Estate Planning Attorneys Circle Pines : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Circle Pines, MN

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Circle Pines Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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The Molever Law Firm

TEL (763) 595-9292 |  Plymouth, MN

TEL (763) 595-9292 |  Saint Paul, MN

Jeffrey P. Molever has been meeting the legal needs of clients since 1982. Mr. Molever's tax planning experience as a CPA and as an attorney, coupled with his Masters Degree (L.L.M.) in Taxation, hel...(more)



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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» “Child Reduction Act” Trailer
The year is 2016. The President signs the Child Reduction Act. Families with more than one child under the age of 18, must pay a multiple child tax. Families unable to afford the tax, must send their extra children to the CHILD CONSERVATION CAMPS. The Pearce family has two teenage children - and can only [...]

» Housing Price Statistics

Almost three years ago -- soon after I started writing this blog -- I posted about how real estate sales statistics tend to shed more heat than light. Here's that post.

This still happens in a down market, like the one we have now. Each Sunday, in a feature called Price Pulse, The Chicago Tribune real estate section runs the numbers for a different area of Chicago. This week the focus was West Cook County and DuPage County, using figures from August - October 2007 (and the same period in 2006). The "results" are shown in a half-page color map.

My biggest complaint about Price Pulse is that its focus is on increase/decrease in value, and not on the effect of a good or bad market on the number of houses sold. While Price Pulse includes total units sold, the emphasis is on whether there was an increase or decrease. That's not particularly helpful, especially in municipalities where few houses are sold. (For instance, in Wayne, Illinois, the median price of houses sold went from $720,000 in Aug. - Oct. 2006 to $466,00 in Aug. - Oct. 2007. Given that only 5 houses were sold in the '06 period, and only 2 were sold in the '07 period, are these figures at all meaningful?)

Here's a quicker way to quantify what's going on in an area's real estate market, one that takes into account median price and number of houses sold. Basically, it just involves multiplying these numbers together, as you would for a company that sells widgets or spark plugs. You can then quantify the drop in "gross sales." For instance,...

I live in Oak Park. From Aug. - Oct. 2006, 348 homes were sold in Oak Park, with a median price of $310,000. From Aug. - Oct. 2007, the median price actually increased -- to $310,750 -- but the number of homes sold dropped to 272. Is it at all accurate to think that the Oak Park real estate market went up, based on the small increase in median price? I don't think so. Rather, I'd show the Oak Park market by doing the following calculations:

Aug. - Oct. 2006: 348 x 310,000 = $107.88 million in gross sales

Aug. - Oct. 2007: 272 x 310,750 = $84.524 million in gross sales

That's a decrease of about 22%, which is a number that makes sense to me. Overall, the "big" municipalities (which I define as municipalities with sales of 100 or more units in Aug. - Oct. 2006 and in Aug. - Oct. 2007) in West Cook and DuPage saw a decrease in gross sales of 23.50%. Berwyn had the highest decrease (57.84%).

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» For Real Planning, Start With the Review Schedule
Stop letting all your management plans slip through your fingers with efficient meetings that track progress.