mikey's Blog: Hawaii real estate news
Good News On The Hawaiian Electric Bill

We've watched energy bills climb over the last year due to oil prices, which peaked at $147 per barrel back in July. Since that time, oil has declined to $51 per barrel today. It's hard to believe - oil prices have gone down to about 1/3 of what they were four months ago.
Hawaiian Electric recently announced that customers can expect their bills to go down as a result of the price reductions. This month I noticed the cost per kilowatt hour had gone down, which was a relief. More importantly, I found that the conservation measures we had been taking around the house put a significant dent in our power use!
In our last electric bill post here: http://www.realestatewebmasters.com/blogs/mikey/6248/show/ we discussed conservation basics and some…
Read Full PostFederal Tax Changes Affect Gain On Sale Of Second Homes
The U.S. Government did a great thing for homeowners back in 1997. The Taxpayer Relief Act allowed a homeowner to exclude up to $250,000 of gain on a residential sale. Married homeowners filing jointly could exclude up to $500,000 of gain.
Tax-free profit - that's hard to beat. Many of us were able to use the exclusion and sell a property, then upgrade to a better home. With our economy going the way it is (not so good), Congress is making some changes that will affect the home sale exclusion.
As the law is currently written, a homeowner must reside in the residence for two out of the last five years. Meeting this test allows the homeowner to take the full exclusion. The gain exclusion can be used once every two years.This means a homeowner could…
Read Full PostJapanese Billionaire Unpopular In Kahala
Genshiro Kawamoto is a man some Kahala residents would rather forget. The 76 year-old man currently owns 22 homes in Kahala, with 20 of them on prestigious Kahala Avenue. The gripe from Kahala residents is that Mr. Kawamoto is letting his homes fall apart.
A little history about Mr. Kawamoto
Remember the Japanese bubble? It started about 20 years ago here in Hawaii. Affluent Japanese businessmen started buying up luxury homes in Kahala and other areas. There were instances where homeowners heard a knock on the door, answered and were offered large sums of money for their homes. The offers were lucrative and the owners often sold.
Mr. Kawamoto was one of those Hawaii investors. By 1998 Mr. Kawamoto owned over 100 homes in the better neighborhoods…
Read Full PostHawaii Real Estate Full Time - Not An Easy Way To Make Money
For those of you working hard out there, these numbers maybe interesting. Non-realtors often think of our job as "a cruise" and how we're so overpaid.
I'll admit I've had harder jobs - I graduated from the University of Hawaii majoring in accounting. Passed the CPA exam and worked in two CPA firms. Then I moved on to be the controller of a property development company for eight years. Tired and stressed from that, I worked as controller at a trucking company for four years. That job was equally stressful. From there, I decided to work as a real estate agent.
Getting back to Hawaii's real estate numbers
Here's how Oahu's real estate agents have fared over a 12 month period, from September 2007 to September 2008.
- 46% of Oahu's realtors made no…
Read Full PostOahu Home Sales Down September 2008
Oahu's home prices took their biggest hit of 2008 in September. Prior to this, we had been happy to say that the U.S. housing market's slide had a minimal effect on Hawaii. Last month, median prices of homes and condos on Oahu fell about 10% compared with prices one year earlier. Sales volume (the number of properties sold) was down 16% for single family homes and 26% for condos and townhomes.
The median price of a home on Oahu was $590,000 - home prices have not been below that figure since April, 2005. Median condo prices were $296,000, a level not seen since April, 2006.
Oahu median home and condo prices by neighborhood

What does this mean for prospective homebuyers on Oahu?
- Get your downpayment ready and talk to your mortgage lender! …
Read Full PostTrimming The Hawaiian Electric Bill

Earlier this month I wrote about a customer's shocking bill from Hawaiian Electric. He and I did some brainstorming about conserving electricity and monitoring our usage. He started checking his electric meter everyday and flipped switches off in his breaker box when he and the family were away from home. Note: he did keep the refrigerator on.
As of this writing he has not received his latest bill. However, he continues to monitor his electric meter and his kilowatt usage is down from 30kw per day last month to 20kw per day this month.
Meanwhile, I received my electric bill and noticed an interesting trend.
The good news: Last month our kilowatt usage per day was the lowest ever, since we moved into our house a year ago.
The bad news: The…
Read Full PostQuicken Loans Comes Through After All
I wrote about some loan problems a homebuyer and I were having in a recent blog entitled Beware of Quicken Loans. It turns out that somebody at Quicken Loans read my blog!
A marketing representative named Clayton Closson e-mailed me and apologized for the problem. He asked for details of the transaction in order to follow up. I provided enough info for him to figure things out through his organization's channels. I was careful not to divulge too much info, just in case he was not really a Quicken Loans employee.
Clayton was for real. Within a couple of days, the loan officer called my customer back and said the loan was going through. In the meantime, the buyer had been scrambling to work with another lender and get a loan as fast as possible. The…
Read Full PostHawaiian Electric Shock
How's your electric bill?
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I got a call from a customer last night and he was asking me what he should do about his electric bill. He had just moved into a two-bedroom townhome in Pearl City, Hawaii in June of this year. The first electric bill was not bad because they didn't have many appliances connected during the first couple of weeks (about $80 for half a month). The second bill climbed to $200 and the third was $300! He asked me about my monthly bill.
We moved into my house in Palolo (a neighborhood in Honolulu) a year ago. At that time, our monthly electricity bills were about $100. As energy prices climbed, so did the bills. We currently pay about $150 per month and use about the same amount of energy as we did a year ago.
The townhome…
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Mike Bates is a realtor associate on the island of Oahu. He's lived on Oahu, Maui, Molokai and the Big Island for 28 years and is here to share his knowledge of the Hawaiian Islands with you. Read More
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