Dixon Contest Update

Written by Jim the Realtor

April 15, 2009

We have nine offers in on Dixon, and the seller/bank countered for their highest and best offer. Later today we should have a winner somewhere in the mid-$300,000s.

One of the offers is $367,500 VA, and they’re asking for a 3% credit for closing costs, and another 3% for discount points.   

Typical closing costs for buyers run from 1.0% to 1.5%, where does the other 4.5% to 5.0% go? 

We probably won’t have to worry about it, because the REO managers are going to take a lower offer with a higher net, and not have to sweat an appraisal issue.

If your loan broker is telling you that you need an extra 4.5% to 5.0% packed into your offer, and to just raise the price to compensate – go find another lender!

 

Here are the guesses for our contest:

Guess Guesser
$1 shadash
$199,000 arizonadude
$305,000 Genius
$310,000 Kook1315
$311,000 Wes
$312,000 NateTG
$314,000 greenlander
$314,900 No_Such_Reality
$316,000 REB
$318,500 Erin
$319,000 The Wood
$320,000 jose
$321,000 GameAgent
$321,500 mybleachhouse
$322,500 CA renter
$323,000 Dwalla
$323,500 DKO
$324,000 gywright
$324,600 Custerdome
$325,000 Susan
$325,000 nolongerjoerenter
$325,000.43 Renter Pete in Carlsbad
$327,000 bobfather99
$327,500 IRE
$327,900 no bubble here
$328,500 mtb
$329,500 sosad
$330,000 Steve
$330,000 Geotpf
$331,000 m
$331,500 4s Renter
$332,000 Dave
$333,500 CB Mark
$334,000 Erica Douglass
$335,000 Kwaping
$336,000 Poorhouse
$337,500 Blissful Ignoramus
$338,000 OCVulture
$338,500 Angela
$338,500 mab
$339,462.20 Mozart
$340,000 Kompeitou
$340,000 tjandthebear
$340,250 rbresident
$340,500 Al in IC
$344,800 Rob Dawg
$345,000 doughboy
$346,000 Atenbrown
$346,800 FreedomCM
$347,000 sd nerd
$349,000 Don Q
$349,500 Myriad
$355,000 Mojo
$362,000 Stephen Waits
$415,000 newbie

The list price is $314,900. Here is the link to the original post on the contest, with video:
Four Padres Tickets!

15 Comments

  1. Myriad

    I put in a guess the other day for $349,500, but its not on the list.

  2. Jim the Realtor

    I love this audience – you keep me on my toes!

  3. mccamman

    You wrote: “If your loan broker is telling you that you need an extra 4.5% to 5.0% packed into your offer, and to just raise the price to compensate – go find another lender”!

    I am currently neg. a loan where the house is listed at 500,000. I put in another 15,000 to be paid back by the seller for closing costs, so my loan will be 515,000 (This is a short sale, btw)

    Is this the type of thing you are talking about? Do you think my deal should raise any red flags?

  4. Jim the Realtor

    In this case, the mortgage originator is probably charging excessive fees. 5 points? Some may go towards buying down the interest rate, but this is how mortgage guys skim extra profits by putting some, most, or all of the 5 points in their pocket.

    In your case, if your closing costs are 1.5% and the lender is charging another 1.5% for his service, and you want to add it to the sales price, that is your choice. If the short sale doesn’t have competing offers, and the appraisal won’t be an issue, you should be fine.

    In my case, the VA deal is a net $345,450, if there is another offer anywhere close, maybe as low as $340,000, the VA deal is going to lose – because the risk of a low appraisal on the $367,500 is high when we have a $330,000 model match five doors down. An appraisal of $340,000 or even $350,000 would probably be do-able.

  5. Rob Dawg

    One of the offers is $367,500 VA, and they’re asking for a 3% credit for closing costs, and another 3% for discount points.

    $367,500 -6% = $345,450
    $344,800 Rob Dawg

    Even though I won’t win I take a certain satisfaction that JtR has taught me enough to recognize SD value. I declare JtR the real winner here.

  6. Jim the Realtor

    Thanks Dawg

    This is more proof on the buyer’s psychology on overbids – even those that love a home, mentally they cap out around 10% over list.

    $314,900 + $31,490 = $346,390.

  7. Geotpf

    What do you think of the tactic of having the list price be a complete low ball, basically setting up an unofficial auction with a starting bid of nil and seeing where it will end up? That is, the McMillin Chula Vista house basically was like this-16.7% under comps, 40 offers. If people will only go up 10% of list, then they lost money than if they listed it closer to the comps. I’ve seen this to an extreme in Riverside-there was a house listed for $110k that was next door and across the street from two houses listed at over $300k. (The two $300k+ homes were significantly larger but on significantly smaller lots, and the $300k+ prices were dreamville, but $110k was equally ridiculous.)

  8. Jim the Realtor

    I think the REDC auctions are experienceing that very problem. They are advertising opening bids that are 10-20% of peak-pricing, thinking it will attract a big crowd.

    The crowds are good-sized, but they come to buy for the opening bid, or a little higher. They know the opening bids are ridiculous, but they sure don’t want to go much higher.

    Off-topic: Nightline has a story running on its website about the Lake Las Vegas Bust, featuring Carlsbadian Jeff Woolson, golf-course broker!

    Nightline website, “Dream Home Nightmare”

  9. Rob Dawg

    Mrs. Dawg was still sitting around Mon at 11:35 when I asked why she wasn’t taking her usual bath. She was waiting for your TV debut. Major disappointment at your postponement.

    Lake Las Vegas is surely a poster child.

  10. No_Such_Reality

    Anything over list is stupidity.

  11. Jose

    Ever heard of the wisdom of crowds? Take a bunch of guys off the street, ask them to count the number of jelly beans in a jar. The guesses will be all over the place, but if the sample size is big enough, the midpoint is often remarkably close to the actual number of beans.

    Take that logic and apply it to the guesses here. If the price is 345-350K, it shows that the crowd here is simply too bearish for the reality of the market. Not saying this is bad, nor am I saying the reality of the market wont change & come down to our level. Im just pointing this out.

  12. segfault

    Hmm, Dixon… Did you mean “Dioxin?””

  13. Geotpf

    Looks like the midpoint of guesses was closer to $325k or so. I think readers of Jim’s blog may be more bearish on pricing than the general public.

  14. tj and the bear

    Not more bearish, just a little ahead of the crowd.

  15. Jose

    “I think readers of Jim’s blog may be more bearish on pricing than the general public.”

    Not surprising really, blogs like this can suffer from a adverse selection problem. Blogs like the oc realtor blogs attracts a certain subset of people, incredibly bearish by nature. They will miss the bottom by a mile.

    This blog? Probably skewed too bearish, but not by much. TJ is right. The bearishness will make this blog ahead of the crowd on the way down, but behind the crowd on the way back up.

    Again, not saying this is bad, just making an observation. Lurkers out there beware!

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Jim Klinge
Klinge Realty Group

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