Santa Fe resort in "Fall's Hottest Openings"

The Street.com’s Fall’s Hottest Openings includes the groovy new Santa Fe Encantado Resort:

 

Wow Factor: Napa’s Auberge Resorts brings eco-lux resort to Santa Fe 
Opening: August 2008

Formerly known as Rancho del Monte, this 1930s ranch has been realized as a spa-themed oasis by Auberge Resorts, one of California’s premier luxury operators. The result in an eco-conscious oasis that employs water conservation, sustainable building products and drought tolerant landscaping for a five-star property located within the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains near downtown Santa Fe.  The resort is home to a full-service spa, yoga center and high-profile eatery with regional New Mexican menu.

The property’s 65 freestanding casitas are arranged with high-ceilings, open-style living rooms equipped with traditional kiva-style fireplaces, heated floors and private terraces ideal for absorbing the spiritual Santa Fe sunset.

Add this to the new Buffalo Thunder Resort, the new Santa Fe Convention Center and the fabulous Railyard Park + Plaza, all opening in the next couple of months.  It’s going to be a busy fall!

 

Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 Passed

The “Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008,” went into law today.  The bill includes the following provisions: 

  • GSE Reform – including a strong independent regulator, and permanent conforming loan limits up to the greater of $417,000 or 115% local area median home price, capped at $625,500. The effective date for reforms is immediate upon enactment, but the loan limits will not go into effect until the expiration of the Economic Stimulus limits (December 31, 2008).
  • FHA Reform – including permanent FHA loan limits at the greater of $271,050 or 115% of local area median home price, capped at $625,500; streamlined processing for FHA condos; reforms to the HECM program, and reforms to the FHA manufactured housing program. The downpayment requirement on FHA loans will go up to 3.5% (from 3%). The effective date for reforms is immediate upon enactment, but the loan limits will not go into effect until the expiration of the Economic Stimulus limits (December 31, 2008).
  • Homebuyer Tax Credit – a $7500 tax credit that would be would be available for any qualified purchase between April 8, 2008 and June 30, 2009. The credit is repayable over 15 years (making it, in effect, an interest free loan).
  • FHA foreclosure rescue – development of a refinance program for homebuyers with problematic subprime loans. Lenders would write down qualified mortgages to 85% of the current appraised value and qualified borrowers would get a new FHA 30-year fixed mortgage at 90% of appraised value. Borrowers would have to share 50% of all future appreciation with FHA. The loan limit for this program is $550,440 nationwide. Program is effective on October 1, 2008.
  • Seller-funded downpayment assistance programs – codifies existing FHA proposal to prohibit the use of downpayment assistance programs funded by those who have a financial interest in the sale; does not prohibit other assistance programs provided by nonprofits funded by other sources, churches, employers, or family members. This prohibition does not go into effect until October 1, 2008.
  • VA loan limits – temporarily increases the VA home loan guarantee loan limits to the same level as the Economic Stimulus limits through December 31, 2008.
  • Risk-based pricing – puts a moratorium on FHA using risk-based pricing for one year. This provision is effective from October 1, 2008 through September 30, 2009.
  • GSE Stabilization – includes language proposed by the Treasury Department to authorize Treasury to make loans to and buy stock from the GSEs to make sure that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae could not fail.
  • Mortgage Revenue Bond Authority – authorizes $10 billion in mortgage revenue bonds for refinancing subprime mortgages.
  • National Affordable Housing Trust Fund – Develops a Trust Fund funded by a percentage of profits from the GSEs. In its first years, the Trust Fund would cover costs of any defaulted loans in FHA foreclosure program. In out years, the Trust Fund would be used for the development of affordable housing.
  • CDBG Funding – Provides $4 billion in neighborhood revitalization funds for communities to purchase foreclosed homes.
  • LIHTC – Modernizes the Low Income Housing Tax Credit program to make it more efficient.
  • Loan Originator Requirements – Strengthens the existing state-run nationwide mortgage originator licensing and registration system (and requires a parallel HUD system for states that fail to participate). Federal bank regulators will establish a parallel registration system for FDIC-insured banks. The purpose is to prevent fraud and require minimum licensing and education requirements. The bill exempts those who only perform real estate brokerage activities and are licensed or registered by a state, unless they are compensated by a lender, mortgage broker, or other loan originator.

Santa Fe ranks at top of AARP healthy places list

The AARP just announced that Santa Fe is #4 in its healthiest places to live list (after Ann Arbor, Madison, Honolulu)

“Santa Fe has been blending Spanish and Native American cultures since it was founded as a Spanish trading post 400 years ago. The result is an unparalleled range of artistic and cultural influences—it is “the artiest, sculpturest, weaviest, and potteryest town on earth,” according to travel writer Jan Morris. Artists flock to Santa Fe for the kind of light you get by combining low humidity, clean air, and an elevation of 7,000 feet.  Of course, those are some of the same qualities that make Santa Fe a healthy place in which to live and retire, too. Its rates of diabetes, hypertension, and high cholesterol are among the lowest in the country.”

Great story, and another accolade for Santa Fe’s creative lifestyle.

Santa Fe Real Estate 2nd Quarter Report

Decline in median selling price by 15% over last year’s Q2….  
Here’s the Santa Fe New Mexican story   The Santa Fe Association of Realtors report is here.  

Where does this leave us?   Sellers who are motivated are selling their homes – those who are living in 2006 are not.  It’s a great opportunity for buyers to make offers that will be accepted.  I feel we’re probably at the low – the market will bump along for a while, but interest rates are definitely firming up, and so the price/mortgage rate combo is probably at its optimal right now.
 

 

Variety magazine Loves New Mexico too!

This week’s Variety, the movie business bible, has a bunch of articles about the movie business in NM.

They make interesting reading

New Mexico has Oscar-worthy year

…In New Mexico’s case, 2007 was an especially good year. The state can claim partial responsibility for 14 Oscar nominations, including best picture honoree “No Country for Old Men” (with “3:10 to Yuma,” “In the Valley of Elah” and “Transformers” rounding out the ballot).