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#Boston to Columbus movers
poseidonmoving · 3 years
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Boston to Columbus Oh movers | An Expert Movers.
If you are one of those people who have never felt a sense of belonging in a place or always considered himself an outsider, then proceeded with Boston to Columbus Oh movers and the warmth of the place give that feeling. call now to schedule your walk.
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sellfurnitureonline · 2 years
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Free Classified Sites- The Biggest Mode of Advertising
In this contemporary world, web has become the principal mode of advertising. Large number of inhabitants from various cities and countries rely on free classified websites in an attempt to promote their products and services online. Free classifieds are among the most powerful tool of online marketing over internet.
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There are thousands of classified sites which help a great deal is buying and selling of products and services. Free classifieds however facilitate you in selling your old stuff which was going stale lying on the corner of the shelf. You can also publicize your product and services without spending single money on the advertising. Thus to avail all these benefits all you need to do is to place a free ad on these websites and explore unlimited benefits.
Free classified sites comes with several benefits firstly it saves your money to a larger extent secondly you can easily locate large number of target customers of your local area lastly it saves your time which you would have spent in business advertising.
Free classified websites are also rooted with unlimited ads from services providers thus if you are planning to relocate your office or home classifieds are the best place for you to hunt the apt movers and packers service who take your entire burden of shifting on their shoulders and guarantee property shifting of your stuff to destined place with all safety and time given
Besides movers and packers services, classified sites also provide best catering services in your nearby vicinity by offering you thousands on online free advertisements. This will save your time and money to a larger extent. You can find jobs, car rental services, home tutors, real estate agents, matrimonial services or pet related services with the little search on these websites.
Moreover if you are a proud owner of any services and products then you can post free ads on these free classified websites. Posting ads on these websites is not rocket science; all can be done in just a minute or two. After signing up on these websites, you can promote your business in accordance with your city and local area and get suitable customers. As you sign up to these websites and post and ad, local search engine of the site will automatically show you in the searching list of the visitors.
Business websites owners can get free traffic to their websites with these free classified advertisements. Many websites also allow you to ad business link with your advertisement so you get direct traffic for your ad, but these are paid websites.
The benefit of classified sites are countless, it depends on you that how you avail these benefits in your personal life.
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New Post has been published on https://fitnesshealthyoga.com/2019-gairdner-awards-winners-hailed-for-discoveries-on-dna-replication-and-power-of-stem-cells-to-fight-cancer/
2019 Gairdner Awards: Winners hailed for discoveries on DNA replication and power of stem cells to fight cancer
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Replicating cells — both normal and cancerous — lie at the heart of discoveries made by four of this year’s seven Canada Gairdner Award winners.
vshivkova/iStockPhoto / Getty Images
Canada Gairdner International Awards
Makers, breakers and movers
For life to endure, cells must copy their DNA to pass on to new cells and new generations. It is a basic fact of biology that disguises a Herculean feat.
Consider that in order to maintain a healthy blood supply, the adult human body must produce about 500 million blood cells a minute. Each new cell carries two metres of tightly coiled DNA. Do the math and it works out to one-million kilometres of DNA every 60 seconds – enough to wrap around the equator 25 times over. And that’s just blood. There’s also gut, skin, liver and all the other cells that require regular replacement. In practice, a replicating cell can’t achieve this by starting at one end of a strand of DNA and copying until it gets to the other. Like a medieval monastery where the monks all work together, each reproducing one page of a sacred book, a cell must deploy many thousands of copiers all at once in order to duplicate its entire genome faithfully and swiftly.
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As a young scientist, Bruce Stillman long puzzled over how cells manage this trick, especially without some genes being copied twice. “Forty years ago, we really didn’t know how replication occurred,” said Dr. Stillman, who is director and president of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a renowned research centre on Long Island, N.Y.
Born in Melbourne, Australia, he grew up with dreams of becoming a medical doctor. But in university, it was the lab rather than the hospital that captured his imagination. When he first arrived in Cold Spring Harbor in 1979, he had a burning desire to tackle the mystery of DNA replication.
Within a few years, he was joined in his quest by another young researcher, John Diffley, a native of New York and now associate research director at the Francis Crick Institute in London. Working with yeast cells, which share the same form of DNA replication as humans and other animals, the two researchers developed new techniques to study the process. By 1992, they had identified an elegant structure made up of multiple proteins which they dubbed the origin recognition complex – ORC for short. The structure wraps around the DNA double helix at specific sites and serves as a starting point where the rest of the replication machinery is assembled. Key to the find was the discovery of how the protein complex is triggered to begin its work at the appropriate moment in the cell-division cycle.
“It was so beautiful and so clear that it had to be right,” Dr. Diffley said.
Further work has added detail to the picture. In 2015, Dr. Diffley’s team was able to reconstitute the process with purified proteins outside of living cells, making it easier to study. The results shed light on genetic diseases that impair DNA replication and also on how cancer can affect the process so that the DNA of cancer cells increasingly diverges from that of its host.
“It’s really one of the most impressive pieces of molecular biology in recent years,” said Adrian Bird, a professor of genetics at the University of Edinburgh and a previous Gairdner winner.
The mechanics of cell division also come into play in the work of Susan Band Horwitz, a professor of cancer research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.
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Growing up near Boston in the 1940s, Dr. Horwitz never thought about a career in science but imagined, instead, of becoming a historian. All of that changed when she took a biology course in her first year at college.
“It was wonderful. It opened up a whole new world to me,” she said.
By 1963, she had earned her PhD in biochemistry at Brandeis University. By then, she was married and gave birth to twins five days after defending her thesis. But at a time when few women were working in her field, she was hard-pressed to find a position that would allow her to balance her scientific career with her family life. She eventually found part-time work teaching pharmacology students at Tufts University while pursuing her research on the side. The job had an unexpected benefit because “it introduced me to the idea of small molecules that can do great things.”
By the 1970s, she was at the Albert Einstein College, where her husband, a virologist, had accepted a position. She was also working full-time again with a growing track record of studying naturally derived products for cancer treatments. That was when the U.S. National Cancer Institute sought her out to examine a new drug candidate called Taxol, derived from the bark of the Pacific yew tree.
Working with a graduate student, Peter Schiff, Dr. Horwitz discovered that Taxol has an uncanny ability to latch onto tiny fibres inside cells known as microtubules. In normal cells, microtubules are assembled and disassembled continuously and they play a key role during cell division when they are used to pull apart duplicated sets of chromosomes just before a cell splits in two. But when Taxol was present, the microtubules could no longer be disassembled, and instead formed bundles that clogged up dividing cells, including those driving tumour growth.
It would be another 15 years of clinical trials and scientific hurdles before Taxol was approved for use as a cancer drug in 1992, but it was the work done in Dr. Horwitz’s lab that set the wheels in motion. Today Taxol has been administered to millions around the world.
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“I never give a lecture when someone doesn’t come over to me afterwards and say thank you,” Dr. Horwitz said.
In addition to roping DNA, microtubules serve as the tracks for an elaborate transportation system found within many cells. Incredibly, those tracks are traversed by a class of proteins called kinesins that amble along like microscopic ants, dragging cargo from production sites near the nucleus and making deliveries to the cell’s outer reaches.
