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All Real Estate Is Local: What You Need to Know to Profit in Real Estate - in a Buyer's and a Seller's Market
 
 
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All Real Estate Is Local: What You Need to Know to Profit in Real Estate - in a Buyer's and a Seller's Market [Hardcover]

David Lereah (Author)
2.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 3, 2007

Grandpa told me the story of the biggest mistake in his life every year until the day he died and he always ended the story with the same advice: Never ignore the local marketplace. Grandpa didn’t research the local real estate market. He made his decision about purchasing the skyscraper his business was located in based on what he read in the newspapers and heard on the radio: Across the nation jobs were scarce and families were struggling to make ends meet. He relied on national trends as well as on his experience of what was happening to those closest to him up in the Bronx where he lived – businesses along the Grand Concourse struggling to survive… Grandpa allowed the ills of the nation and the neighborhood where he lived -- which he read and heard about every day -- to blind him to the activity and prospects of the local marketplace in which his business was located. He had an opportunity to purchase a fifty-story building on one of the most sought-after retail streets in the world for a deep discount, and he missed it. He ignored the rich potential of Manhattan because he was so focused on the nation and the Bronx. He ignored the gravity and pull of Manhattan because of the dismal stories he heard about Newark, New Jersey and Philadelphia. He learned the hard way that local real estate values are determined by local activity. He had made a mistake that he would not let himself, or me, ever forget.


In this book, I am following Grandpa’s lead. My objective is to offer you some valuable lessons on purchasing real estate. My Grandfather was not the only person to make a mistake in real estate. Mistakes are made by many households and investors every year. The common thread among them— they did not pay attention to local influences and activity.

I believe that if you master the lessons that I have learned over the years on how to evaluate and purchase real estate the local way—you will become a successful real estate investor—and make Grandpa proud.

—From ALL REAL ESTATE IS LOCAL

Whatever the national trends are with regard to real estate – whether they are booming or busting – what really matters is what the market conditions are in your region, town, or neighborhood. For as David Lereah points out, in the end, all real estate is local.

What does that mean? Even during the real estate boom of 2001-2005, a great many cities and regions did not participate in the boom – they lagged behind, or even decreased in value. Similarly, when prices began to fall nationally, there were plenty of regions and locales where prices rose, and sales boomed. As Lereah makes clear, the most important factor in buying or selling a home isn’t what is going on nationally – it is what is going on in your local market. Evaluating present and future trends and influences in your region or neighborhood is essential to creating long term wealth, whether you are in a buyer’s or a seller’s market. And David Lereah, as the Chief Economist for the National Association of Realtors, shows you how to determine the conditions in your neighborhood. Lereah reveals how to:

Evaluate the DNA of homes in the town or county or region you are considering (every town has its own real estate DNA – the characteristics that make a region or city more or less desirable to live in).

Determine whether property values in your targeted neighborhood are on the rise.

Research future real estate influences and trends, from migration into or out of the region, to plans to attract or develop new businesses in the area.

Understand the local factors that can affect your investment in the future.


