Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
FREE shredding event! OCTOBER 8th, 2001
Then come to our SHRED-A-MAX event and get rid of them!!
October 8th, 2011
from 9:00 AM to 12:00 noon
We’ll be in the back parking lot here at our office.
We are located behind the CVS at Kildaire Farm Road and Kilmayne Dr.
Location: 51 Kilmayne Drive, Cary, NC 27511
We would sincerely appreciate you referring your family and friends to us for any of their real estate needs!
Bye, Bye To The American Dream? No Way! » Trulia Insights
Bye, Bye To The American Dream? No Way! » Trulia Insights
Monday, September 19, 2011
FREE shredding event! OCTOBER 8th, 2001
RE/MAX UNITED in Cary is going to be hosting SHED-A-MAX on October 8th, 2011, from 9:00 AM to 12:00 noon, in the back parking lot. Each person is limited to 10 boxes of papers they can bring in and shred for free! Bring in your old papers, documents, bill receipts, etc.
Thank You to our Sponsors for making this a FREE event! Wells Fargo (Jim Moore and Amy Furr) and Jonathan Richardson, Attorney at Law.
RE/MAX UNITED in Cary is located behind the CVS at Kildaire Farm Road and Kilmayne Dr.
Location: 51 Kilmayne Drive
Phone: (919) 469-4700
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
September is National Coupon Month!
Since 1998, September has been National Coupon Month. There are a few interesting facts about the use of coupons. The first coupon was handwritten in 1886 by Coca-Cola.
Now, 91 percent of Americans would walk away from the "perfect sweater" if it wasn't on sale or they didn't have a coupon for it. And, 92 percent of shoppers have changed their grocery shopping behavior in the last two years. That means clipping coupons. According to www.Nationalcouponmonth.com, 20 minutes a week clipping and clicking could save you over $1000 annually. So, let's get started.
One great site to begin is actually a blog that has less to do with coupons and more to do with mindset. It has great resources for free budgeting software to suggestions on growing your wealth. The site is www.budgetsaresexy.com. Crazy name but a great site.
When you go to coupon sites, you will find two types, paid and free or a mixture of the two. Paid coupons usually are focused on restaurants where you buy a coupon for say $10 but you get a $20 discount. Not a bad deal but not fit for everyone's taste. Free coupons are just what they say, you download coupons from various stores at no cost but you will have to endure a few offers. What sites do we recommend? Here are a few of the best ones:
1. www.couponsonline.com- This site covers all types of coupons that you can choose in categories. It includes both paid and free coupons and is well worth signing up. Could be a little easier to navigate but not bad.
2. www.couponpages.com- This site is dedicated to your local stores. You can select a category such as groceries or home entertainment and get the local coupons available at most of your local stores.
3. www.groupon.com- This is one of the best known websites and even has sister sites to help you locate more specific item coupons.
4. www.dealcatcher.com- This site is geared toward electronics. You will find new and used bargains. The site will direct you toward the best deals which often will be eBay and other similar sites.
The old days of waiting for coupons to come in the mail are over! A few important things to remember that will help you in your savings quest. First, organize! Use a coupon book that puts your coupons in categories. Second, don't buy what you don't need just because you have a coupon. Be a smart shopper if you truly want to save money!
Monday, September 12, 2011
WALL STREET JOURNAL - TOP 10 PLACES TO LIVE - RALEIGH IS #4
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Chatham Hill Winery...a great place to visit!
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Look at the greater Raleigh Accolades!
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Monday, August 15, 2011
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Friday, August 12, 2011
Afghanistan Crash photo WRAL.com
ADDITION APTOPIX Afghanistan Crash.JPEG :: WRAL.com
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Monday, August 8, 2011
Friday, August 5, 2011
Former FSBO CEO sells his home using a REALTOR!
After giving up on the DIY route, Sambrotto’s decision to hire a broker led to attracting multiple offers, closing for $150,000 over the original asking price. The WSJ reports the listing sold for $2.15 million including a 6% commission.