Ronald Vale, a professor of cellular molecular pharmacology at the University of California, San Francisco, has played a key role in uncovering this remarkable system. Born in Los Angeles, Dr. Vale’s childhood fascination with science was sparked by museum and planetarium visits. In graduate school, he studied nerve cells, which require the transportation of neurotransmitters and other chemicals down long extensions, called axons.
Working with the cell biologist Michael Sheetz, Dr. Vale turned to the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass., where the researcher could work with giant-squid axons that are many times larger than those found in the human nervous system. By squeezing out the contents of the squid axons they were able to painstakingly identify and reassemble the pieces of the cellular transportation system.
“It’s a tribute to human creativity that one can actually probe the natural world at these levels,” Dr. Vale said.
Their initial breakthrough discoveries came in 1983-84, but it would take another 15 years of work before Dr. Vale pinned down precisely how the tiny walkers perform their task and how the transport system, when disrupted, can be linked to certain forms of neurodegenerative disease.
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“It’s been my observation that if you make a fundamental discovery there will be practical applications. In this case there’s no question that’s true,” said Randy Schekman, a Nobel Prize-winning researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, who is on the Gairdner Foundation’s medical advisory board.
The same sentiment applies to the work of Timothy Springer, a professor at Harvard University medical school. A gifted researcher, Dr. Springer became disillusioned as an undergraduate in the 1960s because of the use of scientifically developed chemicals such as Agent Orange and napalm during the Vietnam War. But after a period of volunteer work, he decided to return to his studies, earning a PhD and eventually landing at Harvard in 1977.
It was then that Dr. Springer began making key discoveries about the mechanisms cells deploy to securely latch onto neighbouring cells or to brace themselves against their surroundings so that they can shift location. This ability is particularly important for immune cells, which must leave the blood stream and penetrate into infected tissue in order to do their work. Dr. Springer showed how the molecules involved in the latching operate, and found drugs that can selectively disable them in cases where the immune system is overactive, such as in inflammatory bowel disease.
“Scientists can be like Columbus discovering a new world,” Dr. Springer said. “I very often feel that, if I was born in a different era, I would have wanted to be an explorer. But instead of exploring the Earth I’m exploring the inner workings of cells.”
Each Gairdner Award winner will receive a $100,000 cash prize. In the weeks leading up to the award ceremony this fall, winners will also be sent across Canada to speak to students about their work as a way to inspire the next generation of biomedical researchers. – Ivan Semeniuk
Canada Gairdner Wightman Award
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A stem-cell trailblazer and mentor
In 1961, when Connie Eaves was one of only 10 female students in a pre-med class of 100 at Queen’s University in Kingston, she knew that being a woman meant having to be better than everyone else simply to be considered for an academic opportunity.
“For me, that wasn’t a big deal,” said Dr. Eaves, the daughter of a mathematician and a schoolteacher whose four children all became professors or doctors. “We were brought up to adhere to the principle of always being the best we could, no matter what we did.”
The drive to succeed and to make discoveries led her to England’s University of Manchester, where she found an ideal role model: Alma Howard, a Montreal-born scientist who was known for her work on the biological effects of radiation and who had risen to a position of leadership at one of the most prominent cancer laboratories in the U.K. It was also her entry into an exciting new field in which researchers were striving to understand how blood cells develop from less specialized precursors known as stem cells. After earning her PhD, Dr. Eaves moved to the Ontario Cancer Institute, where she was a postdoctoral researcher with stem-cell pioneers James Till and Ernest McCulloch.
Back in Canada, she found a research community that had not yet learned to accept female researchers as equal the way she had seen in Manchester. “I was just floored,” Dr. Eaves said. “It became clear that a future career in science for me in Canada was going to be an extra challenge.”
But the research was exciting, and in 1973 it led to an appointment in Vancouver with the British Columbia Cancer Agency and the University of British Columbia. She was joined there by her husband, physician-scientist Allen Eaves, and together the two collaborated to build a research powerhouse on Canada’s West Coast that would eventually become the Terry Fox Laboratory and also spawn Stemcell Technologies Inc., the largest biotech company in Canada.
Throughout this time, Dr. Eaves’s research led to key discoveries in blood stem cells, including the development of a technique for separating cancerous from normal blood stem cells in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. She later moved into breast cancer and was among the first, in parallel with an Australian team, to demonstrate the existence of mammary-gland stem cells in mice, before moving on to study the equivalent cells in humans. The finding, published in 2006, set the stage for thinking about how an entire tissue could be generated from a single cell other than in blood. More recently, her team has been perturbing the genes of normal stem cells to reproduce and study the transition to cancerous growth.
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Along the way, Dr. Eaves has mentored more than 100 graduate student and postdoctoral researchers, many of them women, creating a growing worldwide network of scientists working in related areas of stem-cell and cancer biology. Her focus on developing a research community and her determined advocacy for women in science are included in her citation for the Canada Gairdner Wightman Award, which recognizes both scientific excellence and extraordinary leadership in Canadian health research.
“Critical mass is essential in science, and Connie created that when she went out to Vancouver,” said Alan Bernstein, president of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and a former Wightman Award winner. “She is a true builder.”
Dr. Eaves said that the challenges and rewards of a life in research helped underscore for her the importance of opening doors for all those who have the motivation and the ability to contribute to scientific breakthroughs.
“I was extremely lucky … in the people that I met and the opportunities I was given,” Dr. Eaves said. “That is not true for everyone.” – Ivan Semeniuk
John Dirks Canada Gairdner Global Health Award
Mental health for all
When Vikram Patel was a medical student, he says he was drawn to psychiatry “because it was the only field of medicine that was interested in the whole person as opposed to simply where it hurts.”
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It is fitting, then, that the groundbreaking research he’s done on mental health has, in a very real way, improved the lives of millions of people in the developing world.
Dr. Patel is the 2019 recipient of the prestigious John Dirks Canada Gairdner Global Health Award, which recognizes “his world-leading research in global mental health, providing greater knowledge on the burden and the determinants of mental disorders in low- and middle-income countries and pioneering approach for the treatment of mental health in low-resource settings.”
Dr. Patel, a professor of global health at Harvard University, said, modestly, that his greatest achievement is “having generated knowledge to change hearts and minds about the importance of mental health everywhere in the world.”
But what he did, over more than two decades, is debunk the commonly held belief that mental illness was a Western phenomenon, and that poor people had more important things to worry about than their mental health, such as poverty, malaria and AIDS.
“It’s a Faustian bargain to say people shouldn’t get mental-health care because they’re in a socially or medically difficult situation. Mental illness can devastate lives as surely as any other condition,” Dr. Patel says.
His research demonstrated not only that mental illness is as common in low- and middle-income countries as in high-income ones, but showed how care could be delivered effectively and cheaply, in even the most challenging circumstances. For example, his research demonstrated the benefits of lay health counsellors being trained to offer brief psychological treatments for depression and anxiety in clinics, and task-sharing to support caregivers of people with dementia, interventions that have been adopted in more than 60 countries.
Dr. Patel said receiving the Gairdner Award, the pre-eminent prize in global health, is flattering and humbling but, more importantly, it sends the message that mental health is being taken seriously in international health circles.
