowers the quality of life
for everyone.

 

 

Owning your own  

 

Long Beach Own Your Own (OYO) Homes

 

There’s a guy in my OYO building who has
rented his unit for 23 years through 3 changes of ownership.  He wants very badly to buy his place, and
could afford it now, but there is no financing available. 
His landlord charges as much rent as the market will bear, which is
typical.  His housing costs would
increase at a much slower rate if he could own his home.

 

The new legislation would ease the condo conversion issues so
that there are loans available for these “self owned
apartments”.   There are great loan
programs out there for first-time home buyers in Long Beach, some with no down payment.  The new proposed legislation will help these
kinds of Long Beach properties get the financing needed to make them available to those of
us who need affordable housing. 



For more info on
this law and our efforts to correct it, visit our website. 

www.OwnYourOwnCondo.org


Contact us with
your comments, questions, or if you can help us to change this law.  We are gathering a list of OYO buildings for
the sole purpose of helping change the law. 
If you own an OYO home, please add your building to the list!


Deb Dobias

Deb@OwnYourOwnCondo.org

 

We
have supporters from the following OYO complexes,
as well as Realtors and HOA Property Managers.

Our list is growing. This list only partially covers
the Long Beach area but we are expanding our search. 
Please contact us to add your name to our list of
supporters or if you can help us change this law.

700 E 1st St

Ocean View Apts or Ocean Gardens.
1311 E 1st

2225 E 2nd street

The Montclair
1250 E 3rd

1250 E 4Th St

1280 E 4Th St

Clarendon OYO Apartments
1739 Appleton

Palm Garden Apts.  
617 Cedar

354 Chestnut Ave

Welles Apartment HOA
325 Elm Ave

Princess Apartments
82 Lime Ave

Lime Ave OYO
 337 Lime Ave

Villa Aqua
1101 E Ocean Blvd

 

 

 

*Disclaimer:  The opinions and statements in this article are not necessarily the sentiments or opinions of the Long Beach Real Estate Home Blog, its author’s, owner, or any affiliated persons or entities and we accept no liability for them.*

 

 

Related Posts:

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Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor (562) 212-5420

\"\"

Main Street Realtors Belmont Heights 244 Redondo Avenue Long Beach California 90803

\"\"

Long Beach Real Estate BlogLong Beach Real Estate Website

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Long Beach Own Your Own-OYO-Owners Are Organizing for Condo Conversion-Breaking Long Beach Real Estate News
Posted on September 18, 2008 by Laurie Manny
Jul
14


Space Saving Ideas for your Long Beach Homes

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Small Living Space Soutions for Long Beach Homes

Hidden Rooms

Space Savers or Hidden Secrets?

 

Down here at the beach we trade square footage for beach living and ocean breezes.  But what do we do with all of our stuff?  Lifetime collections of photos, books and other treasured belongings, that we are just not prepared to part with, need a place in our new homes as well. 

 

Hidden Closet with Bookcase

Small spaces are a challenge when we downsize our lives.  Creative use of our space without feeling cluttered and oppressive becomes a mission.  Creative Home Engineering, a Tempe Arizona company specializing in hidden passageways may have solved some of these issues. 

Under Staircase Storage

 

What a great way to expand space, furnish our homes and create hidden storage spaces!  When your square footage is limited every found space becomes critical.  Living in small spaces certainly has its challenges and rewards.  A small mess in a large home is a huge mess in small space.  One needs to be a neat freak in small spaces.  Creative Home Engineering is providing several wonderful solutions. 

Hall Closet Storage and Safe

Have you been wondering where to hide a safe in your home?  Take an unsightly hall closet and convert it to a hidden safe and a wonderfully elegent storage cabinet. 

Discrete Hiding Places

Looking for a safe and discrete hiding place for those things that should never be found by others?  Lovely and elegant built in’s hide your most private possessions very nicely.

 

While we have many larger homes in Long Beach, many of the homes here are of the smaller cottage genre.  Small living space ideas are in demand, we are pleased to be able to provide some solutions. 


Read also: 

Small Living Space Solutions for Long Beach Homes

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Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor (562) 212-5420

\"\"

Main Street Realtors Belmont Heights 244 Redondo Avenue Long Beach California 90803

\"\"

Long Beach Real Estate BlogLong Beach Real Estate Website

\"\"

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Space Saving Ideas for your Long Beach Homes
Posted on July 14, 2008 by Laurie Manny
Jul
12


Feng Shui Influences How Bay Area Houses Are Priced

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Feng Shui Influences How Bay Area Houses Are Priced



Lucky Number 8 - Feng Shui


The Long Beach Real Estate Home Blog is pleased to welcome guest author, San Mateo California Realtor, Leonore Wilkas of The Wilkas Group. 


