Archive for February, 2010

It Takes a community to raise an Olympian!

Friday, February 26th, 2010

That is been the Steamboat Springs mantra as we sent 17 young athletes from the winter Sports Club off to Vancouver and the Olympics. The send off was a party as we blocked off Lincoln Avenue and brought in a huge monitor and stage. More than 2,000 people gathered to celebrate and encourage these great representatives. The lighting of our own Olympic torch on the County Building lawn and fireworks off of the roof helped warm the celebration.

 

Highlights of the games for the Steamboat crowd were the Nordic Combined which consists of jumping followed by cross-country skiing.  Two individual events sandwich a team event. In total there are 9 medals awarded to the Nordic Combined events. The United States team made up of primarily Steamboat born and/or raised athletes won 4 of the 9 possible medals.

 

It all started on the 2nd day of Olympic competition with the normal hill individual. Steamboat native Johnny Spillane took a silver medal with Steamboat Native Todd Lodwick  taking 4th and long time Steamboat’s winter sports club athlete Bill Demong taking 6th place. This set up the team event where 4 team members jump then run a relay of 5k each. At the end the Americans with the three skiers above plus Bret Camerota were able to take 2nd place and walk away with a silver medal. Last of the events  is the large hill individual which saw Bill Demong take the gold followed closely by Johnny Spillane. In the history of the Olympics the United States had never won a medal in only two events, Biathlon and Nordic Combined.  Thanks to the great teammates and friends from Steamboat Springs that 86 year drought has been snapped.

 Now all that is left is to welcome them all home. That, my friends, will be quite another celebration!

Two Ways to Use the Long-time Homeowner Credit

Monday, February 15th, 2010

1. Get Your Start in Investing

Buy a new home and rent out your current home. And Voila! You are now a real estate investor and Uncle Sam has helped you out with a $6500 tax credit. If you have owned your current home for five years, consecutively, out of the past eight, you qualify for the long-time homeowner credit. You do need to move into the new home and live in it as your primary residence for three years. But you can do whatever you want with the first home once you move into the new one.

2. Buy Now, Sell Later

Buy your new home now while the inventory is plentiful and mortgage rates are low.  Since you don’t have to sell your current home in order to get the tax credit, you don’t have to be in a rush to sell it. You can keep it until prices go back up again. In the meantime, either rent it out or just keep it empty while you are trying to sell it. But remember that in order to avoid Capital Gains taxes you’ll need to sell it within three years after you move out.

Just like with the height requirements for the cool Disneyland rides, there are set requirements you need to meet to get the credit. To see if you qualify for the credit, take this painless eligibility test:
http://www.homebuyertaxcredit.com/eligibility.aspx

Then let’s go shopping! We have until April 30th to get something under contract.

Beware of Bubble Talk

Friday, February 12th, 2010

This article appeared in a newsletter produced by Joe Birkinbine of ATP Financial Services here in Steamboat. Joe is a financial planner as well as an instructor and trainer for pilots. I thought the article interesting enough to share.  Ulrich  

Price bubbles in technology stocks, crude oil, home prices, credit, and other areas posed far-reaching problems for investors.

For example, the past two recessions were each preceded by (and likely caused by) price bubbles: The recession that began in December 2007 was preceded by a bubble in real estate; the 2001 recession was preceded by a bubble in technology stocks.  Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress that asset price bubbles and the financial booms that they cause were perhaps “the most difficult problem for monetary policy this decade.”

The hot topic right now seems to be where the next bubble will pop up in our economy. But can ordinary investors protect themselves from bubbles? Is it possible to tell the difference between an asset bubble and a legitimate investment opportunity?  What Is a Bubble?A bubble typically occurs when there is widespread speculation that a particular asset is going to increase in value. The subsequent spike in demand for the asset drives up the price, but when the anticipated gains don’t materialize, some segment of the investing public is left holding an overpriced asset. Losses occur as the market adjusts to represent the true value of the asset. Bubbles can occur in the economy at large, in a particular financial market, or in a particular security or commodity. Generally speaking, most bubbles get started with the belief that the investment is a sure thing and thus anyone who manages to purchase the hot asset is guaranteed a return because the price will always rise. One other common ingredient is the notion that fundamentals don’t matter anymore, which leads people into a things-are-different-this-time mentality.  A Saltwater BubbleHistory is littered with investment bubbles, but the first may have been the South Sea bubble, a stock scam in 18th century England. See if any elements of this story sound familiar. The South Sea Company was granted a monopoly on trading routes with Spanish South America in exchange for assuming England’s war debt. So great was the anticipated value of the trade routes that investors became desperate for South Sea Company stock. The company simply issued shares to meet the demand because there was no law to prevent it from doing so. It soon became quite fashionable to own South Sea shares. Many of England’s rich and powerful were drawn in, which, combined with the company’s lavish offices (built and furnished before any trade voyages were launched), further added to the perception of a sure thing. The share price peaked after appreciating 1,000%. When eventually it became evident that the company was making little profit and its officers had acted fraudulently, the share price plummeted. Thousands of investors were bankrupted, and not only because the stock crashed. In addition to spawning many copycat scams, the scandal caused bank failures and a loss of confidence in stock investing. The British government responded with legislation that later came to be called the “Bubble Act of 1720.”2 

The Roar of Steamboat’s Olympic Blood

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

By Susana

If there is any question as to why you would want to move to Steamboat Springs, Colorado…If there is any question as to why you would want to stay living in Steamboat once you moved here…our Olympic Send-off Friday night would have given you a big resounding answer. It is because of who you are and who we are together.

Sure Steamboat is known for its Champagne Powder and bluebird skies. A year-round outdoor recreational mecca, and world class ski resort, nicknamed Ski Town USA for producing more winter Olympians than any other town – 86 and counting. But what does this have to do with a home?

You will move here because Steamboat is NOT all resort town and is NOT at all a fake town. Steamboat is a real town that happens to conveniently have a world-class ski resort attached.

We are, first and foremost, an amazing community.  We are a community that raises Olympians, because we too are all Olympians in breadth of heart and depth of soul.
 
We close off Main Street, re-routing US Highway 40 for Winter Carnival, the 4th of July and the Halloween evening stroll, because community is important, family is important and kids are important.

We play hard, we work hard, we celebrate together and we mourn together. We are the best and the brightest coming from all walks of life to this cherished hamlet in the Rocky Mountains to make it our homes.
 
We bring our children here so they can grow up in the best public schools; so they can have Howelsen Hill, our small city-owned downtown ski hill, as an extension of their backyard and the Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club as an extension of their family, with Olympians as both their role models and their coaches.

Thousands turned out alongside the Courthouse lawn for our Olympic Send-off Friday night, when we once again rerouted traffic. When Rick DeVos, the director of the Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club, asked how many in the crowd were visitors, we heard a loud cheer.  When he asked how many in the crowd were locals, the roar we gave was deafening.

These, after all, are our children we were sending off to the Olympics; our neighbors, our friend’s kids, our older children’s prior classmates, our younger children’s known-on a-first-name-basis heroes.

Their glory during the games will be our glory, and their agony, should there be any, will also be our agony.  As such, when the games begin we will all be feeling the roar of the Olympic blood within our own veins, because we are community, we are teammates, we are family and we are Steamboat!

Why move to Steamboat, and why stay in Steamboat once you move here?  Because you too feel the Olympic Spirit within your own blood, and it is here you and your family will feel most at home.

I may not have a medal to hand you, per se, but I would be honored to help hand you your keys.