Cutting Your Losses |
Robert Bruner, the Dean of Darden School of Business at UVA has a blog that I often find interesting. His latest entry is based on a quote by the famed investor Bernard Baruch "If you have made a mistake, cut your losses as quickly as possible."
He talks about the difficulties of doing that in the business world, specifically using the AOL/Time Warner merger as an example. But one of the points he makes about why it's so difficult seems applicable in real estate as well.
He talks about "sunk cost" thinking. In other words, a seller says "I bought this place for $400,000. I'm not selling it for less than that."
The problem becomes that if you really do need to sell there's no guarantee you can hold out long enough for prices to go back up, or even to stabilize. If you're a seller who's moved on and you're paying two mortgages, how long can you continue doing that?
If you refuse to lower the price or let an offer get away for $10,000 difference, what happens when it's still on the market six months from now and you've paid that much more out in mortgage payments and prices have continued to fall?
Sometimes, cutting your losses is the best advice, in business and in real estate!