He noted that, early in his career, his research plans were often greeted with mockery and skepticism but he was lucky to have a few mentors and funders who took “enormous gambles” on him, including the Wellcome Trust in the U.K. and Grand Challenges Canada. – André Picard
Illustrations by Murat Yükselir
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themountainmovers · 7 years
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The Hottest Markets for U.S. Real Estate: Is California’s Reign Over?
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How the mighty have fallen! For the first time in years, California markets aren’t fully dominating our monthly list of the hottest markets on realtor.com®.  In fact, the Golden State has even ceded its long-held No. 1 spot!
Each month at realtor.com®, we rank the top metro areas where homes sell the fastest, and where eager house hunters are clicking up a storm on our listings. And each month, California reliably hogs the greatest share of the top 20 spots of any state. But while 11 of the top 20 markets in March could be found in the Golden State, in April, that tally had fallen to only six.
That’s the lowest number since we started doing this ranking, in 2013.
Nine other states were represented on the top 20 list: Texas (2), Massachusetts (2), New York (2), Michigan (2), Colorado, Washington, Ohio, Idaho, and Wisconsin.
Longtime top dog San Francisco fell to No. 3 in April, ceding the throne to … Midland, TX, which had previously been at No. 5. Second place went to Boston, which just hosted its famous marathon.
(The definition of big-city markets often include neighboring towns. For example, the San Francisco market includes nearby Oakland and Hayward, and the Boston market includes Cambridge, Newton, and a tiny slice of New Hampshire.)
The top movers for the month are Racine, WI (up 28 spots from March); Rochester, NY (up 14); and Detroit (up 13). Columbus, OH, moved up five spots to reach No. 4, the highest it’s ever reached in our ranking.
Realtor.com’s hottest markets receive 1.6 to 2.7 times the number of views per listing compared to the national average. These markets are seeing homes move off the market 17 to 40 days more quickly than the rest of the United States.
The hot list
Rank (March)  Market  Rank (March)  Rank Change 1  Midland, TX  5 4 2  Boston, MA   7 5 3  San Francisco, CA  1 -2 4  Columbus, OH  9 5 5  Vallejo, CA  2 -3 6  Colorado Springs, CO  3 -3 7  Racine, WI  35 28 8  Sacramento, CA  10 2 9  Stockton, CA  8 -1 10  Ann Arbor, MI 20 10 11  San Jose, CA  4 -7 12  Rochester, NY  26 14 13  Spokane, WA  25 12 14  Boise City, ID  13 -1 15  Santa Cruz, CA  6 -9 16  Detroit, MI  29 13 17  Odessa, TX  24 7 18  Dallas, TX 16 -2 19  Buffalo, NY  18 -1 20  Worcester, MA  27 7
The post The Hottest Markets for U.S. Real Estate: Is California��s Reign Over? appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
from https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/hottest-markets-u-s-real-estate-april-2018/
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j1ceasar-blog · 4 years
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Checkmate movers LLC interstate movers to the villages, florida
www.checkmatemoversllc.com
Helpful interstate moving chart to estimate mileage between the villages and major USA cities Below you will find estimated Mileage from over 300 major cities in the USA to the Villages, Florida
to help you plan your interstate move and trip. Checkmate Movers llc, wants to help you plan your trip and efficiently move and pack your home and offices to our wonderful senior community. We have great mover reviews and many packing tips on out blog for you. We hope you enjoy your retirement life in out Villages communities. Call for a quote today at no obligation .
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Abilene to the Villages, Florida 1219.8 miles
Akron to the Villages, Florida 981.2 miles
Albuquerque to the Villages, Florida 1687.9 miles
Alexandria to the Villages, Florida 822.4 miles
Allen to the Villages, Florida 1055.3 miles
Allentown to the Villages, Florida 1015.3 miles
Amarillo to the Villages, Florida 1404.1 miles
Anaheim to the Villages, Florida 2442.3 miles
Anchorageto the Villages, Florida 4682.7 miles
Ann Arbor to the Villages, Florida 1097.1 miles
Antioch to the Villages, Florida 2811.9 miles
Arlington to the Villages, Florida 1059.5 miles
Arvada to the Villages, Florida 1792.8 miles
Athensto the Villages, Florida 5775.6 miles
Atlanta to the Villages, Florida 388.5 miles
Augustato the Villages, Florida 376.5 miles
Aurora to the Villages, Florida 1137.6 miles
Aurora to the Villages, Florida 1137.6 miles
Austin to the Villages, Florida 1076.6 miles
Bakersfield to the Villages, Florida 2488.0 miles
Baltimoreto the Villages, Florida 872.2 miles
Baton Rougeto the Villages, Florida 646.6 miles
Beaumont to the Villages, Florida 830.0 miles
Bellevue to the Villages, Florida 3017.2 miles
Berkeley to the Villages, Florida 2832.3 miles
Billings to the Villages, Florida 2204.8 miles
Birmingham to the Villages, Florida 405 miles
Boise to the Villages, Florida 2555.5 miles
Boston to the Villages, Florida 1267.1 miles
Boulder to the Villages, Florida 2231.3 miles
Bridgeport to the Villages, Florida 1113.6 miles
Broken Arrow to the Villages, Florida 1158.0 miles
Brownsville to the Villages, Florida 1265.9 miles
Buffalo to the Villages, Florida 1158.3 miles
Burbank to the Villages, Florida 2468.4 miles
Cambridge to the Villages, Florida 4343 miles
Cape Coral to the Villages, Florida 205.1 miles
Carlsbad to the Villages, Florida 2408.2 miles
Carrollton to the Villages, Florida 1051.9 miles
Cary to the Villages, Florida 582.3 miles
Cedar Rapids to the Villages, Florida 1224.2 miles
Centennial to the Villages, Florida 1793.0 miles
Chandler to the Villages, Florida 2070.5 miles
Charleston to the Villages, Florida 359.5 miles
Charlotte to the Villages, Florida 504.1 miles
Chattanooga to the Villages, Florida 506.1 miles
Chesapeake[m] to the Villages, Florida 735.5 miles
Chicago to the Villages, Florida 1,105.3 miles
Chula Vista to the Villages, Florida 2382.0 miles
Cincinnati to the Villages, Florida 848.8 miles
Clarksville to the Villages, Florida 682.6 miles
Clearwater to the Villages, Florida 102.7 miles
Cleveland to the Villages, Florida 1016.9 miles
Clinton to the Villages, Florida 2253.3 miles
Clovis to the Villages, Florida 1487.0 miles
