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Looking ahead to 2014, no other market in the country is poised for growth more than Baton Rouge according to DSNews. Comparing 2013 to 2012, Closed Sales are up, Days On The Market are down, Sales Prices are rising and the Percent of List Price statistics are relatively unchanged. In Baton Rouge, homes are well-priced and the market is hot!
It’s a great time to sell and a healthy time to buy a Baton Rouge home! The Louisiana foreclosure rate dropped to 1.7% at the close of 2013. And while 30-year fixed rate mortgages hovered around 4.50 percent to start 2014, the Mortgage Bankers Association expects mortgage rates to increase above 5 percent in 2014 and then increase further to 5.5 percent by the end of 2015. Now is the time to act before rising rates impact affordability.
Knowing how to make the numbers work for you is an integral part of the Art of Home Selling. We’d love to show you how!
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Versatile 1 Bedroom Condo
Stunning Hundred Oaks Beauty Spacious Home, New Wood Floors – JUST REDUCED! Charming 3 Bedroom Open Floor Plan Commercial Property – Great Business Opportunity
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Charming 3 Bedroom Open Floor Plan
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Charming 3 Bedroom Open Floor Plan
Stunning Hundred Oaks Beauty Commercial Property – Great Business Opportunity Custom Home in Gated Community Ready For New Owners – Open Floor Plan – Wood Burning Fireplace
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Built in Computer/Office in Master!
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Large Lot with Open Floor Plan
Custom Home in Gated Community Wood Floors – Spacious Floor Plan – Great Price Spacious Home, Great Area, New Wood Floors Ready For New Owners – Open Floor Plan – Wood Burning Fireplace
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Custom Home in Gated Community
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Wood Floors – Spacious Floor Plan – Great Price
Custom Home in Gated Community Ready For New Owners – Open Floor Plan – Wood Burning Fireplace Updated with wood floors in Living/Dining room with Fireplace Spacious Home, Great Area, New Wood Floors
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Completely Updated with Spacious Yard SOLD
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Completely Updated with Spacious Yard
Gorgeously Renovated Home Beautiful Home Move-in Ready Beautiful Lake Views in Gated Community 3 Bedroom 1 Bath | Move in Ready
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Country Living Close To The City
Versatile 1 Bedroom Condo Large Lot with Open Floor Plan Large Open Floor Plan His & Hers Master Bath Beautiful Lakeside Condo In Gated Community Near LSU
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When looking at various economic indicators, various lists pop up revealing what analysts name the best and the worst real estate markets across the nation.
BusinessInsider.com has named their ten “sickest” housing markets across America naming vacancy rates, total housing units and unemployment as their three determining factors.
While several of these cities certainly belong in the bottom 10 real estate markets, some do not. Take Oklahoma City for example. This week, CNBC named Oklahoma City as the second best housing market noting factors such as the city’s underwater mortgages being 30.9% below the national average. We look to BusinessInsider’s own note that the city has an unemployment rate of only 4.9%, nearly half of the national average.
Regardless, BusinessInsider’s analysis based on their chosen data points reveals these 10 cities as the worst real estate markets in America:
10. Oklahoma City, OK
Homeowner vacancy rates: 5.2% (6th)
Rental vacancy rates: 9.6% (34th)
Total housing units: 539,077
Unemployment: 4.9%
9. St. Louis, MO
Homeowner vacancy rates: 3.3% (19th)
Rental vacancy rates: 11.4% (18th)
Total housing units: 1,236,222
Unemployment:8.6%
8. Kansas City, MO
Kansas City tied with Detroit for #8.
Homeowner vacancy rates: 3.7% (13th)
Rental vacancy rates: 11% (22nd)
Total housing units: 883,099
Unemployment: 8.4%
7. Detroit, MI
Detroit tied with Kansas City for #8.
Homeowner vacancy rates: 2.4% (32nd)
Rental vacancy rates: 17.2% (3rd)
Total housing units: 1,886,537
Unemployment:11.6%
6. Dayton, OH
Homeowner vacancy rates: 4.7% (7th)
Rental vacancy rates: 10.7% (23rd)
Total housing units: 385,160
Unemployment: 9.3%
5. Baton Rouge, LA
Homeowner vacancy rates: 3.9% (11th)
Rental vacancy rates: 13% (12th)
Total housing units: 329,729
Unemployment:8.4%
4. Atlanta, GA
Homeowner vacancy rates: 5.4% (4th)
Rental vacancy rates: 11.8% (17th)
Total housing units: 2,165,495
Unemployment: 9.7%
3. Memphis, TN
Homeowner vacancy rates: 4% (9th)
Rental vacancy rates: 13.5% (11th)
Total housing units: 550,896
Unemployment:10.1%
2. Indianapolis, IN
Homeowner vacancy rates: 5.2% (5th)
Rental vacancy rates: 13.5% (10th)
Total housing units: 757,441
Unemployment: 7.8%
1. Tucson, AZ
Homeowner vacancy rates: 6.8% (1st)
Rental vacancy rates: 15.9% (6th)
Total housing units: 440,909
Unemployment: 7.8%
According to BusinessInsider.com, the methodology was: Census data on the 75 largest U.S. metropolitan areas and ranked the cities with the highest overall vacancy rates for both homeowner vacancy and rental vacancy for the second quarter of 2011. We picked the cities with the worst rates in each of the two categories to create meta-data ranks. We then removed the cities that had either improved homeowner vacancy rate in either the last twelve months or the last quarter. We believed that any sign of improvement in homeowner vacancies, the more telling of the vacancy rates, should disqualify a city.
To improve our analysis, we also looked at unemployment rates for these cities provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. We also used historical median home prices, as provided by the National Association of Realtors.
The analysis shows that some cities have home vacancy rates over 5% and rental vacancy rates over 10%. Obviously, these levels of unused inventory have the effect of driving down both home and rental prices month after month. It also means that there is comparatively little demand for the purchase of new or existing homes. These ten markets are essentially dead as far as real estate prices and sales activity are concerned.