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    The Eleven Reasons People Can't Sell Their Homes

    Fantasy Finance

    The environment for home sales becomes more difficult with each passing month. Some estimates put 11 million mortgages, about 20% of the U.S. total, underwater, meaning that homeowners owe their banks more than the underlying properties are worth. Home repossessions reached more than 100,000 for the first time in September. Rising foreclosure rates continue to further depress housing prices.

    The federal government let its tax benefit for homeowners expire in April and has not renewed it since them. The program did boost sales earlier this year. Shoppers must now face a market without the credit in which many home prices continue to fall.

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    The clamor over flawed foreclosure paperwork and robo-signers could further chill the housing market. People who might buy have bought a home in foreclosure will now worry about obtaining proper documentation and effective transfer of title.

    24/7 Wall St. spoke with experts at real estate research firms Zillow.com and RealtyTrac to find the best way to sell a home. We also interviewed management from the National Association of Realtors, a number of real estate brokers, bank managers and elected officials in affluent communities. What emerged from these conversations and our research is the following: successful home sellers often do the same small number of things correctly. Often, these tactics are the difference between finding a buyer and not.

    1. Pick the Best Broker

    Many people who decide to sell contact a real estate brokerage with a sterling reputation or go to one that has the largest number of listings. Frequently, when potential sellers call these firms, they are turned over to the first available broker in the office. That person is often not the best representative. As a matter of fact, what is a successful broker doing in the office anyway? There are a small number of brokers in most markets who have a better track record than their peers. Most of them have been brokers for a long time and did not lose their jobs when the housing bubble collapsed.

    2. Get an Appraisal

    Sellers should obtain an appraisal for their home before they put it on the market. One of the major reasons house sales fall apart is that the bank assesses the home for less than the buyer has agreed to pay. For example, a buyer and seller agree on a price of say $250,000. Then the buyer goes to his bank to get a mortgage. But, the bank appraises the house for $200,000. Now, the buyer has to put up more money. Sellers who get their own appraisals get a realistic idea of what price a bank would value a house at before they enter into a sale. Most appraisers already do some work for banks. An appraisal often tells a seller what a "safe" price is. And an appraisal's average cost is only about $200.

    3. Get the Right "Comp"

    Sellers must make sure that foreclosures in their area are included in the "comps" the Realtor gives them. Traditionally, a broker will give a seller a list of similar properties in the market and that information is part of what is used to set a price. What brokers do not always do is put the price of any foreclosed properties that are comparable into the calculation. A typical foreclosed home sells for 25% to 30% less than similar inventory in the same area. If sellers don't take that into consideration, their home will not be priced competitively and they put themselves at a disadvantage. Sellers wind up slashing prices after their overvalued properties are on the market for several months without success.

    4. Tax Assessment

    Low property taxes are critical to finding buyers. Property taxes in most cities, towns and counties have gone up for years as home values appreciated. This revenue is used to run schools and other local services. However, now home values have dropped sharply, and the appraisals by local authorities on which taxes are based are too high. Many cities have a process for homeowners to request lower appraisals, and as a consequence obtain a reduced property tax. Some states even have a board of appeals for homeowners who do not think they were treated fairly. One way for people to get local authorities to cut the tax assessment of their home is to put it on the market at below the appraised price. If the home does not sell for several months, they can present empirical evidence of the lower value. A home assessed for $300,000 that goes on the market for $275,000, but does not sell for a year, is probably not worth $300,000.

    5. Conserve Utilities

    Turn the lights off! Most buyers ask for utility bills. "Energy wasters" who sell a home will rue the times they forgot to turn off lights, turn down the air conditioner or left the TV on all day. It would be ill-advised to fake the amount of energy being used by simply living in the dark and cutting utility costs to nearly zero. However, careful and prudent use of energy can cut bills by enough so that a buyer does not have sticker shock about what it costs to maintain electricity, gas or oil to run a house.

    6. Sell "Green"

    Not very many homes are actually built with environmentally friendly material or heated by solar panels or wind. But those that are have a special appeal to the crowd that buys green cars such as the Prius. A seller may have one of only a few "green" homes in their town or city. That may make it highly desirable to many shoppers.

    7. Curb Appeal

    This item appears on most lists, and many sellers don't bother to take the advice to prune the hedges or clean the gutters. But it is even more complex than that. Walk to the road on which your home is located. Now walk toward the house. What does a buyer see for the first time? Most sellers never bother to look at their homes through a buyer's eyes. Do the shingles need a paint job? Are the shutters looking shoddy? "Love at first sight" is no less rare with homes than with people.

    8. Everything Is Negotiable

    Negotiate the fee with the broker. The fee paid to a Realtor for selling a home is traditionally 6%. Sellers often believe that they can get that down to 5% or even 4%. But, in a market where brokers are desperate for business, pressing for 3% or even 2% may work. Whatever the savings are, they can materially affect how much a seller can drop the price of his home and still walk away with a profit.

    9. Get an Inspection

    Sellers should do some of the inspection work and testing before their home goes on the market. Inspectors for buyers are often aggressive when they report what is "wrong" with a home to their clients. For as little as $250, an inspector will go through your house and tell you what the inspector is likely to flag such as a roof leak or old, energy-wasting windows. That gives the seller a chance to fix the problem for less than the buyer may want to lower the price by, or at least know the items that a buyer will use to negotiate down the price.

