Rates for home loans tumbled, sending the benchmark to its lowest since late 2016. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.73% in the June 27 week, down 11 basis points, Freddie Mac said Thursday. The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.16%, down from 3.25%. The 5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage averaged 3.39%, down nine basis points. Fixed-rate mortgages track the 10-year U.S. Treasury note, which has recently hovered near two-year lows. Investors turn to safer assets in unsettled times, and nerves have been frayed by the geopolitical maneuverings between the U.S. and China, the U.S. and Iran, the U.S. and Mexico, and more. Bonds also become more attractive when economic growth stagnates or declines, and recent weeks have brought plenty of signals that a downturn may be closer at hand than expected. But mortgage rates don’t simply mimic bond yields. They’re also a reflection of how investors view the housing market. Some recent reports suggest that the stepped-up discussion around the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may be denting investor enthusiasm for mortgage bonds. That may mean there’s only so much farther for mortgage rates to fall. Fannie and Freddie don’t make loans directly, but buy them from lenders. That allows banks and other financial services companies more flexibility to then offer mortgages to additional customers. For the past few years, they’ve consistently been responsible for about 45% of all new mortgages taken out, according to data compiled by the Urban Institute. The two enterprises have languished in government control ever since the financial crisis, but this year may be different. As MarketWatch was first to report, back in January, the stars may finally have aligned. A business-friendly White House had the chance to install its man as head of Fannie and Freddie’s regulator just as Congress has essentially thrown in the towel on offering its own reform plan. The new regulator, Mark Calabria, has said publicly that he doesn’t want to upset the market, and that he supports the broad contours of the housing finance system that’s emerged in the years since the crisis. But there are still plenty of unknowns. The post Mortgage Rates Slump to a 2 1/2-Year Low appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/real-estate-news/mortgage-rates-slump-to-a-2-1-2-year-low/
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Rocker Pete Wentz is ready to strut away from his hacienda-style home in the Encino, CA, enclave known as Amestoy Estates. Wentz has lived in the home since 2015, when he purchased it for $1,965,000. Now on the market for $2,395,000, the home was built in 1958 and was thoroughly renovated and expanded in 2009. “The property is gated/walled and has an extremely private backyard, perfect for an entertainer or athlete,” says Thomas Atamian of Compass, who is listing the property with Deedee Howard of The Agency. “A former Los Angeles Dodger lives across the street,” he adds. The home has five bedrooms and 4.5 baths spread over a single level. The layout means the place “lives bigger than its 4,100 square feet,” says Atamian. The huge backyard, with a zip line, sport court, saltwater pool, fruit trees, and grassy lawn, add to the spacious feeling. “It’s hard to find all of that under $2.5 million,” Atamian notes. The home’s updated design and decor choices hew to the hacienda theme of the home. There are wood floors underfoot, beamed ceilings overhead, as well as arched windows and doorways. The layout includes a wide-open floor plan, which creates an effortless flow between the living room, dining room, media alcove, and kitchen. The kitchen has been remodeled and now features custom cabinetry, granite countertops, and high-end stainless-steel appliances. The living space is open to the backyard, through floor-to-ceiling glass doors and windows. The master bedroom opens up to the backyard as well, with French doors. The master retreat features soaring ceilings, dual walk-in closets, a private patio, and a spalike bath with a soaking tub and sauna. Amestoy Estates is a choice part of Encino, and Atamian notes that this particular street is especially desirable. “It’s actually a loop, so you don’t get a lot of traffic through that area,” he says. “Plus, the home is halfway up the street, so it is away from any freeway traffic.” The home’s proximity to the 101 and 405 freeways does make it (relatively!) easy to get to the beach, the airport, the West Side, or Hollywood. According to Variety, the Fall Out Boy has already made an extremely cushy landing in a bigger, fancier pad in Beverly Hills. Wentz and his partner, Meagan Camper, paid $5.5 million for the place. When Wentz isn’t performing with Fall Out Boy, he’s busy appearing on shows like Nickelodeon’s