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Women alone account for 29% of homes bought in Chicago

First-time homebuyers largely have been credited for the glimpses of optimism appearing in the nation’s housing market. But there’s another demographic group flexing its muscle: single buyers and, more specifically, single women.

Unmarried, solo buyers have been growing in number since the residential market heated up seven years ago, and there’ve been twice as many female buyers as male for at least a decade. In the past two years though, married couples have tempered their enthusiasm for home purchases, but singles with steady jobs and good credit are still closing on homes. They’re either entering the market for the first time or are existing homeowners capitalizing on market dynamics to trade up.

For the year ended in June, 38 percent of all home purchases in the Chicago area were made by singles, according to data recently compiled by the National Association of Realtors. Single women accounted for 26 percent of all purchases. Nationally, single women accounted for 21 percent of all home purchases, with single men responsible for 10 percent.

At 32, Jenna Crowther is looking to rejoin the local ranks of single women with mortgages. Five years ago Crowther bought a town house in Joliet, a decision she looks back on as an experience that forced her to grow up more quickly. “You couldn’t just go out to dinner or go shopping, you had bills to be paid,” she recalled.

In December, she sold that home to be closer to her job. Now she’s renting in Western Springs while she shops for a home, but she doesn’t like that arrangement. “Starting to rent again, I felt like I was taking a step back,” she said.

Home purchases today appeal to people secure in their jobs who qualify for a mortgage, plan to stay in a home for several years and love a good deal. Home prices continue to fall, tax credits have been extended for first-time and repeat buyers, and interest rates remain low, trending near 5 percent for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage.

That confluence of factors “was like the planets were aligned. It was like the decision was made for me,” said Daphne Zimmerman, who until late October had been a renter since her divorce a decade ago. Now she owns a single-family home in Joliet that’s near her job at a dental office and has a fenced-in yard for her large dog.

“It’s been a dream forever, to prove to myself that I could do it alone,” she said. “There’s something about owning. It’s like having your very own piece of the planet.”

Real estate agents say the women they see tend to be organized, know what they want and are willing to sign on the dotted line.

“Twenty years ago when I went to buy my first house and I was engaged, the title called me a spinster,” said Catherine Dugan LaBelle, a real estate agent at Prime Property Partners in La Grange. “More and more women are getting stronger in their position as landowners without needing a man. We have a stronger economic base, we’re renting on our own rather than living with our parents. There’s a greater confidence.”

The desire to stand on her own prompted Chicagoan Kaelin Dezelan to break from her renter friends and purchase a Lakeview condo when she was 25. Now 34, she sold that condo seven days after listing it and traded up in November to a new, top-floor unit in Lincoln Park with two decks that closed without a hitch. “I was perceived as the better-than-ideal homebuyer,” she said.

In the 12 months ended in June, 44 percent of buyers in Chicago and 25 percent in its suburbs were single, according to the realtors association data. Women alone accounted for 29 percent of homes bought in the city.

While both sexes are still interested in becoming homeowners, they’re entering the market with different expectations, based on the survey of local buyers. Among first-time buyers in Chicago, single women made substantially less than their male counterparts, $57,000 versus $90,000, yet spent a similar amount of money, about $141,000, for first homes. Women also got less bang for their buck; 72 percent of single women bought homes with 1,500 square feet or less, compared with 50 percent of men.

The survey also found that men were less willing to compromise and wanted less help on negotiating price from real estate agents. Men did say they asked for more help finding a home and completing the paperwork.

When she decided she had to move from her Crestwood apartment last summer, Diane Roppolo, 46 and divorced, began looking for a rental because she had never owned a home. But friends and family members convinced her to consider a purchase.

Armed with her budget, Roppolo went shopping for a two-bedroom condo near a Metra train station with a fireplace, garage, and plenty of storage. By her third visit to properties, she’d settled on a unit in Tinley Park and closed on it in late September. She was one of the most organized buyers Mala Gandhi, a Coldwell Banker agent in Downers Grove, said she had ever encountered.

“The women look more for a home that’s warm and inviting where they can just picture themselves doing things,” Gandhi said. “The men just look for the basics. They don’t care about the layout. They’re just looking for a deal.”

Not all agents say they see differences between how single men and women approach the market.

“These people are getting into the locations they want to be in, Lincoln Park, Gold Coast, Bucktown. These are all places they were priced out of,” said Joe Zimmerman, an @Properties agent.

After renting with a group of friends, Chris Tabor, 27, started thinking of buying his own place two years ago but figured it would take several more years of savings to be able to afford a Chicago condo. Instead, in late November, he closed on a small one-bedroom Bucktown unit that has such extras as a parking space and an in-unit laundry that will help its eventual resale.

