Live to Give Team at My Home Group

Live to Give Team at My Home Group Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Live to Give Team at My Home Group, Real Estate, Chandler, AZ.

02/10/2024

Open house today at 512 E Mesa Vista Lane! Price enhanced to $2,000,000. The rain has cleared come check out this one of a kind mid century masterpiece.

Congrats Team! Way togo. So proud of you.
07/03/2022

Congrats Team! Way to
go. So proud of you.

06/22/2022
06/17/2022

Listing housing resources as I get contacted daily. With house prices/ rents at record high amounts we need to come together as a community and resource.

Shelters/ Transitional Housing
House of refuge
Save the family
U Mom
The Dream Center
Family Promise
Maggies Place
Central Arizona services
A New Leaf
Habitat for Humanity
I Help
Call 211
Many community DV/ Sober living communities

Rental alternatives/Shared spaces
Roomates.com
Roomies.com
Roomster.com
Income based rentals in each city

Furnished Rentals
Hello Landing
Air B and B
VRBO
Home Away
Furnished Finder

Rental Assistance
Section 8
Mesa Emergency Housing Vouchers (EHV)
Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing Voucher (HUD-VASH) program
Project-Based Voucher (PBV) program
Family Self-Sufficiency Program (FSS)
Family Unification Program (FUP)
Shelter Plus Care (S+C)
Scattered Sites Program
TCAA

Down Payment/ Homeownership assistance
Homeowner Assistance Fund (HAF)
Wish * when funds are available
Nacca
USDA
Habitat for Humanity
Home Plus* when funds are available
Home in 5* when funds are available
Chenoa * when funds are available
Pathway to Purchase * when funds are available
Newtown
Neighborhood stabilization programs

Housing Counselors
Trellis
HCC
CPLC
Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF

Utility Assistance
APS Crisis Bill Utility Assistance Program
Up to $800 in utility assistance
CAPS program for energy assistance
Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
Project SHARE

Homeowners who have been financially impacted by COVID-19 may be eligible for federal aid through the new Homeowner Assistance Fund (HAF)

Housing Alternatives
RV life
Boondocking.org

Senior Housing
The Senior Housing Program offers four apartment communities located throughout Phoenix.
Senior/Disabled Housing Program

Veteran housing
US VETS
MANA house
NCHP
Enhanced-Use Lease (EUL) Program

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05/14/2022

ARE YOU PREPARED? Change is coming. Having worked the entire last recession you still can have a good business. Follow who is buying and who is selling closely. I don't think we will have values significantly drop but we are balancing out.

Here are things my mentors/ coaches are putting in motion in business right now:

👉Review your Expenses---things have been good for a long time. Review any thing that isn’t contributing profit and cut it or reduce it.

👉Rentals---if you are buying rentals right now—make sure they math as long term after 1 month rent factored in for both vacancy and repairs, 10% property management and actuall taxes and insurance. You MUST have a positive arbitrage between the real cap rate and the current mortgage rate—ideally 3%. IF the deal only works as a short term rental and nothing else, tough times are coming

👉Flips—start adjusting your money cost up. Homes are going to take longer to sell and the market will give you less lift in the future. Our target on a flip is a 20% return on the asset after all expenses. Many will do it for 5% and many will go out of business.

👉HELOC’s—understand that the bank extends these easily and the can reduce them or shut them down just as easily. Know your risk

👉Lifestyle—now isn’t the time to pick up a 2nd home or get a new car. Too Many out there are running with scissors believing that things will never change. Make sure you have some margin in your life if your income went backward 30%.

👉Activities—figure out the exact effort that you are putting in everyday. Get the exact number and increase it by 30% minimum. In our business, we focus on contacts. You have to talk to people to sell stuff. If you were talking to 20 people daily, make the number 26 (ideally 40) and find a way to know your number EVERY SINGLE DAY.

👉Make a cut list of expenses—if your business revenue went down by 20%, what 20% of expenses would you cut. Make the list today, so there isn’t emotion in the decision later.

👉Review your assets—are there under performers that you can still sell today at crazy prices to someone else?

The upcoming market can be one of the biggest opportunities of your lifetime, or it can be one of the hardest. Make it the former!

