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I just saw in the Somerville News an estimate saying that property values in Somerville declined 2% this year:
http://www.thesomervillenews.com/main.asp?SectionID=2&SubSectionID=2&ArticleID=218. Somebody mentioned that Zillow actually reports a loss of about 8%. This is confusing. The Editor of the Somerville News pointed out that Zillow does not have accurate estimates. In my experience, Zillow is pretty on the mark when it comes to sale prices, they seem to be doing lots of good stats on their datasets. Any idea on how to gather additional information on this? I doubt one can trust the Somerville News, given that it was created by the owners of ERA, one of the Somerville Real Estate agencies (clearly, they would not want to advertise that property values are going down around here).
One funny tidbit. Have you received a pack of coupon last week? I received one, and one of the coupons was an ad for ERA, the Norton Group. It says: "Voted #1 Real Estate Company 2000 to 2007 By the readers of the Somerville News"! Now, when many of the readers are ERA employees or relatives of ERA employees, that is a bit of a conflict of interest, isn't it? :)
http://www.thesomervillenews.com/main.asp?SectionID=2&SubSectionID=2&ArticleID=218. Somebody mentioned that Zillow actually reports a loss of about 8%. This is confusing. The Editor of the Somerville News pointed out that Zillow does not have accurate estimates. In my experience, Zillow is pretty on the mark when it comes to sale prices, they seem to be doing lots of good stats on their datasets. Any idea on how to gather additional information on this? I doubt one can trust the Somerville News, given that it was created by the owners of ERA, one of the Somerville Real Estate agencies (clearly, they would not want to advertise that property values are going down around here).
One funny tidbit. Have you received a pack of coupon last week? I received one, and one of the coupons was an ad for ERA, the Norton Group. It says: "Voted #1 Real Estate Company 2000 to 2007 By the readers of the Somerville News"! Now, when many of the readers are ERA employees or relatives of ERA employees, that is a bit of a conflict of interest, isn't it? :)
zillow manillow
Date: 2008-12-08 06:23 pm (UTC)when i was pissy at 315am this morning about the remarks thrown my way, it wasn't in me to list out some of the issues with zillow - but you did a fabulous job! it isn't just somerville that zillow is horribly flawed, but pretty much the entire area - more flawed as you go closer to the downtown area of boston and less as you travel outwards in a concentric fashion.
i have found only one example where tax assessments have gone along hand in hand with the marketplace - and that would be commercial property assessments in cambridge, especially on larger residential-based properties (5 or more units) and industrial complexes (small to medium/large).
also of note, the MLS-Pin system most realtors use is flawed as well - for a long list of reasons not worth getting into, but predominately because of the realtors themselves (sloppy/incorrect data entry, no independent verification, etc.). the real estate market, overall, is a difficult thing to really understand - we are lucky in somerville for the most part, because things aren't as bad here as they are in say, Stoneham or Lynn or Brockton or even Waltham/Watertown - and there are a whole host of reasons for that as well...
ad valorem taxation is a funny little beast - assessments go up, the mill rate goes down and vice-versa - it's a political shell game so that the typical homeowner doesn't groan too much that their taxes are almost always going up...which from a governmental perspective is vital to meet the requirements of the community as far as essential services.
ok too many subjects, requiring way too much information to be of use here...