Many FSBOs turn to Realtors! The news stands as an enormous validation of the real estate profession and while some may tease, it is no laughing matter and the former FSBO CEO made a good financial decision.
AGBeat columnist Herman Chan said, “If people want to take a stab at For Sale By Owner (ie FSBO), go for it. But well over 80% of FSBO’s eventually have to list with an real estate agent to get their house sold. It’s harder than it looks!”
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Friday, July 29, 2011
Friday, July 22, 2011
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Ritmo Returns!
Thursday, July 14, 2011
The Triangle is #2 in GREEN job growth!
http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/07/14/1342817/triangle-is-no-2-in-green-jobs.html
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Friday, July 1, 2011
Cary Gets Fired Up for Fourth of July Celebrations
Cary Gets Fired Up for Fourth of July Celebrations
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Celebrate Independence Day at State Capitol with free activities :: Seasonal & Holidays in North Carolina :: Out and About at WRAL.com
Celebrate Independence Day at State Capitol with free activities :: Seasonal & Holidays in North Carolina :: Out and About at WRAL.com
Best Places For Business and Careers - Forbes
(Guess where the #1 place is? RALEIGH!)
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Looking for a new color palate for your home?
Grey - the new neutral, balances bolder colors.
Green - a timeless color...olive tones and shades of teal are returning.
Purple - a classic shade...the lighter versions are becoming common.
Blue - "true" blues will remain decorating staples for the future.
Accent colors: golden yellow, purple and pink are increasingly popular
accent colors for extra "pop"!
Monday, June 27, 2011
Great things are happening in Apex this week!
http://myemail.constantcontact.com/THIS-WEEK---FREE-CONCERT-ON-THE-CAMPUS-AND-YOUTH-ART-SHOW-RECEPTION.html?soid=1103123456426&aid=ZB0rP3Ba1yE
In June 2011 alone, Forbes Magazine named Raleigh the #1 Place for Families. Ernst & Young named North Carolina the #1 Most Profitable Biotech Industry. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics named us #5 in US for JOB GROWTH! Is it any wonder everyone is moving here?
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Raleigh-Cary Tops Forbes List for College Grads!
For a decade now, U.S. city planners have obsessively pursued college graduates, adopting policies to make their cities more like dense hot spots such as New York, to which the "brains" allegedly flock.
But in the past 10 years, "hip and cool" places like New York have suffered high levels of domestic outmigration. Some boosters rationalize this by saying the U.S. is undergoing a "bipolar migration" -- On the one hand the smart "brains" head for cool, coastal cities like New York and Boston, while "families" and "feet" -- a term that seems to apply to the less cognitively gifted -- trudge to the the nation's southern tier -- a.k.a. the Sun Belt -- for cheap prices and warm weather. "College graduates with bachelor's degrees or higher," Thompson notes, "have been moving to the coasts, like salmon swimming against the southwesterly current."
However, this analysis -- no matter how widely accepted in the media -- is grossly oversimplified, perhaps even misleading. Indeed, college graduates, for the most part, are heading not to the big cities on the coasts, but to smaller, less dense and quite often Sun Belt cities.
To come up with our list of the country's biggest brain magnets, we took the 50 largest metropolitan areas and ranked them by gains in people with college educations compared to the population over 25 years of age between 2007 and 2009, using the latest data from the American Community Survey provided by demographer Wendell Cox. It turns out that none of the top 10 gainers were large Northeastern cities, but largely Southern or Midwestern. New Orleans; Raleigh, N.C.; Austin, Texas; Nashville; Birmingham, Ala.; Kansas City, Mo.-Kan.; and Columbus, Ohio, all scored high marks. Only one California city, San Diego, made the top 10. Perennial "brain gainers" Denver, Colo., and Seattle round out the top 10.
