Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Special discounts on Hawks, Thrashers season-openers

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

I found this on the AJC blog and wanted to pass it along to all my friends. I just went to my first Hawks game last year and had a blast!! I definitly want to put it on my calendar again this year and what better way than to do it at a discount!!!

The Atlanta Falcons are just getting started and are off to a 2-0 start. Still, it’s never too early to start thinking about the Hawks and Thrashers, who get their seasons underway next month. It’s hard to catch your breath with all of the sporting activities, but slow down and take in these deep discounts for the Hawks and Thrashers first two games.

Both offers for select games are for purchases made this week only, using promo code ‘gtsui’:

Purchase lower level tickets for $30 and upper level tickets for $15. Lower level tickets normally start at $50.

The eligible games for the Thrashers are opening night Oct. 3 against the Tampa Bay Lightning and Oct. 22 against the Washington Capitals.

Hawks games include the season-opener Oct. 28 against the Indiana Pacers and Oct. 30 against the Washington Wizards.

Finally a Lender who takes Responsiblty to Fix Mortgage Problems!

Friday, November 7th, 2008

This article can be found in this weeks Atlanta Business Chronicle- I think it is awesome that someone finally acknowledges that the housing market problem can’t be solved soley on bank bailouts- it is the homeowners who need to be bailed out!!! So while the banks are being bailed out and getting their stuff together- homeowners are still foreclosing on their homes! Chase realizes that it can at least stop some of the bleeding by helping homeowners to refinance so they can keep their homes! I love Chase- I hope this will spread to other lenders!

JPMorgan Chase won’t put any more homes into foreclosure for the next 90 days while it implements a plan to help borrowers stay in their homes, the company announced Friday.

The plan will include proactive offers to refinance mortgages to more affordable terms and a network of 24 regional counseling centers.

New York-based Chase ((NYSE: JPM) will hire 300 loan counselors and 150 people to review mortgages before they are placed into foreclosure to ensure homeowners were offered modifications first.

With the customers of the newly acquired Washington Mutual in the fold, Chase’s program could help about 400,000 families with $70 billion in loans, the company said. It didn’t estimate a cost.

Chase received $25 billion through the U.S. Treasury Department, which became a shareholder in the bank.

Chase will offer borrowers with payment option ARMs alternatives such as 30-year, fixed-rate loans with affordable payments, principal deferral and interest-only payments for 10 years.

“All the offers will eliminate negative amortization and are expected to be more affordable for borrowers in the long term,” Chase stated in a press release.

Chase, which acquired the assets Washington Mutual, or WaMu, in September, has about 60 former WaMu branches in the Atlanta area.

Other Chase and WaMu borrowers who could experience problems also will receive help through interest-rate reductions and principal forbearance, in which the bank would forgive part of the principal.

As another part of the program, Chase said it plans to discount or donate 500 homes to community groups, nonprofits or government programs.

Forbes Magazine Predicts Atlanta’s Recovery to Begin in 2009

Friday, November 7th, 2008

Some good news for everyone! I think the Atlanta market will see the rebound quicker than most states and hopefully this will help across the board make our state a desirable place to live!

Forbes  Magazine made some good predictions for Atlanta homebuilders and residents  last week. While other cities, like Las Vegas and Phoenix are expected to see  home prices decrease by up to 50%, Atlanta is predicted to see significant  increases as early as 2009. (This reiterates that NOW is the time to buy  Atlanta Real Estate. Discounts on current new home inventory are available  now.  They won’t last forever!)

Although Forbes <UrlBlockedError.aspx>  mentions the number  of Atlanta foreclosures in early 2008, our continued steady job growth rate  promises an end to our housing slump. In fact, next year home prices are  expected to jump up by 32.5% for single family homes around the metro Atlanta  area. Multi-family home prices are expected to rise by as much as 18.4% and  job growth will remain around the steady 2% yearly increase that has kept  Atlanta afloat and the envy of the nation. We are placed at number nine in the  group of ten “lucky cities” that are predicted to experience long term  recovery that will begin next year. Other cities where home prices are  expected to rise include Oklahoma City, Minneapolis, Colorado  Springs, Salt Lake City, Austin, Portland, San Antonio, Charlotte, and  Albuquerque. So while times may seem tough now, if we can just hold out for a  little while longer, things should be looking up for the economy and the  Atlanta housing market once again.

Think Positive and GET RESULTS!

