When a lowball offer TOO low???

May 8, 2010

Often times in frantic real estate markets where there are more properties for sale than buyers (a.k.a a buyer’s market) buyers will automatically get very aggressive on initial offers and even go as far as submitting offers on multiple properties at a time! A practice usually common among investors, is now common among all types of home buyers. The reasoning may be anticipating a desperate seller, testing the waters, or no knowledge (or clue) of the fair market value of a home. But to understand or find logic in the low ball offer you have to look at it from both sides.

On the buying side, before even presenting an offer you and your real estate agent (you thought I’d tell you to go it alone? Ha!) need to determine fair market value of the home in it’s current condition. Next you need to determine the bottom line you think a seller will take for a property by taking into account numerous things (payoff, commissions, seller’s anticipated profit, taxes, etc.) and then see if the number you are thinking of makes sense. One thing I’ve learned over the past year is not to let the seller’s payoff deter you because some sellers actually have the ability to satisfy second mortgages or shortages on the primary loan in order to close WITHOUT doing a short sale. The most important thing about a ‘low ball’ offer is that it has to make sense and be well put together. A realtor or the seller will not take an offer seriously if they don’t see the basis of your offer; especially if its incomplete, missing docs, contains misspellings, etc.

On the selling side, you should anticipate low ball offers and not be offended when you receive one. The proper response is to either reject the offer or my favorite is countering the offer at full price. Many buyers will submit low ball offers because ‘they just had to try’, but are still serious about purchasing. Cash buyers are usually always aggressive, but analyzing your bottom line against the offer and factoring in carrying costs, some all cash offers are not bad at all! Always be open-minded and look for ways to structure the deal to make it work. When selling a home, leave the emotions on the table and let the buyers deal with that! On the selling side it’s about making the numbers work!!!

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