Among those metropolitan statistical areas with populations over 5 million, the best ranking went to the Philadelphia region (No. 12 overall), arguably the least glitzy and most affordable of the large northeast cities. The San Francisco metropolitan area, long a leader in its percentage of college-educated adults, held the next spot at No. 13. On the other hand, supposed "brain" magnets Boston and Chicago managed middling rankings, right behind Charlotte, N.C., and just ahead of San Antonio, Texas. Both fell well behind such overlooked "brain gain" areas as Jacksonville, Fla.; St. Louis, Mo.-Ill.; and Indianapolis. New York, the nation's intellectual capital, ranked a mediocre 29th and Los Angeles an even worse 37th. To put in perspective, Nashville's rate of college educated migration growth was 3.7%, compared with 1.4% for New York and a measly 0.7% for Los Angeles.
Rather than following a clear path to the world of the "hip and cool," college graduates appear influenced by a more nuanced and complex series of factors in terms of their location. New Orleans' No. 1 ranking, for example, is likely product of the continuing recovery of its shrunken population, where the central city appears to be somewhat more attractive to professionals than before Katrina while the suburban populations have recovered more quickly from the disaster. The strong showing of Birmingham may likely be traced not to changes in the core city itself, but to the rapid growth in its surrounding suburban counties and the rapid expansion of the region's medical complex.
This reflects something not often mentioned: the spreading out of intelligence. Conventional theory suggests that the new generation of college graduates will go to the largest, densest places, eschewing their parent's McMansions for small abodes in the inner city. Yet the ACS numbers indicate that, overall, college migrants tend to choose less dense places. In the two years we covered, the growth rate in urban areas with lower urban area densities (2,500 per square mile) boasted a 5% increase in college-educated residents, compared with roughly 3.5% for areas twice as dense.
This can be seen in the pattern of migration toward relatively low-density metropolitan areas like Nashville, Columbus, Raleigh or Kansas City as opposed to more packed regions like New York, Los Angeles or San Francisco. And wherever these college graduates migrate, they are at least as likely to settle outside the urban core. Another overlooked fact: Most places with the highest percentages of college-educated people are in suburbs. Only two of the 20 most-educated counties in the country are located in the urban core: New York (Manhattan) and San Francisco. Virtually all the rest are suburban.
Another somewhat surprising statistic revolves around affordability and job growth. The college-educated, particularly in this tepid economy, are not immune to reality. They may want to go one place -- for example, ever-alluring New York or sunny Los Angeles -- but may soon find they can find neither a good job there nor an affordable place to live in order to stay there. Overall our analysis shows that many end up in places with lower housing prices. Areas with the highest price housing experienced college-educated growth at a rate only 60% of those with more affordable real estate. This is one thing that makes an Austin or Raleigh, even a Columbus or Kansas City, more attractive than a Boston, New York or Los Angeles
Finally we have to consider employment trends. For the most part college graduates, like most folks, preferred cities with lower unemployment and more job growth. Some top gainers, such as Raleigh, Columbus and Kansas City, all boast lower than average unemployment and appear to be recovering from the recession. But this is not always the case: Some relatively poor performers on the job front, like Portland, Ore., and San Diego, have managed to maintain their appeal -- for now.
As the economy recovers these patterns are likely to accelerate, although they could also shift a bit as regions gain or lose employment momentum. Meanwhile, the best strategy for attracting graduates lies in creating jobs, as well as in offering both affordable housing and a range of housing options, including both reasonably priced urban and lower-density living. Generally speaking an area that is economically vital as well as physically or culturally appealing will do best. In the next decade advantages will also fall to family-friendly regions, particularly as the current crop of millennial-generation graduates starts entering en masse their family-forming years. These factors, more than hipness or dense urbanity, may well be more influential in determining which regions do best in the ongoing war for talent.
No. 2: Raleigh-Cary, N.C.
