Posts Tagged ‘Sales Statistics’

One Home Sale Closed in Los Gatos Real Estate market

Los Gatos Home sales totaled 341 homes in the Los Gatos Real Estate market Last Year. We have a long way to go with only one sale closing escrow this past week.  It was on Tait Avenue though!  RARE!
There are 141 single family and condos available today in our Los Gatos Real Estate market combined,  ranging from a 1/1 condo $299,000.00 to a 14,000 sq ft single family Los Gatos Estate listed at a whopping $22mil.
The median Los Gatos Home price is over $2.6mil!

9  Properties in Los Gatos that are available are short sales
6  Los Gatos Homes are listed, for sale, as  foreclosures

CLICK IMAGE  below to see the only home that closed this month

Homes-Sold-In-Los-Gatos

Tait Ave Home Sold In Los Gatos

You can do a detailed search for homes available for  sale in the  the Los Gatos Real Estate market here.


Los Gatos Real Estate Closed Sales for 12/1 -12/8

Los Gatos-house-sold-buyer-sellerThe following homes in Los Gatos reported as closed (sold) this past week.  Congratulations to the new homeowners and the community they will certainly enjoy!

15400 VIA PALOMINO Single Family  4 bed(s) /3|1 bath(s)23,482 sq ft     Monte Sereno $2,395,000

16242 AZALEA WY Single Family  3 bed(s) /2|0 bath(s) 8,000 sq ft Los Gatos   $1,229,000

102 HOLLYCREST DR Single Family 3 bed(s) /2|0 bath(s) 7,070 sq ft  Los Gatos  $799,000

14225 LORA DR #102 Condominium 2 bed(s) /1|0 bath(s)     2,242 sq ft Los Gatos $345,000

These homes all sold for below their asking price from  High reduction of -9% for Lora Drive and low price reduction of 3% for Azelea Way.  Home sellers and agents in Los Gatos and surrounding areas should take heed of the substantial reductions made this week.    The days on market or CDOM are more relevant factors in pricing homes today than we have seen in the past few years.

This article  (here) is evidence our market is doing better than average.

Is My Agent Lying to Me? Part 4 Seller’s Advantage

The fundamental reason homes do not sell in a timely manner is due to sell-my-los gatos-home-house-list-for salemisplacing it in the market.   Pricing!  No one is willing to pay more than something is worth… everyone knows that.  Still, I am often befuddled to find so many agents list a home for more than market price?   It’s called ‘buying the listing’.

Buying the listing is when an agent will do anything to stick a sign in your flower bed, including listing at a higher price just to get you to sign on the dotted line.  I call it,  sticking it to you.  That’s exactly what it is when you consider the fact that your home will see little exposure, sit on the market longer and end up selling for less than you expected.  It happens every time!

Elizabeth Weintraub writes “…Maybe the first agent knows there will be two other agents competing for the listing, so the first agent names an astronomical figure. The second agent, upon hearing the first agent’s price, beats it. The third agent comes in higher yet.”

This is all based on the fact you have already implemented the basic tips to sell your home.

Are you thinking “but, if a buyer offers less than we are asking we can’t negotiate”?  If your home is priced right you will have several buyers considering an offer.  This presents a problem for the buyers, a level of uncertainty that you will even consider their low offer.  Hence, the offers that come will be more in line with the market.  Less serious buyers will go fishing elsewhere and not waste your time.

This salesman ‘buy the listing’ tactic only leads to more work than is necessary. I had a similar experience of my own when I recently sold my personal residence.  I don’t use ‘buy the listing’ tactics but, market conditions led to the same result.    The market was falling and I had to lower my price two times to catch a buyer.  It was like chasing the market downhill.  If I had known the banking system was going to experience such failures I would have listed at the eventual selling price from the onset to avoid the trouble.

In reality, the chance a home will sell in the first few weeks is far greater when it is priced correctly and prepared well.  Sounds intuitive enough, Right?   Go look at some homes for sale and see how little thought is given to home preparation.   This is especially important when considering a short sale.   The sooner you can yield a willing buyer the sooner you can move the time consuming process forward.

Showhomes, a national franchised home stager staged Tracy Truitt’s listing and it sold in eight days.   Tracey said…“I had an almost full price offer within a week of Showhomes’ staging, and a 25% higher offer than the two offers that had come in previously to the home being staged,” Truitt says.