05/13/2022

This is a great description of the current real estate market
Although we have known a shift was coming, in reality, we have been functioning as if nothing was going to happen. It was business as usual — until the weekend of April 30 through May 1. Following a weekend of dismal traffic through our open houses, offer deadlines for the following Tuesday, May 3, came and went with no offers on any of our active listings.
Hopping on the phone with all of our sellers, we provided as much information as we could and reset offer deadlines for the following Monday. We also outlined a potential strategy if no offers appeared over the next week.
As we went through the data with each client, they all realized that the market had indeed reached a tipping point and, to a person, were extremely frustrated with their timing but grateful that we had a strategy going forward.
As the Fed announced yet another rate hike on May 4, the highest single increase in two decades coupled with a promise that more adjustments were on the way, the stock market tanked, and buyer activity screeched to a near halt.
Remaining in touch with our sellers daily, we made some price adjustments and, on some of our listings, saw incremental increases in traffic. We also received some lowball offers as buyers, smelling blood in the water, sensed they might have an opportunity to score a bargain.
Having gone through a number of shifts over the years, we have fine-tuned strategies for each change in the market. Critical to any strategy is an understanding of the fundamentals under the surface behaviors.
1. Increasing prices and mortgage rates have eliminated many buyers
As prices have soared this past year, many buyer wannabes have seen home prices soar past their limits. In addition to the increasing home values, mortgage rates have also been on the rise, pricing yet another group out into the cold. It’s estimated by some that this number is approaching 9 million since January.
2. Stock market declines have removed a second tier of buyers
In our region, flush with tech workers, a considerable number have stock options or portfolios they have planned on using as their down payments. As interest rates have skyrocketed, the stock market, sensing future losses in potential gains, has begun selling off and redistributing assets.
The resulting declines in values have reduced individual portfolios and, in some cases, erased funds earmarked for home purchases. With down payment potential reduced, these buyers, though their incomes still qualify them for the higher interest rates, are also backing out of any immediate purchases.
3. Buyers have begun anticipating price reductions
In an overheated market with limited inventory, buyers, if they want a home, must compete and pay whatever is necessary to land a property. Once buyers get a sense that the market is softening, however, tactics change and do so immediately. Instead of engaging in multiple offers, they adopt a wait-and-see attitude which, literally overnight, slows offer activity and increases the number of days homes remain on the market.
As the days-on-market increase, some buyers, anticipating long-term price reductions, back out of the market completely, assuming that they will get better opportunities if they wait. Others, sensing immediate opportunity, start firing in lowball offers.
4. Buyers are getting hyper-picky
The result of these combined issues is a drastic reduction in the number of active buyers, with homes staying on the market longer, which begins increasing available inventory. With more homes to choose from and less competition from other buyers, those remaining in the market begin cherry-picking, going after homes they believe offer the most amenities for the best value.
Alternatively, some start dredging the bottom looking for desperate sellers who have had to slash prices to facilitate a quick sale.
Understanding these factors, listing agents need to begin counseling their sellers to adapt to the new reality. The faster they adapt the higher their chances of success.
Once sellers across any region begin realizing a shift is occurring, we begin seeing wholesale price reductions which result in two facts: It sends confirmation to buyers that they have increased opportunity and eliminates any opportunity a single seller may have had to get ahead of the market shift with a preemptive price reduction.
7 key strategies we outline to sellers
1. Don’t: Buy before selling
A hallmark of overheated markets is the difficulty faced by homeowners seeking to move up. Although selling existing homes has been easy, finding replacement properties has been exceedingly challenging.
A scenario some owners have been using is to buy their replacement property first and then turn around and sell their existing home. There have been numerous ways to do this, including bridge financing, HELOCs, family loans and the like. The idea is that once the new home closes, the existing property is quickly sold to pay off the financing.
Now that the market appears to be shifting, tactics need to shift as well. As long as there was certainty existing homes would sell in a few days for top dollar, move-up buyers fared very well.
As we have seen in recent days, however, in a market shift it takes longer for homes to sell, which in turn increases financial pressure on those who have purchased new homes and are now trying to offload their previous property.
Bottom line: In the emerging market, it may make more sense to sell first and then go looking for a replacement.
2. Don’t: Set an anticipated price you must receive
Once a market begins to shift, all bets are off for matching the prices of previous comparable sales. In a recent talk with a homeowner looking to sell, he stated, “We have to sell above a certain price in order for our plans to work.” He clarified, “We’ve looked at recent neighborhood sales and, based on those numbers, have concluded we can get X-amount for our home.”