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Hello everyone- I thought this was a great article with alot of positive thoughts- please read and enjoy what is about to happen!

 

In race car driving, the top earners make their money in the turns.  While most people would think to take the foot off the gas, or put their foot on the breaks, the top performers are pushing the gas and making their passes.  Now is the time to learn what race car drivers already know, and apply it to the real estate market/housing market…now is the time to accelerate, while others are scared, and putting on the brakes!  The money is made in the turns…ACCELERATE NOW!

 

There are many signals to identify that the bottom has been reached in the housing market, and there are finally positive articles coming out regarding the pace of sales getting better.  More importantly, most every financial wizard is telling people to “BUY REAL ESTATE NOW!”  You must remember, these are the same people that have been saying “do not buy real estate” for 2 years!

 

The following facts are happening now, and they will help form the turn in the near future:

1.       The Bailout ($700 Billion) is taking place, and will be filtering into the credit market…this will create the floor of pricing and help in confidence of the general public

2.       Oil has dropped to the mid $60’s per barrel (it was $147/barrel in July!)!  This will help with energy bills over the winter, and keep our houses monthly bills lower

3.       In Atlanta, Gas is in the $2.30’s, and was over $4.00/gallon just 2 months ago!  June is when the brakes could be felt, and gas had just reached $4.00/gallon

4.       Interest rates are still incredibly low, and will most likely stay here for a while

5.       Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been taken over, and will be adjusted to be stronger and be able to make more loans to more people than what was beginning to happen

6.       Supply of homes is coming down in most areas…Atlanta is about 10 to 12% lower than its peak about 1 year ago

7.       Builders are not building as much (dramatically down), and what is being built today has been adjusted for being deals in today’s climate

8.       Financially challenged banks are being shut down and taken over by the FDIC…this is bad right now, but the good will emerge from the FDIC regulating and selling off the bad assets at attractive prices and stimulating more sales…this simply needed to happen

9.       Recession talk…who would not think we would not be in a recession?!  Banks haven’t been able to loan as many people money…people have been losing jobs…stock market going crazy…how in the heck could we not be in one…and when we know we are in one, is when we are digging out of it!

10.    Election will be done!  It does not matter if it is Republican or Democrat, the 50% of the Nation that was scared of who/what will embrace the reality of the next 4 years and move on…they are waiting to see right now!

 

Educate your buyers that they have 3 to 6 months to get the best deals…and then the market is going to be moving up due to reasons 1 – 10 above.  Remember, it is riskier to buy at the top of the market vs. buying at the bottom…we are nowhere near the top, and most likely at the bottom…BUY NOW for investments!

 

Big change does not happen overnight…it takes time for these to filter out into the minds of the general public.  The general public also must see the changes happening prior to believing them.  If you have all 10 facts happening above, and give them 3 to 6 months to begin to make change, just imagine what good effect that can have on the housing market.

 

 

 

 

 

Why Your Kids Expect to be Rich

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Hello- most of you that know me know that I live in the constant fear of not having money or the “what if” factor. I don’t remember what I thought about money as a teenager mainly because being rasied by a single mom who worked 2 jobs most of the time and starting work myself at age 13- I think I realized money wasn’t easy to come by. I have said time and time again if Jimmy and I ever have kids they wouldn’t see a dime of my hard earned money and that goes from my aging parents as well! This article is very interesting and important for to all of us to remember how lucky we are and how to help our children as they learn about money. It will really make a difference in their futures.

Article sent to me from Art Karalexis at Suntrust

Turns out most kids think they’ll soon earn six-figure incomes. Here’s why their expectations are so removed from reality and how you can help your offspring avoid the fallout.

Plenty of adults are delusional about money, so it shouldn’t come as too much of a shock that teenagers can be unrealistic when it comes to their future finances.  Still, the extent to which teens misjudge their prospective earning power says something interesting — about them and about the rest of us.

 

I refer to tidbits from the “Teens and Money” survey Charles Schwab released last year. This poll of 1,000 Americans aged 13 to 18 from a variety of socio-economic backgrounds found that 73% believed they would earn “plenty of money” when they were adults.

 

In fact, the teenage boys expected to make an average $174,000 annually. Teenage girls expected to earn $114,200.

 

The Reality Check:

 

  • Median earnings of men who worked full time, year round in 2007, the latest year for which Census Bureau statistics are available, was $45,113.
  • Women working full time made a median $35,102.
  • Fewer than 5% of the U.S. population makes more than $100,000, according to the bureau. Only one household out of six report a six-figure income, according to the Federal Reserve’s 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances (a more-current survey is to be released in 2009).