teen musical “School of Rock” series and the reality competition series “Best Ink.” The post Pete Wentz Ready to Rock Out of His $2.4M Encino Hacienda appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/pete-wentz-selling-encino-hacienda/ It’s a tough time to be an agent on a listing with a nine-digit asking price. Megamansions with price tags over $100 million haven’t exactly been setting the market aflame. The Wall Street Journal recently reported on a glut of spec mansions in SoCal and even printed the dreaded b-word—as in bubble. Every home wants to be the one, the record-setter, the high achiever, but what happens when no one in your teeny-tiny pool of fabulously wealthy buyers wants to make the hundred-million-dollar leap? We surveyed the landscape of the 10 priciest properties currently available in the United States and found that the prices of over half of them have had their prices cut in an attempt to goose a high-net-worth buyer into coughing up oodles of cash. In fact, the most expensive home in the country had its price cut by 20% this week and still managed to come out on top in our tally of the priciest places. For a full look at what’s available to buyers with limitless funds at their disposal, simply scroll on down … 1. 875 Nimes Rd, Los Angeles, CAPrice: $195,000,000 Now $50 million cheaper, the property that served as the setting for “The Beverly Hillbillies” still awaits a buyer with a bottomless bank account. Will the price slice help move a buyer to make a record-breaking move? After all, back in 2017, Mansion Global reported that the massive 10-acre spread was available for an astronomical $350 million, but only if a buyer inquired. Stay tuned! ——-- 2. 67 Beverly Park Ct, Beverly Hills, CAPrice: $165,000,000 ——-- 3. 594 S. Mapleton Dr, Los Angeles, CAPrice: $160,000,000 ——-- 4. 924 Bel Air Rd, Los Angeles, CAPrice: $150,000,000 The price was subsequently chopped down to $188 million in April 2018 and then cut to $150 million early this year. Now $100 million cheaper, the place must really be worth the big bucks. ——-- 5. 2000 S. Ocean Blvd, Manalapan, FLPrice: $137,500,000 It’s since been surpassed by the megamansions of SoCal and had its price cut a couple of times. In early 2017, the price was chopped down to $165 million and reduced even further later that year to the current price. Close to Palm Beach, the 15-acre spread offers both ocean and lake frontage. ——-- 6. 2571 Wallingford Dr, Beverly Hills, CAPrice: $135,000,000 ——-- 7. Pacific Coast Hwy, Malibu, CAPrice: $125,000,000 ——-- 8. 19 Great Island Rd, Darien, CTPrice: $120,000,000 ——-- 9. 14000 Calle Real, Goleta, CAPrice: $110,000,000 ——-- 10. 1341 S. Ocean Blvd, Palm Beach, FLPrice: $109,500,000 The post Look at What a Few Billion Can Buy: The 10 Most Expensive Homes on the Market appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/10-most-expensive-homes-currently-for-sale-2019-june/ A fully renovated and reimagined modern mansion owned by a celebrated Persian architect is now on the market in Sausalito, CA. Listed for $4 million with Behzad Zandinejad of Bayview Residential, the 2,636-square-foot home—with four bedrooms and 3.5 baths—is packed with luxe amenities but also has space to build out. “If someone wanted to add a gym or an in-law suite, they can do that on the lower part of the lot,” says Zandinejad, who represents the seller, architect Ali Pedram Motiei. “He came to America from Tehran in 2016 to pursue his passion and talent in a country that could offer him all the resources he needs to showcase his talent and his peculiar vision to bring new perspective to his design,” says Zandinejad. In Tehran, Motiei designed luxury condos and high-rise apartment buildings. This is his second residential project in the San Francisco Bay Area. Motiei closed on the property in December 2017, and a yearlong renovation brought the 1983-built home to its current state, which Zandinejad describes as “a sophisticated, edgy modern sanctuary.” As far as the interiors go, just about everything is new. All of the features and fixtures are high-end, including the kitchen’s Porcelanosa cabinets, Wolf and Sub-Zero appliances, and Caesarstone countertops. Also folded into the new design is a glass staircase, skylights, and soaring ceilings, all aimed at opening up the space, with walls of windows maximizing natural light. A walk-in closet and master bath with a walk-in shower and free-standing soaking tub make at-home pampering easy. Twin blue-green glass barn doors section off one of the upstairs rooms in style. Three sets of French doors off the living room lead to the redwood deck, which was expanded under the new design and offers beautiful views of the bay. A new roof and driveway means zero maintenance in the near future. “The moment you enter the house, one can appreciate the harmonious