College Station to the Villages, Florida 1007.5 miles
Colorado Springs to the Villages, Florida 1772.6 miles
Columbia to the Villages, Florida 1064.6 mles
Columbia to the Villages, Florida 1064.6 miles
Columbusto the Villages, Florida 955.4 miles
Columbus to the Villages, Florida 955.4 miles
Concord to the Villages, Florida 1315.9 miles
Coral Springs to the Villages, Florida 254.5 miles
Corona to the Villages, Florida 2419.9 miles
Corpus Christi to the Villages, Florida 1123.4 miles
Costa Mesa to the Villages, Florida 2450.2 miles
Dallas to the Villages, Florida 1039.2 miles
Daly City to the Villages, Florida 2841.5 miles
Davenport to the Villages, Florida 1176.7 miles
Davieto the Villages, Florida 263.0 miles
Dayton to the Villages, Florida 901.6 miles
Denton to the Villages, Florida 1075.9 miles
Denverto the Villages, Florida 1790.6 miles
Des Moines to the Villages, Florida 1289.6 miles
Detroit to the Villages, Florida 1110.6 miles
Downey to the Villages, Florida 2457.9 miles
Durham to the Villages, Florida 599.3 miles
Edison to the Villages, Florida 68.0 miles
El Cajon to the Villages, Florida 2366.3 miles
El Monte to the Villages, Florida 2445.9 miles
El Paso to the Villages, Florida 1657.8 miles
Elgin to the Villages, Florida 76.1 miles
Elizabeth to the Villages, Florida 714.8 miles
Elk Grove to the Villages, Florida 2750.9 miles
Escondido to the Villages, Florida 2400.7 miles
Eugene to the Villages, Florida 2997.1 miles
Evansville to the Villages, Florida 784.8 miles
Everett to the Villages, Florida 3044.4 miles
Fairfield to the Villages, Florida 874.3 miles
Fargo to the Villages, Florida 1750.1 miles
Fayetteville to the Villages, Florida 514.1 miles
Fontana to the Villages, Florida 2412.9 miles
Fort Collins to the Villages, Florida 1843.0 miles
Fort Lauderdale to the Villages, Florida 260.2 miles
Fort Wayne to the Villages, Florida 1042.4 miles
Fort Worth to the Villages, Florida 1070.6 miles
Fremont to the Villages, Florida 2813.7 miles
Fresno to the Villages, Florida 2597.6 miles
Frisco to the Villages, Florida 1060.7 miles
Fullerton to the Villages, Florida 2442.7 miles
Gainesville to the Villages, Florida 62.2 miles
Garden Grove to the Villages, Florida 2447.7 miles
Garland to the Villages, Florida 1037.7 miles
Gilbertto the Villages, Florida 2076.6 miles
Glendale to the Villages, Florida 1066.7 miles
Glendale to the Villages, Florida 1066.7 miles
Grand Prairie to the Villages, Florida 1051.6 miles
Grand Rapids to the Villages, Florida 1179.5 miles
Greeley to the Villages, Florida 1818.5 miles
Green Bay to the Villages, Florida 1316.4 miles
Greensboro to the Villages, Florida 569.0 MILES
Gresham to the Villages, Florida 2970.3 miles
Hamptonto the Villages, Florida 744.8 miles
Hartford to the Villages, Florida 1168.2 miles
Hayward to the Villages, Florida 2816.3 miles
Henderson to the Villages, Florida 2245.7 miles
Hialeah to the Villages, Florida 279.2 miles
High Point to the Villages, Florida 579.9 miles
Hillsboro to the Villages, Florida 3000.1 miles
Hollywood to the Villages, Florida 267.3 miles
Honoluluto the Villages, Florida 4,694 miles
Houstonto the Villages, Florida 913.0 miles
Huntington Beach to the Villages, Florida 2456.5 miles
Huntsville to the Villages, Florida 568.2 miles
Independence to the Villages, Florida 1180.0 miles
Indianapolisto the Villages, Florida 921.2 miles
Inglewood to the Villages, Florida 2473.9 miles
Irvine to the Villages, Florida 2444.4 miles
Irving to the Villages, Florida 1051.0 miles
Jackson to the Villages, Florida 2.2 miles
Jacksonvilleto the Villages, Florida 124.2 miles
Jersey City to the Villages, Florida 1050.2 miles
Joliet to the Villages, Florida 1111.5 miles
Jurupa Valley to the Villages, Florida 2414.7 miles’
Kansas Cityto the Villages, Florida 1187.4 miles
Kenosha to the Villages, Florida 1174.3 miles
Kent to the Villages, Florida 75 miles
Killeen to the Villages, Florida 1101.1 miles
Knoxville to the Villages, Florida 601.7 miles
Lafayetteto the Villages, Florida 700.1 miles
Lakeland to the Villages, Florida 67.9 miles
Lakewood to the Villages, Florida 1022.7 miles
Lakewood to the Villages, Florida 1025 miles
Lancaster to the Villages, Florida 2608.51 miles
Lansing to the Villages, Florida 1162.4 miles
Laredo to the Villages, Florida 1227.4 miles
Las Cruces to the Villages, Florida 1703.5 miles
Las Vegas to the Villages, Florida 2260.8 miles
League City to the Villages, Florida 922.0 miles
Lewisville to the Villages, Florida 1061.3 MILES
Lexingtonto the Villages, Florida 770.1 miles
Lincoln to the Villages, Florida 17.8 miles
Little Rock to the Villages, Florida 906.3 miles
Long Beach to the Villages, Florida 2465.5 miles
Los Angeles to the Villages, Florida 2,458.6 miles
Louisvilleto the Villages, Florida 807.9 miles
Lowell to the Villages, Florida 1055.1 miles
Lubbock to the Villages, Florida 1384.3 miles
Maconto the Villages, Florida 312.3 miles
Madison to the Villages, Florida 1254.2 miles
Manchester to the Villages, Florida 4228 miles
McAllen to the Villages, Florida 1258.5 miles
McKinney to the Villages, Florida 1061.9 miles’
Memphis to the Villages, Florida 778.4 miles
Meridian to the Villages, Florida 2563.7 MILES
Mesa to the Villages, Florida 2087.9 miles
Mesquite to the Villages, Florida 1027.2 miles
Miami to the Villages, Florida 283.5 miles
Miami Gardens to the Villages, Florida 269.9 miles
Midland to the Villages, Florida 1369.2 miles
Milwaukee to the Villages, Florida 1200.5 miles
Minneapolis to the Villages, Florida 1515.2 miles
Miramar to the Villages, Florida 2385.7 miles
Mobile to the Villages, Florida 448 miles
Modesto to the Villages, Florida 2690.5 miles
Montgomery to the Villages, Florida 414.8 miles
Moreno Valley to the Villages, Florida 2395.7 miles
Murfreesboro to the Villages, Florida 604.2 miles
Murrieta to the Villages, Florida 2435.5 miles
Naperville to the Villages, Florida 1124.0 miles
Nashvilleto the Villages, Florida 636.3 miles
New Haven to the Villages, Florida 1132.7 miles
New Orleansto the Villages, Florida 589.2 miles
New Yorkto the Villages, Florida 1,053.7 miles
Newark to the Villages, Florida 1044.6 miles
Newport Newsto the Villages, Florida 749.7 miles
Norfolkto the Villages, Florida 733.8 miles
Norman to the Villages, Florida 1240.6 miles’
North Charleston to the Villages, Florida 361.2 miles
North Las Vegas to the Villages, Florida 2261.7 miles
Norwalk to the Villages, Florida 1100.8 miles
Oakland to the Villages, Florida 2828.1 miles
