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Realtors have no reason to exist, they are intermediators, and technology is about disintermediation. I won't use a realtor for selling my home, my wife will take the exam to get the licence and get ourselves listed at MLS. 3 of my friends get the realtor licence themselves just for pocketing the commission when selling homes themselves. Realtors don't know anything else I don't know when it comes to homes and area, they can't negotiate better than I do, what do I need them for?
Do it yourself, get a licence, it is educational for ourselves too. Pay the annual licence fee so that you get the same marketing exposure to MLS, and save yourselves tens of thousands of dollars.
@ TWIT: Do you post at Ben’s? If I may ask, under what name?
I don't much anymore. I do lurk there though. Perhaps I'll start up again. SQT, do you ever toss in with the underclass over there? Cause I'll be honest, I'm here for two reasons: the housing bubble and the chicks. And it looks like we are almost out of housing bubble.
I always enjoy your posts.
_smile_ Thank you very much.
Cheers,
prat
While we are talking about ben's, they have a nearly patrick.net epic thread going on gold/housing:
Personally, I hate gold almost as much as I hate real estate. It just sits there, arrogantly doing nothing to make anyone's life better. Mocking us. Thinking that being pretty (pshaw, as if it even *realizes* how gaudy it is) is good enough to get it through life.
Oh God I hope it asks to the prom.
Cheers,
prat
>> Engineers can “do things.†Creeptors / Realtors don’t know how to mow a lawn, fix a broken pipe, fumigate, fix a door jamb
Excuse me, may I call BS?
I know a realtor who have personally helped fixing up a house to get it ready for moving in - and I am talking about the BUYER’s agent! Helping the buyer!
Not helping the seller to get the house ready for a sale!
How many realtors does it take to screw in a light bulb?
TWIT is back!
I am under the impression that most realtors are honorable people.
Prat, my swing is falling apart!
SQT, how was your thanksgiving?
I think there is still money to be made in real estate. As ScottC claims, people will still buy and sell houses.
Problem is, it is so hard to make a sale at this time.....When you are paying money to advertise, gas, phone calls, paperwork, etc. and not making sales, it puts a drain on your finances. Some realtors have to even lower their commission just to make a sale. That is how desperate the market gets. ScottC doesn't sell real estate along the coasts.
And I asked my self why some chick from a family of three needs 7 bathrooms?
The tv crew did a fine job capturing the echoes in that house.
The other couple with the 11,000 sqft home were hilarious--and how in afterthought they wished the home was larger.
Many excellent observations posted here!
The ill advised notion of going through the motions to get a realtors lic. to complete one transaction just won't die! The same mindset for those that on-line/daytrade their own investment accounts. Subscriptions for just a few research sources can run into thousands per year (if making informed decisions is important to you). This is usually spread out over an entire client base, not the burden of one person.
Still and all, I'm the last person to rush to the defense of Realtors. Many that claim to be in the bus. for 10-15-25 years have actually been doing it "part-time" for that period. I don't want to beat this to death but I truly feel that any Realtor that has long term goals in the industry should embrace the "Crash". Get over the whole ego thing and bring value to your clients by presenting low-ball offers that will put them in a place (as buyers) where profitability is short term. Not burying them upside down where they might be stuck for 3, 5 or even 10 years before they can break even.
With friends like this who can afford foes?
How many realtors does it take to screw in a light bulb?
They don't screw light bulbs, they screw buyers.
I have to agree with Allah, I know a RE agent who helped my friends run drainage, install new windows and told them why one home was a total piece of $hit and another was overpriced. Of course this guy is a salesman and he did try to push up some houses more than others - that's his job. But he's still working. He also didn't give people the "now is the best time to buy" BS. As none of my friends or I have sold a house yet, I have no experience with selling a house.
The RE agents I hate the most are the selling agents who purposely list a house at a price way under other comps to generate a bidding war. I know a pair of women in the East Bay who did this very well in the boom cycle. I will never buy any home from this pair. I hope these two suffer in the coming dowturn.
Most of the posters and readers of this blog have never been through a real estate crash. I have. And it was a hell of a lot worse than the price depreciation we’re likely to see over the next few months.
ScottC,
I can't speak from experience about the South Texas RE crash, but I can about the CA crash in the early 90's. Nominally, prices here dropped some 21% from peak (87-88) to trough (96), and it took roughly 15 years for prices to recover to their bubble levels --just as in S. Texas.
