Thursday, May 31, 2012

7 Factors of the ‘Just-Right’ List Price

Just_right

 

A famous little blonde girl of fairy-tale lore made it look like child’s play to master the art of finding the ‘just-right’ solution to her various lifestyle challenges (e.g., finding a bowl of porridge, a chair and a bed that suited her fancy).

In the real-life world of real estate, though, it is much more difficult to find the ‘just-right’ price at which to list your home. There are loads of moving pieces, competing priorities and voices to be sorted through, internal and external. Sellers, if you work from a definition of the ‘just-right’ price for your home as the one at which it will sell without lagging, then it is possible - necessary, actually - to stop the chaos and start sorting and selecting the inputs that will get you there. 

Here’s a short(ish) list of those factors:


1. The Comps. If pricing a home was about putting your heart’s deepest desire on some universal wish list, the world would be a very different place, my friends. But it’s not. And the first step to buying your ticket out of fantasy-land and into the realm of the price that will get your home sold is to narrow down the range of realistic pricing by looking at ‘the comps.’  ‘Comps’ is just industry shorthand for sales data on similar homes near yours which were recently listed and/or sold (“comparable” listings and sales). 

Ask your agent to provide you with your home’s comps; also, check them out by searching your address and general area for homes similar to yours, here on Trulia.  While you should view the actual sales prices (vs. list prices) of comps that have recently closed escrow as very informative and influential for your pricing decision, the list prices of homes that are lagging on the market can also help educate you about what price points buyers in your area see as too high.

2. DOM [Days on Market].  The MLS data your agent will provide with the comps and the listings you find here online should also contain information about how long the various listings in your market have been on the market. You can use this information - or your agent do the math for you - to get a gauge on what the average DOM, or Days on Market, is in your neighborhood. 

This empowers you to look at the comps with more nuance and to use them more strategically to influence your own pricing decision; you will ideally want to price your home in line with properties that went pending and/or sold in a time frame at or shorter than the average time homes in your area stay on the market. The homes that have lingered on much longer than that may be overpriced and may even require a list price reduction to sell; and that’s a club you don’t want to join.

3. List price vs. sale price. Here, LP stands for ‘list price’ and ‘SP’ stands for ‘sale price or ‘sold price.’  This comparison - sometimes expressed in a ratio, other times in terms of how many percentage points the sale price was over or under the asking price - gets at the difference, if any, between what sellers are asking for homes in your area vs. what buyers in your area are willing and able to pay.  When homes are selling for more than the asking price as a pattern or average, this usually suggests that your market is more of a seller’s market or that multiple offers are commonplace.  And the opposite is true - when homes typically sell for less than the list price, it indicates that buyers may have superior negotiating power. 

Work with your agent to do the math and to understand its implications for your own pricing decisions, as they are not always completely obvious. For example, your agent might be able to point out patterns you don’t automatically see, like the increasingly common one in which well-staged, vacant homes that are listed at a slight discount are the ones that typically sell for significantly over asking.

4.  Competition Level.  How many homes are competing with yours for the hearts, minds and wallets of qualified buyers? How has the number of competing homes on the market trended over time, recently? Many areas are reporting a massive decline in competition - less supply is good for sellers, but you need to know what’s going on in your area; don’t try to apply national headlines to your local, personal real estate decisions.

As you work to understand competition levels and their impact on your pricing, here’s what not to do:
  • Don’t just look up and down the street, or in your subdivision - also look at similar homes in nearby neighborhoods or even nearby towns that a buyer who likes what your home might also target. 
  • And don’t just look at quantity - look at the quality, or nature of the competing listings. Is the competition mostly comprised of ‘regular’ equity sales, short sales or foreclosures/REOs? If you’re a regular sale in a sea of foreclosures, your price competition might be steep, but there may be other advantages of your listing that can offset that, to a degree.

So, what should you do? Get your agent to help you understand the competition level and the trends in number of listings on the market in recent months. Then, crash some of the competing listings’ Open Houses to scope out their condition and collect the rest of the intel listed here, before factoring it into your pricing decisions.

