Pricing of San Diego Foreclosures, as in any area can be challenging and of course is the biggest benefit of working with Foreclosure properties.
The biggest mistake buyers make is placing a low-ball offer. The media is always talking about it being a "Buyers Market", which is true in how affordable houses have become to substantially more people than before, but then there are also more people to compete with in purchasing the now affordable home. The large discounts the media is talking about is off the high values from the peak of the market in 2005-2006 not the current list price. The current list prices on the market have already taken in account the discount so you can't then apply another discount on top of the house's currently listed price. Many buyers typically lose out to higher offers on a house or two before they start making realistic offers. Especially right now all over San Diego County from Alpine houses to College Condos, banks are receiving offers above the asking price.
Another common mistake is when there are repairs that need to be done. Sometimes people assume they can take the cost of those repairs and subtract them from the listed price to then come up with the offer price. Generally the condition of the house is taken into account when pricing the property. A better strategy to make sure you are getting a deal is to decide what the value of the home would be once all fixed, then subtract the cost of the repairs and adding in a premium for your time and efforts into getting it there. Sometimes you can then take an additional percentage discount off the top, you should be working closely with your agent to decide on the correct price.
Smart Asset Managers from the banks list the house at or slightly below the market creating lots of interest and therefore potential for the house to go at a higher price than the market is currently paying. If your agent is not looking at recent sales in the area, you could be losing the house to someone who is willing to pay the right price or worse yet, over-paying for your new home, because you had to outbid multiple offers.
While many houses are under or accurately priced, the largest holder of foreclosures right now, FannieMae, tends to over price their inventory because their financing doesn't require an appraisal and they usually put new paint and carpet in making them look better than most others on the market.
If the house is truly over priced based on actual market numbers, rather than your perception that all housing is over priced, don't walk away. Place an offer at, or slightly below the price it should be. Many times that keeps other serious buyers from placing offers. After a couple of weeks they have to lower the price and your offer is already before the others who are now attracted by the lower price. If it spends too long on the market without an offer, the bank gets desperate and may even take a lower than market price. I had a buyer pay 85% of market value (foreclosure, not retail) for a Rancho San Diego Condo foreclosure, with just such a scenario. Discuss with your agent the best strategy for the particular house you want to purchase.
Recently we sold a FannieMae foreclosure in Alpine for almost $40,000 over what another Traditional Sale was trying to sell for in the same development and same model and there were no other offer that they were competing against. The buyers paid the higher-than-market price listed by FannieMae because the agent representing the Alpine buyers had not taken the time to research the actual value of the house.
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Rachell Lara of the Gold Star Group, specializing in getting you the right house for the right price.
619-316-7445
Rachell.Lara@gmail.com
www.LaraProperties.com
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