Archive for Pricing

1208balanceSelling a Kokomo Home is a Balancing Act

There are a lot of things you need to think about when selling your house in Kokomo. Today we are only going to talk about three of these. They are the three most important things every potential seller must consider if they want to sell their home in today’s market in Kokomo or any of the surrounding areas:

  1. Supply and Demand
  2. Market Value
  3. Right Pricing

Let’s look at each of these one at a time:

Supply and Demand:

Regardless of what the product is, if there is more of a product than there are people who want to buy the it, prices fall! And it doesn’t matter whether we are talking about houses, cars, skillets, socks or widgets.

If you take a look at the chart I did a while back for the posting It’s all about competition! I think you will see how Supply and Demand applies to selling a house any where in our area – Kokomo, Greentown, Russiaville, Sharpsville, etc., etc., etc. Look at any price range. The inventory was high!

Example: There were 188 houses for sale in the price range of $120,000-$180,000 in Howard County. A lot of houses! Each month an average of about 21-22 buyers bought houses in that price range. What that means is that if not one more house came on the market, the inventory or supply of houses in that price range was 8-9 months!

Market Value:

Basically, the market value of a home is the highest price a buyer will pay and the lowest price a seller will accept.

Market value is not:

  • It is not what you want to “get out” of your house.
  • It is not an appraisal done a year or two ago or even six months ago – especially if it was done for a re-finance or home equity loan.
  • It is not what you owe on your house.

Remember how many houses are on the market in the Kokomo area? Buyers are out there “comparison” shopping! They are looking for that one house that offers them the most features and benefits that meet their goals and needs for the lowest price.

Right Pricing:

No matter what kind of market – a buyers’ market, a sellers’ market or an even market – an overpriced house will rarely sell for an inflated price. Usually an overprice house ends up  going through several price reductions and listing periods. If and when the house eventually sells, it is usually for less than it would have sold had it been priced correctly to start. Another interesting fact about an overpriced house… It will actually help sell “right” priced houses!

Pricing a house to sell is part science, part math and in large-part market knowledge. You don’t want your house to be overpriced or underpriced, so you need to rely on a real estate professional or an appraiser to do a through Competitive Market Analysis (CMA) or appraisal for your home in today’s market.

Sellers Who Need to Sell, Sell!

Even though supply and demand are out of whack for sellers; if you need to sell, you can sell! The main thing you need to ask yourself is whether you are really motivated to sell. There are a lot of motivated sellers in the Kokomo area:

  1. Bank-owned properties (foreclosures or REOs)
  2. Pre-foreclosure properties** (short-sales)
  3. Builders
  4. Divorce situations
  5. Bankruptcies
  6. Job relocations
  7. Everyone else

Where do you fall in that list? Are you really motivated to sell?

If you are ready and motivated to sell your home, call me at 765-513-0354 or email me.

**NOTE:
If you are having financial difficulties and are facing the possibility of foreclosure, please call me at 765-513-0354 or email me. I have extensive training in alternatives to foreclosure. You may be able to keep your house.

Categories : Competition, Pricing, Selling
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Aug
26

Appraisals Go Down in Kokomo

Posted by: Betty | Comments (2)

betty100-thumb.jpg
Kokomo Home Appraisal Goes Down!

Dear Betty,

We bought our home in Kokomo a little over two years ago. It was brand new and we got a really good deal on it. The builder was leaving Kokomo and slashed the prices on their last few houses. It appraised for almost $20,000 more than we paid for it!

Now we want to refinance and we had to get an appraisal. We got the appraisal back and it says our house appraises for $10,000 less now than when we bought it two years ago.

How can that be? Something has to be wrong!

Bewildered Homeowner

Dear Bewildered,

First, let me explain a little about what an appraisal is and how your current appraisal can be less than the one done when you bought the house two years ago.

An appraisal is an estimate of “fair market value” for a home at a certain point in time. Fair market value is what a buyer might pay – or a seller might receive – for a home at a certain point in time.

You may be thinking, “But I’m not trying to sell my home, I just want to refinance it.”

You are right; but your lender has to look at your house from the stand point of its “fair market value” in case you default on your loan and they have to take it back and sell it.

An appraisal has two purposes:

  • to protect you from spending/borrowing too much on a home
  • to protect the lender from loaning more money than a home is worth (This applies in your case – the lender protecting themselves.)

There are several steps in an appraisal. Perhaps the most important step is using what are called comparable properties or “comps” to estimate the “fair market value” of a home.

“Comps” are properties that have sold in the recent past. They are located in the same area and are similar in size, age, style, amenities, etc. Ideally the homes have sold within the past three to six months. The key here is homes that have sold – not houses that are for sale now; not houses that were on the market and didn’t sell; but houses that actually sold!

Now to your 2 appraisals…

Appraisal 1 – 2007

Let’s say you closed on your house June 1, 2007. When your house was appraised, the comparable homes had to sell between December 2006 and May 2007 – three to six months prior to your June 1 closing. The appraised value was based on homes similar to yours that sold before you closed on your home.

Appraisal 2 – 2009

Now, fast forward to August 1, 2009. You know you got a good deal on your house and you know it appraised for much more than you paid two years ago. But this appraisal for your refinance was based on home sales of similar homes in the past six months – homes sold between February 2009 and July 2009.

Why has the appraised value of your home gone down?

There are several reasons why the “market value” of your home and every other home in Kokomo has gone down:

  • General economic down-turn
  • Fewer homes selling
  • Discounted prices on foreclosures
  • Unemployment or fear of unemployment
  • Fewer buyers qualify for financing

It may not be any consolation to you; but you are in a much better position than many homeowners in the Kokomo area. Your home is still worth more than you paid for it and what you owe on it. Most homeowners (including me), who bought in the past 5-6 years, have lost “market value” on their homes. We can’t sell our homes for what we paid for them. And depending on how much equity we have in the house, can’t refinance them either.

Have a question about buying or selling Kokomo real estate?
Ask Betty!

 

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*Used with permission - by Mollie W. Wasserman

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