5.  Timing.  If your neighborhood’s award-winning school district or abundant colleges drive much of the buyer demand, you might be able to ask or get more for your home in June than in October, once the school year is in full swing.  If you live where it snows, listing it while it’s easy for buyers to get around might pay off, literally. There are a number of area-specific timing considerations that you may need to calculate into setting your just-right list price. Chances are good that you know what they are where you live, but your agent may have some novel insight on the matter, as well.

6.  Motivation Levels.  How motivated are you? Are you just testing out the market to see if you can hit a target number, or do you need to have escrow closed by a particular date to make your life and job plans run smoothly? What is your primary motivation?  Price, timing, closure, making sure your home passes into caring hands or just getting rid of a home or a mortgage that no longer serves you? 

And how motivated are buyers in your area?  From insights like:
  • Average number of days on market
  • Average list price vs. sale price
  • Trends in comparable sales - their number and sales prices
  • Trends in interest rates
  • Trends in competition levels
  • And insights like where you are in the seasonal changes that impact buyers in your area,

you can work with your listing agent to gauge whether buyers are so motivated that they will not be deterred by a premium list price, or whether you’ll need to use a discount or value-based price to churn up motivation in a market of fence-sitting buyers.

7.  Agent and Market Feedback.  So, you came up with a list price that you thought was ‘just-right,’ but you’ve had little or no Open House traffic or private showings. Or you got lots of showings, but no offers - or nothing but lowballs, anyway. It’s not too late to get to the ‘just-right’ list price for your home; in fact, time is of the essence if you want to take advantage of the swelling levels of buyer interest and activity that has sprung this Spring.

In many scenarios where a home lags on the market, the list price was set or maintained against the express advice of the listing agent, who urged the seller to list it lower. Or maybe you and your agent agreed on pricing early on, but they’ve been asking you for a price reduction for months now. If you trust your listing agent, and they have a strong background for getting homes in your area sold on today’s market, then it behooves you to at least take their pricing advice seriously, whether or not you follow it to the letter. 

If you need more data before you make the understandably scary move of cutting your list price, ask your agent to ask for feedback from the brokers and agents who have shown the property or attended Open Houses - or even to run the property past their own colleagues at their office or marketing meetings. Once you have this input - listen to it and factor it in, along with the other factors.
 
via Trulia

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation

Cmhc

CMHC :  Did You Know…On January 1, 1946, the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation was created to house returning war veterans and to lead the nation's housing programs.

 

In 1954, the federal government expanded the National Housing Act to allow chartered banks to enter the NHA lending field. CMHC introduced Mortgage Loan Insurance, taking on mortgage risks with a 25% down payment, making home ownership more accessible to Canadians.

 

1960 CMHC shifts its focus to municipal planning and development to help cities deal with rapid urban growth.

 

During the 1970s, affordability became a major factor in the home buying process. To help make housing more affordable, builders reduced lot sizes and increased the density of developments.

 

Renovation came of age during the 1980s, rivaling new home building for dollar volume of business. Despite the high interest rates, houses were getting larger and more luxurious.

 

In 1999, the National Housing Act and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation Act were modified, allowing for the introduction of a 5% down payment.

 

Today CMHC helps Canadians access a wide choice of quality, affordable homes, while making vibrant, healthy communities and cities a reality across the country.
 
via Sari McPhail

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Canada urged to hike interest rates


 

 

CBC News

 

Angel Gurria heads the OECD, which on Tuesday published a report calling for Canada's central bank to hike its interest rates.Angel Gurria heads the OECD, which on Tuesday published a report calling for Canada's central bank to hike its interest rates. (Francois Lenoir/Reuters)
 

Canada's central bank should move its benchmark target for the overnight rate above its current one per cent level or risk unsustainable increases in the country's inflation rate and real estate market, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development said today.

The bank has held the rate steady at one per cent for the last 13 consecutive policy meetings, dating back to September 2010, the longest the bank has held steady since the 1950s.

"It is assumed here that the first policy rate increase will be implemented in autumn 2012, which is a few months ahead of market expectations," the OECD said Tuesday.

'People should think twice about continuing to leverage up in order to buy more house than maybe they really need'—OECD economist Peter Jarrett

The OECD made a similar suggestion to Canada's central bank a year ago, and was ignored. The U.S. Federal Reserve has already publicly pledged to keep America's benchmark rate at effectively zero until 2014 at the earliest.