And what makes you so sure it won't be just as bad or even worse this time? I see plenty of evidence it will be worse --prevalence of I/O neg-ams, higher estimated levels of speculation, RE constituting a greater share of job & economy, etc.
You guys are all a bunch of wussies to me.
Beware of painting with too broad a brush, Scott. Many on this board, myself, SQT, Peter P, etc., have consistently defended your right to express you opinions and have valued your input, even where we disagree.
This thread topic was obviously meant to be a bit cheeky and provocative a-la "Jealous Bitter Renters". But consider the last sentence:
Will the ethical RE agents be the one’s left standing?
ScottC Says:
"...I’d like to meet a Californian who can stand in an unairconditioned repossessed home in South Texas for 20 minutes. It’s like standing in a 120 degrees oven, while writing a list of repairs. You guys are all a bunch of wussies to me..."
I'm from San Jose, but live in Phoenix. I did live in Arlington Texas for a year and can say, hands down--especially during Monsoon season where it's both ungodly-hot and torridly-humid--Phoenix is hands down hotter than Texas.
Maybe even be hotter than hell itself!
I haven't met an honest realtor yet (and I have two of them in my family!).
btw, here's an article from CATO that might give you a different perspective on deflation.
The same greed that motivates people to buy huge McMansions, eating up our prescious natural resources because for some reason, they need 7 bathrooms is the same greed that motivates RE ... It's the American way. Everything, even a spiritual holiday, is geared toward buy, buy, buy, consume, consume, consume.
NAR report this morning: sales dropped significanly across the board. NE leads by 7.5% sept to oct. Prices are still all lower than they were this summer.
Checkout this article As Prices Cool in California Markets, Defaults Rise
from the "As Prices Cool in California Markets, Defaults Rise" article:
"As interest rates rise, we'll see an end to the price boom of the last several years," said Ms. McGee (foreclosures.com pres.). "But we won't see a price crash like we did in the 90s. The high inventory just isn't there.
Funny things people say.
“As interest rates rise, we’ll see an end to the price boom of the last several years,†said Ms. McGee (foreclosures.com pres.). “But we won’t see a price crash like we did in the 90s. The high inventory just isn’t there.
Funny things people say.
She doesn't want people to think there is a crash....only that there will be more foreclosures....she has to play two sides...if she led people to believe that there was a big crash coming, people would wait it out instead of looking for foreclosures right now. She has a vested interest to protect....remember, she runs foreclosures.com.......Alexis is a saleswoman.
Shes right though...the high inventory just isn't there.....................yet!
Shes right though…the high inventory just isn’t there…………………yet!
Well, to be right she needs to be specific enough to prove or disprove her statement. I can't be sure if she spoke about inventory in the Bay Area, LA, San Diego, or possibly some market where RE is going strong. All the same, it struck me as blissfully hopeful.
Downside Bull,
You might be interested in this thread from August:
"Strategies for profiting off of a housing bust"
Go to the main blog page, find the links on the right-hand side & click on:
Archives
August 2005
@PeterP: "Prat, my swing is falling apart!"
That is the nature of swings. My driver decided that duck-hooks off the tee were the most appropriate way to torment me, and my scores shot up 20 strokes for a month. Isn't this game grand?
@Ha Ha: "Traffic is decreasing to this blog — posting is not that fast and furious."
And thank goodness. I prefer a leisurely read after work to the all-night chugs that were going on a few months ago. It was impressive, but exhausting.
@ScottC re Texas v California.
Like, whatev. You wouldn't last five minutes in an afro-fusion-cuban-thai-vegan restaurant with absolutely *awful* Chablis and a maitre d' whose icy scorn could freeze hell. I mean, really, like he's even that cute in those chartreuse crushed velvet pants. Sooooooo last week.
ta,
prat
I’m a whiskey man.
You, my friend, are in luck. I present...
PERFECTION ITSELF: http://tinyurl.com/da446
Cheers,
prat
I prefer bourbon to Scotch, Scotch is something old ladies like to conceal in a glass of milk.
Well, old ladies and that sissy Churchill.
Cheers,
prat
There are still a few party go’ers that refuse to call it a night.
Hasn't had any effect on the millions of for-sale signs that are still blossoming like spring flowers.