Grad gain: 28,748
Share of 25+ Population, 2007: 4.27%
Even in hard times Raleigh-Durham -- the fastest-growing metro area in the country -- has repeatedly performed well on Forbes' list of the best cities for jobs. The area is a magnet for technology companies fleeing the more expensive, congested and highly regulated northeast corridor. Affordable housing and short commute times are no doubt highly attractive to millennials seeking to start a family. Indeed, a 2010 Portfolio.com/bizjournals survey ranked the city the third-best for young adults.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Hiring Plans Top Layoffs!
Check out this article - hiring plans top job lay offs for the first time in 12 years!
http://www.wral.com/business/story/8990744/
Friday, January 21, 2011
NOW IS THE TIME TO SELL YOUR HOUSE! BUYERS ARE BUYING!
Existing-home sales, which are completed transactions that include single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, rose 12.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.28 million in December from an upwardly revised 4.70 million in November, but remain 2.9% below the 5.44 million pace in December 2009.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said sales are on an uptrend. “December was a good finish to 2010, when sales fluctuate more than normal. The pattern over the past six months is clearly showing a recovery,” he said. “The December pace is near the volume we’re expecting for 2011, so the market is getting much closer to an adequate, sustainable level. The recovery will likely continue as job growth gains momentum and rising rents encourage more renters into ownership while exceptional affordability conditions remain.”
The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $168,800 in December, which is 1.0% below December 2009. Distressed homes rose to a 36% market share in December from 33% in November, and 32% in December 2009.
“The modest rise in distressed sales, which typically are discounted 10 to 15 percent relative to traditional homes, dampened the median price in December, but the flat price trend continues,” Yun explained.
Total housing inventory at the end of December fell 4.2% to 3.56 million existing homes available for sale, which represents an 8.1-month supply at the current sales pace, down from a 9.5-month supply in November.
NAR President Ron Phipps, broker-president of Phipps Realty in Warwick, R.I., said buyers are responding to very good affordability conditions despite tight mortgage credit. “Historically low mortgage interest rates, stable home prices, and pent-up demand are drawing home buyers into the market,” Phipps said. “Recent home buyers have been successful with very low default rates, given the outstanding performance for loans originated in 2009 and 2010.”
According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage rose to 4.71% in December from 4.30% in November; the rate was 4.93% in December 2009.
A parallel NAR practitioner survey shows first-time buyers purchased 33% of homes in December, up from 32% in November, but are below a 43% share in December 2009.
Investors accounted for 20% of transactions in December, up from 19% in November and 15% in December 2009; the balance of sales were to repeat buyers. All-cash sales were at 29% in December, compared with 31% in November, but up from 22% a year ago. “All-cash sales have been consistently high at about 30 percent of the market over the past six months,” Yun said.
Single-family home sales jumped 11.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.64 million in December from 4.15 million in November, but are 2.5% below the 4.76 million level in December 2009. The median existing single-family home price was $169,300 in December, down 0.2% from a year ago.
Existing condominium and co-op sales surged 16.4% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 640,000 in December from 550,000 in November, but remain 5.2% below the 675,000-unit pace one year ago. The median existing condo price was $165,000 in December, which is 7.4% below December 2009.
Regionally, existing-home sales in the Northeast jumped 13.0% to an annual pace of 870,000 in December, but are 5.4% below December 2009. The median price in the Northeast was $237,300, which is 1.4% below a year ago.
Existing-home sales in the Midwest rose 11.0% in December to a level of 1.11 million, but are 4.3% below a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was $139,700, up 3.3% from December 2009.
In the South, existing-home sales increased 10.1% to an annual pace of 1.97 million in December, but are 2.5% below December 2009. The median price in the South was $148,400, unchanged from a year ago.
Existing-home sales in the West surged 16.7% to an annual level of 1.33 million in December, but remain 1.5% below December 2009. The median price in the West was $204,000, down 5.6% from a year ago.
Source: http://rismedia.com/2011-01-20/recovery-on-move-december-2010-existing-home-sales-jump-12-3-percent/