Please help Save the Wild Horses of Abaco, Bellatrix II has died, We need your help!

Dear Friends: 

Most of you know, that we have taken on a fundraising challenge for an endangered species of horse located in Abaco Bahamas, the Abaco Barb.  Many of you have visited our website for more information on this fascinating and endangered species.  We received the sad news that one of the Barbs, Bellatrix II has died suddenly.  Now our efforts are even more urgent to help learn the cause of this unexpected loss.  For those of you who have contributed to this cause, please accept our heartfelt thanks.  Below is a memorial tribute video to Bella and I hope you will take the 3 minutes to watch it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynBN14EDaoY&feature=channel_page

Here is a photo of Olivia (our granddaughter) with Bellatrix during our visit to the Abacos in April, 2009.  Olivia is continuing her efforts to raise dollars through her school and the community and Jim works almost every day in some capacity - either spreading the word or stepping up national efforts to raise awareness here in the U.S.

 

 Please take a few minutes to review information on WHOA on our website.  I am personally asking for your help and support of these wonderful horses.  I promise you that your support will be well used.   If you cannot donate, please help spread the word to people you know, especially horse lovers.  Thanks for letting me share this unique challenge with you….Extinction is not an option!
http://www.selbyrealestate.net/savewhoa.php

Debbie & Jim

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Flagler Art Gallery Launches New Website.

Hello art lovers:

Gallery of Local is happy to announce that it now has a presence on the world wide web. Web address is www.galleryoflocalart.com.   You can now check the web site any time to find out what is happening at GOLA.

All of GOLA’s classes take place in a friendly learning environment with instructors who love what they do, and you can find them all listed on our brand new web site’s easy-to-read Programs and Classes and Calendar Pages.  Please take a look; there is something for everyone.

A few of the upcoming events and programs that you’ll find on the site’s News and Events and Programs pages:

Members of the Colored Pencil Society of America, including Bill Shoemaker, president, will be at GOLA Friday, Sept 4 from 6:00-8:00. 

Sunday, Sept 13, from 2:00pm-4:00pm, GOLA is hosting a Free Art Talk with Robert Douglas Dalles.  

 Master the Marsh with Trish Vevera takes place September 11 from 10:00am – 12:30pm

Larger than Life and in Bold Color with Toelle-Hovan acrylic workshop is September 15 9:00am -4:00pm 

Ceramic leaf platters and woven bowls with Roann Elias takes place Wednesdays 1:30-4:00, September 16 through Sept. 30.   These are easy to make and beautiful when finished.  Supplies included $66.00

Beginning Watercolor with Georgia Johnson returns on Wednesdays in October.  Watercolor with Georgia will also be offered Saturdays 10:00am-12:30pm beginning October

Art Club for Kids 7-9yrs. is back beginning Thursday, September 17.  Class times 6:00pm-7:30pm.  These highly creative classes taught by Karen Barchowski are educational and a lot of fun.  $15.00 

Drawing and Painting 1 for ages 9-13 taught by Janine Regina Fonseca is a four week session that begins September 14.  Class times are 4:15pm-6:00pm.  $38.00

 One Stroke with Diane Franklin is Tuesdays 6:00pm- 8:30pm.  Learn the magic of one stroke.  $15.00 

 There are many more exciting ways to become involved in something creative at GOLA.  Check out www.galleryoflocalart.com and see. 

 A SALE:  All of Georgia Johnson’s art (excluding cards) is now on sale!  For the month of September only, all of Georgia’s works will be 20% off.  Now is the time to get one of these original works for your home.

Audrey Scherr
Gallery of Local Art
386-439-6659

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Wild Horses of Abaco –Extinction is not an option–

Some of you may know, but we (Selby) have taken on a fundraising challenge for an endangered species of horse located in Abaco Bahamas, the Abaco Barb. Anne Thompson (our advertising director) has done a wonderful job setting up a page on our website dedicated to this cause, helping to spread the word about the severe need of funds for this operation – that has very little resources. Selby has committed to donate 1% of all real estate commissions to WHOA on a monthly basis, and has already started to make a difference in the care given to these special creatures.

