Colorado's ski train to Winter Park returns for 2022 season

 
 

One of the most quintessential Colorado experiences is back on track this winter.

Driving the news: The ski train from Denver's Union Station to Winter Park Resort will return in January, Amtrak announced Tuesday, and tickets are now on sale.

  • The Winter Park Express service will run every Friday, Saturday and Sunday, starting Jan. 14 and ending April 3.

  • One-way fares start at $29 and run as high as $59. There's no extra cost for ski and snowboard equipment.

Flashback: The train didn't run in 2021 because social distancing restrictions made it not feasible.

What to know: The double-decker Superliner train departs Denver at 7am and arrives at the resort at 9pm.

  • It leaves Winter Park at 4:30pm and stops back in the city at 6:40pm.

Be smart: The arrival time doesn't make it easy to chase pow, but that's not the point.

  • Ride the train for the 31 tunnels, including the 6.2-mile Moffat Tunnel under the Continental Divide

  • Get a ticket for the Sightseer car for floor-to-ceiling views.

Read more on Axios!

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Just Listed: Townhouse Style Condo in Washington Virginia Vale

 
 
 

Excellent and well cared for townhouse-style condo conveniently nestled in the quiet Washington Virginia Vale neighborhood near shopping, Cherry Creek bike path and two great neighborhood parks!

You'll love the bright and spacious main living area, and open concept dining space. Bright and cheery galley kitchen has ample counter space and new tile flooring. Also convenient 1/2 bath located on the main level. New interior paint & new tasteful, cozy carpeting throughout the entire home. Upstairs enjoy 2 spacious bedrooms that are flooded with natural light. Upstairs also features a nice sized full bath complete with new tile flooring. You'll appreciate the large fully-finished basement with 3/4 bath.. could be a home office, game room, comfortable family room or even potentially become a 3rd bedroom suite? The homes entrance features a lovely fenced patio.. perfect for potted plants and relaxing. In the Spring and Summer relax at your lovely seasonal pool just steps from your front door. Priced under $300,000 this lovely home is sure to go fast!

Listed by Larry Elwood for West + Main Homes. Please contact Larry for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

Have questions?
West + Main Homes
(720) 903-2912
hello@westandmainhomes.com

Presented by:
Larry Elwood
(720) 560-2448
larry@westandmainhomes.com


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Investors purchase a record share of the homes sold in metro Denver in third quarter

 
 

Low rates and expectations for rising rents behind increased activity, putting first-time homebuyers in a bind.

Investors are snapping up homes at an unprecedented pace across the country, including in metro Denver, resulting in more competition for individual buyers trying to find a place of their own in an undersupplied market.

Investors purchased a record 18.2% of the homes sold nationally in the third quarter, or 90,215 homes worth $63.6 billion, according to a study from the Seattle-based real estate brokerage Redfin. That is up significantly from 50,051 homes representing 11.2% of all sales that investors claimed in the third quarter of 2020 and above pre-pandemic levels, including during the housing bust when investors actively scooped up foreclosures.

More than three in 10 homes purchased in Atlanta and Charlotte, N.C., went to investors in the third quarter. Metro Denver tracked closer to the national averages, with investors accounting for 17% of home sales, up from their 9% market share in the same quarter a year earlier. That represents 2,831 homes of the 16,811 sold during the most recent quarter, up from 1,646 homes of the 17,577 sold in the third quarter of 2020, according to the study.

“Investors are expecting rents to increase in the coming years,” said Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather. “Even though home prices are high, they are waiting for rents to grow and there are no signs that prices will decline.”

Not only are investors buying more single-family homes than they historically have, but their purchases are also skewing more toward mid-priced and higher-end homes rather than entry-level homes, which have gone from a majority of investor purchases to a little more than a third, Redfin’s research shows. In Denver, the median price investors paid for a home was $508,700, according to Redfin.

Redfin defines an investor as a business entity used to purchase a residential property. That definition excludes individual buyers who purchase investment properties in their own names, but it also lumps some buyers into the investor category who purchase a home to live in through an LLC or trust. Overall, the range of investors is broad, from retirees buying a house on the same block to private equity funds with billions of dollars to deploy.

Troy Miller, executive director of the Investment Community of the Rockies or ICOR, estimates between five to seven institutional buyers are active in the Denver market. Most of the remainder are seasoned investors, not the kind of novices who jumped into a glutted and peaking housing market in the middle of the ’00s and paid dearly for it.

“Activity is very high because institutional buyers are chasing yield and are borrowing at close to nothing. One ICOR member works sourcing deals directly for one institutional buyer with the expectation of acquiring 40 properties per quarter,” he said in an email.