Great Expectations

 

You might expect teens to overestimate their potential earning power if they were planning to become professional athletes, actors or hip-hop recording artists.  But sports and entertainment ranked only in the middle of the 20 career options chosen by the surveyed teens. Far more popular were medicine (including jobs as doctors, nurses and medical technicians), technology (including jobs in programming, network operations and computer repair) and teaching, the three career fields that most interested the kids polled.

Yes, teaching. Now you begin to see how truly out of whack these kids’ earnings estimates are.  So what, you might say. Let the kids have their fantasies. They’ll find out the truth soon enough.  But that’s the problem. These adolescents will soon be making decisions about money that will affect their lives for years, even decades, to come.

Those who misjudge their earning power could:

 

  • Take on crippling student-loan debt. I hear from too many young graduates with six-figure student loans and salaries under $50,000. These debts cut into their ability to save for retirement, buy a home or meet other financial goals. And you typically can’t shake off student-loan debt in bankruptcy court or anywhere else; this is debt that can literally follow you to the grave.
  • Overspend on credit cards. Eight out of 10 college students have at least one credit card, and many graduate with significant balances. It’s easy to justify paying only the minimum on your cards if you think a fat paycheck is just around the corner. But that bad habit can quickly snowball into huge debts that, at best, cost the borrowers thousands of dollars in interest and at worst lead them to bankruptcy.
  • Overspend on everything else. People who don’t understand that there are limits to their financial resources, and that tough choices must be made, are suckers for a credit industry that has been happy to let them overspend on cars and homes, among other expenses.
  • Fail to take advantage of the time value of money. Once overcommitted, young people find it tough to come up with even the paltry amounts it would take to make them rich in their later years.  For example: Every dollar you tuck away in a Roth IRA when you’re 21 could grow to nearly $30 by the time you’re 65, assuming 8% average annual returns. Wait 10 years to start funding your retirement, and that same dollar grows to less than $14.

 

Dream all you want, but Plan for Reality

 

So clearly, there are serious potential consequences to overestimating future income, and in a minute I’ll address what parents can do to help their kids avoid the worst fallout.

But to get there, we need to understand why teens assume they’ll be rich — or if not rich, at least very well off. There are several potential explanations, including:

 

It’s the media’s fault. I usually disdain arguments that blame “the media” for anything. For one thing, “the media” isn’t one big monolith, despite Rupert Murdoch’s best efforts. For another, most media outlets are so chaotic and disorganized they have a tough time organizing annual company picnics, let alone a vast conspiracy.  But there’s no question we’re bombarded with details of the lives of the rich and famous. Those who consume a steady diet of such pap can get a distorted idea of what’s normal.

 

It’s society’s fault. Our whole society, and our economy, is built on the idea that “money will make you happy,” said attorney Jon Gallo, co-author with his wife, Eileen Gallo, of the book “The Financially Intelligent Parent.” “It’s part of our cultural ethos. . . . These teenagers are just epitomizing that.”  In reality, money doesn’t add much to people’s happiness once they’re raised above the subsistence or poverty level.

 

“Money does make a huge difference when you’re talking about going from $8,000 a year to $30,000,” said Gallo, citing the research of Harvard psychology professor Daniel Gilbert, who wrote “Stumbling on Happiness.” “Between $50,000 and $500,000, though, the difference is scarcely measurable.”  Many of the things that do make us happy, such as a sense of purpose and strong relationships with family and friends, don’t necessarily add much to our nation’s gross domestic product. In fact, Gallo joked that our economy “would grind to a halt” if people gave up the idea that happiness lies in more money and more stuff.

 

It’s the parents’ fault. Have you ever traded in a perfectly good used car for a newer one? Bemoaned your financial state and wished out loud for a raise — or a winning lottery ticket? Expressed envy about someone else’s income or lifestyle?

And you’re wondering why your kids are so darned materialistic?

 

Children are awfully good at picking up the messages we send them, consciously or otherwise, said Mary Hunt, author of several books including “Debt-Proof Your Kids.” If we believe “more is better,” they’re likely to believe that, too — and they often don’t have the real-world experience to understand that money is a limited resource and that every expenditure has consequences.

 

“They watch their parents swiping plastic, living on credit, keeping up with the neighbors,” Hunt said. “Kids learn through observation and emulation, and without allowing them to experience suffering, yearning and delayed gratification, they grow up with unrealistic ideas of what life it really about.”