My granddaughter (Olivia) has raised hundreds of dollars through her presentations at school, and is eagerly continuing to do so in the community. I have been working nationally to solicit equipment and other resources from large US companies related to the equestrian community.

Please take a few minutes to review information on WHOA on our website. I am personally asking for your help and support of these wonderful horses. I promise you that your support will be well used. If you cannot donate, please help spread the word to people you know, especially horse lovers.

Visit the link below and see and read about these beautiful horses.

Thanks for letting me share this unique challenge with you….Extinction is not an option!

Sincerely,

Jim Wingo
Wild Horses of Abaco
“Extinction is not an option”

www.selbyrealestate.net/savewhoa.php Click on this link.

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Tips for Getting a Good Appraisal

Appraisals can be tricky these days. Here’s some advice from Maureen Sweeney, a Chicago-area owner of an appraisal firm, on getting an accurate and fair appraisal.

Both the real estate practitioner and the owner should be present for the appraisal and follow the appraiser around. Make sure he doesn’t miss anything important.

Ask questions to determine if the appraiser has identified the correct neighborhood boundaries and if she’s comparing the home to similar properties.

Bring a copy of a recent tax bill and a survey of the property, and give them to the appraiser.

Provide a list of improvements to the home.

Offer your professional opinion about what makes this property worth more than other properties in the area.

Source: Chicago Tribune, Mary Umberger (08/02/2009)

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Welcome to the bottom: Housing begins slow rebound

WASHINGTON – Aug. 3, 2009 – It was – note the past tense – the worst housing recession anyone but survivors of the Great Depression can remember.

From the frenzied peak of the real estate boom in 2005-2006 to the recession’s trough earlier this year, home resales fell 38 percent and sales of new homes tumbled 76 percent. Construction of homes and apartments skidded 79 percent. And for the first time in more than four decades of record keeping, home prices posted consecutive annual declines.

A staggering $4 trillion in home equity was wiped out, and millions of Americans lost their homes through foreclosure.

Now take a deep breath and exhale. The worst is over.

By every measure, except foreclosures, the housing market has stabilized and many areas are recovering, according to a spate of data released in the past two weeks. Nationwide, home resales in June are up 9 percent from January, on a seasonally adjusted basis. Sales of new homes have climbed 17 percent during the same period. And construction, while still anemic, has risen almost 20 percent since the beginning of the year.

Even home prices, down one third from the top, edged up in May, the first monthly increase since June 2006.

“The freefall is over,” says Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

The problem is that, Baker, like many economists, expects the housing market will “be bouncing around the bottom” for the second half of the year.

There are also real threats that could poison this budding recovery. The unemployment rate, which is 9.5 percent, is expected to surpass 10 percent, leaving even more homeowners unable to pay their mortgages. Mortgage rates could rise, making homeownership less affordable. And the federal tax credit for first-time homebuyers, which has lured many into the market, is set to expire on Nov. 30.

“As long as jobs are being lost, regardless of all the federal programs out there to help the borrowers, you’re still going to have problems in the housing market,” says Steve Cumbie, executive director of the Center for Real Estate Development at the University of North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School.

True, but when you’ve got bidding wars for foreclosures in places like Las Vegas, Phoenix and Los Angeles, it’s time to call the bottom.

Northeast

Nobody knows the power of a dollar like New Yorkers.

After a home on Long Island sat on the market for four months recently, the sellers’ real estate agent told them to drop the price from the mid-$600s to $599,000. The house sold the next weekend.

In Merrick, about 30 miles east of New York City, homes are starting to sell “as long as they’re priced right,” the agent said.

In January, with the ground and financial markets still frozen, few would have believed that the worst of the housing crisis in the Northeast would turn around within six months.

But the evidence is clear: home resales in the region in June hit a seasonally adjusted pace of 820,000, up 28 percent from the beginning of the year. Sales of new homes were also up slightly and construction in the region more than doubled.

Even the median sales price of $249,400 in June was up 10 percent from January and was off just 6 percent from year-ago levels, according to the National Association of Realtors.