Plenty of available capital and diminishing competition has seasoned investors willing to take on even higher-priced homes in the $500,000 to $700,000 range, he said. The margins are smaller, but if redeveloped properly, the returns can be in the $100,000 to $200,000 range.

“Seasoned investors are simply adapting to new market variables,” he said.

Andrew Abrams, chairman of the Market Trends Committee at the Denver Metro Association of Realtors and a Denver-area real estate agent, said he has worked with clients wanting to pick up a second or third home to boost their income up to an active investor with 300 townhomes in his portfolio.

“From my conversations with them recently, they believe that the value of the dollar is decreasing every day and that interest rates are historically low. To invest in an actual asset that has limited supply will help them leverage against a weaker dollar,” he said. In short, real estate offers a way to hedge against inflation and represents an asset class they have more control over than stocks or bonds.

Investors can borrow money at around 2.5%, he said, and even if home price gains revert back to the 30-year average of around 6% a year, they will come out ahead. Should home prices dip, say because inflation causes mortgage rates to spike, investors are better equipped to ride it out. An investor who puts 30% to 40% down on a purchase has a much bigger cushion than a first-time buyer who puts 3% or 5% down, he said.

More broadly, there is also a sense that higher home prices will prevent more households from buying a place, creating stronger demand for single-family rentals for years to come. Higher home prices are a risk, but they are also a hedge ensuring more rental demand.

The current surge of investor interest comes after home prices have risen at unprecedented double-digit annual gains for several months. CoreLogic estimates that metro Denver home prices are up 19% year-over-year as of September. Next year, it estimates gains will average only 0.4%.

“It feels like we are at an inflection point,” Eli Beracha, a real estate professor at Florida International University, which together with Florida Atlantic University maintains an index of expected home price changes, said in a release.

When precisely any given housing market will peak is hard to tell, Beracha said, but he recommends individual buyers in the country’s most overpriced markets, which includes metro Denver, consider renting and reinvesting any savings. Put another way, his advice is to let investors have at it.

“You don’t want to be among the last to buy at your local market’s peak because it may be a long time before you can resell your property for a substantial return,” he said.

Abrams said first-time buyers should pursue property types where investors are less active right now, such as condos and townhomes, and they should try to strike a chord with sellers who might have been in a similar situation to them decades earlier.

“Telling your story helps buyers compete,” he said. “Most people have put so much love and memories into their house, they want to pass it on to someone else who will fill those walls in the same way.”

Owning a home is the primary way Americans accumulate wealth. Ownership can provide for a more stable retirement and a home is a resource that can be passed down to children and other heirs. Because of that, the growing dominance of investors has bigger implications for the country, Fairweather said.

“Fundamentally we will need to see strong wage growth for the middle class to take back homeownership from investors,”  she said.

Read more like this on The Denver Post.

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How Long Does It Take to Build a House?

 
 

How long does it take to build a house? It’s a question often posed by people looking to buy an idyllic piece of land so they can construct their dream home from the ground up. If this describes your current housing situation, you’ve come to the right place.

So before you invest in that spacious lot with stunning views and mature trees, it’s wise to consider the time it’ll actually take to build the place you’ll be living in—especially considering supply chain issues and overall construction delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which are expected to last through 2022.

How long does it take to build a house?

In a perfect world, depending on the site and zoning classification, it typically takes from three to six months to build a house. However, given the current state of supply chain slow-downs, labor shortages, and increased building demand, it’s more realistic to factor in a few months of delay.

The U.S. Census Bureau’s most recent 2020 data from the Survey of Construction estimates approximately 6.8 months as the average length of time from start to completion of new privately owned residential buildings. That number rises to nearly 12 months for owner-built houses, and falls to just under 6 months for build-for-sale homes.

Depending on U.S. location, the average build times increase and decrease. For instance, houses in the northeast are averaging 10.7 months, while construction in the south is at about 5.9 months.

No matter your location, the key to any successful new home building project is having approved house building permits, a process that can take a long time in some areas. So plan ahead. The biggest obstacles to obtaining a new home permit are poor due diligence, neighbors who oppose construction, and a backlog at the building department.

Main factors that affect how long to build a house

“Location and what I call environmental conditions can slow down or speed up a build greatly,” says Bill Green, president of W.R. Green Construction, a custom builder in Connecticut and Colorado.

What kind of environmental conditions? Factors such as soil type and site topography. For example, to construct a house with a slab on a level site with stable draining soil conditions is likely to take half the time it would take to construct the same house on a hilly lot. Building in a coastal earthquake or mudslide zone, or in a fire hazard zone, will also prolong the construction process.