"Further increases … will also be needed in 2013," Tuesday's OECD report added, noting it hopes the rate will be at 2.25 per cent by the end of 2013.

Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and other policymakers have warned Canadians to get their financial houses in order in advance of rising rates for a year. The federal government has tightening mortgage lending rules for CMHC-insured mortgages, but thus far Canada's central bank has had its hands tied in terms of raising rates.

Beyond words, a modest interest rate hike could be necessary to slow the trend of rising debt loads, OECD's senior economist Peter Jarrett said. "We feel that at least in the hottest real estate markets, particularly Toronto, that that would be a good signal that people should think twice about continuing to leverage up in order to buy more house than maybe they really need."

The posted rate for a variable rate mortgage at Canada's big banks stands at prime plus 0.2 percentage points, or roughly 3.2 per cent.

"If rates go up something like we are suggesting then mortgage rates will be in more like the five per cent range," Jarrett said.

With files from The Canadian Press

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

How to Pay Off Your Mortgage Faster

Did You Know…

Saving thousands of dollars and shaving years off a mortgage is surprisingly easy.

Strategy #4

Take a shorter amortization

In addition to the strategies listed above, some home buyers choose to shorten their amortization period from the industry standard 25 years to 10, 15 or 20 years instead. The results slightly higher mortgage payments but significant interest savings over time.

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

How to Pay Off Your Mortgage Faster

 

 Did You Know…

Saving thousands of dollars and shaving years off a mortgage is surprisingly easy.

Strategy #3

Take advantage of lump-sum payments

In addition to increased payment options, most banks offer the opportunity to make lump-sum payments on a mortgage .An annual lump-sum payment of just 2% is all it takes for many homeowners to pay off their mortgage years ahead of schedule.

 

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Monday, May 21, 2012

How to Pay Off Your Mortgage Faster

 Did You Know…

 

Saving thousands of dollars and shaving years off a mortgage is surprisingly easy.

Strategy #2

Take advantage of increased payment options

TD Canada Trust customers can increase their payments by up to 100% of their regular payment amount at any time throughout the term of the mortgage. “Most people are surprised by how easy it is to adjust their lifestyle to a slight increase in their mortgage payments.

 

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Friday, May 18, 2012

HOW TO PAY OFF YOUR MORTGAGE FASTER


 Did You Know…

 

Saving thousands of dollars and shaving years off a mortgage is surprisingly easy.

 

Strategy #1

Increase the frequency of your payments

If you’re paying your mortgage on a monthly basis, you can arrange to switch your payments on a weekly, biweekly or semi-monthly basis .You will notice the interest savings that add up from this simple strategy.

 

 

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Canada home prices rise in March, but gains cooler

A builder works on the the roof of a new home under construction in the Montreal suburb of Brossard August 10, 2010. REUTERS/Shaun Best
 

By Jon Cook

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian home prices climbed 5.1 percent in March from a year earlier, boosted by strong gains in Toronto, but the annual increase was one of the weakest in the past year, suggesting the recently buoyant national market may be cooling.

The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) said on Friday its recently launched MLS Home Price Index rose to 152.9 last month, a 1.3 percent rise from February and a 5.1 percent gain from March 2011.

The index had also risen at a 5.1 percent annual pace in February, the smallest increase since June.

"Overall price trends show that Canada's housing market continues to moderate," Wayne Moen, president of the CREA group of real estate agents, said in a statement.

"While that trend paused in March, it may in part reflect an early spring in many parts of the country, resulting in increased competition among buyers."

The index, which monitors housing prices in five major urban markets, did not provide actual prices. A separate CREA report released on April 16, which used a different methodology, had shown that prices fell in March from a year earlier.

Both reports, however, showed a slowdown in British Columbia's formerly red-hot housing market.

The latest data showed prices in March rose slightly from the previous month in Vancouver, and in British Columbia's Lower Mainland and the Fraser Valley areas. But on an annual basis, the pace of price gains moderated.

Vancouver's year-over-year increase in March was 5.3 percent, compared with a 6 percent annual rise in February. The Lower Mainland market was up 4.78 percent for the year in March, compared with a 5.5 percent gain the previous month.

