Tuesday, October 29, 2013

MLS USA on Facebook



MLS USA Facebook

Lo que nos hace diferentes de los demás sitios de MLS en la internet, es que nosotros usamos múltiples sitios para anunciar tu propiedad, los cuales son de nuestra propiedad y son controlados por nosotros mismos.
Por ejemplo. Si tu enlistas una propiedad en MLS USA enwww.multilistingserviceusa.com con todos sus beneficios que obtienes de ese sitio web, será automáticamente enlistado y disponible en el buscador de MLS Norte América enwww.multilistingservicenorthamerica.com, el cual será también enviado a nuestro sitio principal www.mls-global.com.
Tenemos muchos servicios que ofrecer cuando enlistas una propiedad, tambien tenemos secciones para publicar anuncios. Una gran seccion de administración para tus guías y estadísticas. Por favor sientete libre de usarlo y date la oportunidad usando el código de promoción "mlspromo" y enlista gratis tu mismo enhttp://www.multilistingserviceusa.com/en/index.php?action=addon_signup_promo

Derick Scott CEO
Tu opinión es agradecida.

MLS USA Promotion


What makes our sites different from the rest of the MLS websites on the internet, is that we use multiple site to advertise your property's which are owned and control by ourselves.


For example.
If you place a property listing on MLS USA atwww.multilistingserviceusa.com with all its benefits you get from that that website, it is automatically listed and searchable on MLS North America at www.multilistingservicenorthamerica.com which is then sent to our main site www.mls-global.com.

We have many services to offer when you list your property's , we also have a sections for wanted adds. A great admin section for your leads and stats. Please fell free to try it out use promotion code mlspromo and try for your self at http://www.multilistingserviceusa.com/en/index.php?action=addon_signup_promo

Derick Scott
CEO

Your feedback would be nice.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

What is MLS Multi Listing Service

MLS stands for multiple listing service. Every home for sale listed by a real estate agent, unless it is specifically exempted from MLS, will be listed in MLS. However, only real estate agents and other professional affiliates can access MLS, but that doesn't mean a home buyer or home seller can't get the same information -- just not directly.
 Back in the old days, like the 1970s, MLS information was available in print format. Books were published monthly; updates weekly. It was quite heavy and cumbersome to haul around! Fortunately, today it's online.

 What is MLS?

 MLS is a sharing of comprehensive home information among real estate professionals. Listings brokers enter the data about a home for sale and offer to share the commission with a broker who brings a buyer. It's an online software that contains all the specifics about a home, from the address, age, square footage, number of bedrooms, baths, upgrades and schools districts to types of financing the seller will consider, and more. There is generally at least one to a dozen photographs of the home, plus a link to a virtual tour, if one exists.

 Home buyers make the mistake of believing they can access this information through online feeds to other services, but the data the public can receive is:

 Limited in scope
 Can be outdated
 Often inaccurate
 For Sale By Owners in MLS

 While there is no separate category for a For Sale by Owner (or FSBO) listing, the MLS can contain listings from sellers who are unrepresented.

 The way FSBOs circumvent some MLS restrictions is to pay a flat fee to a discount real estate broker to enter the information, but the seller is not really represented.
 Instructions to present all offers directly to the seller is often frowned upon or prohibited by MLS authorities.
 Sometimes the selling commission is less than the fee agents are offered by traditional brokers -- which does not motivate agents to show these listings, even though they cannot legally refuse to do so.
 Who Owns the MLS?

 The trend is leaning toward local MLS companies joining or merging with other local MLS companies to create regional MLS services. MLS can be privately owned and operated or it can be an affiliate of a local board of Realtors, among other forms of ownership, but most are subject to regulations set forth by the National Association of Realtors.

 Back in the '80s, many MLS were owned by boards of Realtors, but conflict of interests and lawsuits caused many association groups to form a separate entity for MLS. In my area of Sacramento, for example, members of MLS are not required to be a member of the Sacramento Board of Realtors, nor the California Association of Realtors, nor the National Association of Realtors.

 Finding MLS Listings

 Many services offer to provide home buyers with a list of available homes on the market, but few provide comprehensive data. To get that information, you need to ask your real estate agent to set you up on a home search. Typically, there are many types of reports a buyer can receive, so ask your agent for the most comprehensive report, the name of which varies by locale. What you don't want is a customer copy. It's not enough information.

 An agent can enter your name, e-mail and home search preferences into a search engine on MLS that will send you automatic e-mails of new listings. This way you will receive up-to-the-minute information that you can't really get anywhere else.

 MLS Searches

 If you're beginning a home search, lucky you! You can ask your agent to customize a search for you that will automatically send you updated listings. Not all agents will set up a search for you based on anything other active listings, so if you want to receive price reductions, pending or sold sales data, ask for it.

 Here are a few ways (among many) that you can request to have your report customized:

 ZIP Code
 Radius Search, within a specified distance from a target address
 Street or Subdivision
 Within those parameters, you can further define your search to:

 Price range from low to high
 Number of bedrooms and baths
 Garages
 Pools and spas
 Square footage
 Your requirements can be even more clearly defined, depending on your priorities. But be aware that as the number of exceptions climb, you might be missing out on opportunities. It's wise to keep the list somewhat limited, especially for those cases where a data field might not contain data due to human error.

