Showing posts with label FSBO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FSBO. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

How FSBOs can compete against distressed properties

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In the time it takes for you to sell your own home without a real estate agent, you'll have to muster the same experience it takes a professional agent years to accomplish, but you can competitively market your home in today's economy, according to ForSaleByOwner.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com
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Deadline Newsroom - ForSaleByOwner.com says those who choose to sell their home without the aid of a real estate agent can still get the upper hand and beat the competition even in a market loaded with distressed properties.

Keep in mind, in the time it takes for an owner to sell his or her own home without a real estate agent, he or she must muster the same experience it takes a professional agent years to accomplish.

Right now it's even tougher.

With distressed sales (foreclosures, bank owned, short sales, auctions, etc.) accounting for half of all home sales in some areas, FSBOs (for sale by owner) are not just competing with traditional listings.

To help FSBOs compete against properties with discounted prices ForSaleByOwner.com advises:

Skip the agent. Hiring a real estate agent can cut into the proceeds of a sale by 6 percent. Without a commission to pay the seller can pocket more of the proceeds or use the savings to set a more competitive asking price.

Price it right. The same advice sellers get from real estate agents applies to FSBOs. Price the home according to the current local market, not based on a price a neighbor obtained a year or even a few months ago. A licensed, certified, trade-group affiliated appraiser is best at setting a price based on the true value of a home.

Market effectively. Use all available marketing channels, which are not always used by distressed properties. Public listing Web sites, creating your own listing site, virtual staging and a host of other approaches are available.

Keep the home fit. Foreclosed homes are often trashed, in disrepair or in need of some work due to neglect. FSBOs should stage their home to give it the a model home appearance and ready for move in.

Offer a quick close. Distressed property sales can take months to close due to title issues, repair concerns and other red tape. Offer a 30-day closing date to attract buyer who wants to move quickly.

Qualify interested buyers. Right from the beginning, make sure any prospective buyer has a lender approval for the amount necessary to finance the purchase of your home. It makes no sense to spend weeks courting a buyer who doesn't have the wherewithal to actually buy the home.

Get professional help. Just because you don't hire a real estate agent doesn't mean you should have an attorney or title company help you review the contracts and makes sure you are adhering to state and local disclosure requirements.

Read more FSBO news that really hits home.

• Click on the keywords below for more stories on this subject.

© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

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Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist, parlayed 30 years of old-school journalism into a digital real estate news service, the San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews Group, including DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service and Web site, and the Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's news back shop. Perkins is also a National Real Estate Examiner. All the news that really hits home from three locations -- that's location, location, location!



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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

To FSBO or not to FSBO?

How you sell your home is a lot like when you choose to buy your home -- you get to make the decision based on what's best for you.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com
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Unauthorized use of this story is a copyright violation -- a federal crime

Deadline Newsroom - Some homeowners who sell their homes without the assistance of a real estate agent or other professional can get a better price and sell their home faster than others who use a real estate agent.

That's a fact.

FSBOs who close a better deal than those working with a real estate agent are the exception rather than the rule.

That's also a fact.

The small and shrinking share of homeowners who actually succeed in the FSBO (for sale by owner) world typically do so because of conditions unique to the transaction.

More fact.


Don't be discouraged about attempting to sell your own home. It's your right to go FSBO if you choose.

But also don't be misled by FSBO hoopla that promises a hefty windfall without disclosing the risk. Depending upon the price of the home, both savings or losses could be in the thousands or tens of thousands of dollars.

In the open market, in the time it takes a FSBO to successfully sell a home, he or she has to achieve a level of professionalism akin to a level real estate agents spend years obtaining.

Yes, you can sell your own home. It just isn't always a slam dunk.

ForSaleByOwner.com recently announced that the "2008 National Association of Realtors (NAR) Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers" reveals FSBOs receive 97 percent of their asking price, while those who sell with an agent get only 96 percent.

The data also reveals a home sold through an agent takes 10 weeks, while it takes just six weeks to sell a home "by owner."

"This data from NAR shows that people can sell their homes quicker and for closer to their asking price if they don't involve a real estate agent," says Greg Healy, operations vice president at ForSaleByOwner.com.

FSBOs, however, are most attracted to working without a net to save thousands on the cost of a commission. In most instances, the seller pays for the cost of the commission out of the home sale proceeds.

"While the study didn't mention the costs of a real estate commission, it's clear that using an agent means that the seller would generally lose another six percent of their home's sales price," Healy added.

