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While June isn’t quite over yet, I do have some preliminary information to share with you in my “Hangover” series. As of today, the number of June Pending Sales for Bluegrass homes is at 469, so I’m projecting a total for the month of around 529, which again will be a record low. Without getting too political, the government hosted a really fun housing party with the various tax credits, lots of us drank down what was being offered, and now we’re dealing with the throbbing headaches and the upset stomachs! The numbers again reinforce the theory that the credits simply pulled demand forward, and created little if any true increase in real estate sales.

Here is a look at Pending Sales for our local association, Lexington Bluegrass Association of Realtors, January through September, going back to 2002:

Pending Sales for Lexington Bluegrass Association of Realtors 2002-2010

Pending Sales for Lexington Bluegrass Association of Realtors 2002-2010

*June 2010 projected based on data available through 6-24-10

I’m expecting to see similar numbers in July and August, but I do think we will have worked through the bubble by early fall, and see the market begin to stabilize. Another positive note is that interest rates remain near historic lows, and I hope that will encourage some people to get off the fence as well. Banks and mortgage lenders do have money to lend, and they are anxious to loan money to qualified buyers, with “qualified” being the key word. Some of the insane lending practices we saw a few years ago are thankfully gone, and those practices lead to the foreclosure increases we have seen across the country. Despite what you might hear, money is readily available for home purchases, and buyers do have to have good credit and have reliable income.

As always in this type of market with lots of supply, it is crucial for sellers to be priced right and have top notch condition. Buyers have so many choices today, and buying decisions can be based on what might seem like insignificant factors.

Please feel free to call or email with any additional questions you may have. My goal is always to provide accurate, professional real estate advice.

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June 22, 2010
By Becky Locknane

See more SOLD signs in your future with Milestone!

Milestone Realty Consultants takes pride in our team of experienced, professional agents. Milestone is a locally owned and operated full service Real Estate Brokerage with offices in Lexington, Louisville and Georgetown. 

We have many advantages to offer at Milestone.  We offer our agents a very aggressive commission structure with opportunities for growth.  We have a full time Relocation Department that can network all over the world.

Agents love that we have a full staff to assist with Listings and Sales and we have an outstanding Marketing/Advertising Department that will help you create your marketing materials. Plus, every listing that you have gets its own website! We also syndicate all of your listings to over

Central Kentucky sellers love that Milestone advertises all our new listings on television on all  local network stations and in our local newspapers.  Milestone offers their agents all the tools they need to sell Kentucky houses. We are committed to helping make our agents the best they can be! 

If you or someone you know would like to know more about joining our team, please click here.

Milestone is a great place to work!

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June 18, 2010
By Judy Craft

More and more single female home buyers hitting the real estate market...

“You’ve come a long way baby”, undoubtably most of us will remember the Virginia Slims tagline when Philip Morris introduced a new cigarette marketed to women.  That was in 1968 and, believe me, we’ve come alot farther in the past few years!  One revelation from the recent recession is that more women are working today than ever before largely due to lay-offs being predominately in construction/factory type jobs.  The January 2010 issue of Economist Magazine announced that in the fourth quarter 2009 labor statistics, the Bureau reported that women held 49.8% of American jobs.

The mindset of women has changed as well.  Jeremy Conaway of Recon Consulting reported that according to Meredith’s “The Rise of the Real Mom” white paper they discovered in today’s leading consumer market of 18-43 year olds, only 46% of men consider buying a home important, as opposed to 86% of women.  That is big news.  We are also finding that women wait longer to marry or sometime forego marriage all together which makes them an important segment of the home buying industry. Here in Kentucky we are noticing more and more single women taking the step  to buy thier own Bluegrass homes by themselves .

I personally found Meredith’s white paper very interesting.  In particular their indepth study of Generation X and millennial mothers and how they differ from their older counterparts.  The following paragraphs are directly from their report:

“Increasingly, Gen Xers (ages 30-44) and millennials (ages 18-29) are not beholden to perfection. Having seen their predecessors exhaust themselves trying to achieve an elusive ideal – the corner office, 2.5 well groomed children at home and Julia Child’s command of the kitchen – these younger mothers realize that “having it all” deos not require doing it all.

While a decade ago mothers aspired to be “Supermom,” today’s mothers aim to be pragmatic, efficient and rooted in reality. They want to be real moms. (That lower case is intentional; these women don’t need fancy titles.) Perhaps more importantly, they want to be real women, with interests that include and extend beyond their roles as caretakers, providers and nurturers.

In this way, real moms look to subvert the so-called “mommy trap,” where a mother has to choose whether to forfeit a career to care for the kids or plow ahead at work and hand over the stroller reins to the nanny.  Real moms understand that tradeoffs are implicit in motherhood; they just don’t see things as black and white.”

They go on to say: 

“What’s different today is that women – millennials in particular – are becoming more accepting of opportunity costs. With the publication of books such as “Good Enough Mother,” “Even June Cleaver Would Forget the Juice Box,” “The Mommy Myth” and “Perfect Madness,” the second half of this decade has brought a backlash against the mythical Supermom – that hyperactive Type-A personality who whips up perfect cookies and perfect children – and an embrace of the likable, more relatable real mom, who doesn’t obsess over the little things.  Spilled milk? No problem.”