Countless books offer advice on how to buy and sell a home. But ALL REAL ESTATE IS LOCAL is the first book to explain how knowing the ins and outs of the local market you are targeting is essential to deciding when, where, and what to buy.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. As pointed out by Lereah, senior vice president and chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, "over 80 percent of homeowners in America depend more on the value of their home for retirement than stocks and other savings." This guide to evaluating local real estate markets is meant to make "smarter property buyers" of both heavy investors and first-time house-hunters. In textbook-ready prose, Lereah (Why the Real Estate Book Will Not Bust) leavens the often stressful process of real estate procurement with common sense and clarity. Lereah introduces fresh concepts like "market DNA"-the set of attributes that determine a given market's future performance-which he uses to profile specific locales and explore the relative merits of such concerns as climate, resources, diversified economy, education, government, sports, medical services, transport, culture, safety and less-obvious "X factors" (e.g., the power brokers of Washington, D.C.). Lereah's profusion of tables, indexes, ratings and rankings are practical, and his step-by-step guides to the purchasing process are well laid-out. Along with the ins and outs of an intelligent buy, Lereah includes some 80 pages of statistics on a wide range of specific cities, making this a valuable reference.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Tip O'Neill famously said that "all politics is local," referring to the fact that voters are concerned primarily with the problems of their own community. Lereah, senior vice president and chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, says that the same lesson applies to the housing market. He points out that although the real estate boom of 2000-2005 has been thought of as a nationwide phenomenon, parts of the country have not participated. While cities like Miami, Las Vegas, and San Francisco have seen prices soar amid a speculative frenzy, prices in such areas as Detroit and Indianapolis have been stagnant. He explains how to analyze local real estate markets using factors such as employment, population, weather, schools, and even sports teams to gauge where the community is headed. Lereah considerably downplays the risks in the market due to the recent fallout from subprime-lending delinquencies, and he overemphasizes the view of a home as an investment rather than a place to live, but there is plenty of hard data here to educate prospective home buyers. David Siegfried
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Business (April 3, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385519222
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385519229
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,416,138 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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81 of 87 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Another swing, another miss., April 10, 2007
This review is from: All Real Estate Is Local: What You Need to Know to Profit in Real Estate - in a Buyer's and a Seller's Market (Hardcover)
Mr. Lereah likes to publish books. Tragically, they have almost comedic timing. He wrote a book on how to get rich in tech stocks that came out in 2000, when the tech stock market collapsed. His previous book was about how the housing market would continue to grow at double digit rates through the end of the decade. He then re-released it when it was obvious that there was a bubble with a new title on why the real estate bubble won't bust. That brings us to his latest book All Real Estate is Local. Now he tries to backpedal off of his hyping of the bubble areas and start bombastically declaring that even though the national trend of inflating housing prices across the country has stalled and is reversing, you can still find good deals if you start focusing on tinier and tinier sections of housing, down to individual neighborhoods. The cheap, easy money that fueled the boom is on the way out, and it will be harder and harder to qualify for loans and interest rates are likely to keep rising. The net result is stagnant or deflationary housing prices.

He's been wrong in his previous two books, and now he's swinging for the fences at a ball that's in the dirt for his third. Instead of saying "Buy everything!" like his last books, now he's saying "Move your buying to an area that isn't already wildly overpriced!" So write those checks for investment homes in Topeka, Kansas everybody!

If you want a book to educate you about real estate investing, this isn't it. If you want a book that tries to convince you to stuff money into some realtor's pocket, then this is the book for you. If you just want to buy yourself a home, forget all the real estate books and calculate your renting costs vs. your owning costs, and then make an informed decision as to when you want to purchase.
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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars My Gosh, June 8, 2007
By 
Shadow (Charleston, SC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: All Real Estate Is Local: What You Need to Know to Profit in Real Estate - in a Buyer's and a Seller's Market (Hardcover)
If you don't know already by this date, Mr. Lereah has resigned his post in the NAR. He is disagraced all over the internet as a liar (do a Google search) and rightfully so. If he believes what he says, at worst he's an ignorant fool. If he does not he's a lying fool...either way the man is a fool.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Major FAIL, September 8, 2011
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This review is from: All Real Estate Is Local: What You Need to Know to Profit in Real Estate - in a Buyer's and a Seller's Market (Hardcover)
2 major drawbacks.
1). The author suggest buying rental properties with negative cashflow. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize that you wont become rich if you're paying OUT more than you are getting IN. One major maintenance issue will make you broke for with negative cashflow you won't be able to build cash reserves. Then he suggests using the current tax code to offset the negative income against your job (active) income. Well, two things here. (Under current tax code) if you make a lot of money (150k and above), you won't qualify. And two - the tax code can be changed and the tax break might dissapear (like it happened in the 80's).

2). The author suggests buying property in other areas. Why not suggest buying in the own backyard where you're familiar with local economics? You can also visit the property anytime; and if you're hands-on person, you can also save 10% on Property Manager's fees.

Look for qualified advise on buying investment real estate - authors like Mike Butler and Jeffrey Taylor.
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