Ann Arbor Real Estate: How to Sell a House, When You Have to Sell It Now via WSJ.com

Wow! Where was this article last year when the Ann Arbor real estate market was reeling from the Pfizer pull-out? While the article would not have mitigated any of the pain, it sure would have been reassuring to many sellers that this is how you should go about selling your home in a declining market. The Wall Street Journal recently did an article on how to sell your home when you absolutely, positively have to sell it in this market.

A few highlights:

1. DON’T WAIT AROUND.

Even in the better housing areas, it’s taking a long time to sell houses; and in the hardest-hit metro areas, inventories of unsold homes are stretching well past 180 days.

So, don’t try to sit out the market. That’s what hundreds of other timid sellers are doing, each of them hoping — somehow, some way — that hanging on the sidelines will improve prices and, ultimately improve his or her chances for selling success. It won’t. Not if you expect to sell anytime soon. If you want your place sold, the best way to make sure that happens is to put it up for sale.

Obviously, you should take advantage of your local market cycles — early spring is usually better for selling in much of the country — but otherwise don’t try timing the market. You won’t have any better luck than a stock trader who’s always holding out for the market highs or lows.

3. PRICE IT CHEAPLY.

Don’t fight the market by trying to price your house at bubble-era levels or by factoring in all those improvements you made. It won’t fly.

Set a realistic, salable price on day one. Don’t let the house hang around on the market as you gradually lower the price. Forget what you think the house should be worth or what it was worth three years ago. That’s not what it’s worth today.

Smart buyers will be looking for bargains. So you must set your price below comparable nearby properties. Look at the asking prices of neighboring houses, and set your price to beat them. If prices in your area are generally down 20% from where they were at the bubble peak in 2005, then price your house 25% to 30% below its peak bubble value. Your area down 40%? Be prepared to take just half of what the house was worth three years ago. Yes, it’s painful. But if you want to sell, you don’t have much choice.

[ed. We're back to 2000 price points in the Ann Arbor real estate market.]

And remember: In much of the country, renting is still a better deal right now than buying. As you try to settle on a price, look at rents on comparable properties. Buyers are not likely to be counting on huge price appreciation, as they did during the bubble, so they may be less willing to take on the higher monthly costs of home buying and owning. You must set a price that makes someone’s prospective mortgage and home-owning costs look like a better deal than a month’s rent.

4. HIRE A TOP REAL-ESTATE AGENT.

Get the best, most aggressive selling (listing) agent you can find.

When everything was selling before it even hit the market, of course, you didn’t need the best. You just needed the cheapest. But not these days.

Fortunately, in this market, real-estate brokers are even more anxious than you. They’re eager to get whatever work they can, so don’t rely on your cousin with the real-estate license or your best friend’s wife.

Ask, instead, for the local real-estate office’s top salesperson. All offices have one or two sellers who greatly outperform their colleagues. That’s who you want.

Interview various agents and insist that they present you with a well-conceived marketing plan that goes way beyond the usual Internet page, one or two open houses and a yard sign. (Think about using a professional photographer for multiple shots on the primary Web listing, your house as the featured “home of the week” in the local newspaper, a decorating segment on a morning chat show, a stop on the local garden club’s spring tour.)

Enough said!

Contact Team366 for a peek at our Listing Syndication System and see how we can get your home sold in today’s market.

Ann Arbor Real Estate at 2000 Price Points: You Saw It Here First!

Yesterday, the Ann Arbor News had an article about the Ann Arbor area real estate market and how the current price points are averaging out to the year 2000 price points. In plainer English, this means that today, on July 11th, 2008, you can buy a house for about the same price as the same home in 2000!

For some, this is reason to yabber about the collapse of the housing market, the credit market, housing affordability, you choose the topic. Team366 simply knows that we have been all over this trend for a year!

If you had been following our blog in August of last year, you would have bumped into this article:

August 2007 Ann Arbor Area Market Report

Or, if you were trying to stay warm this past winter by spending time in the warm, soft glow of your monitor, you might have read this post:

January 2008 Ann Arbor Area Market Report

Any way you slice it, Team366 is ahead of the times!

Want to sell your home or condo? Check out how we utilize Real Estate Video and a listing syndication system to push your property to over 500 Google Indexed links!

Drop us a note at info-at-team366-dot-com or twitter Todd (@toddwaller) for more information!

Ann Arbor Area Real Estate Statistics - June 2008

2008 is officially half done!  The Fourth of July is behind us, the Olympics are just around the corner and we are all anxious to learn about the housing market thus far in Washtenaw County.  The Short story:  Sales Prices Down, number of Closings Up, number of New Listings Down, and Overall Volume of closings is Up.

From the Big House Data Executive Summary:

The Washtenaw County Housing Market is showing signs of health. The first half of 2008 is officially over and the numbers aren’t bad! The number of closings for 2008 year to date are up, compared to the first half of 2007. The number of listings are down, compared to the first half of 2007. This is a great indicator that purchasers are seeing value in the market and are depleting the inventory of available homes. Also encouraging is that the year to date closed volume is up, compared to the first half of 2007.

The mantra continues for sellers: price your property LOWER than the most recent comparable sale, and make your property gorgeous. BHD has heard of deals where there were multiple offers, and offers over list price!

For buyers: get your pre-qualification prior to hitting the streets. Get your financial house in order and be ready to move quickly when the perfect property comes on the market. You are not the only ones who see this as a great time to purchase a home.

On to the Stats!