 

Living on the San Francisco Peninsula as I do, with our large Asian population, we find all kinds of Asian influences creeping into our daily lives. One of the biggest is Feng Shui, a Chinese mysticism of sorts, where it is believed that your life can improve by doing little things within your living environment through the placement of furniture, artwork, or even the front door of a house. It’s a serious business around here with many experts helping Realtors and non-Asians prepare their houses for sale so that the house will sell quickly.


Having harmony in life promotes wealth, prosperity, good health, and chi – the movement of the air around you. The Chinese are superstitious people. If they believe the Feng Shui is bad at a property, they will not look at it, or seriously consider buying it unless they think the bad Feng Shui can be over come.



Numbers play a big influence in Feng Shui

 


Certain numbers can prevent someone from even considering a property unless they can have a Feng Shui master come and correct the chi of the house. In our area, the number 8, believed to mean wealth, is often seen within the listing price of a home. Asians believe that numbers can create harmony within the house. If the price of the home reflects certain numbers such as 1, 6, or 8, it is considered to be positive so it’s very common to price homes with the number 8 somewhere in the price, for example you might see a house listed at $618,988, $888,888 or $1,886,688. The worst numbers to use are 2 and 5 and if I, as an agent, want to attract a buyer who follows Feng Shui, I will avoid them, if I can.

 


Foo Dog - Feng ShuiBut, that’s only part of the issue with numbers. What do you do if the house number is considered bad Feng Shui? What if the numbers are really bad like 4, 13, 24, or 104? You can’t exactly change them, can you? No, not if you’re trying to sell the house, so you must use little Feng Shui tricks to provide protection to the property.

 

Have you ever noticed houses with two large lion-type animals sitting at the front entrance to a house in your neighborhood or city? These are called Foo dogs and they’re placed there to protect the house from bad chi.

 

If you’re unlucky enough to have house numbers that are considered bad chi you place a circle around your house numbers and protect the chi.

 

When you see wind chimes anywhere near the entrance of a house, it is considered good luck. Is there a birdbath or water feature somewhere in the front or back yard? They may be trying to improve the chi, or energy, of the house.


The power of Feng Shui is believed in by a whole lot of people on this planet. Many other cultures have similar beliefs. The Japanese and Indians also look at numerology in their daily lives. Japanese like odd numbers like 3, 5 and 7. The Indians believe in a Destiny number that is the total number for your birthday. If you were born on March 1st, 1968, the numbers would be written out like this: 03.01.68 = 18, 1+8 = 9, and 9 would be your Destiny number. Numerology has been around for thousands of years and is believed by millions of people.


What are the lucky numbers for Feng Shui?

 

8, 18, 28, 38, 48, 54, 68, 80, 84, 88, 99, 168, and 108.

The number 8 is considered lucky because of how the word sounds in Cantonese. It sounds a little like the word faat (more like you saying phat) and it means prosperity and abundance. Something we all wish for, right?


What are the unlucky numbers?


4 – is considered the worst number because when it’s spoken in Cantonese it sounds like the word for death.

13 – if you add 1+3 it equals 4.

24 and 104 are also considered unlucky.

7 is considered unlucky, too!


Next month, on August 8th, or 08.08.08, the Chinese people will be trying to either get married on that date or hope to deliver their babies on that date, because of these auspicious numbers. This might be the reason that the Olympics will start on this date.

 

I have had clients bring in a Feng Shui master to make simple corrections to houses with bad numbers. I have also seen people request a number change from the city and post office. Sometimes this is the easiest thing to do.


Does the number 8 help sell a house faster? Who knows? I try to put at least one 8 in every listing price I have. I do notice that we see a lot of Asian’s coming through our open houses, so maybe it is helpful. Realtors are superstitious, too, so anything that we can do to help our clients sell their homes we’re probably going to try. As long as it’s legal, that is!



 

Contributed by: San Mateo Realtor, Lenore Wilkas; author of the San Mateo Real Estate News Blog


 

 

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Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor (562) 212-5420

\"\"

Main Street Realtors Belmont Heights 244 Redondo Avenue Long Beach California 90803

\"\"

Long Beach Real Estate BlogLong Beach Real Estate Website

\"\"

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Feng Shui Influences How Bay Area Houses Are Priced
Posted on July 12, 2008 by Laurie Manny
Jun
29


Belmont Heights Homes-Market Report-2008-Long Beach Real Estate Sales

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Home Sales in Belmont Heights are picking up. The availability of lower priced homes has todays buyers out shopping. The plethera of available short sale and bank owned homes has brought prices down in Belmont Heights. Well priced homes are often receiving multiple offers. Smart sellers are pricing their homes to sell instead of chasing the market down, which is never a good idea. If you do not need to sell, this is not the time to be on the market. Smart buyers are out shopping.