    10. Hire a "Stager"

    For as little at $200, you can hire someone who can make your home look better by moving pictures, furniture, lights and addressing problems that may make the home show poorly. These people are cousins to the men and women who "fix" expensive homes before magazines come in to photograph them for stories. "Stagers" have lists of tricks that few Realtors and almost no homeowners know. The "better" your home looks, the more appealing it will be to potential buyers.

    11. Fix It First

    Sell a house that does not need any work. In a market in which people count every penny and worry about job security, fewer buyers want homes that are "fixer uppers" that require work that could cost thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars to address. These days, a buyer choosing between two homes will most likely take the one that needs the least work. It may cost some money to get your home to the point where a buyer can walk in and do almost no work. However, it may be the difference between selling a home and having it languish on the market.

    ___

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    11 comments

    • John M  •  12 hours ago
      The reason I couldn't sell my house is because a storm blew the roof off and Alstate insurance Company made out the check to me and Bank of America. The B of A said sign the check and give us the roofers bid and we will pay it. I did what they said and they kept the check. After dozens of lies and saying they lost the paperwork they kept the money forever. Alstate Insurance Co. said "That is Fraud what the B of A did." I bet that bank ruined many lives and caused many suicides .
    • UBCN1BADC  •  Bakersfield, California  •  11 days ago
      Good luck getting your property shown if you beat your broker up on the commission! That is the worst advice possable to give the public. If your broker let's you beat them out of his money, what do you think he is going to do with your money!?! And that is if any other brokers will show your property at a discount commission;) the only way this will happen is if you are selling a million dollar property and there is room for everybody to get paid! Is your property worth a million dollars?... Think about it people.
    • John M  •  12 days ago
      I had a buyer with cash that wanted to buy my home when a storm blew the roof off my home. The insurance company made a check out for 25 thousand dollars for damage. Allstate insurance made the check out to me and Bank of America. B of A said sign the check and we will pay the roofing contractor. I did sign the check and Bank of America stole the check. Pure Fraud. Not kinda, sorta but pure conspired Fraud. There shoud be prison time for these liars and cheaters.
    • Jay  •  12 days ago
      How about something a bit more recent?
    • Jayne  •  Los Angeles, California  •  1 month 24 days ago
      There are few buyers because they DO NOT QUALIFY under the scrutiny that is our current loan market. Odubmo does nothing to help this or good people who never needs FANNIE or FREDDIE to purchase a home. They get no help while they go under. Good bye Obama!
    • Jerry  •  Boise, Idaho  •  2 months ago
      Reason Number One: the magic knee grow in the whitehouse.
    • Ron  •  Tampa, Florida  •  2 months ago
      this market may stay low for years,yes years if you are buying make offer lower than the lowest price and leave and be ready to close fast when this happens.
    • josef  •  Newhall, California  •  3 months ago
      Include foreclosures in the comps?Are you serious? Realtors would not do that.It is like comparing apples and oranges. You cannot compare the sale price of a house of a person who walked away and let the bank foreclose, to the sale price of a house which sold in the traditional way. In my area the foreclosures are listed at 70% less than the normal sale prices. That is not fair to the sellers who have kept up their home and the payments. Let the investors snap up the foreclosures so the market can normalize and we can stop taking bad advice from people who don't know what they're talking about.
      • Allan 3 months ago
        I agree it seems not fair but the reality is most buyers want the best deal and that includes foreclosures comps. I am currently looking to buy in the next few months but will only look at homes that are priced "right" and that includes foreclosure/Short Sales comps. Tracking recent sales in the areas I am looking support that approach. When you see a listing that is priced too high you can see they are trying to make a profit or break even which inludes selling costs. It's either a stubborn seller, desparate realtor or both. The end result is a stale listing. All I can say to those folks involved good luck and enjoy open houses every weekend and all that comes with selling your house (ie. house cleaning, cotsco meat and cheese runs, impromptu showings for the Chin or Patel family who will only end up low balling you in the end lol) for the next year or more. Advice to sellers...Price it high and watch your house sit or bite the bullet include "all" comps and move on only to be renters for the next few years. After dealing with selling your ball and chain err home, that may be a good thing.
      • Matt M 2 months ago
        I agree. I know that foreclosed and traditional for sale homes make up the market but to have them added as a comp is a joke. Apples to Apples people.
      • Jay 1 month 26 days ago
        Apple to apple rferes to things like the number of bedrooms, bathrooms, and square footage as well as area. I think many sellers are not realistic in this market just like the buyers in the last market who are now in foreclosure weren't realistic
    • darlenes  •  3 months ago
      thanks to HGTV shows many new home buyers expect the houses they are looking at to be in move in condition . try a little sweat and fix the house up a little at a time , also I get sooooo tired of house hunters saying oh this yard will be perfect for Fido is that dog going to make the house payment ? The yard is to big to mow , this would be great for entertaining, the master bedroom is the wrong color etc etc so have your new home custom built if you dont like whats out there ! Get off your lazy behind and put some work into that house the more things you want in a home the more your mortgage is going to be . Its funny that new home buyers cant see behing the color of the walls or the odd furniture placement who cares , I always look at what I can do with the space and I dont need a stager to fix it .
      • Jayne 1 month 24 days ago
        The dog is a family member too! The dog enables the homeowner to go to work and make the payment. If there was no dog, there would be no way to alleviate the stress of the day. The homeowner with have a nervous break down and all would be homeless. Snap out of it!
    • John M  •  4 months ago
      The reason their are fewer buyers is because Bank of America has lied and cheated so many former homeowners that many will never buy again.
    • Ron  •  Tampa, Florida  •  2 months ago
      Remember Bank of america and Wells Fargo were the 2 top crooked banks when this mess all started.

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