Average List Price - June 2008

 

June 2008 Average List Price - Ann Arbor Area Real Estate The overall average list price in June was $245,794, down over 4% compared to June 2007.  Year to date, the average list price is down over 6%, compared to the first six months of 2007

Average Sales Price - June 2008

 

June 2008 Average Sales Price - Ann Arbor Area Real Estate

May saw an average sales price of $195,886, down nearly 16% from June 2007.  Compared to the same time frame last year, the average sales price is down nearly 11.5%.

Number of Listings v Closings - June 2008

 

Jun08Chart_Page_06

410 closings in June 2008, up nearly 4% compared to June 2007. Year to date, compared to the same timeframe in 2007, the number of closings is up nearly 17.5%.

With 939 new listings in June 2008, that represents a nearly 27% drop over June 2007. For the year, listings are down nearly 31%.

Give Team366 a call to learn more about our Listing Syndication System (LSS).  Our LSS generates scads of Google indexed links about your property.  In most cases we generate between 450 and 1,000 links.  There is nothing more crucial to the sale of your Ann Arbor Area Home than an excellent market system!

Call us at 734.476.1343 or drop us an email at: info-at-team366-dot-com.

Turning the Corner on the Michigan Real Estate Market

Why it is Time to Enter the Market and Secure Your Investment Dollar

Is Housing Slump At a Bottom - WSJ 1

Have you been watching the media talk about real estate recently?  Be it print or video, the media is catching on that it is time for folks to purchase real estate.  Heck, Larry King Live the other day had a few folks on to talk about the foreclosure mess and this is what Donald Trump has to say about our national housing market:

TRUMP: I do agree with Barbara. I think that this is a great opportunity to buy. And, unfortunately, not everybody is in that position because they have seen erosion. But if you’re out there and you have some cash, this is a fantastic time to buy. And even if you don’t have cash, this is the time to buy because you can make deals with banks.

Hmm, if Barbara Corcoran, Robert Kiyosaki, and Donald Trump are saying this is a good time to purchase, it might be a good time to purchase!

Need more proof?

Check out the chart above.  When housing starts drop below 1 million, they immediately rebound, and pretty rapidly too.  The valleys also happen to coincide with national recessions, but that’s a topic for a different post and likely different blog!

It may be time to purchase, but what about pricing?  Are homes any more affordable than in the past?FACL_Q1_2008_V15 3

The First American CoreLogic CoreMortgage Risk Monitor shows that through the end of 2007, national housing values were trending to a less favorable point for purchasers.  Any point along the graph to the left that is below 1.00 is a point at which homes are more affordable than the 1995 baseline.

So housing affordability is still good, but got less affordable through the end of 2007?!

You Need More Examples and Articles?

Wall Street Journal May 6th, 2008- The Housing Crisis is Over

Home sales peaked in July 2005. [emphasis added]

Since then, house prices have fallen 10%-15%, while incomes have kept growing (albeit more slowly recently) and mortgage rates have come down 70 basis points from their highs. As a result, it now takes19% of monthly income for the average home buyer, and 31% of monthly income for the first-time home buyer, to purchase a house. In other words, homes on average are back to being as affordable as during the best of times in the 1990s. Numerous households that had been priced out of the market can now afford to get in. [emphasis added]

Wall Street Journal May 6th, 2008 - Is Housing Slump at the Bottom?

It’s important to note that real-estate prices in many areas are far from a historic bargain. And where there is a glut, prices — obviously — are likely to stay lower for longer. It is still a buyer’s market. If you are buying, drive a hard bargain.

Prices may still fall further. Yet if you are tempted to keep waiting for homes to get a lot cheaper, there are several reasons to think that might not happen.

First, there are too many other bargain hunters out there.

Second, the falling dollar has made these homes even cheaper to foreign buyers. There are plenty of people in Europe for whom Florida is now a bargain.

Third, interest rates are low right now. I hesitate to give my fellow Americans any extra incentive to borrow yet more money, but you can get a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage under 6%. If the economy recovers that won’t last. If you are shopping for a home, it is probably worth seeing if you can lock in one of these rates cheaply.

Finally, in an age of weak currencies and rising inflation, “real” or “hard” assets are in demand. That should include land, bricks and mortar. Sure, real estate isn’t as cheap as it has been at other times in the past. But are Florida homes any more expensive these days than steel, or copper, or gold? I’m not so sure.

Team366 even offers localized housing data!  Check out our quarterly inventory reports and our monthly housing market reports.

You’re still reading? Great!  Take advantage of this market, get into that home you’ve been meaning to buy.  Get locked into a near historically low interest rate, and let the market “recover” around you buoying the equity in your property.

Begin your Ann Arbor Area property search, talk with a lender and let’s go find a home!

For Sale: 617 Powell, Dundee, MI

 

Like New Condo in Burgeoning Dundee, Michigan

 

617_powell_MLS_HID476670_ROOMMainExterior The Courtyards of Dundee is where you will find this wonderful two bedroom, two and a half bath condo.  Cathedral ceilings in the bedrooms, an attached two car garage and ample storage are just the beginning!

This clean, functional kitchen flows into the main entertainment space and acts as the gathering point in the condo.  The kitchen, entrance and first floor half bath feature hardwood floors.

617_powell_MLS_HID476670_ROOMkitchen
617_powell_MLS_HID476670_ROOMcabelasindundee Located around the corner for downtown Dundee, Michigan, this condo is a hop, skip and jump from the world famous Cabela’s.

Here is some more information, photos and a walkthrough video of 617 Powell, Dundee, MI.

 

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