Princeton NJ Homes for Rent
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Princeton Real Estate
by Josh Wilton
by Josh Wilton
Did you know that the supply of available homes in Princeton is down nearly 40% from 2011? True! If you have every thought about selling your home in Princeton now may be the time! Contact us for details!
by Josh Wilton
Looking for a home for the holidays…? Take a look at some of the newest homes to hit the Princeton real estate market:
by Josh Wilton
by Josh Wilton
This studio in Palmer Square has seen the following rent increases in the past few years:
Year 2010: Rent $1475
Year 2011: Rent $1500
Year 2012: Rent $1600
That is over an 8% increase in a rent price in three years! Incredible! If you are looking to buy v rent here are some affordable condo and townhouse options for you to look at. It might actually be cheaper to buy this unit than to rent it! Click here for a link to a similar studio unit for sale in Palmer Square, Princeton.
by Josh Wilton
Looking for a home in Princeton without all the upkeep? Take a look a the the available Princeton townhouses and condos.
by Josh Wilton
Here is a list of the newest homes for sale in Princeton, NJ. All of these homes were listed in the last seven days!
by Josh Wilton
Here are Princeton’s newest listings all listed in the last seven day! Enjoy!
by Josh Wilton
Tim McLaughlin, VP Weichert Financial Services
The Federal Reserve announced Wednesday that they will expand its program to replace short term bonds with longer term debt by $267 billion through the end of the year in a bid to reduce unemployment and protect the expansion.
The continuation of Operation Twist “could help make broader financial conditions more accommodative,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in their statement at the conclusion of a two-day meeting in Washington.
“Growth in employment has slowed in recent months, and the unemployment rate remains elevated,” the FOMC said. “Household spending appears to be rising at a somewhat slower pace than earlier in the year.”
Policy makers led by Chairman Ben Bernanke are taking steps to shore up the world’s largest economy as faltering growth leaves it vulnerable to fallout from the European debt crisis and looming fiscal tightening in the U.S. Payrolls expanded at the slowest pace in a year in May, and the jobless rate has been stuck above 8 percent since February 2009.
Policy makers left unchanged their view that economic conditions will probably warrant keeping interest rates “exceptionally low” at least through late 2014. The FOMC has kept the main interest rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent since December 2008.
The Fed said it is “prepared to take further action as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery and sustain improvement in labor market conditions in a context of price stability.”
The Fed said it will sell Treasury securities with remaining maturities of about three years or less. It will purchase securities with six years to 30 years remaining.
The Fed left unchanged its policy of reinvesting its portfolio of maturing housing debt into agency mortgage-backed securities.
Takeaway: While the market was anticipating a bazooka shot of infusion from the Fed, what they ended up getting was more like a slingshot. Nonetheless, rates still historically low.
Click here to search for a home in Princeton up to $600,000
Click here to search for a home in Princeton $600,000 – $900,000
Click here to search for a home in Princeton up to $900,000- $1.2 million
Click here to search for a home in Princeton up to $1.2 million+
by Josh Wilton
Tim McLaughlin VP Weichert Financial Services
It’s one thing when special interests declare “the end” of the housing debacle. But it’s another when an organization such as the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University calls the bottom.
Center Managing Director Eric Belsky says housing as entered “the early innings” of recovery, his statement rings with an air of authority. Belsky points out that rental markets have turned the corner, home sales are strengthening and that all-important “floor” is forming under home prices. “With new home inventories at record lows,” the economist says, “unless the broader economy goes into a tailspin, stronger sales should further stabilize prices and pave the way for a pickup in single-family housing over the course of 2012.” And even as sales are pick-up, so, too, is the rental sector on the mend, the Joint Center’s director adds. Thanks to sharp drops in construction and an increase of over 4.4 million renters since 2005, vacancy rates are falling, rents are increasing and multifamily construction is up “solidly.”
What the housing sector needs now is a good shot of job growth. A sustained increase in jobs would bring household growth back to its long-term pace “and spur demand,” says Chris Herbert, who directs research at the Harvard center. Belsky states the fact that, in survey after survey, respondents state that the overwhelming majority of young adults say they will eventually become home owners.
Right now, says Belsky, they’re on the sidelines, but as the markets continue to tighten as expected, he says, “these fence-sitters begin to take advantage of today’s lower home prices and unusually low mortgage rates. With rents up, home prices sharply down, and mortgage interest rates at record lows, monthly mortgage costs relative to monthly rents haven’t been this favorable since the early 1970s.” So for all those so called fence sitters out there: terrific news. Mortgage rates this weekend are at all time historical lows, with 30 year rates in the mid 3% range, and 15 year mortgages in the high 2’s. So whether you were waiting for the bottom in both housing prices and interest rates, or if you have been delaying that opportunity to refinance and reduce your payment and/or loan term, now is your chance.