Real Estate in New Jersey
Real Estate in New Jersey
is a very valuable commodity.
Whether you are referring to North NJ, Central NJ or South
NJ; real estate in New Jersey has a tremendous amount of
value. This is if you are interested
in selling or buying.
This is from a recent article from
Courier Post Online
New Jersey
adding jobs at healthy pace
Friday, June 23, 2006
By JEANNE RIDGWAY
Courier-Post Staff
April and May were good months for private-sector employment in New Jersey.
The state added 12,300 new jobs, the best gain this year.
The spike offsets a small job loss during 2006's first quarter,
according to the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development.
Overall, New Jersey
added a net 11,900 private-sector jobs since the start of the year.
"The state is doing better than we have done during the last two
years, and better than the rest of the country," said Philip
Kirschner, New Jersey Business & Industry Association president.
"If we can get to four straight months of growth, that's a solid
trend and that is something that the state should be able to crow
about," Kirschner said.
Protocall Staffing in Cherry Hill is
making 33 percent more in sales this year filling orders for temporary
industrial workers.
Overall, "our industry expects to increase our sales figures by 9.1
percent," said Roy Fazio, Protocall's vice president.
The company is also helping many companies find full-time workers, especially
in the office/administrative field.
"We are up 12 to 13 percent in fees for direct hire," Fazio
said. "The higher the skill level, the greater the need to fill
it." Higher-paying jobs
The Burlington-Camden-Gloucester county region is outpacing the state in
generating jobs, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
In May, the figures were 1.5 percent for the tri-county region, compared
with 1 percent for the rest of the state. The tri-county area is also
generating higher-paying jobs.
"Professional and business services are picking up strongly,"
said Tim Schiller, senior economic analyst for the Fed.
"There is also a lot of construction of office buildings, and
that's another view of it," he said.
On the negative side, residential building is slacking off and consumer
reaction to higher fuel prices is still waiting to be felt, Schiller said.
Overall, "I think what we are going to see is slower growth in the
year's second half, both locally and nationally. It looks like an orderly
transition to a more subdued pace," Schiller said.
The New Jersey Business and Industry Association expects fuel prices to
eventually dampen consumer confidence and business buying. For now, people
are spending.
"The ability of the consumers to adjust is remarkable. If you want
to drive your car or buy certain products, you just hold your breath and do
it," Kirschner said.
Consumers' ability to adapt is also reflected in the travel industry
this summer.
"I don't think that the price of gasoline has affected the vacation
level too much," said Stephanie Mensch, public affairs manager for AAA
South Jersey. "It's the everyday travel that is hitting us in the
pocketbook," she said. Closer to home
Consumers continue to travel, but they are staying closer to home, Mensch
noted. "This is New Jersey,
and people go to the shore," she said.
On June 21, a driver in South Jersey
paid $2.87 for a gallon of gasoline. This compares with $2.06 a gallon sold
on the same date last year.
In residential real estate, the resale of preowned houses in South Jersey picked up during the first quarter of
2006, with 52,500 units sold, compared with 49,600 units during the final
quarter in 2005.
Buyer affordability continues to slip statewide, though, with a $84,672
annual family income needed to buy the median-priced home priced at
$356,700. The state median income is $80,613.
For buyers in South Jersey, resale
prices are much lower than the state as a whole. Also, prices are not
rising at the giddy pace they once were. During the year's first quarter,
the median price for a resale home was $226,100, an increase of just $100
over the final quarter of 2005.
Nationwide, demand for commercial real estate space remains healthy. The
sector is not without concerns, however, including energy costs, rising
interest rates and slower-than-expected job growth, according to the
National Association of Realtors.
Bill Glazer, Keystone Property Group president, believes in the
possibilities for commercial real estate profit in South
Jersey.
Keystone, of Conshohocken, Pa., purchased the Barrington Industrial Park in February,
which is now 95 percent occupied, up from 30 percent.
Keystone is also redeveloping 112
W. Park Drive, a 115,000-square-foot office
building in East Gate, Mount
Laurel.
"That will be a best-in-class asset. We are looking among the best
national tenants to fill it, a company that would be a household name
because that is the caliber of the building we are building," Glazer
said.
"Rental rates are just starting to tighten now. Since 9/11, the
market has been soft. It's taken many years to backfill that excess supply,
and now it's beginning to impact on the rates," Glazer said.
Signals are "go" for more development in Atlantic
City, where economic growth is resonating within the entire South Jersey economy.
By itself, the casino industry has brought aggressive development to the
shore. Now the region sees new opportunities to enhance the total
experience for visitors through other types of development, such as retail,
golfing and fine dining. Ripple effect
"The casino industry has an enormous ripple effect on the whole
economy, including housing and malls," said Milton Leontiades, former
dean of the Rutgers School of Business.
More expansion is anticipated as serious money is placed on new land
tracts in Atlantic City,
Leontiades said.
"Recent acquisitions by Morgan Stanley and MGM promise added
impetus to a growing economy at the shore," he said. "It's a
money pump for the state and particularly for that region."
Tip #23
Home Buying Tip, Big Ticket Items:
Before you buy a home
you should avoid buying any big ticket items. When this is found out during the
credit process or reporting it can make mortgage banks nervous.
Even if you will be able to get a loan, you might not be able to get
the best available interest rate.
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Tip #24
Home Selling Tip, Listing Right:
A common mistake when people list their house (especially in a
buyers’ market) is list the house at a high price that they don’t
anticipate to sell it at. They
figure that if they get it then GREAT but if not they can always lower
the price.
This is not a good practice because what mostly happens is it will
stay on the market for a while and make potential home buyers nervous because
it’s been on the market so long.
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