NAR begs to differ. Raw statistics rarely tell the whole story, especially when the data is a relatively small and shrinking sample.


ForSaleByOwner.com's news release cherry picks NAR data without revealing the share of FSBO sales in 2008 was 13 percent, up slightly from the record low 12 percent in 2006 and 2007, but still trending down from the 18 percent peak in 1997.

If the FSBO way is such a good deal, why are their numbers shrinking?

"Forty-five percent of FSBO transactions are between people who knew each other in advance, such as family or acquaintances. The homes are not placed on the open market and are transacted quickly at an expected price," says Walter Molony, NAR spokesman.

The kinship between the buyer and seller would tend to retain the price point and shorten the sales time.

There's more. Factor out properties not placed on the open market and the actual number of homes that sold without a real estate agent plummets to about 7 percent of all resales, down from 10 percent in 2004, NAR says.

And still more. The median home price for sellers who used an agent was $211,000, for FSBO's $153,000, but that's because FSBOs in the NAR study were more likely to be in rural areas or small towns where sellers were more likely to know potential buyers, the home was more likely to be a manufactured home, and the owner's income was likely lower than that of sellers who used agents, according to Molony.

More contradictions

Other reports also reveal the FSBO way isn't a sure thing.

• Last year, "The Relative Performance of Real Estate Marking Platforms: MLS Vs. MadisonFSBO.com," from economics professors at Northwestern University found no gain in the price in selling the home through the Madison multiple listing service (MSL) compared to homes sold on MadisonFSBO.com.

FSBO sellers did, however, save on the commission, as much as $12,000 on a $200,000 home. Listing on the MadisonFSBO.com site cost only $150.

The study also found homes sold faster on the traditional MLS than on the FSBO Web site and 20 percent of FSBO listings wound up relisted on the traditional MLS, which also translates into longer selling time.

Longer selling times can spell disaster even for homes in the best shape. A home on the market too long tends to become stigmatized. In a rapidly falling market, a listing that languishes unsold can also lose value in the eye of the buyer beholder.

"How Much Value Do Real Estate Brokers Add? A Case Study" by Stanford University and National Bureau of Economic Research economists found likewise:

"We find no evidence that the use of a broker leads to higher average selling prices, or that it significantly alters average initial asking prices, However, those who use brokers sell their houses more quickly."

• A more recent Consumer Reports study, "How To Protect Yourself In Today's Rocky Real Estate Market," revealed that 82 percent of respondents who sold with the help of an agent received $5,000 less, on average, than their original asking price. Almost all of the only 17 percent who sold their homes without an agent said they received about what they originally asked.

The same survey revealed getting the real estate agent or broker to reduce the commission could provide the best of both worlds.

Consumer Reports said, "Paying an agent a lower commission rarely had any effect on the sales price. And readers who paid commissions of 3 percent or less were just as happy with their brokers' performance as those who paid 6 percent or more. People who paid extra, in fact, were more likely to say they had regrets about the selling process. The biggest regret? Nearly one-third said they should have been more assertive in negotiating their agent's fee."

The Internet has helped level the playing field for those who want to do the FSBO thing, if only from a marketing and educational standpoint.

However, selling a home also involves legal issues, financial acumen and negotiating skills you can't expect to glean from Internet browsing.

Bottom line?

Don't buy into real estate industry insistence that the only way to sell a home is with a real estate agent.

Don't buy into FSBO fans who frenetically focus on facts that don't tell the full story.

How you sell your home is a lot like when you choose to buy your home -- you get to make the decision based on what's best for you.

Make that your story…and stick to it.

• For FSBO news that really hits home, visit the FSBO News Center

© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

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Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist, parlayed 30 years of old-school journalism into a digital real estate news service, the San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews Group -- DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service and Web site and the Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's news back shop. Perkins is also a National Real Estate Examiner. All the news that really hits home from three locations -- that's location, location, location!


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Saturday, January 31, 2009

Forecast: FSBOs cometh in 2009

FSBOs are poised to take the market by storm, according to a website founded on the FSBO way.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com
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Unauthorized use of this story is a copyright violation -- a federal crime

Deadline Newsroom - As home sales and prices continue to decline this year, more consumers will try to sell their own homes, says ForSaleByOwner.com, a do-it-yourself web site that promotes, you guessed it, the FSBO (for sale by owner) way.