flow that he was able to achieve through his tastefully modern design,” says Zandinejad. “The incredible view of Sausalito, Belvedere, and Tiburon is peeking through each corner of the house, through glass doors and windows.” Another unique feature is the location, a cul-de-sac on Laurel Lane. “A lot of the properties in Sausalito are on narrow streets. When you turn into Laurel Lane, you see the whole bay and the harbor. It’s a wide street, and there’s so much parking space,” says Zandinejad. What kind of buyer will snap up this property? “The house is more for a younger couple working in the high-tech industry, living the fast life in San Francisco, and really wanting to have a property in which to entertain,” he says. The “piece of cake” commute to San Francisco over the Golden Gate Bridge might also hold appeal. “They can’t have something like this in San Francisco unless they pay $20 million,” Zandinejad says. The post Acclaimed Architect Creates Sensational Bay-Front Space in Sausalito appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/unique-homes/modern-marin-county-manse-sausalito/ Former Atlanta Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer just finished up a stellar season in Milwaukee. After parting ways with the Hawks in 2018 and landing a head gig with the Milwaukee Bucks, Budenholzer helped lead the team to the NBA’s Eastern Conference Finals and was named Coach of the Year this week. But between leaving the Hawks in April 2018 and signing a four-year contract to lead the Bucks one month later, Budenholzer didn’t have a ton of downtime to tie up all of his loose ends in the Peach State. It now appears Budenholzer is ready to close out his tab in the ATL. The off-season is here, and he’s listed his mansion in Atlanta‘s Morningside neighborhood for $2.4 million. The exterior of the home is reminiscent of the French countryside, with stone detail and rich, Mahogany-colored doors. It has a bit of that storybook feel buyers have become enamored with. By contrast, the interior embodies modern luxury with curved entryways and crisp, light finishes. The three-level house comes with six bedrooms and 6.5 bathrooms. Luxe amenities include top-of-the-line appliances in the kitchen as well as a variety of custom flourishes in the bathrooms and bedrooms. However, the terrace level truly sets this house apart. It’s the ultimate man cave. It’s probably the place where NBA games were dissected and watched and where Budenholzer and his assistant coaches relaxed after a winning road trip. There’s a game room complete with wet bar, media room, and walk-out access to the backyard, which is an oasis in itself. The house offers the perfect antidote to a sweltering Atlanta evening: a saltwater pool. There’s also a screened veranda complete with outdoor fireplace and entertainment, and an outdoor kitchen. There’s also a spa, and the manicured garden adds a sweet touch. Budenholzer, 49, served as an assistant coach with the San Antonio Spurs for nearly two decades before being named the Hawks head coach in 2013. After four playoff appearances in five seasons with the Hawks, he and the team mutually parted ways last year. His recent recognition as Coach of the Year for the 2018-19 season marks the second time he’s won the award. The post Bucks Head Coach Mike Budenholzer Selling $2.4M Mansion in Atlanta appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/mike-budenholzer-selling-atlanta-home/ Fans of “Gone With the Wind” gone wild! At least, that’s what we expect might happen once news catches on that one of the homes that inspired this epic award-winning 1939 film has gone up for auction—and for a potential pittance, with a starting bid of $1 million. The mansion, called Twelve Oaks, was built in 1836 in Covington, GA. Then, nearly a hundred years later, “Gone With the Wind” author Margaret Mitchell saw a photo of this home in the Atlanta Journal. At the time, her best-seller was being made into a movie, so she sent the news clipping to the movie producers, who ended up using it as the inspiration for the home of Ashley Wilkes. Wilkes, you might recall, is the man who becomes the obsession of Southern belle Scarlett O’Hara, who checks out his amazing digs in the movie’s opening scenes and then spends most of her young life foolishly pursuing Wilkes. Alas, America’s Civil War throws a wrench in those plans when this plantation gets burned to the ground. War is hell. So was this home ‘Gone With the Wind’? Not quiteBut never fear—since the movie was filmed on set in Hollywood, the actual Twelve Oaks was not burned to a crisp. But that’s not to say that this mansion maintained its good looks through the decades, either. At some point after inspiring the film “Gone With the Wind,” Twelve Oaks fell into disrepair. By the time its current owners, John and Nicole