4spdragtop
Well-Known Member
Anyone on here a real estate agent? Laws vary obviously country-country and possibly province to province...
I’m not a realtor but, out here in the Lower Mainland, a trained monkey could sell homes! It’s an easy way to make $ for doing very little.
The average price of a detached house here is $2M so the selling realtor makes $29k and the buying realtor makes $25k on that sale.
I'm In the Game, but only to the "Hands On" hit man problem solving aspect. I work with, and have a good rapport with a few of them. Met some slimy one along the way also.... That being said, that's some BS there, if You were in Florida, I Could make some calls and help Ya....Yes, real estate WAS hot, but has cooled drastically thankfully.
So here is the scenario/rant I have.
A house on our street is for sale. Owner has been put in a "home".
As soon as I see the for sale sign, I try to get in touch with listing agent....no return email, no return phone call.
Turns out there is an offer on the house. NOT surprised as its reasonably priced.
Heres the kicker and my frustration. The offer is conditional upon inspection and financing. But they wont show us the house?? If the offers conditional, why the wait? Soooo the house sits empty with no showings until the 16th and they start the BS all over again. WTF?
Of course with OREA everything is done behind the scenes and agents double dip on commissions.
Sorry for the rant.
I'm In the Game, but only to the "Hands On" hit man problem solving aspect. I work with, and have a good rapport with a few of them. Met some slimy one along the way also.... That being said, that's some BS there, if You were in Florida, I Could make some calls and help Ya....
Yes, real estate WAS hot, but has cooled drastically thankfully.
So here is the scenario/rant I have.
A house on our street is for sale. Owner has been put in a "home".
As soon as I see the for sale sign, I try to get in touch with listing agent....no return email, no return phone call.
Turns out there is an offer on the house. NOT surprised as its reasonably priced.
Heres the kicker and my frustration. The offer is conditional upon inspection and financing. But they wont show us the house?? If the offers conditional, why the wait? Soooo the house sits empty with no showings until the 16th and they start the BS all over again. WTF?
Of course with OREA everything is done behind the scenes and agents double dip on commissions.
Sorry for the rant.
What annoys me to no end is when a house is put up for sale for, say, 500K and I offer 500K they will "consider" it
That is bull
If they are asking 500K, the first 500K should buy it
You clearly don't know how this market works. Ever see a house list for 500K and sell for 550+. Same as selling a car. If you are looking at a car and say I'll take it for asking and another buyer next to you says I'll do asking +500, until your offer is accepted buy the seller, you have no claim to a transaction. PERIOD
Maybe your 500K offer isn't the first offer nor the best offer.
I agree with the poster that thinks the agent or a lackey wants the property, especially if the listing agent is the only agent involved doing both sides.
If I am in negotiations with a seller and I offer asking price, that seller has a moral obligation to sell me the item at asking price
If he wants to auction it off, that is fine, he has a right to do so
But if he lists an asking price, that should be it
I'm not talking law, I'm talking character, a man a man, a word a wordMoral obligation? Please. It's a business transaction and if someone offers more than asking, sellers have no moral obligation to accept an inferior offer. PERIOD!
Business and contract law 101
If you offered asking and they "ACCEPTED", then turn around and accept a higher offer, telling you sorry, cry all you want about being wronged. Until seller ACCEPTS your offer, you are out of luck with any standing.
Is that the cheapest home in your area?I’m not a realtor but, out here in the Lower Mainland, a trained monkey could sell homes! It’s an easy way to make $ for doing very little.
The average price of a detached house here is $2M so the selling realtor makes $29k and the buying realtor makes $25k on that sale.
If I am in negotiations with a seller and I offer asking price, that seller has a moral obligation to sell me the item at asking price
If he wants to auction it off, that is fine, he has a right to do so
But if he lists an asking price, that should be it
Maybe not, but thats how decent folks workYeah, that's not how real estate works at all.
Do I really need a real estate agent to sell my house? I mean, the house is alright, and I think there will be people who would like to buy it, even if I only place an ad somewhere online or in the local newspaper.
I understand that getting an attorney to help with the legislative part of the deal is necessary, but why would I need someone to sell my house for me? It’s not even a difficult case, and I don’t want to pay someone for a service I don’t really need. Especially when the market is in not that pleasant condition, according to https://timthomas.co/signs-оf-a-housing-market-crash/.
What do you think about that?
People who are buying / renting are responsible for the outrageous prices homes are going for. Just a few months ago our insurance agent was selling 2 insurance policies for the same home as people were paying more than they are worth. I don't and will not ever pay asking price for a car or a homeYeah, that's not how real estate works at all.
Most sellers take offers for a set amount of time, especially in the current market. As in, the house is put on the market, the seller takes offers for a week, and at the end of the week the seller considers all the offers they have received. Depending on how the house is priced, the seller may very well receive multiple offers over the listing price in that time.
And not all offers are the same. How the financing is arranged on the offer makes a difference. Some lenders require more inspections, some require certain repairs be made before lending, etc. So you could have two offers at the same exact price, but the "take home" for the seller might be very different depending on the requirements set by the lender. And if a lender requires repairs to be made and an additional inspection it can delay escrow and closing, especially with some materials nowadays, which could play as much or more of a role than the offered price. So the highest offer might not even be the "best" offer, depending on how that offer is financed.
So yeah, if a house goes on the market for $500k and you offer $500k the first day it goes on the market, the lender may very well just say "I'll consider it" while collecting 4 more offers before the end of the week when they consider all of their offers. They'd tell someone that offered $550k the same thing, and depending on how the financing is structured they might take a $530k offer vs the $550k offer while completely ignoring your $500k offer.