Another major factor to consider in estimating the length of the process is how skilled the contractor is. An experienced new home builder will typically take less time to complete your new home.

Choose a contractor with a good reputation among the local municipality and real estate community. When issues arise, they’ll get taken care of quickly, says John Kuroda, manager at Sleight Farm, a subdivision of new-construction houses in LaGrange, NY.

What can increase the average time to build a house?

The overall time of a build usually depends on labor, supply chain issues, and weather conditions. Construction can easily be delayed by labor shortages, construction supply and building material hold-ups, and shifts in temperature or too much precipitation.

Other factors that can cause a delay? “The owners,” says Todd Whalen, owner and CEO of Eclipse Building Corp. Yes, that’s you!

If you delay in selecting finishes or decide to add change orders to your new home during construction, you can significantly prolong your construction time. As much as possible, stick with your home design—don’t tell your builder after the drywall is installed that you want the kitchen on the other side of the house, or a different floor plan altogether.

Real estate markets experiencing a building boom may also face a shortage of laborers and subcontractors—another thing that can lengthen the overall building time.

How to shorten the average time to build a house

Planning is far and away the most important way to shorten the building time frame, according to Green.

All the components of building a new house are interrelated, so if you plan the build, you can reduce the chance of delays and mistakes.

For instance, the thickness of the tile you select for a bathroom will determine the exact location of pipes that your builder must have in place before building your foundation.

Make sure you understand the lead time on products such as windows and doors in order to have them on the building site when they are needed.

During construction, an extra few weeks waiting for something can delay your timeline. Having all the different work crews—electricians, plumbers, HVAC specialists, etc.—working as promptly as possible in the building process helps speed everything up, too.

You should hold the builder accountable, by including a penalty in your contract if the builder misses the agreed-upon completion date, says Jesse Fowler, president of Tellus Build.

Being active and staying on top of things throughout the building process—such as scheduling weekly site walks to check on progress—can help keep everything on track.

Read more Realtor.com

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Can an LLC Buy a House? What to Know About Buying a House Under an LLC

 
 

If you own your own business, chances are you have a limited liability company (LLC) or, at the very least, you know what that is.

Business owners may choose to buy a home using an LLC or under their own name. Buying a home under an LLC is beneficial for two main reasons:

Reason No. 1: Homeowners can maintain some privacy because the LLC is listed as the property owner

For buyers who don’t want nosy people to be able to locate their addresses in public records, buying a home under an LLC is the preferred way to acquire property.

Many buyers of high-end properties prefer using an LLC, because all property transfers are recorded and available to anyone who wants to look up information on an address. An LLC prevents a buyer’s name from entering the public record.

Reason No. 2: Owners have more protection in the event of a lawsuit

If you own your residence in your name (as most people do), someone who’s injured on your property can sue you directly.

While homeowner’s insurance (and umbrella insurance if you have it) will cover the payments on a successful lawsuit up to a certain point, your other assets––including your savings, investments, and home equity––could be garnished to pay the rest of the damages.

However, if you own your home in an LLC, then the lawsuit can only name the LLC, and the only assets that can be used to pay off the suit are those assets held in the LLC (which usually would just be your home.)

In addition, investors commonly use an LLC to purchase properties they intend to rent to tenants because of the liability protection offered by the structure. When you own your property as an LLC you pay your property taxes through the LLC and can even funnel other costs of homeownership through the LLC.

Keep in mind that establishing an LLC will impact your property taxes and future capital gains taxes. The impact varies from state to state, but in most states you’ll need to pay an annual-report filing fee in addition to your property taxes. You’ll also need to pay legal fees to set up an LLC,  which can be expensive depending on the structure of your LLC.

If you’re considering buying a home with an LLC, it’s important to consult an attorney and a tax advisor with experience in your state. You need expert advice to understand the implications of buying property under this type of ownership.

Potential cons of buying a house under an LLC

If you’re sold on the idea of buying a house under an LLC, it’s important to first examine some of the potential downfalls of this strategy. One of the biggest surrounds the difficulty of securing financing. Not to mention, you likely won’t be eligible for most types of residential loans, including FHA or conventional loans sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Buying a home under an LLC also means you’ll forego capital gains exemptions. Typically, home sellers pay no capital gains tax on the first $250,000 of profit as a single individual or $500,000 as a married couple. But when you own a property as an LLC, you’ll ultimately be responsible for the tax bill, no matter how small or large your gain is.

Learn more on Realtor.com

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