UK’s most expensive residential property demolition project unveiled

Mews houses are popular in London and known for their traditional architecture but now one is to be knocked down and rebuilt in what is being described as the UK’s most expensive demolition project.
The carriage house in question in the heart of London’s Mayfair is on sale for £35 million and looks exceptionally pretty with a pink façade and a traditional private garden but has permission to be razed to the ground and replaced with an ultra modern mansion that could be worth £65 million.
Apparently the property in Mount Row, just a few minutes from the famous Connaught Hotel, is too outdated for today’s wealthy buyers and there is planning permission for a 16,000 square foot villa over six floors, including two basement levels, a landscaped garden and a guest villa at the end of the plot.
At £35 million for the land, plus builders costs, this represents the most expensive house demolition project ever undertaken in the country and agents Wetherell claim that once completed the property could be worth around £65 million, generating the new owner a £20million to £28million profit.
Mount Row was originally occupied by stable yards and cabinet making and upholstery workshops which served Mayfair’s grandest mansions. The house at 30 Mount Row was originally a carriage house, built to accommodate horse drawn carriages and related tack, with the coachmen sleeping in the eaves. Behind the carriage house was a large stable yard.
The coachmen of Mount Row were known as the whips or Mayfair whips, and are believed to be the inspiration for the famous phrase ‘crack the whip’. In 1886 the birth of the motorcar led to upheaval between the 1890s and 1930s with the carriage houses in Mount Row converted into houses and garages and the stable yards transformed into gardens.
The new mansion would have a 50 foot south facing frontage spanning four windows across. The ground and first floor would provide for grand entertaining rooms including an entrance lobby, library, three reception rooms, family kitchen/breakfast room and 26 seat formal dining room.
The 2,000 square foot master bedroom suite, with walk in dressing room, shoe room and two ensuite bathrooms would occupy the entire second floor, with a further five bedroom suites on the two uppermost floors. The lower ground floors of the new mansion are currently designed to provide a bowling alley, swimming pool and Jacuzzi pool room surmounted by skylights, cocktail bar, gymnasium, beauty salon, sauna, steam room, changing facilities and wine cellars. The mansion has a grand main staircase and lift to all floors.
The residence will open onto a landscaped garden leading onto the guest villa which is designed to provide a guest living room, kitchen and bedroom suite. The villa directly connects under the garden with the main house via a staircase to the lower ground floors.
‘The site is for sale for £35 million with consent to knock down and replace the exiting property. Therefore some have called this site the most expensive house knock down in the UK,’ said Peter Wetherell, managing director of Wetherell.
However, this is only half the story. Firstly the site is for sale on a freehold basis, which is extremely sought after in Mayfair. Secondly, the planning allows the buyer to create a bespoke new mansion of outstanding luxury and quality. Finally, the completed residence could be worth circa £65 million, effectively doubling the value of site,’ he explained.
‘For a discerning buyer this is an outstanding investment opportunity with the potential for huge capital value uplift. The Mount Row location is outstanding, in the heart of Mayfair and just moments from the Connaught Hotel and Mount Street,’ he added.

Hong Kong leads global house prices higher


2 October 2013
Knight Frank’s global house price index confirms that average prices rose 6.6% in the year to March, the highest rate of growth since Q2 2010. Kate Everett-Allen assesses the potential for future growth.

Results for Q1 2013:
 
  • The Knight Frank Global House Price Index rose by 2.0% in the first quarter of 2013 and by 6.6% over a 12 month period
  • Hong Kong recorded the largest rise on an annual basis (up by 28%) while prices in China rose the most on a quarterly basis (up by 10.7%)
  • Greece recorded the largest annual fall in mainstream prices for the third consecutive quarter, declining by 11.8%
  • The US saw prices rise by 10.2%, its highest rate of annual growth since 2006
  • Australia saw prices rise by 2.6% during the last 12 months 
  • Europe is the weakest-performing region, mainstream prices fell by 0.3% on average during the last 12 months
 
Thirty five of the 55 housing markets (63%) tracked by Knight Frank’s Global House Price Index recorded an increase in mainstream property prices in the year to March.
 
The index now stands 14.7% above its recessional low in Q1 2009. 
 
Property prices in all world regions, except Europe, increased in the year to March (figure 3) with the Middle East performing best, rising by 10.6% on average.
 
Mainstream property prices in Hong Kong and China look to be flouting the efforts of policymakers to cool their property markets; both recorded price rises in the first quarter despite a raft of measures to kerb escalating prices.
 
Prices in Hong Kong are, on average, 28% higher than they were a year ago and in mainland China* prices are up by 23.8% in the last 12 months (and by 10.7% in the first quarter alone).
 
Greece, Hungary and the Netherlands occupy the bottom three rankings this quarter having seen prices fall by 11.8%, 9% and 8.3% respectively. But Europe’s difficulties don’t end there – aside from Japan and South Korea all the countries that recorded negative growth in the 12 months to March were based in Europe.
 
The Dutch market, which proved resilient in the aftermath of the financial crisis, is now starting to flag. Prices fell by 8.3% in the year to March driven by rising household debt and growing unemployment.
 
That said, there is some good news in Europe. Ireland has rid itself of double-digit price falls. Prices fell by 3% in the year to March, compared to a 16% decline a year earlier.
 
The UK’s property market is also improving. Here, prices rose by 0.2% in the year to March and stand 8.9% above their low in Q1 2009.
 
Beyond Europe’s shores, the South Africa and the US are performing strongly. Prices rose by 11.3% and 10.2% respectively in the year to March, up from -3.2% and -1.9% a year ago.
 
South Africa’s momentum is linked to an increasingly wealthy middle class who are tapping into the rising confidence of the wider African continent, keen to get on the property ladder.
 
In the US, prices have now risen for 12 consecutive months boosting consumer confidence which hit a five year high in May.
 
 
For further information, please contact:
Alexandra Austin, National PR & Communications Manager, 02 9036 6794 or 0413 993 221