...and while that is going on, have a look at the article RealtyTrac survey sees increase in foreclosures
[snip]
"New foreclosures increased in October to their highest level so far this year," said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. "Some of the increase can be attributed to foreclosure activity ramping up again in Louisiana and Mississippi after being disrupted by the recent hurricanes. But it's possible that increasing interest rates and other economic factors are beginning to move foreclosures closer to their historic levels."
but I have yet to meet one Californian who would stand in an unairconditioned repossessed home in South Texas for 20 minutes.
Actually, I'd prefer to sit. With a cool drink, I can weather anything short of a fire.
but I have yet to meet one Californian who would stand in an unairconditioned repossessed home in South Texas for 20 minutes.
I'm sure anyone can if there is money to be made.
I wouldn’t waste five minutes in an afro-fusion-cuban-tai-vegan restaurant. There’s no money it.
I prefer banks myself, but the food usually sucks.
Hmmm... "Last hurrah", dead cat bounce, or genuine evidence that this bubble still has legs?
/biz.yahoo.com/ap/051129/home_sales.html?.v=4
New Home Sales Hit Record Level in Oct.
Tuesday November 29, 10:09 am ET
By Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer
Sales of New Homes Soar to Record Level in Oct. in What Could Be Last Hurrah for Housing Market
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sales of new homes soared at a record pace in October in what could be a last hurrah for the booming housing market.
The Commerce Department said that sales of new single-family homes shot up by 13 percent last month, the biggest one-month gain in more than 12 years. The increase pushed sales to an all-time high seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.42 million units.
The increase confounded analysts who had been predicting that new home sales would decline by 1.8 percent, reflecting continued increases in mortgage rates. It was possible that the unexpected surge reflected a final rush by buyers to get into the market before mortgage rates climb higher.
The rise in new home sales was accompanied by an increase in prices, with the median price increasing by 1.6 percent from September to $231,300 in October.
Same article did have a couple of caveats though:
The nationwide jump in new home sales was the one bright spot for housing last month. Sales of previously owned homes fell by 2.7 percent, the National Association of Realtors reported on Monday, and construction of new homes and apartments also fell during the month.
Re: New Homes Sales
y-o-y and broken down by region, the report tells a more interesting story:
Northeast -16.5%
Midwest -19.8%
South 27.5%
West 8.8%
We should send that condo “crash and burn†link to the people over at Condoflip.com.
I already did!
Thanks for pointing that out Frank. One has to wonder if that huge 27.5% spike in the South has something to do with Katrina, or if the RE speculators are simply leaving the coasts in search of less expensive properties to flip --or a little of both.
or if the RE speculators are simply leaving the coasts in search of less expensive properties to flip
What do you do for a living?
I'm a traveling RE speculator. :lol:
"There is no way a real estate broker can survive, much less profit, for 10 years in the business without absolute integrity and unassailable ethics. It’s just not.
Since realtors have a 90% failure rate–9 out of 10 new licensees will quit before two years–only the very best and most honest will make it for 10 years. And they are the only realtors worth doing business with."
ScottC,
I don't want to reignite another pointless "all Realtors are crooks" debate, but it's quite a leap to go from "9 out of 10 new licensees will quit before two years" to all those who survive have "absolute integrity and unassailable ethics". I'm sure that many wash out due to incompetence & inexperience, but that's not the same thing as failing due to dishonesty and a lack of ethics.
There are tons of talented "closers" in every sales-oriented profession under the sun. It does not logically follow that all long-term closers are also exceptionally ethical --just good at closing. Of course, this does not prove that they are exceptionally unethical, either.
Again, not a slam against you personally or your profession --just an observation. There are ethical and unethical people in every profession. I agree that most of the johnny-come-lately's will wash out quickly.
@Mother Ocean,
I was gone for a long while myself. I understand that Surfer-X hasn't been posting for several weeks now. As far as Mr. Fuchs' fate, that would be a question for SQT, Jack or Peter P.
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There have been no shortage of would be realtor's who have entered the housing market in recent years. We've all heard the rallying cry of "Now is the time to buy." And of course everyone's favorite, "Real Estate never goes down."
But is this the talk of a "real" RE agent, or have they become sterotyped into the used car salesman mold because of the housing mania. Did we always look at RE agents as untrustworthy or is this a new phenomenon?
What do you think will happen as the market cools and jobs dissappear? Will the ethical RE agents be the one's left standing?
#housing