Monday, April 27, 2009

Homes Are Selling If The Price Is Right.

By Joel Persinger
YouRealEstateDude.com

Some years back there was a popular TV game show called, “The Price is Right.” It had nothing to do with real estate, but the name of the show has a ring to it when you think about today’s real estate market. Not long ago homes were sitting on the market for months and months without being sold. That is no longer the case in the San Diego marketplace. If the price is right, as the old TV show title goes, the house will sell and sell quickly!

My office has been busy with buyers lately. Every one of my agents who are working with buyers has had the same experience. We have all selected 5 or 6 homes to show our buyers on any given day, only to find out that all but one or two have multiple offers on them before we even get our buyers in the car. In order to find five houses that our buyers may have a chance of buying, we often have to research around twenty homes. Prices are at rock bottom and interest rates are low, so there is a lot of competition out there. That means that buyers have to be ready to compete for the available homes even in a “depressed” real estate market.

Nevertheless, some houses are still not selling. Some sellers are still hoping to squeeze every cent out of the sale. As a result, they price their homes too high and they sit unsold. The message here is simple. If the price is right the house will sell. Therefore, if the house isn’t selling, then the price isn’t right. There is one additional piece to this puzzle. If the price is right, there will be multiple offers on the house. So, if you have only one offer or you have offers that come in slowly and one at a time, then the price isn’t right. Lower it and the number and frequency of offers will increase. This is important because many of the buyers currently making offers on houses are flakey. Just like a mist, they are here one second and gone the next. Having multiple buyers to buy your house will increase your chances of finding a real buyer among all the flakes.

So, if you’re buying, you should prepare yourself for some competition. If you're selling, think about that old game show and make sure the price is right.

Monday, April 06, 2009

Be Prepared for the Long Haul

By Joel Persinger
YourRealEstateDude.com

One of my grandfather’s favorite sayings was, “The more bends you put in the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain.” Well, my dear reader let me tell you… the mind boggling number of changes to the real estate and lending market this past few years have put a lot of bends in the plumbing. When you throw in the oddball things that can sometimes happen with real estate purchases, the drain can be stopped up more often than not.

One of my sellers moved out of the area and left her house to be sold while vacant. So, I sold it for her. The buyers were happy and everything was moving along just fine until the buyer’s lender wanted to know if the room addition was completed with the proper permits. When asked about this, the seller said, “Of course there are permits” and directed me to one of the kitchen drawers where she had left the permits and the plans for the room addition. Naturally, I went to the property at once to secure the permits. The problem is the permits weren’t there.

It seems that a potential buyer who had visited the home had absconded with the permits. We found this out surreptitiously when that buyer contacted escrow and asked, “So, when do we get the house?” The escrow officer was naturally confused by this turn of events and said, “Ah… you don’t have an escrow on that house.” As it turned out, this buyer had been under the impression that she was buying the house even though she didn’t have an accepted offer and had never opened escrow. It took me three weeks to get her give us back the permits. In the meantime, I checked with the city and county only to find that they had lost the originals. So, the only copies were those that the confused buyer had taken. By the time I got them back the real buyer had given up and cancelled escrow.

In another instance, an Army veteran and his wife worked with me to find them a home. We found a great house for them at a wonderful price. The escrow appeared to be moving along smoothly and all appeared to be right with the world. It was then that we discovered that his certificate of eligibility for his V.A loan was being held up. It seems that the V.A. records did not show his entire length of service. In fact, the records only indicated that he was in the military for the short time he was stationed in California. Since his discharge papers and other related paperwork did in fact show his entire service record, the V.A. indicated that all he had to do was to send the paperwork to the appropriate V.A. office and they would make the change. The problem was that we were supposed to close escrow in 15 days and nobody on the planet believed that the V.A. would move that fast. Not even the V.A.

In yet another strange situation, a client of mine was in line to buy a home only to find out that his lender would not accept the appraised value of the house. This was in spite of the fact that it was the lender’s appraiser who came up with the value. No matter how clear we were about the fact that the house in question was a custom home on over an acre of land with a 300 degree mountain view, the lender insisted on deriving their opinion of value by comparing the home to the many tract houses that surround the area at the bottom of the hill. It should be mentioned that the tract houses were on small lots and did not have a view. The decision to reject the appraisal was made by a junior underwriter located somewhere in Pennsylvania.