Those slower price gains were offset by continued strength in Toronto, which once again led all markets. Prices rose 1.65 percent from February and 7.35 percent from March 2011, in line with the Toronto market's year-over-year gain the previous month.

Prices rose in all five of the metropolitan centers covered by the index, with Montreal up 1.5 percent and Calgary up 1.4 percent from a month earlier.

The data was in line with the April 16 CREA report that showed the average selling price in Vancouver fell 3.1 percent from a year earlier to C$761,742 ($774,200).

Canada's housing sector did not experience the subprime mortgage boom and bust that drove the United States into recession. It has since had a post-crisis property market rally, triggered by record low borrowing costs.

But Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty have both expressed concern about the housing boom, with Flaherty tightening mortgage rules several times to try to cool the market.

In legislation introduced on Thursday, Flaherty said he was giving Canada's bank watchdog the job of making sure that the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp - a federal agency that is the country's biggest seller of mortgage insurance and a major provider of mortgage-backed securities - doesn't stoke an already hot property market and create financial instability.

"We watch the market closely, and I particularly watch the condo market in Vancouver, Toronto and to some extent in Montreal as well," Flaherty said.

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Canada March building permits surge, housing cools

 

By Louise Egan

OTTAWA, May 7 (Reuters) - The value of Canadian building permits unexpectedly climbed in March even while plans for home building softened for the third straight month, Statistics Canada reported on Monday, likely calming nerves among policymakers troubled by soaring property prices and debt.

Building permits issued by municipalities jumped 4.7 percent from February t o C$6.5 billion ($6.5 billion), confounding market expectations of a 2.8 percent decline.

The increase followed a 7.6 percent gain in February, according to revised figures.

Intentions for residential buildings fell 1.3 percent in March as the value of permits fell by 1.7 percent for single-family dwellings and by 0.7 percent for multi-family dwellings.

Permits for non-residential buildings jumped 13.9 percent to C$2.9 billion ($2.9 billion), their highest level since June 2010. Plans for new government buildings and medical facilities in the province of Ontario helped push up construction intentions in the institutional sector by 88.4 percent.

Permits for commercial buildings rose 15.3 percent in value while those for industrial structures fell 42.8 percent.

The report is consistent with the Bank of Canada's prediction of stronger business investment in months ahead and suggests construction activity will provide a boost to economic growth, despite the weaker housing component.

"Although residential building plans cooled in the first quarter, the recent solid gain in full time employment in March, together with evidence a stronger sales of existing houses through April, suggests that residential construction and house related consumer spending will make a positive contribution to domestic demand into the second half of the year, said John Clinkard, economist at Deutche Bank in Canada.

The decline in permits for housing adds to evidence from other data showing the heated housing market is cooling and may be in for a soft landing this year, though hot spots such as Toronto's condo market persist.

"Although housing starts data have been buoyant lately, the recent softening trend in residential permits suggests that the pace of homebuilding may slow in the months ahead," said Emanuella Enenajor, economist with CIBC World Markets.

Canadian home prices fell 0.5 percent in March from a year earlier, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association, which also showed a 3.1 percent drop in Vancouver property prices.

With interest rates still extraordinarily low at 1.0 percent, Canadians have sharply increased their debt load to finance home purchases at a time of sky rocketing prices, especially in Vancouver and Toronto.

In fact, the household debt-to-income ratio has surpassed that of the United States and Britain, leading Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney to single it out as the biggest domestic threat to Canada's economy.

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Penny presses to fall silent on Friday

Penny Presses to Fall Silent Friday
 

THE CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES Enlarge Image

The penny presses are about to fall silent, but not before one last hurrah.

On Friday, the Royal Canadian Mint will host a special ceremony at its Lagimodiere Boulevard facility to commemorate the end of production of the lowly penny.

Dignitaries including Mint CEO Jim Bennett, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, and St. Boniface MP Shelly Glover will be on hand for the 11 a.m. event, which will include speeches and a ceremonial final coin strike.

In March, the federal government announced it would stop producing the penny and slowly remove it from circulation. It costs about 1.6 cents to produce each coin.

Cash transactions will be rounded to the nearest five-cent mark, while debit and credit transactions will continue to use that final decimal spot.

Posted via email from Selling Cambridge with Clare DeJong