All in all I am not surprised at the changes we have made over the past 30 years.  When able to make a choice, most women are choosing quality of life over quality of possessions and material goods.  It’s all good.  What’s next?  A woman President??  We will see.

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June 4, 2010
By Judy Craft

2010 Grand Tour of Homes Starting this Weekend

Lexington’s Grand Tour of Homes begins this weekend (June 5th and 6th) and will feature more than forty new Bluegrass homes in the Central Kentucky area.   Homes are open from 1 to 5pm each of the dates.

An annual tradition of the Lexington Homebuilders Association, the scattered site format of the Grand Tour brings together a variety of new homes, by several builders, priced this year from $117,000 to over one million dollars.  To read more and preview the homes, click here.   Planbooks will be available at all homes on the Tour. Milestone Realty Consultants represents several of these featured Builders, including Azalea, Via Vitae and Ball Homes.

Azalea’s home is located at 107 Sugartree, in Versailles. From Lexington, take US Highway 60 to Versailles. Turn left on Huntertown Road (at Speedway). Follow Huntertown Road for 4 miles and look for our Milestone Team signs and Sugartree Lane on your left.

Via Vitae will be featuring a home located at 548 E. Fifth Street in Lexington. Midland Avenue to Shropshire. Right on East Fifth Street. Model on right across from the William Wells Brown Elementary School.

Ball Homes will have 18 homes in the Grand Tour of Homes in several locations including: Chilesburg, Glasford, Walnut Hill Club, Equestrian View, Greendale/Masterson, and Gleneagles of Versailles.

Please visit us on the Grand Tour of Homes to see what’s new in new construction!

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June 3, 2010
By Judy Craft

Check out this month’s Milestone Minute video market update for a snapshot of recent year over year comparisons of sales, pendings and active Bluegrass homes.

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May 22, 2010

Feeling like the real estate market has a hangover?

Now that we are more than halfway through May, and the Tax Credit deadline has passed, the big question is…“How long will the Tax Credit Hangover last??” I wanted to update you on my analysis of the market, and in particular, the effect of the Tax Credit deadline, which was April 30th (the last day contracts could be signed). The million dollar question that everyone has been pondering is, how long will it take to recover from the huge increase in sales generated by the credit? I think without a doubt we are experiencing a “hangover”, with pending sales and showing activity way below normal for the first 2 weeks of May compared to years past.

 Here is what happened, and what I think we can expect over the next few months: 

Pending sales in April were 1143 units, the highest Pending month we have had since June of 2005, when we had 1158 Pending sales. Pending sales in March were 909 units, again way over what I would have expected as ‘normal”…without the tax credit, I’m guessing around 700 units in March, and about 800 units in April would have been normal, based on historical trends. The total impact for those 2 months was an increase in Pending sales of about 500 units over what I would expect to be a normal 2 month period. As of today, we are over half way through May, and Pending sales are at 227 units, which if we finish around 500, that number would be a record low number of Pendings for May, going back at least 9 years (we don’t have detailed stats prior to that). I would expect between 800 and 900 Pendings per month for May, June and July without the credit, so the 500 unit bubble created by the credit should be absorbed over the next 3 months, based on where we are right now with May Pendings. Based on my personal experience, I feel like the major impact of the credit was that it “pulled forward” demand, as opposed to really creating sales that wouldn’t have otherwise occurred, and I think our preliminary May numbers support that idea. I simply didn’t talk to very many people over the past year who were in the market as a direct result of the credits.

While it’s frustrating at the moment to be enduring a period of very few showings and sales, I am optimistic that we will absorb the bubble and be back to normal by the end of the summer. In the meantime, please feel free to let me know if you have more questions. I’m hoping my crystal ball is giving us an accurate picture!

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May 17, 2010
By Judy Craft

Annual Top Sales Agent Trip 2010, Cancun, MX

Milestone Realty Consultants was pleased to award our top agents a 5 day all expense paid trip to Cancun in April. Everyone had a great time in spite of the fact that it rained for 2 solid days!!  Our 2009 winners included Mike Wheatley, David Stewart, Greg Back, Erin Raymond, Deborah Back, Richard Flora and Louise Miller.  Principal Broker Judy Craft served as host for the trip.  Jeff and Holleigh Sharp of Walden Mortgage Group also attended.  Winners were based on total sales production for 2009 for Bluegrass homes, commercial sales and land sales.  Congratulations to all!!

Market Trends Post Tax Credit

April 30th has come and gone and along with it the chance to qualify for the first-time home buyer credit of $8000.  What’s next?  Do we expect our Bluegrass homes to decline in value? Should we expect the market to go down greatly?   The answer is no.  According to a survey just released by Prudential Real Estate and Relocation Services, although more than 90% of consumers believe that the home buyer tax credits have helped both first-time home buyers and the U.S. housing market overall, among consumers actually shopping for homes, 65% believe that the end of the tax credits will have little or no effect on their interest in purchasing a home.

