Written by Jim the Realtor

April 23, 2021

It never occurs to agents to properly conduct a bidding war where the market decides the winner.

Instead, they choose the easy route and just collect offers, itemize them on a spreadsheet, and then point out a winner to the sellers. It is an ego-boosting choice that fares well around the brokerage’s water cooler, but is likely to leave loads of money on the table.

Agents who deny open bidding and just process one round of blind offers are clerks, not salesmen.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/23/realestate/home-selling.html

By the time they got the last offer, Quinn and Daryn Shapurji had received 54 bids on their four-bedroom, single-family house in Fishers, Ind., in just three days. Ms. Shapurji said they felt totally overwhelmed — and a bit melancholy.

“We felt bad that we had to say no to so many people, because we got a lot of beautiful letters from buyers saying how much they loved our house and why they wanted to live in the area,” said Ms. Shapurji, 32, a closing coordinator for a home builder. “Some buyers had already struck out on five or six homes.”

Chris Dossman, the couple’s real estate agent, suggested they take a cash offer that was $25,000 above their home’s list price of $220,000. “It wasn’t the highest offer they received, but the cash buyer waived the appraisal, so we knew that we weren’t going to have an issue with the home closing from a financing perspective,” said Ms. Dossman, an agent with Century 21 Scheetz based in Indianapolis.

“Fifty-four offers is by far the highest number of offers that I’ve ever received for a listing,” added Ms. Dossman, who has been an agent for 15 years.

“We’re seeing an inventory crisis,” said Katie Wethman, a Washington, D.C.-based real estate agent at Keller Williams Realty. Indeed, total home supply at the end of March sat at only 1.07 million units, down 28.2 percent from a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors. The association’s data also found that homes typically sold in a record-low time of just 18 days in March, down from a 29-day average in March 2020.

Still, sellers face a challenge: “Getting inundated with offers can be overwhelming, and it can make it harder for sellers to choose the best offer,” said Alicia Stoughton, a real estate agent and designer at Keller Williams Advisors in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Why? Because “the highest offer isn’t always the best offer,” Ms. Stoughton said.

Here are the factors sellers should consider, in addition to purchase price, when evaluating multiple offers.

“Cash is king,” according to Nancy Newquist-Nolan, a real estate agent at Coldwell Banker in Santa Barbara, Calif. “I often recommend sellers take a cash offer, even if it’s not the highest offer.”

Still, mortgage buyers aren’t completely out of the running, said Ms. Wethman. “If you’re confident in the buyer’s lender and their ability to get approved for a mortgage, there’s not a lot of risk taking an offer from a buyer who’s getting a loan,” she said. Her advice to sellers? “Do your due diligence on the lender who is providing the funds,” she recommends.

This is a step where sellers can lean on their listing agent, Ms. Newquist-Nolan said. “I call up the lender and ask how qualified the buyer is for their loan,” she said. Moreover, “some lenders are notorious for dragging their feet and missing key deadlines.”

The best approach that sellers can take when weighing offers, Mr. Lejeune said, is to compare them side-by-side.  His strategy: “I present offers to my clients in an Excel spreadsheet that specifics the offer price, loan amount, type of loan, contingencies, and other important metrics,” he said. “It’s basically a cheat sheet for sellers.”

Ms. Dossman is also a fan of presenting offers in a spreadsheet. As she puts it, “You want to have all the information in front of you when you’re making a decision.”

Many buyers attach personal letters with their offers to try to sway the sellers in their favor. But some real estate agents don’t even show sellers these letters when they present offers to avoid the possibility of unlawful bias against a buyer. But Ms. Dossman said she will share letters after vetting them to make sure there isn’t any information that could raise the potential for fair housing violations.

Read full article here:

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/23/realestate/home-selling.html

6 Comments

  1. Jim the Realtor

    It’s not only prospective buyers stressing out.

    Tregg Rustad, a real estate agent focused on L.A.’s Westside neighborhoods, said some sellers start to panic when they don’t get an offer on their house within five days — a seeming eternity in today’s market.

    “They are like: ‘My cousin, my brother and my sister-in-law — they are all telling me we should have 10 offers by now. What’s going on?’”

    https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2021-04-23/california-homes-are-selling-at-record-speed-in-hot-covid-market

  2. Jim the Realtor

    In the original post, the sellers received 54 offers and only sold for $25,000 over list? Once it closed, there had to have been at least ten of the losers that said to themselves, “I would have paid that!”

    It is why allowing for competitive bidding should be the preferred method of selling homes today. But ask a realtor about it, and they won’t have a clue of what you are talking about.

    The lady with the Cash is King quip? That saying got squashed by Greed is Good. I’m not taking a lower cash offer if a qualified buyer who is financing is willing to pay more. In one case, I took a financed offer that was only $7,500 above a cash offer because there were other circumstances that added to the reliability of it closing. Cash offers fall out of escrow too.

  3. just some guy

    “Cash is king,” according to Nancy Newquist-Nolan, a real estate agent at Coldwell Banker in Santa Barbara, Calif. “I often recommend sellers take a cash offer, even if it’s not the highest offer.”

    good lord…..no attempt whatsoever to hide her laziness. what do I need you for, then Special Agent Nancy..???

    The best offer comes in a variety of shapes and colors.

    get good help indeed…

  4. Jim the Realtor

    As long as sellers get more than list price, everyone is happy…..except the buyers who got boxed out.

    Piles of money are being left on the table across America this year.

  5. Dan

    Is it better to price your home just slightly under market value and hope for a lot of offers or to put a high price and hope for some counter offers?

  6. Eastern Bunny

    Don’t take a buyers agent, go directly to the listing agent , he/she will screw over the other candidates to get double commission for her/himself under any circumstance. Transparent public auction with defined rules is the way to go. I would say majority of RE agents bring zero value to the transaction other than collect a commission. It’s amazing that such arcane practice hasn’t been eliminated with all the data and technology available out there.

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