Archive for the ‘Finance’ Category

Columbus Ohio… College Town

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

skyline

“Please remember that Real Estate is LOCAL”

In a post titled “Please remember that Real Estate is LOCAL” China Moon Crowell. a real estate agent from the Madison Wisconsin area pointed out a New York Times article that I missed. I missed the article in “The Nation” because it failed to mention Columbus Ohio among the college towns. “College Towns  Escape the Pain.”

OK Columbus is a bit big to call a college town but Coldwell Banker referred to Columbus as a college town last year. OSU is super sized… maybe that makes Columbus a super sized college town…Or just Columbus size as the 15th largest US city.

Of course Columbus Ohio would not be mentioned in this New York Times article was about small cities:

“The list of metropolitan areas with the smallest percentage of high-cost home loans is dominated by small cities with big colleges, including Ithaca, N.Y.; Iowa City; Madison, Wis.; Morgantown, W.V.; and State College, Pa.”

Bruce Katz with the Brookings Institution (Katz loomed large in the recent Columbus Dispatch article about Ohio’s big cities….) is quoted in the New York Times article:

“Where subprimes are turning up is in hot markets, but also in places like Cleveland and Detroit,” Mr. Katz said. “College towns are more stable places in some respects. If you make between $75,000 and $125,000 in these places, you can get into a pretty decent home and still have very reasonable ratios.”

In one of the audio comments in the Columbus Dispatch series Katz talked about the Ohio Brain Drain and mentioned Madison Wisconsin as a hot place for young, educated people. He said Ohio’s cities are losing young educated people to cities in the southwest and southeast US and then mentioned Chicago, Minneapolis and Madison.

Columbus is the third most stable housing market in the country according to Forbes.com and Moody’s Economy.com I think that study / article looked at bigger cities so you won’t see the Madison, State College PA, Iowa City size cities on that list.

Look at the Multimedia map in the November 4, 2007 New York Times article.

National average 29% of loans are subprime…

Look at Central Ohio…

Franklin county 29%
Delaware county 17%

Cleveland area

Cuyahoga County is 36%
Lake County is 24%
Geuga County is only 16%

Cincinnati area

Hamilton County is only 28%

Columbus as a college town:

Nov. 6, 2006 - College Towns Columbus Ohio on Discover Columbus

How expensive is Columbus in comparison to the small cities that the New York Times wrote about… this is last year, 2006 info from the Coldwell Banker table, article, if you want to see how we compared to other college towns like Ann Arbor MI, Evanston IL use the link above to Discover Columbus:

“Columbus, Ohio, home to Bowl Series Championship leader Ohio State University, was number 62 on the affordability ranking at $251,364, approximately $108,000 less than the national average of $359,779 for the 119 studied college markets.

Iowa - Iowa City, IA 2006 - Avg. Price $208,691

Ohio State - Columbus, OH 2006 - Avg. Price $251,364

Wisconsin - Madison, WI 2006 - Avg. Price $279,500

Penn State - State College, PA 2006 - Avg. Price $306,950″

Thanks to China Moon Crowell (what a great name) for bringing the New York Times article to my attention… even if the New York Times article does not mention Columbus. Real estate really is local.

Columbus Mayor at “Foreclosure Forum”

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

From WOSU Radio Newsroom - 820 AM, Mayor Michael Coleman of Columbus is attending a “Foreclosure Forum” in Detroit Michigan… this week.

The Detroit Mayor says the “Foreclosure Forum” is not about legislation.

The WOSU article says:

“One consumer group says cities can’t afford to wait for action in Washington or at the state level. Tuesday’s meeting will be closed to the news media, but the mayors plan to release a report on the economic ripple effect of foreclosures on major metropolitan areas.”

The Detroit Mayor likened the effect of foreclosure on the local economy to a tsunami
Ohio is among the states with the highest rates of foreclosures in the US. The state of Michigan leads the nation in foreclosures.

In totally unrelated news except it is about foreclosures, Trulia.com is adding RealtyTracs feed of foreclosures to their site, Trulia.com according to the Trulia Blog.  Trulia.com is a real estate search site.

Our Real Living HER listings are on Trulia.com including foreclosures listed with the brokerage.  I always wonder if there are listings duplicated on Trulia.com because of the way they take feeds.  I used to read the RealtyTrac updates and quit because of duplication of the same listings.

World’s Most Respected Financial Services Company

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

In September 2005  Barron’s Magazine ranked Wells Fargo the world’s most-respected service company.  The September 12 edition of Barron’s ranked companies based  on a number of factors.  Our inhouse lender, Real Living Mortgage is a partnership between Real Living and Wells Fargo, the world’s most-respected financial service company.

Scott Bentley of Real Living Mortage is featured on my website:

MaureenMcCabe.com

The top- 20 most-respected companies in the world according to Barron’s:

1.    General Electric

2.    Johnson & Johnson

3.    Microsoft

4.    Toyota Motor (Japan)

5.    Proctor & Gamble

6.    Target

7.     Dell

8.     Intel

9.     Exxon Mobil

10.   Walgreen

11.   3M

12.   PepsiCo

13.   United Parcel Service

14.   Amgen

15.   Home Depot

16.   Medtronic

17.   Gillette

18.   Wells Fargo

19.   Yahoo!

20.   Honda Motor (Japan)

The top-10 financial-services companies:

1.   Wells Fargo (18)

2.   American Express (23)

3.    Royal Bank of Scotland (41)

4.    HSBC Holdings (46_

5.    U.S. Bancorp (50)

6.    Wachovia (51)

7.    Barclays (54)

8.    UBS (55)

9.    ABN AMRO (59)

10.  Bank of America (61)

Wells Fargo Chairman and CEO,  Dick Kovacevich said ” Our ranking as one of the world’s most respected companies is built on the efforts of local team members who have the ability to make decisions that best help their neighbors.”

First posted on the original Columbus Best Blog.