That’s good news for all of us.  While it is true the tax credit certainly did the trick we also know that people will always have a need to buy or sell a home.  Regardless of the economy families will experience the joy of bringing new babies into the world, thus the necessity for larger living quarters. People will marry, divorce, die and graduate which also demand a change in their life and living circumstance.  Plus the fact that interest rates are still phenomenal also promises continued activity as evidenced by additional survey results which indicated among those who have already purchased a home, 61% cited low mortgage interest rates as “very important” to their decision.

As for as the dream of home ownership and the perception that owning a home is a good investment, among current renters 75% still believe owning their home is a better long-term choice for their needs than renting.  The survey goes on to show that the majority of consumers also believe that home ownership is a better investment than individual stocks or bonds (75%), mutual funds (72%), or savings accounts (74%). As a summary Earl Lee notes, “the real estate market is precariously balanced.  Consumers are clearly motivated to take advantage of the opportunities the current low interest rates and prices afford. While the market is picking up in terms of sales and confidence, and the majority still believe that owning a home is a good investment, the outlook for the market remains highly dependent upon the direction of the economy overall.”

A review of the Central Kentucky real estate statistics for March 2010 shows that buyers have a great selection of homes from which to choose.  Buyers and sellers are benefiting from stable sales prices and continuing low mortgage rates. First, sales of Central Kentucky homes rose 6% for March 2010 vs. March 2009. 

Central Kentucky: Monthly Percentage Change vs. Last Year for Total Sales

While regional sales didn’t top national sales which rose by 20%, many counties in the area did post more significant gains than the region as a whole. For example, sales in Lawrenceburg were up 25%, sales in Winchester were up 13% and sales for Lexington homes were up 14%. 

Monthly Percentage Change in Sales Central Kentucky, Area Counties vs. Nation for March 2010

And, even though local sales didn’t outpace national sales for March there are many sales in process. Pending sales for Bluegrass Homes are up 34% — this is more than double the pending sales in February.

Central Kentucky: Monthly Percentage Change vs. Last Year for Pending Sales

A key figure in which the Bluegrass almost always outpaces the nation is median sales prices. In March, the National Association of REALTORS® reported a meager gain of 0.4% for median sales prices in the U.S. In Central Kentucky, we saw a gain of 3% for single family residential homes and a 7% rise in median sales prices for townhouses and condos.

Monthly Percentage Change in Median Sales Price for Central Ky Single Family Homes and Townhomes March 2010 vs. National Median

Listings in Central Kentucky rose 6% for March 2010 vs. March 2009.

Central Kentucky Monthly Percentage Change vs. Last Year for Home Inventory

Subscribe to our RSS feed or watch the blog for my overview of April data in relation to the national market.

Lexington, KY named in top 50 Best Bike Cities!

If you’re looking at Lexington homes, you’re in for a new treat.  Because of the city’s new commitment to bicycling, the editors of “Bicycling Magazine” have named Lexington Ky, as one of the top 50 cities in the United States.

Cycling enthusiasts have long heard of the legendary climate for riding in cities like Boulder, Minneapolis or even Madison (WI), but now Bluegrass homes are right in the mix. Factors that the editors considered in their evaluations included the miles of marked bike lanes on public streets, the availability of easily used bike racks on public transportation, the commitment local governments have made to improve the conditions for cyclists and the presence of a vital cycling community. Lexington has also been recently given about $7 million in combined local, state and federal funds which are dedicated to encouraging bikes as a citywide mode of transportation and recreation.  These grants will allow cyclists to crisscross the city more safely. If you venture onto Fayette County’s more rural roads, make sure to note the yellow “Share The Road” signs which mark well traveled bike routes used for recreation, fitness and commuting by residents.

The Bluegrass Cycling Club named the “Best Regional Cycling Club in America”

If you add the fact that the Bluegrass Cycling Club was just named the “Best Regional Cycling Club in America” by the League of American Bicyclists and the monthly “Second Sunday” rides which lead families and beginning riders to spots throughout the city on Police-escorted rides, it’s easy to see why the Bluegrass is truly becoming a cycling destination with a quickly developing national reputation.  This reputation will be expanded this year as about 2,500 cyclists from all over the world will come here for the “Horsey Hundred,” a nationally recognized, three-day bike festival over the Memorial Day Weekend.

Just to toot our own horn one last time, please come and join us for the “Ride For The Red”  which combines bikes, the Red Cross, and Equus Run Vineyards on May 15th, 2010.  Four rides varying from 10 miles long to a full “Metric Century” rode of 100 kilometers (63 miles) will challenge you physically and then soothe you with a Bluegrass barbecue lunch cooked on the grills at the winery while you help raise funds for the Red Cross.

Check out the rest of  Bicycling Magazine’s top 50 cities. Join our club by contacting the Bluegrass Cycling Club.  And if you’re looking for a new home with a bike-friendly location you can email me, Bill Cole at bcole@milestoneKY.com!