“We certainly had our share of problems, but overall the severity of what happened here was far less” than what happened elsewhere, says Michael Lynch, an economist with IHS Global Insight.

Pittsburgh has the region’s strongest home market in terms of sales and prices because the city saw less of a housing bubble and the area has 7.7 percent unemployment rate that is below the national rate.

One of the weakest markets, by contrast, was Providence, R.I., where a jobless rate of 12 percent exacerbated the city’s foreclosure crisis. Too many residents took out risky subprime loans they couldn’t afford when the interest rates spiked within a few years. Today, more than one in 10 homeowners with a mortgage in the state is at least one month behind or in foreclosure.

The Northeast, more than any other region, felt the full force of the credit crisis that reshaped Wall Street. Manhattan’s real estate market, long immune from price declines, tanked this year as tens of thousands of people lost their jobs.

Prices of for-sale apartments plunged in the second quarter by the largest amount in decades. Prices have fallen, on average, between 13 and 19 percent, according to four reports published recently by real estate firms.

Northeast states: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont

South

The real estate market in the South remains one of extremes.

On one end, are oil-rich cities in Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma that nearly skirted the housing recession altogether. Tipping the scale on the other side are foreclosure-ridden areas in Atlanta and swaths in Florida where prices are still falling annually by double digits.

Taken as a whole, home resales in the 17-state region rose 10 percent in the first half of this year on a seasonally adjusted basis, and are off just 4 percent from June of last year, according to the National Association of Realtors.

“Generally speaking, the rate of decrease, both in sales and prices, has started to bottom,” says the University of North Carolina’s Cumbie. “But that doesn’t mean it’s going to come roaring back.”

Mass layoffs at Bank of America and Wachovia, for example, have taken their toll in their home state of North Carolina. Home price declines in Charlotte accelerated this year, and home resales in June were off nearly 30 percent from last year.

Home and apartment construction, a key economic engine, will also vary widely across the region. Parts of the South, notably Florida and Atlanta, were vastly overbuilt during the housing boom. So construction in the region rose a meager 7 percent in the first half of the year, the lowest of the four regions, according to the Commerce Department.

There was little reason for builders to start laying new foundations. New home sales fell 2 percent from January to June, the only region in the country to post a decline.

“In the longer term, I’m confident that the real estate market is going to shift where buyers are coming out not only because of attractive interest rates and low prices, but because more people are getting jobs,” says Les Simmonds, president of L.G. Simmonds Real Estate Corp. in Longwood, Fla. an Orlando suburb. “But, as we speak, it’s not right. It’s going to take more time.”

Southeast states: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, D.C., Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia

Midwest

It’s no surprise that the housing market and the auto industry are intertwined in Detroit, though, this is the first time anybody can remember that you can buy a home for less than the price of a new car.

But step out of devastated towns in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana and the housing market in the Midwest is showing some of the strongest signs of recovery in the country.

Thanks to places like the Dakotas, Iowa and Nebraska, the median sales price in the region rose almost 20 percent to an affordable $157,000 in June from January levels.

Sales of new homes jumped almost 38 percent in the first half of the year, which encouraged builders to get out their hammers. Construction, which was at a standstill in some communities, rose 86 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis, which accounts for typical variations in weather and other factors.

“New construction has been a good indicator for us in the past of what the general market is doing,” says Chris Collins, president of the Kansas City Regional Association of Realtors. “Our new market is not what we’ve been used to but it’s substantially better than other parts of the country.”

The home resale market, however, remains weaker than the nation as a whole. That again can be blamed on the economy. The jobless rate in the Midwest is 10.2 percent compared with 9.5 percent nationally. And if you don’t have a job you are not buying a house.

William Strauss, a senior economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, cautioned that job cuts are still high in the region, and loss of income is the No. 1 reason homeowners default.

“We never got as bad as (other) states but nonetheless we still took a hit,” he says, and the market remains “soft in the Midwest.”

Midwest states: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin

West

For years Las Vegas symbolized the boom, as mile after mile of desert gave way to three-bedroom homes and swimming pools. Then came the crash and it symbolized something else: a decade of speculation and excess.