“I’m single now but I won’t be forever,” Tabor said. “Then I have this place and I can make some money on it and sell it for a down payment on something more permanent.”

Mario Greco, a Prudential Rubloff agent, said singles of both sexes are focused on the bottom line.

“A lot of these singles have been waiting for a few years” to buy, Greco said. “It’s prudent functionality.”

By: Mary Ellen Podmolik

Source: www.ChicagoTribune.com

Categories : Agent News, News
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Helios Realty and Infinity Realty to merge, creating flagship network member in Chicago ahead of national expansion of Real Living brand name

Real Living Helios Realty and Real Living Infinity, the Chicago network partners of one of the nation’s largest residential real estate networks, today announced a merger that will combine the companies’ operations after five years of independent growth. The new company will operate as Real Living Helios Realty and will be base its offices in Lincoln Park and the West Loop neighborhoods.

The announcement from these two local, independently owned firms comes on the heels of the merger announced in late 2009 between Real Living Network Services – the national franchisor of the Real Living real estate brand – and GMAC Real Estate, a merger that will extend Real Living, the real estate industry’s first consumer lifestyle brand, across more than 600 independently owned offices nationwide, with more than 10,000 sales professionals conducting over $20 billion in annual transactions.

In Chicago, the new Real Living Helios Realty will be led by Tripti Kasal, the founder of Infinity Realty and longtime leader in the Chicago residential property market, as well as by Andrew Magliochetti and Joe Magliochetti, brothers and co-founders of Helios Realty. Tripti Kasal will be managing broker and will oversee day-to-day operations, while the Magliochettis will focus on business development, agent development, and the growth of complementary businesses.

“The combination of our firms makes sense in so many ways, not least among them that we have been operating independently for years under the same franchise brand and in the same neighborhoods,” said Kasal. “Both companies share many of the same core values, and together we will be even better at delivering outstanding results for our customers.”

Real Living is a national award-winning brand known for its innovation, customer service and track record of attracting results-driven brokers and sales professionals, along with a culture of partnership and collaboration within its network. The principals of the new Real Living Helios Realty believe their firm has achieved similar recognition in the Chicago market. In particular, Andrew Magliochetti noted that agents from both Helios and Infinity share two notable and valuable traits – customer loyalty and productivity.

“We really can’t say enough about the quality and caliber of the people in the new Real Living Helios Realty,” said Magliochetti. “When we study sales numbers as well as market activity, it’s apparent that our people are about twice as productive as the average Chicago real estate agent, and in a tough market this only increases market share and sets our people and our company up for success in the future.”

Likewise, Joe Magliochetti said that he and his colleagues at Helios have known Kasal and her team for years, and have been allies and supporters throughout that time. He further noted that the merger has been forged with strength and growth in mind.
“Each of our firms on its own should be proud of our growth and performance during what has been a pretty tough market, but it became clear in late 2009 that the landscape of our business in Chicago was continuing to change dramatically,” said Magliochetti. “We see an opportunity to do some exciting things in the next couple years, and this merger is a big step forward toward the type of scale we need to achieve those goals. We don’t want to be the biggest – only the best.”

Kasal agrees, noting, “The real estate business has undergone some significant changes in the past several years, some prompted by the surge in technology innovations, and some prompted by the cleansing effect of a real-estate and financial recession. We believe that by combining our sales and marketing resources, agent professionalism and success, with the excellent brand, systems and technology of Real Living, you have a really exciting offering that is positioned to succeed well into the future.”

About Real Living Helios Realty

Founded in 2004 and continuing to achieve year after year of uninterrupted growth, Real Living Helios Realty is a full-service residential real estate sales and marketing firm. First and foremost, we are a customer service organization that features collaboration among some of the most talented and reliable real estate sales professionals in the Chicago marketplace.

Real Living Helios Realty has built an integrated sales and marketing system that combines technology, creativity, collaboration and communication to connect sellers and buyers all over Chicago. Our sales professionals are the leading-edge experts in their markets and neighborhoods, having built their reputations through years of performance and accountability.

In addition, as part of the Chicago-based anchor firm in the national Real Living network, our sales consultants – and their customers – access the best possible systems, technology, communication, collaboration, support and expertise in the business. Nationwide, Real Living Real Estate includes more than 600 independently owned offices with 10,000 sales professionals conducting over $20 billion in transactions each year. Real Living is a national, award-winning company known for innovation, customer service and its fresh, energetic, consumer-focused brand.