Written by Jim the Realtor

December 15, 2013

Here is the wrap-up report on the 5-offer bidding war we had on Ivy Rd.

Most bidding wars lack transparency – the listing agents just want you to send in your best deal and they decide which is best.

I handle the bidding wars personally, and pit all contenders against one another to ensure top dollar. It takes more work – but it’s worth it:

7 Comments

  1. Just some guy

    Great stuff as always, Jim.

    This demonstrates that there are still buyers out there who are willing and able to pay top dollar if they know they can get a deal closed quickly without a lot of fuss. Today’s buyer is way more educated.

    Maybe next time you can wear a mic? It was a bit echo-y in the video.

  2. Jim the Realtor

    Thanks JSG!

    I’m still rocking the Nikon D90 which doesn’t have an external mic outlet. Maybe Santa is listening?

  3. Friakel

    I’m not surprised a bit you got top dollars for this property. The property has a lot of cachet, a je-ne-sais-quoi that cannot be valued in cookie-cutter appraisals. Gorgeous look. Great plan and a detached guest house. As a matter of fact, all comments were unanimous when you posted the video a month ago.

    Add a good job by a hard-working agent. Stir, mix well, serve and voila !

    Congratulations for a job well done.

  4. Jim the Realtor

    Thanks Friakel – I love it when all the right ingredients come together nicely!

    The buyers deserve a hat tip for sending in a good intro letter, and their agent did a great job too. They found a few things wrong during the inspection but we cordially settled on a $2,500 credit, plus made a favorable deal on some of the furniture.

    Win-win!

  5. shadash

    Great work on the sale Jim.

    I was watching this one. Looked like a really nice place.

    Not surprising that it went for top dollar.

  6. Richard Truely

    Newbie question here….I don’t quite understand why having the buyer waive the appraisal contingency was such a big deal in this case..

    The buyer that had the big offer with 20% down would potentially have a problem because they would need to bring more cash to the table to close their loan, so I can understand why the appraisal is key for that offer.

    The other buyer (the ultimate winner) was going to put down 50% if I understand correctly. In that case the appraisal isn’t going to be an issue, right, since the amount the bank will need to loan will ultimately end up under 80% of the appraised value anyway.

    So I don’t get exactly why having the appraisal contingency waived for the 50% down deal is important.

    Thanks – Richard

  7. Jim the Realtor

    Thanks for the question Richard.

    It is better to handle objections early if possible, and I only want to sell a property once if I can help it. In other words, pick a winner who is going to stick.

    I knew we were going to have trouble getting the appraisal to come in that high, and if I don’t address it in the beginning then the buyer will have some, if not a lot of negotiating power to grind the price down. But if he agrees in the beginning not to have it be a problem, then end of discussion.

    A buyer can still object later – it is also a preliminary test of how bad they want it, and what their intentions are.

Klinge Realty Group - Compass

Jim Klinge
Klinge Realty Group

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