Special offer

Why Some Homes Will Never Sell

Reblogger Sheldon Neal
Real Estate Agent with Bergen County, NJ - RE/MAX Real Estate Limited

This is a great article about the danger of overpricing a listing and "CHASING THE MARKET" !

...Sellers: DONT DO IT IF YOU WANT TO SELL !!!!

 

Original content by Jonathan Benya 618516

Teresa Boardman over at the St. Paul Real Estate Blog recently posted a very direct article about homes that "eat" Realtors. The concept sounds funny, yet the reality behind it is anything but. The fact is, some homes sit on the market for years without being able to sell and the home ends up going through several different listing agents, each failing to get the home sold.

Here's how it happens:

Step 1: A seller lists their property in Southern Maryland with a Realtor. Realtor does a Comparative Market Analysis (CMA), and determines the home is worth $250,000, and the seller decides to list the home for $275,000.

Step 2: House fails to sell. Meanwhile, the home down the street sells for $250,000. After 6 months, the seller decides the agent hasn't done their job and fires them.

Step 3: Seller hires a new agent, and lists the house for $250,000. The current CMA shows the home is now only worth $225,000. Once again the home is overpriced because the market value is declining. The house sits on the market for another 6 months without a single offer.

Step 4: The agent can't sell the overpriced house, so the seller fires them, and hires someone else. The home has been on the market for a year now, with 3 different agents. This time, the seller lists the home at $225,000. Again, the market has declined and the home is only worth $200,000.

Step 5: I think you get the idea here....

The problem is not with a bad agent who listed the house, nor is it because the market is bad. The problem is a bad seller. Had the home been listed for $250,000 from the start, it would have sold. Every month the property sits on the market is another month that the home is losing value, and as time goes by less and less people even bother to view the property.

The other thing to bear in mind is appraisers look at the same comparable sales that we as Realtors look at. If the market analysis can't support a listing price of $275,000, odds are good that the appraiser won't be able to support the price either.

The Solution

As a Realtor, my solution is simple. If the seller is determined to list the home for a price that I feel is unrealistic, I don't have to take the listing. It doesn't make sense for agents to take 'dead on arrival' listings like that because we don't get paid for our services on homes that don't sell. For a seller, if you think your Realtor's analysis of your home is inaccurate, it might be a good idea to have a formal appraisal done on the property. It's extremely rare for someone to be able to sell a home for more than the appraised value because lenders will not write a loan for more than a home is worth.

There are lots of appraisal companies in Southern Maryland, and the cost is generally a couple hundred dollars. It's a small price to pay in order to be able to sell your home for $250,000 now rather than waiting months or years to find out the home has lost $100,000 in value. At the end of the day it just doesn't make sense for sellers or agents to list properties for more than they are actually worth.  I understand wanting to make sure you don't get as much as possible for your home, but listening to the expert opinion of your Realtor can make the difference between a sale and a foreclosure.

Looking For My Expert Opinon on Southern Maryland?  Find it Here:  The Southern Maryland Real Estate Blog

Jonathan Benya
DeHanas Real Estate Services
1218 Smallwood Drive
Waldorf MD 20603
301-653-8113
301-870-7633(fax)
Posted by

 

Follow Sheldon on these sites below !

 

                            

 

 

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

 

Joshua Zargari
MJ Decorators Workshop LI staging and home decorating - Lynbrook, NY
MJ Decorators Workshop

Very good info.

I like to add that the interest rate will go up soon, and that will make the buying process more expensive.

 

 

Apr 10, 2010 10:03 AM
Vickie McCartney
Maverick Realty - Owensboro, KY
Broker, Real Estate Agent Owensboro KY

Hi Sheldon~  I can totally relate to what Teresa is saying here!!  It is just the way it can happen....

Apr 10, 2010 10:05 AM
Catherine Chaudemanche - Edison & Central NJ
Metuchen Keller Williams Elite Realty / Middlesex County, NJ - Edison, NJ
Full Time, Informed and Involved- Results Driven

So simple is not it??- I think most sellers understand the appraisal requirement and the overall house pricing model. I think most people just cannot apply what they understand to be true when it comes down to their own circumstances...I am dealing sometimes with very corporate business savvy people and still they make the wrong decision almost every step of the way in the selling process...

Apr 10, 2010 10:47 PM
Ellie McIntire
Ellicott City Clarksville Howard County Maryland Real Estate - Ellicott City, MD
Luxury service in Central Maryland

Some Sellers will never get it. I viewed an average home yesterday that has been on the market for 433 days and is still grossly overpriced.

Apr 10, 2010 11:32 PM
Sheldon Neal
Bergen County, NJ - RE/MAX Real Estate Limited - Maywood, NJ
That British Agent Bergen County NJ

Joshua ! Yes, another reason to price it right !

Vickie - ...all too often !

Cathy ! Very simple right ! Those corporate types often think they alwaqys know one step better than us - except its usually one step behind us - always !

Ellie  - CRAZY !

Apr 11, 2010 11:47 AM
Gwen Banta
Sotheby's International Realty - Los Angeles, CA

Excellent post, Neal! I deal with this daily in L.A because we hit such an unrealistic zenith, and then homes dropped at an equally steep vortex. Now sellers think that just because we are the state of beaches and sunshine that we will bounce back overnight. It so important to explain how "testing the market" with an inflated price ultimately results in a lower sales price. Appraisals are an excellent stepping stone to reality!

Apr 18, 2010 10:06 AM