No matter what really unfolds for FSBOs this year, do-it-yourself sellers should be aware that in the time it takes to sell a home he or she will have to exercise at least some semblance of experience a professional real estate agent often takes years to achieve. That assumes the FSBO wants top dollar, a buyer who can really close the deal and no legal entanglements after the close of escrow.

Real estate agents say that's a lot to ask during the greatest economic downturn since the Great Depression, a recession triggered by the housing crash.

However, based on little more than the thought that a free society allows homeowners to take a crack at selling their own home -- and maybe they should to save a few thousand bucks -- the leading FSBO listing and information Web site predicts for 2009:

A continued slowdown in homes sales. The weak credit market will continue to make it harder for Americans to obtain mortgages, causing the number of homes sold in 2009 to fall for a fourth straight year. (Check.)

Falling home prices. An increase in foreclosure sales and short sales - which have significantly discounted prices - will cause a decline in the average price of all homes sold in 2009. (Two for two.)

The Internet will become more effective than realty agents helping buyers find homes. In 2009, for the first time, more buyers will find the home they purchase by seeing it first on the Internet rather than learning of it from a real estate agent. (That's a stretch, but you heard it here first.)

More browsing for housing. Ninety percent of homebuyers in 2009 will use the Internet to search for their next home. (Not such a stretch. The National Association of Realtors last year reported 84 percent of all buyers identified the Internet as a source in their home search including 87 percent of first-time buyers, 82 percent of repeat buyers, 79 percent of new home buyers and 85 percent of buyers of previously-owned homes.)

A continued decline in the number of real estate agents and brokers. As the housing market continues to cool and the Internet makes it easier for people to sell and buy homes, there will be even fewer real estate agents and brokers in 2009. (This will happen more so because of the economy, rather than Internet empowerment. With fewer homes to sell, fewer agents will be needed.)

Higher commissions. Real estate commissions will increase from 5.12 percent in 2007 to nearly 6 percent in 2009. (The law of supply and demand mentioned in the last prediction would indicate commissions will tank.)

More consumers will resist real estate commissions. Even more sellers in 2009 will use FSBO methods to sell to their homes in order to avoid paying commissions, and to maximize the amount they get from the sale of their homes. (Which is why the previous prediction makes little economic sense.)

More competition for traditional real estate agents. More web-based real estate services will follow the lead of ForSaleByOwner.com. (Perhaps, but with advertising down, who will pay the bills? FSBOs looking to save money? Not.)

Increase in lease-to-own deals. Lease-to-own will become more commonplace in 2009, as sellers need to realize cash flow from their properties and many buyers find themselves still unable to obtain mortgages. (Check. Look for equity sharing growth too. Buyers will have to pull out all the stops to get in a home for the next year or so.)

"While 2008 will be remembered as perhaps the most painful year for real estate in decades, declines in home sales and prices will likely continue well into 2009," said Greg Healy, Vice President of Operations at ForSaleByOwner.com.

"As a result, we're seeing new trends emerge that will affect both the industry and consumers who need to sell or buy a home," he added.

There's more FSBO news that hits home!

Steep FSBO learning curve pays off
Sellers corner commission concessions
FSBOs fall flat

© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

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Get news that really hits home for your Web site or blog from DeadlineNews.Com.

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist, parlayed 30 years of old-school journalism into a digital real estate news service, the San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews Group -- DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service and Web site and the Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's news back shop. Perkins is also a National Real Estate Examiner. All the news that really hits home from three locations -- that's location, location, location!


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Saturday, November 1, 2008

Steep FSBO learning curve pays off

A FSBO's savings on commissions can be a real windfall of thousands of dollars. In a recessionary economy, that's a lot of dead presidents to put to work. Just beware. Before you become a successful FSBO you'll have to become a smart FSBO, real fast.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com
Enter The Deadline Newsroom

Unauthorized use of this story is a copyright violation -- a federal crime.

Deadline Newsroom - In the time it takes for you to sell your own home, you've got to summon the experience of a real estate agent who's been in the field for years.

However the crash course in home selling is worth the cramming because it comes with a hard-earned windfall most FSBOs (for sale by owner) put to good use.

It's that fat bottom line, of course, that motivates FSBOS. Do the math. Based on the typical 6 percent commission, a FSBO can save up to $15,000 on a $250,000 home. Buy in high-cost areas like Silicon Valley you can easily save $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 or more.