I found keeping my house prepared well, clean and neat, was tiresome after just a couple of weeks.  I am a terrible merry maid.  If I had to deal with a Realtor I would have lost my mind!  I know can do better than some..look at what  these people did.

Each time I made a price adjustment more people called and disrupted breakfast, dinner and quiet family time.  It was unnerving more than once.  Buyers  sense  desperation when you drop your price and lower offers will follow.

You can guard against this by simply stepping outside your bubble and looking at the competition in an unbiased fashion.  This means you will have to forget all the trouble and expense you suffered when you updated and improved your home.  A buyer’s eye only sees your home compared to other like properties that are available.  You must do the same. No one cares if Aunt Clara helped you cook your first Turkey there.

Is this boring yet?

Wake up!  Do a Walk Score or a Megans Law search for your home? How about a Crime Report review?   I will bet my favorite tie that buyers considering your home are.  Think like a buyer!

Following your internet searches and open house viewings you can reasonably determine what your home should sell for. This will afford you the knowledge and understanding to say no to –salespeople-.  Half hearted buyers will resist the urge to make low ball offers and serious buyers will make their highest and best offers.

Would you be interested in learning what buyers complain about most?  If so, please comment and I will provide a definitive list and some ideas to overcome them.

Tips on Appraisals

One in Four Homes Lowered Price

Why do agents take over priced listings

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Pay now or Pay Later?

prepare to sell-los gatos-home for sale

Do you remember that commercial?  Was it a Mr. Goodwrench add?   We now know we payed them then and bailed them out this year!  Payed both times.   Ugh!

Pay now or Pay Later?  That is the question in our mortgage market now…not  Shakespearean,  but profound considering….Should you jump?

Mortgage rates eased for the fourth consecutive week, hitting historic lows well below 5 percent this week, Freddie Mac said in releasing the results of its latest Freddie Mac Reports.

Rates on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 4.78 percent with an average 0.7 point for the week ending Nov. 25, down from 4.83 percent last week and 5.97 percent a year ago.

This is what we have been expecting and will lead to higher rates as the market change cycles.  Not to mention the 1.25T  the Federal Reserve is spending to buy mortgage backed securities from Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae.

The program is going to continue through March 2010 which makes you wonder…Why are they delaying the inevitable?   The program was supposed to be finished up at the end of this year.   The answer is:  To keep the rates low.   Thank you for that.  What happens when the rates increase?

The Mortgage Bankers Association last month projected that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages will hit 5.4 percent next year, 6 percent in 2011, and 6.3 percent in 2012.   Inflation?

I would suggest buyers take this seriously.  Would you rather pay rate to a mortgage bank or a few thousand hard dollars now?

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Temporary Loan Mod Program…Failure?

Half million dollar house in Salinas, Californ...

Image via Wikipedia

650,000

That number represents 20% of eligible homeowners at least 60 days behind in their payments, according to the Treasury report. This is up from 16% a month earlier.

Despite the progress, housing counselors say the number of people falling into foreclosure vastly exceeds the ranks getting assistance. The number of filings hit a record high of 937,840 in the third quarter, according to RealtyTrac, an online marketer of foreclosed homes. That’s a 5% increase from the second quarter and a 23% jump over the third quarter of 2008.

The $75 billion Obama plan is “lagging behind the massive number of foreclosures that continue to pile up,” said John Taylor, head of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition.

But administration officials have said that the program, which was projected to help up to 4 million homeowners, is on track.  On Track?  Which track?  Becsude, if it”s the ‘railroad’ track..we are in REAL trouble.

The above excerpt is from CNNMoney‘s reporting and I have to say I don’t believe the Loan Mod scammers are going to go away soon enough for this to get markedly different anytime soon.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Loan Mod Scams…Is this the End?

pic via pibillwarner.files

pic via pibillwarner.files

The Governor of California, Arnold Shwartzenegger recently signed legislation to stop scammers from taking the money of troubled Homeowners and consumers who are looking to mitigate the damage the California economy is wreaking on them.

The California Bar Journal posted the names of some of the culprits and the results of their investigation from the task force created last March.  In this article it makes it clear that Safe Haven may be the most prolific violator of citizens rights.

I wouldn’t profess to be an expert in the world of Loan Modifications and forbearance’s however,  I believe my 16 year old son could do a better job!   What is it with these creeps!