Oceanside to the Villages, Florida 2411.9 miles
Odessa to the Villages, Florida 1391.2 miles
Oklahoma City to the Villages, Florida 1235.2 miles
Olathe to the Villages, Florida 1207.9 miles
Omaha to the Villages, Florida 1371.4 miles
Ontario to the Villages, Florida 1550.9 miles
Orange to the Villages, Florida 57.4 miles
Orlando to the Villages, Florida 44 miles
Overland Park to the Villages, Florida 1198.4 miles
Oxnard to the Villages, Florida 2521.9 miles
Palm Bay to the Villages, Florida 130.4 miles
Palmdale to the Villages, Florida 2469.7 miles
Pasadena to the Villages, Florida 2457.6 miles
Pasadena to the Villages, Florida 2457.6 miles
Paterson to the Villages, Florida 1058.7 miles’
Pearland to the Villages, Florida 919.4 miles
Pembroke Pines to the Villages, Florida 269.5 miles
Peoria to the Villages, Florida 1078.3 miles
Peoria to the Villages, Florida 1078.3 miles
Philadelphiato the Villages, Florida 966.5 miles
Phoenix to the Villages, Florida 2087.5 miles
Pittsburgh to the Villages, Florida 950.4 miles
Plano to the Villages, Florida 1049.4 miles
Pomona to the Villages, Florida 2430.7 miles
Pompano Beach to the Villages, Florida 249.3 miles’
Port St. Lucie to the Villages, Florida 171.2 miles
Portland to the Villages, Florida 2982.9 miles
Providence to the Villages, Florida 1232.6 miles
Provo to the Villages, Florida 2268.7 miles
Pueblo to the Villages, Florida 1717.8 miles
Raleigh to the Villages, Florida 575.4 miles
Rancho Cucamonga to the Villages, Florida 2422.5 miles
Reno to the Villages, Florida 2699.0 miles
Renton to the Villages, Florida 3021.9 miles
Rialto to the Villages, Florida 2409.8 miles
Richardson to the Villages, Florida 1043.9 miles
Richmondto the Villages, Florida 719.7 miles
Richmond to the Villages, Florida 719.7 miles
Riverside to the Villages, Florida 2405.8 miles
Rochester to the Villages, Florida 1203.4 miles
Rochester to the Villages, Florida 1203.4 miles
Rockford to the Villages, Florida 1188.7 miles
Roseville to the Villages, Florida 2781.0 miles
Round Rock to the Villages, Florida 1077.6 miles
Sacramento to the Villages, Florida 2842.3 miles
Saint Paul to the Villages, Florida 1505.6 miles
Salem to the Villages, Florida 1284 miles
Salinas to the Villages, Florida 2760.8 miles
Salt Lake City to the Villages, Florida 2260.3 miles
San Angelo to the Villages, Florida 1274.4 miles
San Antonio to the Villages, Florida 1108.7 miles
San Bernardino to the Villages, Florida 2406.7 miles
San Diego to the Villages, Florida 2381.1 miles
San Franciscoto the Villages, Florida 2839.5 miles
San Jose to the Villages, Florida 2797.4 miles
San Mateo to the Villages, Florida 2826.7 miles
Sandy Springs to the Villages, Florida 404.5 miles
Santa Ana to the Villages, Florida 2444.8 miles
Santa Clara to the Villages, Florida 2803.5 miles
Santa Clarita to the Villages, Florida 2490.6 miles
Santa Maria to the Villages, Florida 2618.2 miles
Santa Rosa to the Villages, Florida 2885.7 miles
Savannah to the Villages, Florida 260.2 miles
Scottsdale to the Villages, Florida 2092.4 miles
Seattle to the Villages, Florida 3022.8 miles
Shreveport to the Villages, Florida 854.1 miles
Simi Valley to the Villages, Florida 2500.3 miles
Sioux Falls to the Villages, Florida 1550.1 miles
South Bend to the Villages, Florida 1063.5 miles
Sparks to the Villages, Florida 2695.4 miles
Spokane to the Villages, Florida 2745.2 miles
Springfield , Illto the Villages, Florida 1005 miles
Springfield , Moto the Villages, Florida 1054 miles
Springfield , Mato the Villages, Florida 1192 miles
St. Louis[m] to the Villages, Florida 942.0 miles
St. Petersburg to the Villages, Florida 103.3 miles
Stamford to the Villages, Florida 1092.4 miles
Sterling Heights to the Villages, Florida 1131.5 miles
Stockton to the Villages, Florida 2795.2 miles
Sugar Land to the Villages, Florida 934.8 miles
Sunnyvale to the Villages, Florida 2808.2 miles
Surprise to the Villages, Florida 2115.4 miles
Syracuse to the Villages, Florida 1192.2 miles
Tacoma to the Villages, Florida 3036.2 miles
Tallahassee to the Villages, Florida 209.0 miles
Tampa to the Villages, Florida 80.9 miles
Temecula to the Villages, Florida 2428.8 miles
Tempe to the Villages, Florida 2082.5 miles
Thornton to the Villages, Florida 1790.8 miles
Thousand Oaks to the Villages, Florida 2499.7 miles
Toledo to the Villages, Florida 1049.8 miles
Topeka to the Villages, Florida 1249.3 miles
Torrance to the Villages, Florida 2469.1 miles
Tucson to the Villages, Florida 1975.0 miles
Tulsa to the Villages, Florida 1171.4 miles
Tuscaloosa to the Villages, Florida 512.5 miles
Tyler to the Villages, Florida 948.9 miles
Vacaville to the Villages, Florida 2859.1 miles
Vallejo to the Villages, Florida 2841.6 miles
Vancouver to the Villages, Florida 5083.0 miles
Venturato the Villages, Florida 2528.0 miles
Victorville to the Villages, Florida 2445.6 miles
Virginia Beachto the Villages, Florida 751.1 miles
Visalia to the Villages, Florida 2567.7 miles
Vista to the Villages, Florida 2412.8 miles
Waco to the Villages, Florida 1095.9 miles
Warren to the Villages, Florida 1128.1 miles
Washingtonto the Villages, Florida 826.7 miles
Waterbury to the Villages, Florida 1144.5 miles
West Covina to the Villages, Florida 2441.2 miles
West Jordan to the Villages, Florida 2265.5 miles
West Palm Beach to the Villages, Florida 217.9 miles
West Valley City to the Villages, Florida 2264.3 miles
Westminster to the Villages, Florida 1790.4 miles
Wichita to the Villages, Florida 1346.0 miles
Wichita Falls to the Villages, Florida 1179.8 miles
Wilmington to the Villages, Florida 557.78 miles
Winston–Salem to the Villages, Florida 582.2 miles
Woodbridge , NJ to the Villages, Florida 1032 miles
Woodbridge, VA to the Villages, Florida 805 miles
Worcester to the Villages, Florida 1228.5 miles
Yonkers to the Villages, Florida 1071.0 miles
Below you will find estimated Mileage from the Villages, Florida to over 300 major cities in the USA to help you plan your interstate move and trip
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thrashermaxey · 5 years
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Ramblings: Draft Lottery; Lineup News; Looking Ahead – April 10
  It was quite the eventful draft lottery as Colorado did not end up with the first overall pick, sliding to fourth. The Rangers, Devils, and Blackhawks all jumped into the top-3. New Jersey ended up grabbing the top pick with New York ending up in the second slot.
