Not Found all posts | Garage with a Detached Home | Gwinnett County GA

LaneBailey.com

Garage with a Detached Home

Contact Lane
  • What's YOUR Home Worth?

    Get a free Maximum Price Analysis to find out the current market value of your home.

    Read More
  • Custom Listings

    Sign up to get notified when new listingscome on the market that meet your specs.

    Read More
  • Browse Listings

    Take a look at what is currently on the market in the areas that interest you.

    Read More
  • 1

Category Archives: all posts

Wayback Wednesday… Police Response, 15 Minutes…

Special Response Team of the US Mint Police

Image via Wikipedia

Every job has it’s hazards, and one of the ones we face in real estate is the occasional police call…  and my last one was two years ago this week.  It was an alarm.  It has happened a couple of times.

It actually happened twice on the same house on different days.  I wrote the post, and then we went back out to look at the house a second time… my buyer was pretty serious about it.  The seller had actually changed the code between our visits.  So, even though I had left the information in the lockbox (per the Listing Agent’s request) it was wrong.  The seller also didn’t bother to tell the agent that they had changed the code. Gee… thanks.

On the second call, the exact same officer showed up.  He didn’t even stop the car.  Rather, he recognized us, made a radio call and just rolled by, waving to us out of the window.  I guess we had made him pretty comfortable with us on the previous visit.

Should I also mention that the house was vacant and cleaned out?  There wasn’t much to steal… but vandals could have had a field day stripping out copper.  I understand the fears on the part of the seller, but they were actually making it difficult to show their home.

For sellers, the piece of advice I would pass along is this…  Make your house easy to show.  Communicate with your agent if you are changing alarm codes, and trust your agent to have a fail-safe code if the normal one is lost. 

 

Picture of the

Image via Wikipedia

For buyers, I would say this…  Stuff happens.  Keep a cool head.  Your agent should be cool under pressure, too, but ii helps if you aren’t flipping out.  

 

And for other agents…  You are the pro.  Don’t get flustered.  Getting angry won’t help.  No person involved in this little event woke up that morning looking to pee in your oatmeal.  Stuff just happens.  If it is an alarm, walk outside, relax, gather up any papers you might need and stay in view.  Keep your buyers calm and with you. 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Pricing for Sellers…

DSCN2847

Image by lane.bailey via Flickr

When you are selling real estate, there are generally two competing needs that have to be balanced while deciding on a price.

Getting the property sold (low price).

&

Maximizing the price.

It’s a no-brainer that if you price your property at a ridiculously low price, it will sell very quickly.  We see some of those amazing deals pop into the MLS… the seller needs to get out of a property immediately and is in a position to be very aggressive with price.  Undoubtedly, an investor will swoop in and buy the property if a owner/occupant isn’t fast enough.

 

On the other hand, it is just as much of a no-brainer that if a property is ridiculously over-priced, it will hang out in the listings long enough to actually be stigmatized.  Even with a new MLS number and a new brokerage handling the property, it will have a cloud hanging over as buyers wonder why it has been on the market so long… wondering what must be wrong with it.

And yet… there is almost a mantra from some real estate agents that they will “sell your house for the most money in the least amount of time.”  Of course, it is an easy thing to say, and an impossible thing to prove…  but just look at the statement for a moment.  The least amount of time generally means the least amount of money.  And in order to maximize sales price, sellers have to be willing to wait a long time.  (Lightning could strike and a cash buyer could drop out of the sky and decide that they HAD to have the property, regardless of price… but not likely).

So, what is a seller to do?

  1. An unidentified seller in an unknown location....

    Image via Wikipedia

    Price competitively.  No matter what else, the price HAS to compete with the comps in the neighborhood and area.  In the unlikely event you can get a buyer to pay a price that is too high, the property will not likely clear an appraisal if the price is too high.  Heck, even fairly price properties get clipped by appraisers sometimes.