Munn, first saw the place in 2011 and purchased it for $486,000, it had turned into an antebellum dump. “There were boarded-up windows. There were at least 30 busted windows we replaced. There was water damage on every floor,” Nicole told WSB-TV in Atlanta. “One of the porches was being held up by one last nail that hadn’t rusted away. It was in really bad shape.” It took a few million dollars and countless days of restoration to get it into the award-winning shape it enjoys today. Currently, Twelve Oaks is an eight-unit bed-and-breakfast that, just last year, was added to Southern Living’s list of Best Inns, TripAdvisor’s Hall of Fame, and Georgia Public Broadcasting’s list of Most Romantic Places in Georgia. It’s also profitable. The eight suites range in price from $199 to $400 per night, and the inn averages 55% to 60% occupancy per year. There’s also the potential to increase the number of suites by converting the innkeeper’s residence to guest rooms, converting the carriage house into guest suites, or by building cottages on the property. There are 12 bedrooms and 12.5 baths, all of them decorated with valuable antiques and reproductions. Rich paneling, wood flooring, and leaded-glass windows can be found throughout. There are a whopping 12 fireplaces in total, plus a beautifully designed kitchen that can be used for either public catering or private family dining. Outside, the 3-acre grounds include manicured gardens, a lovely pool next to a chandelier-lit gazebo, and a carriage house that can accommodate four cars. All of this, and a location that’s only four blocks from the historic Covington Town square. Not just a bed-and-breakfastBut there are other uses forTwelve Oaks beyond a B&B. “This would make a magnificent home, a lucrative business, or both,” says Dewey Jacobs of Target Auctions, which is handling the sale. “Operating permits are already in place for a B&B, an events venue, and a historic tourist site. And the property receives movie and tourist contracts each year. So this could be a huge opportunity for someone.” As a matter of fact, “Gone With the Wind” is not the only production in Twelve Oaks’ history. Many films, TV shows, and commercials have been shot there, including “Life of the Party,” “Vacation,” “Cannonball Run,” “In the Heat of the Night,” “Sweet Home Alabama,” and the “Vampire Diaries.” History buffs will note that this gorgeous home was built well before the Civil War broke out in 1861. And they might be wondering: How was this Twelve Oaks inspiration spared the same scorched-earth treatment from Gen. Sherman’s Army that its namesake suffered in the film? There are two theories: The first is that Sherman didn’t burn any homes in Covington because he had a friend who grew up in the area. The second is that either Sherman or a top officer in his army had a thing for a lady who lived in the house. Why sell now?So after putting so much money and time into this meticulous restoration, why are the owners parting with it? “Health issues and other factors have convinced them it’s time to move on,” explains Jacobs. “We feel we have accomplished what we set out to do and are ready to start a new adventure,” says Nicole. “This was a dream of mine, and we feel we’ve achieved it beyond our imaginations.” “Somebody is going to get a great deal,” Jacobs says. “This is one of the premier antebellum mansions in the country, and it’s never been on the market before.” When asked what he expects it to sell for, he says he’s not sure because a home of this scale has no comps. “It depends on the buyer’s purpose for it,” he concludes. Online bidding begins on July 4, with final live bids to take place on July 25. More details are available at TargetAuction.com. The post I Declare! Georgia Mansion That Inspired ‘Gone With the Wind’ Movie Is Up for Sale appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/georgia-mansion-that-inspired-gone-with-the-wind-film-for-sale/ If you’re looking to buy a home, you may want to prepare yourself for disappointment. A new study from Realtor.com found that there is a large gap between the home price buyers are looking for and the listed prices. Half of today’s home shoppers want to purchase a property for under $288,000, the study found, based on an analysis of Realtor.com home-search data. That’s 9.1%, or $27,000, below the median price of homes currently on the market. Closing that gap won’t come easily. Realtor.com estimated that roughly 94,000 homes priced between $100,000 and $340,000 would need to be put up for sale to achieve equilibrium. However, that would represent a 15% increase in the number of listings in this price range – homes priced above $750,000 is currently where inventory is growing the most, and even then there are only 11% more homes for sale in that price tier. The largest discrepancy between