Welcome!
Welcome to
DaneCountyWiHomes.com And JackFessler.com
home site for Jack
Fessler Realtor®
with the First Weber Group in Madison Wisconsin. I
put this site together because I wanted to have a place
my clients
could find all the tools they need for buying and selling a home
in one place. Here you will find free Foreclosed
listings, free home market evaluations, free books,
free MLS Search, Home Budget planner, calculators, buyer/seller
guides and even a neighborhood price alert.
Please take full advantage of my site and thanks
you for stopping. If you have any suggestions
or comments please click on the
contact link.
News!
New listings click
picture for more photo
212-214 Rosemary Ave

201 Rosemary Ave
3010 Union St
208-210 Rosemary Ave
3611 Marcy Rd

3016 Union St
3513 Marcy Rd

3517 Marcy Rd
3523 Marcy Rd
How long does it take to sell a
home anyway!?!
6-12-08
I have been asked recently by many people, "how
long should it take to sell my home? Well that's a loaded question
with all the variables that are involved in selling a home such as
price, appearance, market condition etc.. But I believe people are
owed an answer to this question. The best way to answer is with a
bit of statistics!
Using the latest in calculators and the new
fangled pencil I was able to come up with a very good guess and here
is the results.
In Madison the average time to sell a home is
Drum roll please..
63 Days
So you have a 50% chance of selling your home in
63 days. With the average we can come up with a Standard Deviation
of 71. What is Standard Deviation you ask? Well to put it in simple
terms it is a more accurate gauge of the market with the oddities
included such as a house selling in a week or one selling in 400
days.
The Breakdown:
50% chance of selling in 63 days
84% chance of selling in 134 days
93% chance of selling in 205 days
96% in 276
98% in 347
100% in 418 days
I know the numbers are a bit scary to look at
especially when you have some agents telling you they can sell your
home in a week or two. But a 93% chance in 6 month is pretty
good for any market if you ask me. Now you know why your agent asks
for a year contract.
I must say It all depends on many many things and
having the right agent makes all the difference.
On a side note the average reduction in price from
list price to sold price is 1.9% in Madison.
New Live chat Help Service
launched!
9-20-207
With this new feature buyers and
seller will be able to contact me directly from my website when ever
I am online. This option will bring about anonymity to folks that
want answers from a professional but may not be ready to commit to a
real estate agent.
With this service I will be able
to talk with anyone live through my website just by the person
clicking on the Live Chat Help button at the top of the home page.
No software to download, no passwords to enter and nothing to sign
up for! When the chat support says im off line you can leave a
message and I can return your questions by email. Try it out now by
clicking the picture that says live support click to chat!
Choose Your
Method of Profit
by
M. Anthony Carr
10/12/07
To hear many
reports from my media colleagues, there's no reason to buy real
estate today because the "bottom's fallen out," the "balloon burst,"
etc. With the real estate market down (number of sales AND dollar
volume), you might as well put your money somewhere else -- how
about the stock market or in bonds?
Following this
philosophy, then whenever any investment tool drops in value -- dump
it. Stocks, bonds, real estate, mutual funds -- it doesn't matter
which vehicle, park it, get out and hitch a ride on the fastest
moving investment possible … right? Actually, for the real estate
investor who does his homework, money can be made in any market. You
just have to decide on your profit methodology: cash flow or asset
growth. Both are available in today's market, and the savvy investor
must be sure to conduct due diligence on the bottom line.
For those who
want to get in on the ground floor -- this is the best market in
which to buy to plan for future asset growth. Equity growth comes in
more than just buy low and sell high.
In the last
few years, short-term, play investors lucked out with the market and
bought houses/condos/pre-construction at high prices and were able
to sell at higher prices in just a few weeks or months. This buy
now, profit later can still be experienced, it just takes more
patience.
Most real
estate assets grow consistently year after year. What the last few
years created in the short-term, however, is what it usually takes
years to create -- thousands of dollars in equity growth. The usual
way this growth occurs is by using other people's money (OPM) to
grow your equity along with the usual appreciation.
OPM is one of
the most powerful investment tools out there. Most people use OPM to
purchase real estate (the mortgage) with a little bit of their own
money (down payment). Each month after you buy a house, there's the
monthly mortgage payment. Thus, your second use of OPM is the rental
payments you receive from your tenants. Now, you're growing that
equity month by month, plus paying the interest, fees, etc., with
the funds provided to you from the tenants.
The second way
your equity grows is through appreciation. This figure is not as
controllable by you. What's really exciting about this part of the
profit growth plan is that since you took control of this large
asset with a little down payment, the cash on cash growth is
astronomical.
For instance,
let's say a rental property is purchased for $200,000 with a 10
percent down payment - $20,000. As time moves forward, you're going
to make money two different ways. If the property moves up in value
6 percent on average through the next few years -- remember looking
at it long term, not just in the last year -- then the house will be
worth $212,000 in the next year. However, that 6 percent growth
converts into a 60 percent growth of your cash investment (the
$20,000) in the first year.
Secondly, if
the house rents at $1,500 per month, then you have income of $18,000
per year. If you have a 6 percent mortgage, then you'll carry about
a $2,500 annual profit after expenses. So your gross income is
nearly 100 percent of your down payment, resulting in a nearly 10
percent net profit based on the investment of your down payment.
Your next
profit choice is the stand-by fixer upper. With a slow market, many
sellers are willing to sell their house as-is for a stiff discount
just so they don't have to fix up the property and compete with
homes that have upgrades throughout. Many investors are marketing
for this type property with the "We Buy Houses" signs you've seen
throughout the community. Some of the sellers are people who are
behind on the mortgage and have no resources to fix up the house to
sell it at a market rate. The key here is having the money already
lined up through a lender to acquire the house, fix it up and market
it quickly to pull in profit on the sale.
Finally,
there's the method of positive cash flow. This is my method of
choice, where you're creating profit with a renter who is paying for
your mortgage payment and expenses, leaving profit in your bank
account at the end of each month.
Is it a good
time to get in the market -- absolutely. Research the market,
analyze your cash flow and equity growth, then move forward.
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