This tactic fails to recognize that it is the buyer who sets the price, not the seller.
A shifting market is evidenced by two key factors:
First, homes start staying on the market for a longer period of time.
Second, because buyers now have more opportunity and leverage, offers come in at lower prices, effectively lowering overall market values.
Regardless of how much any given seller insists they must make in a sale, it’s not within their control. Sellers need to carefully consider any offer that arrives — if they dismiss it out of hand, it might be a while before the next one arrives, and no guarantee it will be any higher.
3. Don’t: Underprice listings
A common strategy employed in this area is to list homes artificially low and then let the market drive prices up to reasonable levels. I have always been in complete disagreement with this practice, and it has caused significant heartburn for those listing agents who recommend that their sellers list at fair market values.
We have always told our sellers to list at a price they would accept if only one offer came in at that price. Ironically, due to other agent pricing strategies, some buyers look at listings that are priced realistically and then assume they will have to add a substantial amount on top of that price to have a chance to purchase the home. In many cases, this assumption has prevented potential buyers from submitting offers.
In a slowing market, homes listed at ridiculously low prices may get offers, but at a potentially lower level than the seller’s expectations. The practice has been a bit like an auction with a hidden reserve: If offers come in lower than the seller’s “minimum,” then the offer is refused. Personally, this smacks of false advertising, and I am aware of at least one agent who incurred penalties for this practice.
4. Don’t: Price higher than existing comps
When pricing a home, sellers must always follow the market. In an escalating market, it’s OK to price at or higher than previously closed comparable sales. In a market that is tipping or headed down, sellers want to price ahead of the market by setting the price under previous sales.
5. Do: React quickly
When the market shifts, it typically does so in a single day. Although agents who have been through previous shifts can usually spot the early indicators, a significant percentage of currently active agents have never been through a shift and may not recognize the signs until it is too late. Listen carefully to pundits to maintain an active read on the market du jour and, when it appears a shift is happening, respond as quickly as possible.
One of life’s ironies is that the segment of the market most affected by a shift is also the slowest to grasp the implications and respond effectively. When the market spikes upward, disadvantaged buyers will frequently refuse to write offers at prices that will win the day, stating, “The home is not worth that much.”
The sad thing is that once another buyer pays the going rate and escrow closes, the house is indeed now worth that much, and the buyer who missed out will need to offer even higher to get the next home that appears.
When a market shifts downward, buyers recognize the fact immediately and respond with lower offers.
Sellers, on the other hand, refuse to accept the new market reality and will ignore offers coming in at the new lower price points. Skilled agents will recognize this and get the sellers onboard with effective responses before the majority of other sellers wake up and smell the roses.
6. Do: Maximize property potential
Once buyers see an increase in available inventory coupled with a decline in activity, they become decidedly picky. Since they finally have a chance to get a home on terms that are more agreeable, they will start to focus on those listings that outshine the rest. In an overheated market, the goal for buyers is to simply get a house — any house — so they can begin to reap the benefits of being owners. In a softening market, however, they actually have an opportunity to look for and buy a home that more aligns with their stated tastes and needs.
The message to sellers in a shifting market is simple: Make sure homes are well-prepped, staged, priced and marketed better than competing homes down the street.
7. Do: Be patient
Sales in a few short days will disappear in most cases, so council your clients to hunker down for a bit longer haul. Encourage them not to panic if their property does not sell in a couple of weeks — in softer market conditions, sales just take longer.
We have no idea how long this shift may last or how far down the rabbit hole we may go. Stay in touch with market conditions, pay attention to the news, network with other agents, and do whatever is necessary to stay ahead of the market.
This is not a case of Chicken Little crying, “The sky is falling … ” We are headed into a real shift and we need to embrace the new reality.

Great Job Team!  #5 Medium sized Team at My Home Group and congrats to Kriste Melcher who received the Industry Excellen...
05/13/2022

Great Job Team! #5 Medium sized Team at My Home Group and congrats to Kriste Melcher who received the Industry Excellence Award.

05/07/2022

Welcome to the Team Facebook group. Sorry never got this set up before. This is a place to share ideas, ask for help, offer support. Very Proud of all of you and the businesses you are building.

What a great TEAM we have. Keep up the good work.
05/07/2022

What a great TEAM we have. Keep up the good work.

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Chandler, AZ
85225

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+14808828324

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