what buyers want and what’s on the market, per the study, is in Cincinnati, where the median list price ($275,045) is nearly 22% higher than the median closing price ($215,000). The study used closing prices as a proxy for what buyers are looking for, since these were homes that they were willing to purchase. Houston had the second largest discrepancy, followed by Minneapolis and Indianapolis. (Realtor.com is operated by News Corp subsidiary Move Inc., and MarketWatch is a unit of Dow Jones, which is also a subsidiary of News Corp.) Realtor.com’s report also pointed to April data from the National Association of Realtors, which showed that the median sales price of homes sold two months ago ($267,000) was 15% below the price of all the homes available for purchase. “The price differences between what buyers are searching for, closing on, and what’s available on the market demonstrates just how big the gap is for entry-level home buyers,” Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com, said in the report. “Entry-level homes continue to be difficult to come by as the inventory composition shifts more and more toward higher priced homes,” Hale said. “This is causing smaller and more affordable homes to appreciate rapidly, resulting in a mismatch between what buyers are able to spend and what sellers expect to receive.” Hale argued that this gap explains why the rate of home sales is down 4% year-over-year. Making matters worse, the low inventory of entry-level homes has caused their prices to rise 3.5 times faster than mid- to large-sized homes. The post There’s a Huge Gap Between What Home Buyers Want and What’s for Sale appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/theres-a-huge-gap-between-what-home-buyers-want-and-whats-for-sale/ Former college basketball coach Rick Pitino hopes to pass his Florida mansion to a deep-pocketed tenant. Moving into the coaching legend’s exclusive neighborhood will set you back $90,000 a month. With his college coaching career over, thanks to fallout from a federal bribery scandal, Pitino would love rental income to start flowing in. His Indian Creek, FL, home has bounced on and off the market for a few years. Back in 2016, the place was for sale for $25.9 million, and it’s still available for purchase for $23.9 million, if you’re ready to commit for more than a few months. Located on Indian Creek Island, the property is one of as few as 40 waterfront homes on the island. The listing is the only home available either to rent or buy on the island, which is situated just north of Miami Beach. The luxury abode offers eight beds, 10.5 baths, and 9,700 square feet of living space. Remodeled and expanded in 2016, the Mediterranean-style manse includes a living room, formal dining room, a chef’s kitchen, and family room. Upstairs, there’s a master suite with an office, another living room, and a gym. The 1.2-acre grounds include 118 feet of water frontage, a tropical backyard, a resort-style pool with built-in pool lounge, and an outdoor kitchen. The property also includes a four-car garage and a large boat dock. Offered fully furnished for a tenant with the means to spend nearly six digits a month on rent, the waterfront estate is located on the private island, which is guarded by police and has an 18-hole golf course and country club. This is just one of two Florida homes the coach was juggling. His nearby Bal Harbour, FL, home sold for $3.3 million in 2017, after originally coming onto the market for $4.15 million the year before. Elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, Pitino is the only coach to lead three teams to the Final Four. In 2017, he was fired from Louisville after a massive bribery probe involving recruits. Now 66, the coach is looking for a way back into the NBA, where he’d previously coached the Boston Celtics and the New York Knicks. The post Rick Pitino Hopes to Recruit a Tenant for His Florida Mansion at $90K a Month appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/rick-pitino-offers-florida-mansion-for-rent/ Welcome to turf wars! No, it’s not the latest reality TV show—it’s just a way to describe two (or more) parties insisting that a particular piece of property is their own. Turf wars are as old as the hills, and the existence of people who could lay claim to them. And they’re at the center of some surprisingly fascinating stories of wealth, greed, and pettiness. It seems that no property is too small to inspire a bitter rivalry—including one about the size of a floor lamp—that could go unresolved for decades. As proof, check out some of the strangest turf tales below, and the lessons we can all learn from them to avoid the same ugly fate. 1. The smallest land grab everIn Manhattan on the corner of Christopher Street and 7th Avenue lies a 500-square-inch piece of private