Should everything go to plan, the Devils will be adding an elite talent immediately to the lineup. This team desperately needed another elite talent up front and they got it. The Rangers get a great prospect in their own right. Not a bad night for those franchises, and sincerest sympathies to Avalanche fans. 
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Just want to say that I really hope Jake Bean can get into some postseason games for the Hurricanes. He had a marvelous AHL season and is a guy I’ve been waiting to see in the NHL for a couple years now. I assume there would have to be at least one more injury for him to get a spot in the lineup, but all the same, I have high hopes for the kid.
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Slava Voynov has been suspended by the NHL for next season plus the 2020 playoffs for his domestic abuse plea deal. There had been murmurs that teams were interested in signing him, and this suspension will likely dissuade these suitors (not that they shouldn’t have been dissuaded before the suspension).
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Minnesota general manager Paul Fenton expects both Mikko Koivu and Matt Dumba to be ready for the start of training camp in September. That’s great news for Wild fans and fantasy hockey enthusiasts.
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Yesterday I was editing an article for Cameron Metz and in one paragraph he proclaimed that it marked the one-year anniversary for him at Dobber Hockey (congrats, Cam!). That got me thinking: this time of year would mark my own anniversary here at Dobber Hockey. Four years, to be exact. Next Tuesday will mark four years I’ve been with Dobber Hockey (man, time flies).
This link brings you to the first Ramblings I ever posted. Included are such topics as:
Peter Chiarelli being fired by the Bruins
Craig Berube’s future being up in the air with the Flyers
Boston’s cap crunch due to players like Carl Soderberg and Dougie Hamilton needing new contracts
The difference between Claude Giroux and Jakub Voracek playing with Brayden Schenn and playing with Michael Raffl
Ryan Strome’s excellent 50-point season with the Islanders
Looking back at what’s happened since that Ramblings post nearly four years ago is kind of hilarious. Chiarelli has since been hired and fired by the Oilers, Berube is a coach of the year candidate in St. Louis, neither Soderberg nor Hamilton are still in Boston, Schenn is thriving in St. Louis, and Strome never recaptured that level of success. Time not only flies, but it makes fools of us all.
Seeing as this is the last day before playoffs start, it might be the last chance to do something like this, so I wanted to take a stab at what the NHL might look like in four years. Ready to be made a fool of again? I am.
  Unbelievable Free Agent Class
A lot of stars have signed huge contracts in recent seasons with lengths of anywhere from six to eight years. A lot of those contracts will be running out in the same three-year span, and that will lead to a lot of talent in unrestricted free agency, even if they’re older. Per Cap Friendly, here are some of the names that could theoretically be available after the 2022-23 season: Patrick Kane, Vladimir Tarasenko, Jonathan Toews, David Pastrnak, Sean Monahan, Nathan MacKinnon, Dylan Larkin, Ryan O’Reilly, Max Pacioretty, James van Riemsdyk, Jonathan Huberdeau, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Bo Horvat. That kind of talent in a single free agent class is almost surreal.
Of course, as alluded to, a lot of players will be in their 30s by that point. There are a handful of guys who will be in their mid-to-late 20s like MacKinnon, Pastrnak, Monahan, and Larkin. With the likelihood of a lockout looming, will some of the older players not named who will also be UFA like Milan Lucic, Kyle Okposo, and Duncan Keith be bought out?
The younger guys, I’m sure, will be extended by their current teams. What about everyone else? Wouldn’t it be cool for Toews and Kane to do what Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne did and take cheap contracts to sign somewhere together? Regardless, in a few years’ time, there will be a lot of high-profile free agents that will start hitting the market.
  Colorado Powerhouse
It seems pretty likely that Colorado is one of the top teams in the league in four years, isn’t it? They’ll have MacKinnon and Mikko Rantanen on the roster, Samuel Girard will be a top-tier puck-mover, Cale Makar has the look of a future Norris Trophy contender, and then there’s Ottawa’s top pick from this year. There will be a great core to build around and if management can manage to not pull an Edmonton or Buffalo, it will hopefully be a championship core.
Of course, there is a lot else the team will have to deal with. Their captain, Gabriel Landeskog, is a free agent after the 2020-21 season. Will he still be around? Will Tyson Barrie? Will any of the young guys currently on the roster like J.T. Compher, Alex Kerfoot, and Tyson Jost be making an impact on the 2022-23 roster? This is certainly a team on the rise, but the toughest leap to make is from a good team to a championship-calibre team. Can the Avs be that team?
I say yes. There were some early bumps in the road but the Avalanche management group has made solid deals over the last year or so. As long as they can keep making positive deals for the franchise, there’s no reason to believe they’ll flounder. I believe in April 2023, we’ll be talking about the Avalanche as one of the top franchises in the league, returning to the glory they enjoyed early in the franchise’s existence.
  Tkachuk Brothers
In the fantasy game, guys I have a soft spot for are the across-the-board performers. They’re guys who may not excel in any individual category, but the sum of their parts makes for a great fantasy campaign. In years gone by, this included names like David Backes, Wayne Simmonds, and Andrew Ladd. When looking around the league currently, names like Kyle Palmieri, Gabriel Landeskog, and Brendan Gallagher fit this bill. We’re always looking to the future, and it appears the future in this category belongs to the Brothers Tkachuk.
In many ways, they’ve already sort of arrived in this position. The elder Tkachuk, Matthew, was a top-30 fantasy player in standard Yahoo! leagues this year, one year after being a top-130 player. He’s a young star on the rise and he’s proved himself as such.
Brady Tkachuk has also arrived but not to the same degree just yet. He had a marvelous rookie season, becoming sixth 19-year old rookie since the 2012 lockout to post a season with at least 20 goals, 20 assists, and 200 shots, joining Dylan Larkin, Jack Eichel, Sebastian Aho, Auston Matthews, and Clayton Keller. To put the cherry on top in multi-category leagues, Tkachuk had 75 penalty minutes and 174 hits. That is just outstanding.
It very much appears that Matthew and Brady will follow in the footsteps of past multi-cat stars like Backes and Simmonds, and current multi-cat stars like Gallagher and Landeskog. In four years, it’s very likely that both of those players are easily top-50 picks in roto leagues, if not higher.
  Alex Ovechkin
It’s hard to imagine, but in four years, Ovechkin could be with a different franchise (he’s UFA after the 2020-21 season). I don’t actually think he’ll finish his career anywhere else but Washington, I’m just saying it’s possible. Regardless, if Ovechkin can average 40 goals a year for the next four years, he’ll have passed Gordie Howe on the all-time goal scoring list and will be about 80 goals behind Wayne Gretzky for the all-time record.
Of course, the major wrench that could be thrown in all this is the potential of a lockout after the 2019-20 season. Ovechkin already lost a season and a half to lockouts, which have cost him, what, about 60 goals by now? If we lose another season, that’ll make Ovechkin’s task even more difficult.
It could be very likely that in four years, we’re lamenting what could have been with Alex Ovechkin. His pursuit of Gretzky’s record could be one of the great record chases of this generation. Will Ovechkin have maintained his elite goal scoring prowess while not losing a season to the lockout? I’m hopeful, but the NHL’s history with labour negotiations is cause for concern.