  2. Price on a “node”.  A node is where multiple price searches might come together.  Buyers tend to fall into habits of searching with common boundaries… $100k, $150k, $200k, etc.  Instead of pricing like the grocery store ($2.99), price ON the node…  $300,000.  That way, searches are much more likely to hit your property.  This can be tough sometimes…  but, the thing to keep in mind is that while it is common, pricing that ends in a $999, $900 or even a $950 should be avoided.  End on a round number, and the rounder, the better.
  3. Know that you may be expected to contribute Closing Costs.  This is more true for a $150k home than a $500k home, but many buyers will look to the seller to contribute to closing costs.  Bake it into the price, so that it isn’t a shock when the buyer asks for 4-6% to help them with closing.
  4. Don’t build in fat.  Seems to be the opposite of point #3, but it is what it is.  Don’t price too high thinking it is “negotiation room”.  Buyers are unlikely to offer if they think the price is too high.  Instead, offer up your negotiation room up front.  Tell the buyer that you are willing to contribute 5% (or whatever) towards their closing costs with a full price offer.
  5. Level with your Agent.  Talk with your real estate agent frankly.  Some sellers don’t want to tell their agent what they are willing to do because they assume the agent will use that knowledge to beat them down if they get a buyer.  However, with most listing agreements, the seller’s agent actually has a legal duty to look out for the best interests of the seller.  Simply put, it is an ethical breach, if not a legal one, for the seller’s agent to betray the interests of the seller.
  6. Don’t use the agent that tries to “buy your listing.”  No, I don’t mean one that puts down cash and offers to buy your property…  I’m talking about the agent that comes into the listing presentation with a price that is higher than everybody else’s.  They tell you that your house is worth more than it really is… and then usually say that they will “sell your house for the most money in the least amount of time.”  They want the listing… and the probably know it won’t sell for the initial offering price.  But they are pretty sure they can beat you down on the price later.  If not, they just won’t give much effort to selling your house… and mark it up as a loss.  Many of these agents are playing a numbers game.  If they take 100 over-priced listings, they can get some percentage of them to reduce price and sell.  Buy, listings that start off over-priced usually sell for less in the end.

There are a lot of things that sellers have to balance as they go through the process of pricing their homes.  It isn’t easy…  A good agent can help guide the way, but in the end, the sellers are the ones that have to live with the pricing.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Mortgage Rates Lowest in 50 Years… according to Freddie Mac

Freddie Mac

Image via Wikipedia

Freddie Mac issued their Primary Mortgage Market Survey yesterday, and the rates are unbelievable.  Let me click off a few quotes from the Press Release.

30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 4.15 percent with an average 0.7 point for the week ending August 18, 2011, down from last week when it averaged 4.32 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 4.42 percent.

15-year FRM this week averaged 3.36 percent with an average 0.6 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.50 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 3.90 percent.

5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged 3.08 percent this week, with an average 0.5 point, down from last week when it averaged 3.13 percent. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 3.56 percent.

1-year Treasury-indexed ARMaveraged 2.86 percent this week with an average 0.6 point, down from last week when it averaged 2.89 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 3.53 percent.

I guess that is the upside of economic stagnation.  And when combined with the amazing prices on homes in the market right now, it makes for a GREAT time to buy property.  Assuming that you don’t have to sell first.

And that is the flip side.  Many would be buyers are sidelined because they can’t afford to sell their current home.  The best they can hope for is to re-finance with the low rates… of course, that isn’t helping those that have a need to relocate.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Wayback Wednesday… Social Media Breakfast

Image representing Blog Talk Radio as depicted...

Image via CrunchBase

A little over 2 years ago, Mortgage Broker, Ken Cook and I started an event called Social Media Breakfast Atlanta (smbATL).  It was actually in July, 2009.  Ken was (and still is) the co-host of a show on Blog Talk Radio called Social Media Edge (it used to be called Twitter Tuesday).  And I had the idea that it would be fun to get together a with a bunch of local small business owners to talk about better ways to leverage social medias.

 

Image representing Facebook as depicted in Cru...

Image via CrunchBase

When we started, Twitter was all the rage.  FaceBook Pages were brand new, and a lot of people hadn’t heard of them.  Google Buzz and Wave hadn’t been released yet.  And we hadn’t even had an inkling about Google+.  In the last two years, we’ve learned more about those platforms, as well as things like Posterous, Get Glue and a PILE of tools.