A law is something creeps will simply find a way around.  This may not be the absolute end.

Do you know anyone who has been victimized by a scammer?  Together we can reduce their effectiveness.

HVCC Appraisal Rule is not helping!

Eagan, Minnesota
Image via Wikipedia

Beware if you are selling your home or if you are an interested buyer.  This article published by the San Jose Mercury news tells a true story of a sad result of government intervention.

When David and Penny Mann decided it was time to move to a retirement community, their real estate agent told them that in this rough market, it could take months to sell their downtown San Jose Victorian. So they were thrilled to receive back-to-back offers in the first week, and they accepted the first offer of $560,000, from an enthusiastic young couple buying their first home.

“Things were sailing through,” said David Mann, a retired minister.

But just days before the sale was to close, an appraisal required by a new federal code came in $100,000 below the sale price, torpedoing the deal and sending the buyers and sellers into an emotional tailspin. It’s just one example of the turmoil this new rule-intended to prevent fraud-has caused: Appraisers say it is forcing many of them out of business while pushing up fees and derailing sales, all at a time when the real estate market can ill afford such problems.

The new rule, which took effect May 1, forbids brokers from hiring their own appraisers and requires intermediaries-called appraisal management companies-to choose them instead.

The change was intended to reduce the possibility that brokers and lenders would pressure appraisers to raise house values to match sale prices, regardless of the true value. It affects all loans backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The rule meant the Manns’ first appraisal, which came in at the full sales price and was conducted before the rule took effect, was invalid, and they needed a new one. The second appraiser, based in Oakland and sent by an appraisal management company, told the Manns’ agent he had never worked in San Jose. When his appraisal came in $100,000 below the offer price, the lender wouldn’t approve the buyers’ loan.

“That’s when the drama began,” Mann said. “There is something so wrong in all this,” said Georgie Huff, president of Capital Properties in downtown San Jose, who represented the Manns. “And a lot of qualified buyers and sellers are being victimized.”

No one is tracking the precise results of the new rule, but Bill Hillestad, strategic director of Think Big Work Small, which provides resources for the real estate industry and is pushing to have the rule repealed, says his research offers some clues.

In his online poll of industry professionals, about two-thirds of respondents said they had had at least one appraisal come in under the purchase price since the new rules took effect, with the average difference being more than $13,000. And 90% of respondents said they had lost at least one transaction.

Hillestad said the code has the potential to kill the country’s budding real estate recovery by depressing prices even more than the foreclosure crisis. If willing sellers and buyers agree on a price, the appraisal shouldn’t scuttle the deal, he said.

“We are exactly the kind of sale which our country needs in order to begin getting housing sales moving again,” Penny Mann wrote in a letter to the lender for the couple who wanted to buy their home. As David Mann put it, the deal he struck “was a new stake in the ground to revive this neighborhood.”

The new rule, called the Home Valuation Code of Conduct, is part of the settlement of a lawsuit filed by New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, who had accused Washington Mutual of pressuring appraisers to inflate home values.

Accurate appraisals are necessary to prevent fraud in home sales and to protect lenders in case a loan holder defaults and the property has to be sold. Washington Mutual, however, was accused of inflating values to make more money on higher-priced loans.

While the intent was noble, the policy has had devastating consequences for some appraisers, many of whom have signed a petition (www.hvccpetition.com) to try to repeal the rule-a cause taken up by U.S. Rep. Gary Miller, a Southern California Republican who is co-sponsoring legislation asking for an 18-month moratorium.

A Santa Cruz appraiser who used to have about 10 jobs a month says she is now lucky to get just one, as the management companies change the way work is doled out. And instead of being paid between $350 and $500, she might get just $200. The management company pockets the difference. “I’m sure there were a lot of crooked appraisals. But to put every appraiser basically out of business is not OK,” said the appraiser, who didn’t want her name used for fear that she would jeopardize future work. “After having my business for 20 years, I’m about to lose my house.”

Qing Jiang, a San Jose appraiser, said the new rule is also having a chilling effect as appraisers, “to protect themselves, to avoid being accused of pushing values up, are putting the value at the lower end. This will push the housing values down and have a huge effect.”