  Seattle
With Seattle getting an NHL franchise, the league will be at 32 teams. This new franchise is going to have the same rebuild rules as Vegas, so will the enjoy the same early success as Vegas?
I think to expect any expansion franchise to replicate the accomplishments of the Golden Knights through their first two seasons is expecting far too much. I think teams will have learned from this mistake. You won’t have teams ship out 30-goal scorers on bargain contracts (Florida), letting go of multiple young prospects to save one player (Minnesota), or over-paying to get rid of a bad contract (Columbus). Well, you probably won’t… shouldn’t? Regardless, I do think teams will learn from their mistakes and Seattle will be in for a rough early couple seasons.
This isn’t to say there won’t be hope. The end of the 2022-23 season will bring Seattle to the end of their second season. It’ll will probably be another year of missing playoffs, but they’ll have an absolutely loaded cupboard of prospects. There will be a lot of promise for the years that follow.
Seattle’s new franchise is going to go through growing pains that Vegas did not have to endure due unimaginably bad decisions across the league. But in four years, there will be promise of much better days ahead.
  Those are a few things I’ll be looking for in four years. How about you? What stands out as something we accept now that’ll change in four years? What will be the same? Hit up the comments. 
from All About Sports https://dobberhockey.com/hockey-rambling/ramblings-draft-lottery-lineup-news-looking-ahead-april-10/
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Tight Inventory Drives High Prices, Quick Sales in the Nation’s Hottest Markets
zimmytws/iStock
What’s a home buyer to do? Listing prices for residential real estate remain near historical highs in October, pushed up by a continuing shortage of homes for sale, according to a preliminary analysis of October data on realtor.com®.
In June, the median home list price for the country ascended to $275,000 for the first time, and it has remained there ever since. (Well, almost—it slipped to $274,000 in September. Chump change!)
The culprit: There are still far more would-be buyers than there are homes for sale.
“The usual fall drop-off in inventory is compounded this year by scarcer listings than we saw one year ago and more shoppers than we typically see in this October,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist for realtor.com.
Sure as pumpkins and skeletons are sprouting up along the sidewalks, the seasonal drop-off in housing inventory has begun: We’re expecting to see 2% fewer listings in October, when we close the books, than there were in September. That would also be 8% fewer than the previous October.
And those few-and-far-between homes are selling quickly—8% faster than one year ago, in fact. Properties are spending a median 73 days on the market.
“Potential buyers who waited until fall hoping to score a bargain will find slim pickings,” Hale noted. “One potential bright spot for market-fatigued buyers is that new listings are up slightly from one year ago.”
About 420,000 new listings are expected to have hit the market by the end of October.
Amid all this, some real estate markets remain way buzzier than others.
Realtor.com compiled its monthly list of the hottest metro markets in the country by looking at where homes are snapped up in days and buyers can’t stop clicking to find their dream home.
This month’s list has San Jose, CA, maintaining its top spot, while Vallejo, CA, which is adjacent to fire-ravaged Napa and Sonoma counties, moved up a spot to second place.
And while California continues to dominate the hot list with 10 metro markets (which include neighboring towns—i.e., the San Francisco market also sweeps in Oakland and Hayward), nine other states across the country also made a showing.
Among this month’s big movers is Boston, which vaulted up 14 spots to reach the top five for the first time since May. Midland, TX, jumped 11 spots, and Janesville, WI, rose 10 spots to break into the top 20 for the first time.
The hot list
Rank (October) 20 Hottest Markets Rank (September) Rank Change 1 San Jose, CA 1 0 2 Vallejo, CA 3 1 3 San Francisco, CA 2 -1 4 San Diego, CA 5 1 5 Boston, MA 19 14 6 Stockton, CA 6 0 7 Sacramento, CA 8 1 8 Detroit, MI 10 2 9 Denver, CO 13 4 10 Modesto, CA 9 -1 11 Columbus, OH 11 0 12 Fresno, CA 15 3 13 Dallas, TX 12 -1 14 Nashville, TN 16 2 15 Colorado Springs, CO 18 3 16 Midland, TX 27 11 17 Rochester, NY 25 18 Oxnard, CA 14 -4 19 Santa Cruz, CA 26 7 20 Janesville, WI 30 10
The post Tight Inventory Drives High Prices, Quick Sales in the Nation’s Hottest Markets appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
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poseidonmoving · 4 years
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realestate63141 · 7 years
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America’s 20 Hottest Real Estate Markets for June 2017
iStock; realtor.com
Are you ready for the housing market’s Endless Summer? At least it might feel endless, because there seems to be no end in sight for the national housing shortage now that we’re waist-deep in the busiest season for buying and selling, according to a preliminary analysis of June data by realtor.com®.
With limited growth in for-sale homes, prices remained high. Just a few months ago, the nationwide median home price pushed above $250,000 for the first time. We’re predicting it will hit $275,000 when we close out June—an increase of 9% since one year ago.
“The housing market has now gone 24 months in a row seeing inventory drop on a yearly basis, the longest streak in over two decades,” said Javier Vivas, manager of economic research at realtor.com, in a statement. The shortage is hitting even more markets, he added—8 out of every 10 have fewer homes for sale now than this time last year.
And that shortage is reflected in how fast homes are snapped up. Properties in June spend a median 60 days on the market—the same level as May, but five days faster than in June 2016.
It’s not that homes aren’t being listed for sale—in fact, 536,000 new listings entered the market in June. But total inventory is substantially lower than one year ago, at 11%. Plus, those new listings are primarily in the upper tier of the market, leaving middle- and lower-income buyers to fight it out over what’s left.
“Most of this fresh inventory isn’t addressing the largest, most desperate group of buyers,” said Vivas. “With no clear hints of new construction providing short-term relief, there appears to be no end to the inventory shortage on the horizon.”
Amid all this, Vivas’ team assessed the country’s biggest metropolitan markets to find which were buzzing the most with buyer activity, in terms of listings clicked on our site and homes speeding off the market on their way to new owners. As is the norm in recent years, our top 20 is a list dominated by California, but seven other states made a showing, and a couple of big movers hail from the Midwest.
The top two spots are still held by the double threat of Vallejo, CA, and its infinitely swankier neighbor to the south, San Francisco. The San Francisco Bay Area’s economic influence reached eastward to Sacramento, which has absorbed many San Franciscans fleeing that city’s high prices. Sacramento sits at No. 4 on our hot list, after Kennewick, WA. And Columbus, OH, reached the top five for the first time in our ranking. Detroit, which fell just short of joining the club, moved up an impressive 12 spots since last month.
The hot list
Rank (June) 20 Hottest Markets Rank (May) Rank Change 1 Vallejo, CA 1 0 2 San Francisco, CA 2 0 3 Kennewick, WA 5 2 4 Sacramento, CA 4 0 5 Columbus, OH 7 2 6 Detroit, MI 18 12 7 Boston, MA 3 -4 8 Colorado Springs, CO 6 -2 9 San Jose, CA 7 -2 10 San Diego, CA 16 6 11 Dallas, TX 12 1 12 Waco, TX 30 18 13 Grand Rapids, MI 13 0 14 Stockton, CA 10 -4 15 Midland, TX 8 -7 16 Fort Wayne, IN 11 -5 17 Santa Rosa, CA 19 2 18 Denver, CO 17 -1 19 Yuba City, CA 21 2 20 Modesto, CA 23 3
The post America’s 20 Hottest Real Estate Markets for June 2017 appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
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realtor10036 · 7 years
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America’s 20 Hottest Real Estate Markets for June 2017
iStock; realtor.com
Are you ready for the housing market’s Endless Summer? At least it might feel endless, because there seems to be no end in sight for the national housing shortage now that we’re waist-deep in the busiest season for buying and selling, according to a preliminary analysis of June data by realtor.com®.