Now, Las Vegas is one of the hottest housing markets in the region again. This city has always profited from others’ misfortune, and the same can be said of the current housing market.

In Clark County, Nev., home to Sin City, one in every 11 homes had received at least one foreclosure-related notice in June, according to RealtyTrac. The glut of deeply discounted foreclosures has almost doubled sales activity for most of this year.

“In January the market was busy, and since that time, it’s gone a little haywire,” says Brad Snyder, an agent with ZipRealty in Las Vegas. “There’s (sales) activity now that we haven’t seen even since ‘04.”

The situation is similar in California’s Riverside, San Joaquin and San Bernardino counties, where one out of every 14 homes was in foreclosure.

After falling 18 percent in the second half of 2008, monthly home prices were flat in the first half of this year, on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Markets like these have seen a surge this year in all-cash buyers, many of them investors, scooping up the sharply discounted properties. It’s not uncommon to see multiple offers on a single property, and that’s helped slow the rate of price declines a little. The demand also has helped whittle down the inventory of homes for sale to the lowest level since the boom.

“We have seen such a steep decline in supply right now, that when a home comes on the market it’s first day there could be seven or eight or 10 people there in a matter of hours,” Snyder says.

To lure buyers away from foreclosures, homebuilders have slashed prices or are simply tearing down vacant homes. New home sales jumped almost 59 percent in the first half of the year, while construction in these grossly overbuilt markets slid 12 percent.

In the Pacific Northwest and states such as Utah, by contrast, housing markets are on a different timer than the rest of the West. Home sales and values held up better and longer while markets in the Southwest were already in decline. These markets also haven’t seen as many foreclosures wreaking havoc with home prices.

States in the region: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Home Prices Up, First in 34 Months – Case Shiller

Ken Sweet
FOXBusiness

For the first time in nearly three years, home prices nationwide rose slightly month-over-month, according to a key indicator of the housing market. However, home prices remain well below their already-distressed 2008 levels.

According to the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, housing prices in the nation’s 20 largest metropolitan areas rose 0.5% in May compared to prices in April, led higher by price gains in the nation’s most resilient housing markets of Cleveland, Dallas and Denver.

In the 10-city index, housing prices nationwide rose by 0.4% compared to April, the index committee reported.

While housing prices month-over-month increased, the pace of annual declines remains at a steep 18% compared to a year ago. However, the pace of annual declines has now recovered moderately over a period of four months from a near 20% decline annual pace reported earlier this year.

While quite hesitant, economists said that it seems that there’s been enough data to show that the housing market is at least recovering and quite possibly bottoming in some parts of the nation.

“This could be an indication that home price declines are finally stabilizing,” said David Blitzer, chairman of the committee.

Some of the most troubled metropolitan areas of the nation continue to suffer from month-over-month home price depreciation. Phoenix, where home prices plunged the most since the boom of 2007, saw home prices fall 0.9% in May. Annually, Phoenix is down 34.2% from a year ago.

Las Vegas saw a steep 2.6% decline in housing prices in May, bringing the one-year change for that market down to 32%. Las Vegas housing prices are down 53.4% from the 2007 peak — barely trailing Phoenix’s peak-to-trough drop of 54.5%.

The places were home prices actually appreciated during the month were in metropolitan areas where home prices never plunged that much in the first place: Boston, Denver, Dallas and Cleveland. The Ohio city saw home prices appreciate by 4.1% in May, with a year-over-year change remaining at a negative 6.2% from a year ago. Dallas remains the most resilient housing market, with housing prices down a relatively modest 4.1% from a year ago.

“The index really is pointing to a fundamental improvement,” said Abiel Reinhart with JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Robert Shiller, founder of the home price index, told the Wall Street Journal that he was surprised by the rise in the index and said it shows a “change in momentum” for the housing market.

Shares of some of the nation’s home builders – Lennar (LEN: 11.3499, -0.3001, -2.58%), Toll Brothers (TOL: 19.0995, -0.3831, -1.97%), Centex (CTX: 10.21, -0.24, -2.3%), and Pulte Homes (PHM: 10.54, -0.24, -2.23%) – were either moderately lower or unchanged in Tuesday trading. They were up considerably on Monday after the U.S. Commerce Department’s better-than-expected June new home sales data.