For traditional home sellers like the Manns-both retired clergy with the United Church of Christ-the rule nearly cost them their retirement. The couple were waiting to take a tour of their new Southern California bungalow, near their children and grandchildren, when their agent called with the news that the deal was unraveling because of the second appraisal. “We postponed the tour for an hour,” Mann said, “and went to a neighborhood park and cried.”

The intentions of the HVCC rule have hurt more than helped and already struggling San Jose Real Estate market.

The buyers were equally devastated when their loan company balked at funding their mortgage. They had spent months looking for the perfect house, walking through at least 40 and viewing hundreds more online.

The Manns’ century-old Victorian was ideal for Michael Schlemmer, a lawyer. So the young lawyer was undeterred. “I’m an educated person. I’ve lived in the Bay Area my whole life,” he said. “I had no question it was worth $560,000-plus. Neither did my agent or the mortgage broker or the first appraiser who approved it.” Nor, as it turned out, did a third appraiser. After Huff insisted the management company send someone with a 408 area code, the value came in at the sales price. Early this month, after weeks of hand-wringing, the deal closed.

This is only one of the many pitfalls in this new market that we are having to overcome.   What challenges have you experienced?

San Jose Mercury News article

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Market Stats For the week of 11/29/08

 

Here are the numbers for the week ending 11/29/08.
The following is considered the rule of thumb:
Buyers market if: Less than 25% of the houses in inventory are in Escrow
Sellers market if: 25% or more of the houses in inventory are in Escrow
Class 1= Single Family Homes Only as of 11/29/08:
 
   Zone                                                    % of listings in escrow        Active # of Listings
1              South County                                       25.3%                                     634
2              Santa Teresa                                         34.8%                                     101
3              Evergreen                                              32.4%                                     376
4              East Valley                                            33.8%                                     636
5              North Valley                                          32.3%                                     237
6              Milpitas                                                 34.2%                                     121
8              Santa Clara                                            26.7%                                     187
9              Downtown                                            29.0%                                     262
10            Willow Glen                                          15.2%                                     245
11            South San Jose                                     30.3%                                     372
12            Blossom                                                 31.5%                                     224
13            Almaden                                                18.3%                                     094
14            Cambrian                                               26.5%                                     177
15            Campbell                                                22.7%                                     167
16            Los Gatos                                              13.8%                                     188
17            Saratoga                                                  6.4%                                     131
18            Cupertino                                              20.4%                                     117
19            Sunnyvale                                             23.9%                                     150
 
INVENTORY CHANGE
FOR THE FOURTH QUARTER OF 2008
(AREAS 1 through 23, that is: Gilroy through Sunnyvale)
Class 1 Properties:
Date
Active
Active Percent Change from Previous Week
Pending
Pending Percent Change from Previous Week
9/27/08
4804
 
1893
 
10/4/08
4704
Down 2.1%
1851
Down 2.2%
10/11/08
4775
Up 1.5%
1813
Down 2.1%
10/18/08
4737
Down 0.8%
1814
Almost the same
10/25/08
4770
Up 0.7%
1792
Down 1.2%
11/2/08
4702
Down 1.4%
1718
Down 4.1%
11/8/08
4669
Down 0.7%
1683
Down 2.0%
11/15/08
4606
Down 1.3%
1714
Up 1.8%
11/22/08
4527
Down 1.7%
1717
Up 0.2%
11/29/08
4455
Down 1.6%
1674
Down 2.5%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Overall Change from 9/27/08 to 11/29/08:
 
Active:
Down 7.3%
Pending:
Down 11.6%
________________________________________________________________________
Class 2 Properties:
Date
Active
Active Percent Change from Previous Week
Pending
Pending Percent Change from Previous Week
9/27/08
1526
 
587
 
10/4/08
1510
Down 1.0%
559
Down 4.8%
10/11/08
1531
Up 1.4%
550
Down 1.6%
10/18/08
1531
No Change
534
Down 2.9%
10/25/08
1530
Almost the same
508
Down 4.9%
11/2/08
1488
Down 2.7%
499
Down 1.8%
11/8/08
1499
Up 0.7%
489
Down 2.0%
11/15/08
1489
Down 0.7%
493
Up 0.8%
11/22/08
1473
Down 1.1%
481
Down 2.4%
11/29/08
1457
Down 1.1%
479
Down 0.4%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Overall Change from 9/27/08 to 11/29/08
 
Active:
Down 4.5%
Pending:
Down 18.4%