With limited growth in for-sale homes, prices remained high. Just a few months ago, the nationwide median home price pushed above $250,000 for the first time. We’re predicting it will hit $275,000 when we close out June—an increase of 9% since one year ago.
“The housing market has now gone 24 months in a row seeing inventory drop on a yearly basis, the longest streak in over two decades,” said Javier Vivas, manager of economic research at realtor.com, in a statement. The shortage is hitting even more markets, he added—8 out of every 10 have fewer homes for sale now than this time last year.
And that shortage is reflected in how fast homes are snapped up. Properties in June spend a median 60 days on the market—the same level as May, but five days faster than in June 2016.
It’s not that homes aren’t being listed for sale—in fact, 536,000 new listings entered the market in June. But total inventory is substantially lower than one year ago, at 11%. Plus, those new listings are primarily in the upper tier of the market, leaving middle- and lower-income buyers to fight it out over what’s left.
“Most of this fresh inventory isn’t addressing the largest, most desperate group of buyers,” said Vivas. “With no clear hints of new construction providing short-term relief, there appears to be no end to the inventory shortage on the horizon.”
Amid all this, Vivas’ team assessed the country’s biggest metropolitan markets to find which were buzzing the most with buyer activity, in terms of listings clicked on our site and homes speeding off the market on their way to new owners. As is the norm in recent years, our top 20 is a list dominated by California, but seven other states made a showing, and a couple of big movers hail from the Midwest.
The top two spots are still held by the double threat of Vallejo, CA, and its infinitely swankier neighbor to the south, San Francisco. The San Francisco Bay Area’s economic influence reached eastward to Sacramento, which has absorbed many San Franciscans fleeing that city’s high prices. Sacramento sits at No. 4 on our hot list, after Kennewick, WA. And Columbus, OH, reached the top five for the first time in our ranking. Detroit, which fell just short of joining the club, moved up an impressive 12 spots since last month.
The hot list
Rank (June) 20 Hottest Markets Rank (May) Rank Change 1 Vallejo, CA 1 0 2 San Francisco, CA 2 0 3 Kennewick, WA 5 2 4 Sacramento, CA 4 0 5 Columbus, OH 7 2 6 Detroit, MI 18 12 7 Boston, MA 3 -4 8 Colorado Springs, CO 6 -2 9 San Jose, CA 7 -2 10 San Diego, CA 16 6 11 Dallas, TX 12 1 12 Waco, TX 30 18 13 Grand Rapids, MI 13 0 14 Stockton, CA 10 -4 15 Midland, TX 8 -7 16 Fort Wayne, IN 11 -5 17 Santa Rosa, CA 19 2 18 Denver, CO 17 -1 19 Yuba City, CA 21 2 20 Modesto, CA 23 3
The post America’s 20 Hottest Real Estate Markets for June 2017 appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2t3V9Sp
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The Hottest Real Estate Markets in America, March 2018
Bill Williams/Flickr CC; istock
The impact of two long years of declining numbers of homes available for sale is readily apparent as this year’s go-go spring buying season gets started in earnest. The proof: A crowd of home buyers—including many who’ve missed out in previous seasons—is driving prices to record heights, according to a preliminary analysis of realtor.com® data for the month.
Talk about March madness!
“Never in history have there been more eyes on fewer homes than today,” said Javier Vivas, director of economic research at realtor.com. “The price gains observed in the last days of March tell us the market is on pace to see half of the homes listed above $300,000 this summer. This means buyers are not just having to pay more for the same home—they’re also seeing the mix of what’s available change more rapidly.”
Listing prices have already overtaken last summer’s high: $275,000 in July 2017. The median listing price for March is $280,000, the highest point since realtor.com began its monthly analysis of inventory data in early 2012. That’s also an 8% increase over March 2017.
There was just a small increase in housing inventory, which grew 3% from February to March. However, the total is still down 8% from March 207. The influx of 480,000 new listings won’t be enough to bring relief to buyers—it’s 14% higher than the previous month, but 1% lower than last year.
Plus, the new listings disproportionately favor higher-income buyers. Vivas said his team recorded a healthy injection of new listings above $350,000, while the number of new listings in the $200,000-$350,000 range was anemic. And below $200,000? Pretty much nonexistent.
“This bodes well for buyers in the upper and luxury tiers as they see more options surface, but paints a darker picture for the entry-level market,” noted Vivas. “If this pattern holds, 1 in 12 listings nationally will be listed above $1 million this summer, while only 1 in 3 will be listed under the $200,000 sweet spot targeted by half of all buyers.”
Among the largest 100 markets in the country, 36 are still seeing homes sell at least a week faster than this time last year. This includes colder weather markets, which are thawing faster than expected and quickly catching up to the rest of the country.
“Nationally, homes are still moving faster than last March, but more critically, supply in the market is carrying baggage from even larger drops in the last two spring home-buying cycles,” Vivas said. “The cumulative effect means it will be a languid search for most home buyers this season as they face the most competitive, harshest conditions yet.”
Whew! Want to know which markets are the most cutthroat? Our hot list shows the metropolitan centers where homes get the most listing views on our site and spend the fewest days on the market.
This month, tech-fueled San Francisco again held onto the No. 1 spot. Buffalo, NY, jumped 17 spots to break into the top 20 for only the second time since realtor.com began tracking this data in 2013. The previous time was June 2015.
The next biggest mover was Boston, which ascended 14 spots. Note that when we talk about metropolitan markets, they often encompass other towns and suburbs. The Boston metro, for example, includes neighboring Cambridge and suburban Newton, as well as part of New Hampshire.
While California dominated the list as usual with 11 markets, eight other states were represented: Colorado, Texas, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Ohio, Idaho, New York, and Michigan.
Let’s check it out!
The hot list
Rank (March)  Market  Rank (February)  Rank Change 1  San Francisco, CA  1  0 2  Vallejo, CA  3 +1 3  Colorado Springs, CO  9  +6 4  San Jose, CA  4  0 5  Midland, TX  2  -3 6  Santa Cruz, CA  5  -1 7  Boston, MA  21  +14 8  Stockton, CA  8  0 9  Columbus, OH  16  +7 10  Sacramento, CA 7  -3 11  Denver, CO  6  -5 12  Chico, CA  14  +2 13  Boise City, ID  22  +9 14  San Diego, CA  11  -3 15  Modesto, CA  15  0 16  Dallas, TX  12  -4 17  Fresno, CA  17  0 18  Buffalo, NY 35  +17 19  Santa Rosa, CA  10  -9 20  Ann Arbor, MI  26  +6
The post The Hottest Real Estate Markets in America, March 2018 appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
from https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/hottest-real-estate-markets-america-march-2018/
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