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Now Is a Perfect Time to Buy.

Don’t forget to remind potential buyers of something that is obvious to real estate professionals: Now is the time to buy, but that opportunity may be slipping away.

For people who have a job and money, a dream house is within reach, writes Marc Roth, founder of Home Warranty of America and a columnist for BusinessWeek.

He points out that mortgage rates remain low, prices are still at historic lows, and the government is offering incentives for first-time homebuyers.

He also adds that the inventory of homes to buy is still large, but it is shrinking. According to the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, the housing inventory peaked in November 2008 at an 11-month supply. At the end of May 2009, it had fallen to a 9.6-month supply.

Roth says anyone who dallies will miss a good opportunity to buy a first home at a terrific price or go shopping for a move-up property that is a great buy.

Source: BusinessWeek.com, Marc Roth

Find your dream home in Orlando at www.NeighborhoodsOfEastOrlando.com or Flagler Beach www.FlaglerLifeStyles.com

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Pending Home Sales Up For Third Month

WASHINGTON – June 2, 2009 – Record low mortgage interest rates boosted pending home sales for the third consecutive month, with some benefit now from the first-time buyer tax credit, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in April, rose 6.7 percent to 90.3 from a reading of 84.6 in March, and is 3.2 percent above April 2008 when it was 87.5.

“Housing affordability conditions have been at historic highs, but now the $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit is beginning to impact the market,” says Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist. “Since first-time buyers must finalize their purchase by Nov. 30 to get the credit, we expect greater activity in the months ahead, and that should spark more sales by repeat buyers.” NAR President Charles McMillan says there are numerous buyer assistance programs around the country. “Some states are offering bridge loans that allow first-time buyers to use the tax credit for downpayment and closing costs, but there are many other local government and nonprofit programs available to buyers, depending on location.

“Just last week, HUD announced that qualifying buyers can use the tax credit for closing costs on FHA loans to buy down the interest rate or make a larger downpayment.”

“In addition, the relationship between contracts on pending home sales and closings on existing-home sales is taking longer than in the past for several reasons,” Yun says. “Mortgage processing time has increased, it is taking many months to close on those homes requiring short sales with lender approval, and some sales are falling through at the last moment.”

The total number of existing-home sales is expected to improve but with dramatic local market variation in the timing of recovery. “The market has already bottomed in some areas, but this is an unusual housing cycle with some areas improving rapidly while others languish or decline,” Yun says.

© 2009 FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

Denise Chen celebrates her 29th birthday and New House Warming Party on April 18, 2009.

Friends and family gathered at Denise Chen’s new house on April 18, 2009 to celebrate her 29th birthday and her new home! Denise Chen, is a client of Debbie and Angela Wingo. The Selby Group was happy to be able to share this special event with Denise Chen, her family and friends.

Pictured above: Denise Chen

Pictured above: Angela Wingo, Debbie Wingo with clients John Chen and Jeanie Chen at Housewarming.

Pictured above: Denise Chen celebrates her birthday and new home with friends.

Help Save the Wild Horses of Abaco

horse

While on vacation in Abaco, Bahamas, Debbie and Jim Wingo visited the Wild Horses of Abaco. Inspired by Milanne Rehor (Mim), a volunteer who has championed the cause of these rare horses since 1992, Debbie and Jim decided to help spread the word about these beautiful horses. Read More about The Wild Horses of Abaco >>

The Wild Horse of Abaco accepts donations to fund and improve the infrastructure of the preserve, maintain fire breaks, keep the fence lines clear, and most importantly for long overdue medical support. You can donate directly on their website http://www.arkwild.org/.

The Selby Group is committed to ongoing fundraising and 1% donation of each and every real estate commission earned by the firm. Please let us know if you are able to donate to this special, life saving cause so that we can recognize your generosity, and track any success at spreading the word.

For more information please visit http://www.arkwild.org/or call 242-367-4805
Olivia, Angela Wingo's daughter visits the Wild Horses on April 2, 2009