Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The minute the listing alert hit his phone he contacted his realtor who ... arranged a showing the same afternoon.
How do I get these phone alerts without signing a contract with a realtor?
This is a weird market. D.C. housing futures were up 13% last year, but down 10% the previous year. With such low volume, the market is not "hot". Instead, it is illiquid because many owners won't sell and give up their low-interest mortgages. Buyers must be very motivated to choose from such small inventory.
When mortgage rates drop, then a bunch of inventory will hit the market. That should be good news for buyers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The minute the listing alert hit his phone he contacted his realtor who ... arranged a showing the same afternoon.
How do I get these phone alerts without signing a contract with a realtor?
This is a weird market. D.C. housing futures were up 13% last year, but down 10% the previous year. With such low volume, the market is not "hot". Instead, it is illiquid because many owners won't sell and give up their low-interest mortgages. Buyers must be very motivated to choose from such small inventory.
When mortgage rates drop, then a bunch of inventory will hit the market. That should be good news for buyers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had the opposite experience last weekend. Our house went on the market on Friday and we received an offer on Friday with an sizable increase in the price if we signed by 10 pm on Friday. We know our neighborhood is popular and said no but the buyers were welcome to re-submit by the Tuesday noon deadline. They re-submitted and they were the lowest price among the seven offers we received.
This may not be true in every situation, but it was in ours and we can certainly use the extra $115,000 we got for waiting a few more days
In hot neighborhoods I can't imagine not waiting through the open house to see how many bids you get.
Realtor.com populates new listings from the MLS almost immediately. The other sites tend to lag.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The minute the listing alert hit his phone he contacted his realtor who ... arranged a showing the same afternoon.
How do I get these phone alerts without signing a contract with a realtor?
This is a weird market. D.C. housing futures were up 13% last year, but down 10% the previous year. With such low volume, the market is not "hot". Instead, it is illiquid because many owners won't sell and give up their low-interest mortgages. Buyers must be very motivated to choose from such small inventory.
When mortgage rates drop, then a bunch of inventory will hit the market. That should be good news for buyers.
Anonymous wrote:We had the opposite experience last weekend. Our house went on the market on Friday and we received an offer on Friday with an sizable increase in the price if we signed by 10 pm on Friday. We know our neighborhood is popular and said no but the buyers were welcome to re-submit by the Tuesday noon deadline. They re-submitted and they were the lowest price among the seven offers we received.
This may not be true in every situation, but it was in ours and we can certainly use the extra $115,000 we got for waiting a few more days
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The minute the listing alert hit his phone he contacted his realtor who ... arranged a showing the same afternoon.
How do I get these phone alerts without signing a contract with a realtor?
This is a weird market. D.C. housing futures were up 13% last year, but down 10% the previous year. With such low volume, the market is not "hot". Instead, it is illiquid because many owners won't sell and give up their low-interest mortgages. Buyers must be very motivated to choose from such small inventory.
When mortgage rates drop, then a bunch of inventory will hit the market. That should be good news for buyers.
I bought my house in McLean in 2018, we started looking in 2017, competition was insane in 2017 and every year since. In McLean, Bethesda, Arlington, Potomac, NW DC and pretty much any good school district etc it has always been like this. In 2018 we viewed the property before the open house and made the offer 2 days prior to the open house.
From my understanding this sort of market competition has now moved to rest of the Fairfax and Montgomery county as well. Desirable houses in good school districts will always have bidding wars, I have been seeing this for the last 7 years and I don’t see any signs of a change.
If you are a serious buyer, you need to modify your strategy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The minute the listing alert hit his phone he contacted his realtor who ... arranged a showing the same afternoon.
How do I get these phone alerts without signing a contract with a realtor?
This is a weird market. D.C. housing futures were up 13% last year, but down 10% the previous year. With such low volume, the market is not "hot". Instead, it is illiquid because many owners won't sell and give up their low-interest mortgages. Buyers must be very motivated to choose from such small inventory.
When mortgage rates drop, then a bunch of inventory will hit the market. That should be good news for buyers.