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How Market
Conditions Affect Your Offer Price
A hot market is a "sellers market."
During a sellers market, properties can sell within
a few days of being listed and there are often multiple
offers. Sometimes homes even sell above the asking price.
Though most buyers want to get a "deal"
on a home, reducing your offer by even a few thousand
dollars could mean that someone else will get the home
you desire.
A slow market is a "buyers market. During
a buyers market properties may languish on the
market for some time and offers may be few and far between.
Prices may even decline temporarily. Such a market would
allow you to be more flexible in offering a lower price
for the home. Even if your offered price is too low,
the seller is likely to make some sort of counter-offer
and you can begin negotiations in earnest.
More often than not, the market is simply "steady,"
or in transition. When a market is steady, no real rules
apply on whether you should make an offer on the high
end of your range or the low end. You could find yourself
in a situation with multiple offers on your desired
house, or where no one has made an offer in weeks.
Transition markets are more difficult to define. If
the economy slows unexpectedly, as it did in the early
nineties, people who buy on the high end of a sellers
market (like the late eighties) could find their home
loses value for several years. So far, no one has proven
reliable in predicting when markets change or how good
or bad the real estate market will become.
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All Buying &
Selling articles courtesy of © 2000 RealEstate
ABC
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