There are currently 68 homes for sale in Belmont Heights.

Average Price: $1,111,793

  • Lowest Price: $530,000
  • Highest Price: $2,500,000
  • 30 Homes are priced under $1,000,000
  • 38 Homes are price over $1,000,000

Average Days on Market: 91


6 homes in Belmont Heights are in escrow accepting back-up offers.

Average Price: $804,650

Average Days on Market: 83


2 homes in Belmont Heights are currently pending in escrow.

Average Price: $1,019,000

Average Days on Market: 34


42 homes in Belmont Heights have Sold (closed escrow) in 2008.

Average Price: $820,619

Average Days on Market: 85


27 Belmont Heights home owners have cancelled their listings.

Average Price: $967,201

Average Days on Market: 119


6 Belmont Heights homes have withdawn from the market.

Average Price: $1,056,000

Average Days on Market: 104


22 Belmont Heights single family home listings have expired.

Average Price: $912,881

Average Days on Market: 153


Contact Laurie to begin your search for your Belmont Heights Home (562) 212-5420


Are you thinking about selling your Belmont Heights home? Internet exposure and marketing has never been more important. Expansive internet exposure will drive many buyers to view your home. Hire an internet savvy Realtor. Contact Laurie (562)212-5420

Why Hire an Internet Savvy Realtor?

Over 80% of all home searches start on the internet. Your Long Beach homes need to be online, and findable, when buyers begin their search. Have the Realtors you interview show you their ability to market your Long Beach properties on the internet. Step back; pick keywords that should bring that item to the front page of Google; keywords like Long Beach Real Estate. Are any of the sites that your Realtor is using to promote your property coming up at the top of the engines? No? Keep shopping. Better yet, call the Realtors on the front page of Google, they already know how to get there and you can cut right through the unlikely candidates.


Over 25% of all Home Buyers FIRST saw the home they purchased on the internet. If your Long Beach homes are not heavily marketed on the internet, you are missing thousands of potential buyers.


Visit our blog for more helpful Long Beach Real Estate Information and Updates

Long Beach Real Estate Home Blog>>>

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Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor (562) 212-5420

\"\"

Main Street Realtors Belmont Heights 244 Redondo Avenue Long Beach California 90803

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Long Beach Real Estate BlogLong Beach Real Estate Website

\"\"

\"\"

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Belmont Heights Homes-Market Report-2008-Long Beach Real Estate Sales
Posted on June 29, 2008 by Laurie Manny

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Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

Lic.#01321200

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(562) 212-5420


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Long Beach Condo Buyers Beware

The condo market in Long Beach, and nationwide, may be in for a few rather large shockers which could rattle more than a few cages.  We have already come across several HOA\'s in, or very near, serious financial jeopardy.

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Buying Fixer Upper Homes in Long Beach

Many buyers who are searching for homes in Long Beach express interest in purchasing a \"fixer upper\" . It is always interesting to hear what their idea of a \"fixer upper\" is. There are so many levels of fixer upper it is necessary to clarify what the buyer has in mind.

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Issues for the \"First Time Home Buyer\"

With so many Long Beach homes on the market at affordable prices one would think it should be really easy to find a home and get a great deal. So why are so many first time buyers having trouble finding a home that suits their needs at a price they can afford?

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FHA Loan Limits

FHA loans are available to a maximum loan of $729,750 with a minimum 3 to 3.5% down payment until January 1, 2009 when they are currently scheduled to drop the maximum loan amount to $625,000, this could change.

Current FHA Lending Limits for LOS ANGELES COUNTY (LOS ANGELES-LONG BEACH-GLENDALE, CA METROPOLITAN AREAS):

  • Single Family Home or Condo : $729,750
  • Duplex : $934,200
  • Tri-plex : $1,129,250
  • Four-Plex : $1,403,400


7 Steps to Pre-Home Purchase Preparedness

    1-Choose a Lender 2-Checking Credit Scores Prior to Starting the Purchase 3-Be Pre-approved Prior to Searching 4-Have A Solid Financial Plan 5-Insist on a Lock-In Letter 6-Demand a Loan Commitment 7-Waiting to Sell Your Home

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Long Beach California is Best Neighborhood for Walking

One of the most appealing draws to living in Long Beach California is the walkability of many of our local neighborhoods.

Long Beach California has been ranked as the 8th Most Walkable Neighborhood!

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Relocating to Long Beach California?

If you are relocating to Long Beach California you will need lots of information. You will be curious to know about Long Beach communities , neighborhoods and resources . We have tried to include as many area resources as possible here to make your transition a smooth one.

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