These are just three of the many screwball situations my clients have faced over the past several months. In most cases, the problems were able to be resolved and the escrows went through just fine. But, in every case an extraordinary measure of patience and perseverance was required on the parts of the clients (as well as everyone else). It should also be noted that every one of the escrows we have closed over the past three years has been a challenge, to one degree or another. The days of the easy home purchase, if they ever existed, are gone!

The bright side to this otherwise dismal tale is the opportunity it presents for you as the home buyer. Since we know that the overwhelming majority of home purchases in this current environment are difficult, it is the buyer who is willing to hang in there for the long haul who will succeed. While other buyers are giving up, you will persevere and thereby accomplish your goal of buying a home. So, here’s my advice: hang in there and be prepared for the long haul. Buying a home in this marketplace is challenging. But, those who are up to the challenge can swing some terrific deals.

Buying a Home is a Partnership for Good or Ill.

By Joel Persinger
YourRealEstateDude.com

Not long ago, I was meeting with a couple who were in the process of losing their home to foreclosure. Their savings was gone and they were suffering emotionally. Neither of them had slept well for quite some time and both were beginning to experience stress related health problems. During our meeting, the husband sat with his eyes closed, brow furrowed and his arms ramrod straight in front of him as he maintained a death-grip on their kitchen table. He looked like a man, afraid of heights, who was being forced at gunpoint to ride his first rollercoaster. After an hour of listening to his wife explain their situation and how they arrived at such a disastrous financial point in their lives, the gentleman finally relaxed and released his grip on the table. Amazingly, his sudden relaxation immediately followed something I said. Since it seemed to work so well for him, I’m going to repeat it for you.

If you own a home and you have a mortgage, then you invested in real estate with a partner. Your partner is the bank that loaned you the money. You invested with the idea that your home would go up in value over time and that you could live there while that investment increased in value. The bank invested in the same way. Just like you, the bank decided to gamble that the investment would go up in value and that money would be made in the form of interest on the existing loan. They also planned to introduce you to new loan programs as your equity increased in the hope of selling you a new loan down the road.

Let’s replace the bank with a friend and see how this actually works. Say, for example, that you want to buy a duplex so that you can live in one unit and rent out the other. You only have enough money to pay for part of the duplex, so you need somebody to go in with you in order to be able to do it. You and your buddy decide to do this together and you both plunk down your money on the property and pay all cash. As part of the agreement, you get to live in the property and you and your buddy split the profit derived from renting the second unit. Since your buddy doesn’t get to live there, you both agree that he will have the right to sell the property and keep the money, if something goes terribly wrong.

Everything seems to be going along fine, but suddenly the hillside in the backyard collapses and destroys the duplex. As a result, you no longer have a place to live and both you and your buddy have lost the income from the rental unit. As if to add insult to injury, your property is now worth less than half of what you paid for it, because the building has been destroyed. In this situation, would you be the only one who loses? I don’t think so. Your buddy would lose too. But, you might actually lose more than your buddy. You have to find a job, a place to live and you lost your property in the process. Your buddy, on the other hand, already has a job and a place to live. In addition, he gets to sell the vacant lot to get some of his money back and he doesn’t have to share a dime with you. This is the way it works with a bank.

You and a bank purchased a property together. You both agreed that the property was worth what you paid for it and you both stood to gain if your investment worked out. But, you both took a risk as well and you both stood to lose if things didn’t work out as planned. So, if you lose, the bank will lose too. That is as it should be. While you bear some responsibility for making a bad investment, you do not bear it all. The bank may have invested more than you, but that’s why the bank gets to keep the property and sell it in an attempt to regain some of its lost money. You don’t get to do that.

Now that you understand that your home was an investment and that you weren’t alone in thinking it was a good one, give yourself a break. Every investor makes mistakes. That’s generally how they learn. So, learn something from it and move on. In the meantime, do the best you can to reduce your losses and when bedtime comes each night, leave that day’s guilt behind you and get some sleep.