The Cost of Time and Money (or, J. Philip's Law of Pricing)

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with J. Philip Faranda (J. Philip R.E. LLC) Westchester County NY License # 49FA1074963

I was inspired by Bill Gassett's recent posting on why listings expire unsold to share what I tell people when it comes to pricing their homes. Simply put, time costs money and money costs time. The faster you need to sell, the less you'll get. The more money you want, the longer you'll have to wait. Let's take a house that I think will probably sell for $375,000, bearing in mind that in my market, the same house may have sold in 2005 for $475,000 (ouch).

J. Philip's Law of Pricing

Some people are more motivated than others. It need not be duress, they just want to get the show on the road and get packing. These are the people who don't need their arms twisted about the whole different set of eyeballs their home will get at $399,900 than $409,900. The house shouldn't take too long to sell. It may not sell the first weekend, but the odds of it getting stale are low.

Others are in hot water. They can't wait 90 days. They need to tell a collection department (or a judge) that they have a contract on their home in order to hold off a foreclosure proceeding. They may need to price it at $349,900. It might get bid up higher because the market is efficient, but regardless, that will get the people moving on the place. They get less money but they benefit with a faster timetable. Time costs money.

The last group isn't motivated by time so much as they are on money. For one reason or another, they want to hold out for their price. Let's suppose these people want $400,000 or more. They might be stubborn, egotistical, or just in doubt about the true conditions of the economy. Or, they might just be of a more speculative mindset and believe that there is one special buyer out there that might pay them a premium for the place because of scarcity or condition. They might be right, but these clients will have to be prepared to wait longer than most of their peers. Again, time is paid for in money, but money's cost is more time.

If the latter group is educated by their experience after a month or two, they'll reduce their price. Some don't get it and are on their 3rd broker in 2 years. Sometimes they will get an offer from that one special buyer but there's no guarantee that the appraiser will agree, and that is a discussion for another day. If higher-priced people know in advance that they'll have to wait, they should have less of a problem with a higher commission, a longer listing contract, or both.

It is an immutable dynamic in my experience, and if explained to sellers in advance, it saves me from being blamed for poor price advice, or, worse, priming the pump for another broker later on.

Comments (4)

Bill Gassett
RE/MAX Executive Realty - Hopkinton, MA
Metrowest Massachusetts Real Estate

Hi Philip - Nice to hear I inspired you:) The laws of pricing are pretty simple. If you want your home sold quickly price it slightly under market value.

Jan 29, 2009 11:21 PM
Elizabeth Weintraub Sacramento Realtor Top 1%
RE/MAX Gold - Sacramento, CA
Put 40 years of experience to work for you

Hi Philip, I find that with my short sale listings, if I price them a bit below comparable sales and position them well against the competition, they receive multiple offers. I also write in the marketing comments: no lowballs. That knocks out the throw it at the wall to see if it sticks buyers.

Generally the first offer is at list price. The second a few thousand more, and by the time we receive the last offer, it's way over list.

Elizabeth Weintraub Land Park Real Estate Agent in Sacramento

Jan 30, 2009 02:43 AM
Lise Howe
Keller Williams Capital Properties - Washington, DC
Assoc. Broker in DC, MD, VA and attorney in DC

There is also the value of our own time  - sometimes I think about whether I will be able to sell the listing or just take time away from my family.

Feb 02, 2009 03:32 AM
Morgan Evans
Douglas Elliman Real Estate - Manhattan, NY
LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON

Having a property on the market for a year or more sure seems like a lot of emotional committment that the seller will have to endure, that surely will be a hard price to pay.

Mar 25, 2010 11:06 PM

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