State Real Estate Drop The Worst On Record Patch.com By Chris Dehnel Home sales in Connecticut dropped 13 percent in 2011, making it the worst on record, according to The Warren Group, the preeminent compiler of real estate statistics in New England. Boston-based Warren began tracking real estate data in ...
Kensington mayor's real estate purchases Washington Post Sources: Montgomery County Planning Board; property deeds. By Laris Karklis/The Washington Post. Published on February 4, 2012, 6:50 pm SuperFan badge holders consistently post smart, timely comments about Washington area sports and teams.
Bringing real estate into a mobile world The Register-Guard By Sherri Buri McDonald RealLead is a new Eugene company designing technology that enables real estate agents to get more mileage out of their mobile marketing of real estate listings. The company's owners are Caroline Cummings (left), ...
Developer says real estate market is on the mend Las Vegas Review - Journal Buy this photo Quotable: "Real estate is more like a marathon, not a sprint. You need to build on your strengths, intellectual assets and human resources." Work history: Salesman and broker for Rossum Realty Unlimited, 1989-2005; managing member of ...
'New normal' for real estate arrives Daily News Transcript By Jay Hummer/local columnist Homeowners in MetroWest, and throughout Massachusetts are beginning to adjust to the “new normal” — an industry buzz word used among real estate professionals to define the current state of the housing market.
Local real estate agents had good 2011, feel optimistic about 2012 The Mountain Press That's a statement echoed by Colonial Real Estate principal broker Vickie Stanton. “The sellers are feeling more optimistic,” she said. “(The realtors) are cautiously optimistic.” With most buyers still looking for foreclosed homes and good deals, ...
Investing: Real estate investment trusts risky, but show great returns The News-Press Peculiarly, the commercial real estate market isn't quite as depressed. In fact, funds that invest in real estate investment trusts, or REITs, rose an average 7.5 percent last year, beating the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index's 2.1 percent gain.