In today's economy that's a lot of hard cash sellers can't afford to abuse.

When surveyors at the ForSaleByOwner.com asked FSBOs who'd sold homes on the Web site what they did with their "commission" 80 percent of them said they found financially prudent ways to spend it.

That's not surprising, given savings-minded consumers typically don't squander what they've squirrled away.



How FSBOs Used Savings
Down payment on next home42%
Paid off bills26%
Saved for retirement13%
Paid child's college tuition 2%

Enjoying an average savings of $12,750, more than 1,000 FSBOs responded to the survey conducted via email to those who'd listed homes on ForSaleByOwner.com.

ForSaleByOwner.com charges from $89 to $899 for a range of advertising and marketing services.

But another cash benefit FSBO's realize makes those amounts relatively small fees that are worth the expense.

“Many families would need years to save $13,000, especially in current economic conditions.”

A recent Consumer Reports study "How To Protect Yourself In Today's Rocky Real Estate Market," revealed that 82 percent of respondents who sold with the help of an agent received $5,000 less, on average, than their original asking price. Almost all of the only 17 percent who sold their homes without an agent said they received about what they originally asked.

"Many families would need years to save $13,000, especially in current economic conditions. Our survey reveals the noteworthy trend that, unlike the recent practice of using home equity to fund big-ticket discretionary spending, FSBO consumers are using the commission savings for more conservative purposes,” said Greg Healy, Vice President of Operations for ForSaleByOwner.com.

FSBO News
FSBO News Center

FSBO Listing Sites
FSBO.com
Owners.com
SaleByOwner.com
HomesByOwner.com
IRED's National FSBO Web Site List

© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

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Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews Group -- DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service and Web site and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's news back shop. In both cases, it's news that really hits home!


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Saturday, November 24, 2007

FSBOs Fall Flat

by Broderick Perkins
© 2007 DeadlineNews.Com

Deadline Newsroom - For-sale-by-owner or 'FSBO' transactions in the softening real estate market experienced zero growth last year, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

The NAR's 2007 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, released at the recent 2007 Realtors Conference & Expo in Las Vegas revealed only 12 percent of transactions in 2007 were FSBOed, unchanged from 2006.

That's not surprising.

In the time it takes a first-time FSBO to sell a home, he or she has to learn what many real estate agents get to know only after assisting dozens of buyers and sellers for many years.

That includes experience gained from too many deals that don't gel, lessons learned in long hours at seminars, workshops, continuing education courses, conventions and wisdom gleaned from picking up after errant FSBOs who couldn't hack it.

Not to mention housing markets that go boom -- the wrong way.

Today's tight money market of falling prices, foreclosures and deals that don't gel is a potential minefield of blown opportunities for the uninformed.

The survey also reveals the percentage of homes sold without professional representation has continued to decline since 1997, when a record 18 percent of transactions were FSBO deals.

While the survey shows it's possible for a few staunch sellers to complete a FSBO deal, bringing in a real estate professional is a better deal in any market, and even more crucial when things go south.

"Realtors add value to the real estate transaction no matter what market conditions may be," said Pat V. Combs, NAR president.

"Realtors are experts in attracting qualified buyers, negotiating on their client's behalf, and ensuring a smooth transaction," said Combs also vice president of Coldwell Banker-AJS-Schmidt in Grand Rapids, MI.

Nearly half, 40 percent, or four out of 10 FSBO properties were private deals that never made it to the multiple listing service, but "closely held" between parties who knew each other in advance, such as family members or acquaintances.

The NAR survey indicates most FSBOs end up working with a real estate agent.

"It is incumbent on Realtors to demonstrate to unrepresented sellers the value that Realtors add to the transaction," said Joseph Marovich, owner of Marovich Business Institute, a real estate education company.

NAR says the sites that cater to FSBOs have listings that pale in comparison to the home showcased on NAR's Realtor.com which offers more market exposure to would-be FSBOs.

Visit DeadlineNews.Com's FSBO Center
Homebuyer Regrets FSBO Move
Are FSBOs An Agent's Best Friend?
FSBOs Remain Viable Market Force
Unprepared Buyers Alarm FSBO Journalist

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© 2007 DeadlineNews.Com

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service, and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's new backshop. In both cases, it's where all the news really hits home.



DeadlineNews.Com's Editorial Content Is Intellectual Property • Unauthorized Use Is A Federal Crimeby Broderick Perkins
© 2007 DeadlineNews.Com


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