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Denver Real Estate Blogspot

August 2007

Exclusive Buyer's Agents Strategize on Making Low Offers

Aug. 20, 2007
Categorized in: Buying a home...

Exclusive Buyer's Agent in DenverAn article in the Wall Street Journal points out a successful strategy for making a low offer in a stagnant market. During a hot market sellers were used to turning up their noses at lowball offers. But with the real estate slump affecting many parts of the country sellers should learn that a low offer isn't an insult. According to national real estate expert Danielle Kennedy, a low offer is "an expression of interest," and should start the ball rolling to a successful sale.

Making low offers is part of the stock in trade of Exclusive Buyer's Agents (EBAs). Not that it's a standard practice in every market. But we do want to make sure that our clients don't pay more than a property is worth. The secret is knowing market values and being able to demonstrate to a seller that the offer price is reasonable given sale prices of comparable properties in the neighborhood. EBAs have to give the seller strong justification for a low offer.

Denver's real estate market is uneven. Prices in some neighborhoods are stable, even appreciating, while in others are dropping slightly, and in still others are dropping drastically. This kind of a market suggests that buyers should be careful in who they choose to represent them. Buyer's Agents who don't work exclusively with buyers can be affected by their expertise in representing sellers, wanting to be fair to the seller, sometimes to the detriment of their buyer client. Exclusive Buyer's Agents don't have that kind of a mindset. Their mindset is on getting the best price for their buyer clients.

Denver Market Conditions August 2007

Aug. 14, 2007
Categorized in: Denver Market Info
August 2007 Market Conditions in DenverDenver’s market is beginning to show signs of recovery, but not in prices. The median price of a single family home dropped 3.1 percent from June to $255,000 and from $259,500 last July, a 1.8 percent drop. But fewer homes were on the market in July 2007 than in 2006 by 5.4 percent. July was the seventh consecutive month to show a drop in the number of homes left unsold.
 
5,951 homes were under contract in July, 7.5 percent higher than July 2006 when there were 5,538 under contract, showing growing demand. The number of homes sold and closed also increased, from 4,850 in July 2006 to 4,980.
 
The number of foreclosures has dropped overall, likely due to high numbers of homes being sold at auction. During the first weekend in August 300 homes were taken off the market from auction activity, reducing the number that had been flooding the market. It will still be some time before foreclosures are fully absorbed. Together with resale homes not under foreclosure, the total number is some 30,000 on the market, a far cry from the 9,000 inventory in 1999 at the height of Denver’s double-digit increases in sales prices. Of course, population increase has contributed to the increase in number of unsold homes on the market, but nowhere near the contribution by foreclosures.
 
Fewer buyers are looking for homes which impacts inventory and prices, and those who are looking want bargains. Buyers still have many choices of homes available to them, and don’t have to be in a hurry to buy. This week I showed homes in Aurora’s Hoffman Town to a couple relocating from California. This is a neighborhood changing rapidly with a disproportionate amount of “fix and flip” homes emptied by borrowers adversely affected by the sub-prime mortgage meltdown. Investors have stepped in and swooped up these low-priced homes close to the Denver metro area’s newest medical center complex at the former Fitzsimons Army base. Many are still available for sale, so many that I told my buyers if they weren’t quite ready yet to buy, they could be assured of a steady stream of these spacious remodeled homes so close to a major medical redevelopment.
 
In contrast to single family homes prices, condo sold prices (which include townhomes) rose to $192,885 from $186,328 in June, a 3.6 percent increase, but dropped slightly from last year’s July price of $194,705.
 
Average prices for single family homes in July 2007 dropped from $334,833 in June and $328,721 in July 2006 to $316,024.
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