 

3 Things Parents Can Do

 

So what’s the antidote? Most of us parents don’t want to quash our children’s dreams, but there are ways to tune them into reality. For instance:

 

Talk with your kids about their career aspirations. Once they get beyond the “I want to be a ballerina-veterinarian-astronaut” stage, you can start having real conversations about their interests and what jobs might suit them. Research together what those jobs actually pay, advises Kristine Dixon, Schwab’s director of consumer education. You can get average hourly earnings for different professions from the U.S. Department of Labor’s National Compensation Survey or see typical salaries across the country with Salary.com’s Salary Wizard. Contrast that with what people typically spend on shelter, food, transportation and other living expenses in your area.

 

Give your kids some hands-on experience with money. If the only money experience your children have is knowing how to successfully nag you into buying something, they will be woefully unprepared for the real world — either that, or you’ll still be supporting them when they’re 50. Better to start turning chunks of cash over to them now, either in the form of an allowance or in payment for work around the house, and let them make decisions on how to spend it. As one poster on the Your Money message board put it, “Let them learn when a lesson is cheap.” By the time they’re in high school, they should be assuming more responsibility for their own living expenses, as I wrote in “Why allowances don’t work.”

 

Adjust your own attitudes about money. Recognize that even if you do win that raise, or that lottery jackpot, you’d adjust pretty quickly to the improvement in your circumstances and would soon want even more. That’s not to say you shouldn’t be ambitious or want to improve your family’s financial circumstances — far from it. But expecting money to be the magic-ticket solution to all your problems is just as unrealistic for you as it is for your teenager.

Interest Rates Still Falling!!!

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Hello! Great News the interest rates today on a 30 yr. fixed loan is 5.5% !!!!! Now this rate is tied to your credit scores and debt ratios- but if you have good credit and little debt it is the time to buy!!!!!!

Some of you that might have bought when rates where what we considered high- 6.5% then you should contact me to help you refinance!!! It is the time to save any money you can and if it means doing some paperwork to save 70 to 100 dollars a month than do it!!!!

If you know anyone looking to buy a home right now- pass my name and number along to them and let them know how I can help them!

Beth Ann Clanin

404-246-5037!

Have a great day!

Fitness is Important- Check Out These Two Great Events!

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

Hello Friends!

 

We all know how important exercise to stay healthy and relieve stress! I am a sponsor for FitWit which is a local boot camp type training company. The owners are past clients of mine. They started this program with kids in the inner city school system and now it has evolved into a great program that serves the Grant Park and Oakhurst/Decatur areas!

 

Check out these two great events and see if this program could benefit you!


1. The FitWit Foundation Fundraiser - On Tuesday, October 21 @ 7:30, we’ll be hosting a fundraiser at SweetWater Brewery.  Tickets are $35 for unlimited beer, a brewery tour and music.  Proceeds benefit The FitWit Foundation - our own non-profit organization that provides fitness and tutoring programs for low-income youth in our area.  We’re a 501(c)3 company so donations are tax-deductible. 

2. Free Workout - On Saturday, October 25, we’ll be holding a free workout for anyone who wants to try out the FitWit camp.  This is a good opportunity to see how our program is so different!  Discover what 500 Grant Park and Oakhurst Park residents already know, and try it out before the next camp starts on November 3.  Remember - anyone who mentions you as a FitWit sponsor gets a $100 discount when signing up!  Call/email to sign up for the free workout - 9 a.m. at Jackson High School (Glenwood Ave. in Grant Park).  josh@fitwit.com or 888-5-FitWit.

Thanks again for all you do!

Josh Guerrieri
FitWIt

My YouTube Debut!

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Click on this link to see my acting debut now on You Tube!!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsT1ioPVwRM&feature=email

My husband owns his own web design firm and being the cutting edge company that they are with a small budget we did a short film for his company. All actors seen in this video are friends or family members. None of us got paid- but clearly we should have!!!

Enjoy!

Ready, Set, Blog!

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Hello Everyone! I am trying to stay with the technology edge and the word on the street is all the cool Realtors are out there blogging - I am definitly a cool Realtor- so here it goes!

I hope that all my past, current and future clients will find these blogs relevant and helpful.  Don’t hesitate to tell me what you like, don’t like, or want to know about!

Bethann@bobridgeport.com

404-246-5037