 

We have also split the events so that there is one in Cobb County and one in Gwinnett County each month.  Cobb’s event is generally the 3rd Thursday of the month and Gwinnett’s is the 4th Thursday.  In Cobb, the usually take off a couple of months in the summer… in Gwinnett, we take off for the Holidays.

 

Image representing Twitter as depicted in Crun...

Image via CrunchBase

For August, we have a special guess at the Gwinnett County smbATL event.  Jennifer Jones of Anderson Jones PR will be talking about Social Media leveraging for small business.  She has case studies and all sorts of solid reasons that we (as small business owners or principals) should be involved with Social Media.  But, even better, she will be fun!

 

And, as usual, we will all get to socialize and meet some new folks.  That’s why Ken and I started this over two years ago… to meet some cool new folks and learn some cool new tips, technologies and techniques.  And we have.

 

You can check us out on FaceBook (1st link), and we’d love for you to join us on August 25th at the Atlanta Bread Company on Lawrenceville-Suwanee Rd and Satellite Blvd.  We’ll be meeting there from 9:00am until around 10:30am.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Mortgage Interest Deduction… Good or Bad?

The NAR building and the U.S. Capitol in the b...

Image via Wikipedia

There is a lot of discussion in the real estate world about the Mortgage Interest Deduction (MID) on Income Taxes.  The National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) is virtually flipping out with just the thought that it could be eliminated by Congress as they look for more “revenue enhancements” (they are unwilling to say “tax increases”).

The NAR position is that with a weak housing market, and the fact that homeowners have benefited form the MID for decades, this is NOT the time to eliminate it, increasing taxes on mostly middle class taxpayers/homeowners.  I can’t argue against that position very forcefully.  It isn’t that I want to agree with the NAR, because I don’t.  And, in fact, my reasoning is much different from theirs.

Opponents of the MID argue that homeowners shouldn’t get special treatment v. renters in getting a tax credit for a portion of their mortgage.  And that IS  a strong argument, but there is one HUGE flaw…

Renters might not get a tax credit, but Landlords DO.  They may or may not pass that savings along to the renter (depending on the competitiveness of their rental market), but as a business, interest is a deductible interest expense.  So, in effect, a homeowner would be penalized for occupying a home that they own.  And with all of the talk of “fairness” coming out of Washington, DC, taxing the Mortgage Interest for Owner/Occupants, while not taxing it for investors seems kind of dumb. 

Also, this would be going after the heart of the middle class.  Many opponents argue that upper middle class families benefit more from the MID than those with lower incomes… although, the truth is that income isn’t as much of a determinant as is mortgage debt.  BUT, those with higher incomes might have a tool available that those with lower incomes may not.  Many are already business owners.  And, it wouldn’t be that tough for them to incorporate, transfer the ownership of their home to their business, and rent the house. 

This would give them the tax deduction for the mortgage interest as a business expense.  Homeowners with smaller mortgages and/or smaller incomes might not be able to swing the same deal… meaning that they would be more adversely impacted by the change than higher income and/or higher debt homeowners. 

One other thing, which I personally think is important, but a back burner aspect of the debate, is the benefit of a home-ownership society.  Simply put, home owners are a more stable group than renters.  They have a stake in their neighborhoods, schools and communities.  Renters want nice neighborhoods, schools and communities, but have a much easier time escaping if things go sour.  They won’t pay a financial penalty for getting out… in fact, if demand increases for a specific area, they might actually end up having to pay more.

BTW, I DO consider business deduction of interest to be something that should NOT be taxed.  It is a legitimate business expense.  And since I don’t think businesses should have to pay taxes on the interest THEY pay, I don’t think it would be right to force owner/occupants to pay interest for the exact same thing.

What do YOU think?  I’d love to hear your thoughts.  Add a comment.

Enhanced by Zemanta
Copyright © 2009 - 2019 Garage with a Detached Home | Gwinnett County GA. All Rights Reserved. Created by Blog Copyright.