Posted Friday, March 6, 2009 by
DoorFly Blogger
Buying real estate in 2009 presents challenges. Financing is difficult and who knows what will happen to your job in this economy.
If you have the money and can hang on to a home for five years or more, there's a huge inventory of homes for sale priced at levels not seen since 2004.
Of course, not everybody agrees that homes selling well below list price can be considered discounted. Maybe they were just overpriced, says Barry Nystedt, the president of the National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents.
Redfin offers the following home buying advice to increase real estate affordability:
1) Find seller listings on the market for 90 days or more
Smart home buyers have long known that if a home doesn't sell in three months, the listing becomes stale. Redfin says the more deeply discounted homes were 83% more likely to have been listed 90 days or more.
Interestingly, the discounts didn't increase after 90 days, so it's not crucial to wait longer to make a bid.
2) Bid low on a fixer-upper
Dave Daggett's eyes lit up when he first saw his lakefront house. The yard was overgrown, plasterboard was missing in places, unfinished wiring dangled here and there, and the roof was mossy. It was ripe for a discount.
Redfin found that bargain sales were 73% more likely to have used "fixer-upper" or similar terms in listings and ads: "People who sell homes before fixing them up are usually more concerned about an easy sale than the best price."
3) Bid aggressively on a discounted property
Many discounted homes have sustained not just one or two but several price reductions.
"Heavily discounted homes are 28% more likely to have already been price-reduced," the Redfin study says, adding that with 56% of the biggest bargains, prices had been dropped at least twice before buyers made a bid.
"Once a seller lowers his asking price, he sends a signal to buyers that he is willing to accept further discounts in negotiations," Redfin speculates.
"Probably the area where we've seen the biggest change is in negotiating with builders," Kelman says. "If they can't liquidate and pay creditors, they're in a crunch."
In order to keep his official prices up, a builder may make expensive concessions by throwing in luxury amenities or reducing a buyer's mortgage terms or down payment.
4) Look for desperate flippers
Redfin found a small (9%) chance that homes purchased within five years would be discounted by more than 10% from the listing price. It could be that some people who are desperate to exit an unmanageable loan are willing to take a bit of a bath.
5) Don't expect much bargaining from banks
Banks don't negotiate as freely as you might imagine when selling foreclosed homes. They also keep a tight rein on prices in short sales, when a seller owes more on the mortgage than the house is selling for.
Don't expect much price flexibility here, Redfin points out. (Banks also tend to move very slowly in such sales.) Redfin found that 9% of the bargains it studied were short sales or houses owned by banks.
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