Are offers coming in?

NEW -> Contingent Buyer Assistance Program

rattaom

New member
In the market for a SFH, but also not in a rush. Houses are sitting on the market for a long time. I’ve been watching Woodbury closely, and very little seems to be moving.

I’m curious - to those on the front lines of this - are these houses getting lowball offers that aren’t being accepted? Or is there just no activity?
 
This is pretty much the best time to buy. Housing market is usually at its slowest and lowest from Aug to Jan. Spring time is when it starts picking up and peaks around April to end of May.
 
I'm a professional Redfin browser. This is anecdotal and region specific. A year ago I was seeing absurd prices. About 6 months ago I started seeing a moderate amount of modest price cuts in the $50k to $100k range (on $2M to $3M SFHs). Lately I'm seeing $100k to $200k price cuts.
 
I am seeing closed sales in the last month lower than before. It really depends on the seller and whether or not they need the money asap. Otherwise they can wait until home buying season next year as it seems rates will be lower then.
 
Last edited:
Is it the market? Perhaps. It's more likely two of the three types of realtors causing much of the mispricing to market.

1) The "Area Expert" realtor. We've all seen certain agents shouting about their high sales volumes, but remember high volume doesn't mean high price. Most sellers don't dig in to see "original list" to "closing price" later bamboozled into signing a listing agreement. The agent says they can get the list price that an ill advised seller thinks is a market price. It's not the market price, but the sellers price... A price that is simply unrealistic.

2) The grossly inexperienced realtor. It's too easy to get a real estate salespersons license. With many realtors and few listings, it's a market destined for trouble. Inexperienced agents give oceans worth of bad advice and sloppy service. Even a well priced home can suffer from A.I. Slop property descriptions, minimal IPhone photos on-line, and bad staging. Agents with less than 5 sales YTD shouldn't a sellers first choice for representation when selling a $1.5M property, even if they are a sellers cousin/co-worker/ or FB Friend, but often are.

3) The 80/20 rule applies to Realtors just as it does to any other business. I'd say (with 35+ years of experience behind me) that it's more like 99/1 percent. I'm not talking about the advertising gimmick of being a "TOP 1% AGENT" as you often see on your grocery cart at HMart or Mitsua, but that 1% of Realtors who make home selling a profession, not a hobby. @usctrojancpa is one for example. I'm in South OC and know 2-3 others that are at the same level of industry professionalism, but unfortunately I also know literally hundreds who should be avoided. Just because you get a good Realtor doesn't mean you won't have a price adjustment during your listing, but you will know what your strategic options are well in advance. Look up "The 7 P's" as most genuine 1% agents demonstrate this phrase during the entire sales process. It's the kind of Realtor you want in this present market

My .02c
 
Last edited:
Back
Top