Tag Archives: selling home

Selling property: weird, quirky or unusual features of a home can put off buyers

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When you’re looking to sell a property, you want it to appeal to a broad market – for punters to come in and be able to picture their happy, home-owning future. What you don’t want is a confused giggle when they get a look at your bathroom.

When buyers are attending several inspections over a weekend they’re looking for reasons to rule out properties, according to agents.

“Buyers tend to exclude rather than include”, says Walter Burfitt-Williams, of BresicWhitney. “You might think the leopard print wallpaper is gorgeous, but it’s not to everyone’s taste.”

In older homes it’s better to stick to classic styling rather than something on-trend, and try to avoid over-complicating interiors with multiple trends or time periods. You don’t want a clash of different styles in a house, let alone a room, he notes.Steep, spiral staircases in narrow terraces – a popular option for renovations of a certain era – were another feature to rethink, according to Peter Gordon, from Cobden & Hayson, particularly in small terraces in Sydney’s inner west. Jacuzzis were another addition to consider getting rid of, as buyers tended to view them more as a second-hand spa.

 

 

Plenty of Signs the Market Has Cooled

Do you feel that hint of a chill starting to swirl through the housing market? The cooling is slight, but it’s for real.

Home prices are not rising as fast in most metropolitan areas as they did earlier this year and much of 2012. Multiple bid competitions — fierce in many places this spring and late last year — aren’t as intense. Inventories of homes for sale have increased this summer, reversing near droughts of listings that helped fuel higher prices.

Has your neighborhood “cooled?”  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your home value questions.

Add in rising mortgage rates, and you’ve got a distinct, measurable momentum shift in the pace of the housing recovery. The recovery is still well underway — it’s just not as effervescent as it once was.

Consider some of the key numbers:

• Asking prices on homes listed for sale declined by one-third of a percent in July, the first drop on a monthly basis since last November, according to data compiled by Trulia.com. Quarter-to-quarter data through July confirm the moderating trend line.

• Pending-home sales — under contract but not yet closed — dropped by four-tenths of a percent in June, according to the National Association of Realtors. Resales of houses in June dipped by 1.2 percent.

• Inventories of homes listed for sale rose in a number of the hottest markets recently, after hovering near record lows for a year or more. Low inventories stoke buyer competition and bidding wars that can send prices up sharply. More plentiful inventories give buyers more to choose from and tend to calm things down. Trulia estimates that nationwide inventories of homes for sale are up 6 percent since January.

read more: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/aug/25/tp-plenty-of-signs-market-has-cooled/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Even In Hot Market, Not All Homes Sell Quickly

With full-fledged sellers’ markets underway in dozens of metropolitan areas around the country, new research has found curious statistical patterns emerging: Even in cities where listings get multiple offers within days or hours, significant numbers of homes are sitting on the market for six months, 12 months or more with no takers.

What happens when an appraisal comes in under the listing or agreed upon price?  Contact the appraisers at the www.scappraisals.com for your appraisal questions.

Call them turnoff listings. Despite roaring sales paces all around them, for one reason or another these houses send shoppers scurrying away, often because of mispricing, excessive restrictions on access to buyers and agents, failure to clean or make repairs, and a variety of other marketing bungles.

Researchers at Trulia, a real estate listings site, say the existence of large numbers of unsold houses in the midst of high-activity markets is more common than generally assumed. Jed Kolko, chief economist for Trulia, suggested that “even in the tightest markets, there is a ‘long tail’ of homes languishing” unsold for extended periods.

For example, in one of the fastest-paced sales areas in the country, San Jose — where the median time from listing to sale is just 20 days — one out of 10 houses has been on the market for 161 days or more. In metropolitan Boston, where houses go from listing to sale in a median 42 days, 10 percent go unsold for 257 days or more.

Data provided for this column by MRIS, the multiple listing service covering metropolitan Washington, D.C., indicate that in the hottest neighborhoods, houses sell in a median five to 12 days. Yet from 10 percent to 12.5 percent of listings in some areas sit without buyers for six months or more.

Nationally, according to new data from the National Association of Realtors, 44 percent of all new listings take 90 days or more to sell, 22 percent take six to 12 months, and 9 percent take more than a year.

Why the glacial pace for certain homes in even the fastest-moving sellers’ markets? Realty agents who visit houses with potential buyers in tow aren’t shy about sharing the major reasons. One agent, Jeff Dowler of Solutions Real Estate in Carlsbad, says more often than not, the root problem is the owners of the property. As he guides shoppers from one listing to another, “I see homes being sabotaged by owners all the time.”

Sabotaged? Not intentionally, says Dowler, but by “doing things or not doing things that would make the house easier to sell.” Demanding an unrealistically high asking price — and refusing to negotiate on lower but qualified offers — is the top turnoff for Dowler and many other agents showing homes.

Imposing severe restrictions on when and by whom the house can be shown is another. For example, sellers who will only allow showings between 10 a.m. and noon on Saturdays, or who require a 24-hour advance notice before appointments to show during the week, or who won’t let anyone in unless they or the listing agent are present, inevitably delay offers and sales.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/apr/28/tp-even-in-hot-market-not-all-homes-sell-quickly/?print&page=all

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only