property in the shape of a triangle. The backstory: In 1910, the city demolished a building owned by David Hess to build a subway, but the surveyors missed this small patch in their measurements. Later on, once this error was discovered, the city asked the Hesses to donate it, but the family refused. For good measure, the family laid a mosaic reading, “Property of the Hess Estate Which Has Never Been Dedicated for Public Purposes.” Per the New York Times, it’s “one of the smallest pieces left in private ownership as a result of the cutting through a few years ago of the Seventh Avenue extension. It has been assessed on the tax books for $100.” In 1938 the family sold this parcel to the cigar shop a few feet behind it for $1,000. Lesson learned: Land survey mistakes—or not bothering with a survey at all—can cost you big-time! “If there’s any question about who owns what, it’s better to be safe than sorry and get a good survey done,” says David Reiss, a law professor at the Center for Urban Business Entrepreneurship at Brooklyn Law School. On a more human level, we can learn this: “Spite is about as powerful as an immovable object,” says Reiss. “If you try to dislodge it, you will in all likelihood lose.” 2. Keep your water away from mine!In Minnesota’s Otter Tail County, a seething feud between homeowners on two neighboring bodies of water—West McDonald Lake and Hoffman Lake—has boiled for decades. The source of the fight: Should Hoffman Lake be allowed to flow into West McDonald Lake, currently separated by 2 feet of sandy soil? Team Hoffman Lake, whose residents are represented by Sheila Eklund, says it simply wants the excess water that’s eroding its shorelines to dissipate into lower-level West McDonald Lake. But the homeowners around Team West McDonald Lake are adamant that their crystal-clear waters not be polluted by Hoffman Lake, which is more of a “swamp” as their representative Todd Yackley described it in the Star Tribune. In the 1970s, someone (no one seems to know who) blasted a channel through the lakes with dynamite, which was quickly plugged back up. The bitter battle is now being settled by the court, although if the water in Hoffman Lake keeps rising, it might just spill over into West McDonald Lake anyway, making all of this a moot point. Lesson learned: Land wars aren’t just about land—water counts, too. Rumor has it some people were removing stones between the lakes, a big no-no. “Homeowners shouldn’t take matters into their own hands, especially when bodies of water are part of the equation,” says Paul Sian, a real estate expert in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky. “There are many environmental laws in place to control waterways.” 3. Won’t you not be my neighbor?In summer 1991, private investor Jeffrey Horvitz—rumored to be worth billions—bought 1.2 acres of private beach on Massachusetts’ famed Gold Coast for around $1.8 million. He apparently placed an extremely high value on his privacy. So when land developer Evan Wile bought the adjoining plot a year later with the hopes of building his dream house there, Horvitz was so irked, he vowed to foil Wile’s attempts to build anything on his property at all. Horvitz’s first filed a lawsuit questioning the validity of an easement that cut through his own property onto Wile’s land—the developer’s only access to his plot. That tied up Wile’s building plans for five years, but Wile eventually retained his easement, got his construction permit, then, perhaps as a form of revenge, lined up piles of scrap metal and port-a-potties along his property line, right near Horvitz’s swimming pool, infringing on this area’s view and fresh air. Yet Horvitz continued fighting, and although Wile eventually gave up on building his dream house there, he didn’t throw in the towel. Since both men clearly had axes to grind, money to burn, and no intention of ever backing down, this battle has raged for decades to this very day, earning the moniker in the Boston Globe of “rich versus richer.” An added irony? Both oceanfront properties have a view of Great Misery Island. Lesson learned: “This is a classic case of people not backing down from a land fight due to access to plenty of money,” says Sian. “While the land is desirable, at what point does continuing to spend money to fight an ongoing legal battle make sense?” Sometimes it’s better to cut one’s losses and build a dream home you can actually live in. The post 3 Most Mind-Boggling Housing Turf Wars Ever—and What They Can Teach Us All appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/most-mind-boggling-turf-wars-ever/
It's not just you -- rental homes and apartments are getting more expensive across the country.
via https://www.huffpost.com/entry/high-rent-reasons_n_5d03d65ae4b0304a120f25e4 |
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