Feb. 02, 2008: If you've finally found your dream home in the Phoenix area -- don't dawdle

Here's a paradox for the ages: It's been a strong buyers market for more than two years -- and yet buyers still can't afford to be lax about the houses they love.

How's that? In our recent seller's market, sellers were completely indifferent to home-buyers -- as a matter of studied strategy. "We might consider your offer," they seemed to say, "but not today. We're letting the offers pile up until Monday or Tuesday, then we'll take a look at them all at the same time."

Why can't buyers in this market approach sellers with the same bland indifference?

They can -- provided they're willing to buy just any home.

In a seller's market, qualified buyers are essentially a fungible quantity. Each one is simply a pile of money in the seller's eyes -- some larger, some smaller, some sooner, some later. Allowing for risks and opportunities, one is as good as another.

Not so for buyers. Houses are inherently non-fungible -- each one is unique in location, appearance, construction, condition, amenities and lifestyle factors. Even with so many homes for sale right now, it can be a challenge for buyers to find even one house they are completely committed to buying.

My take: If you want to get the best possible deal, pick three homes, not one, and pit the sellers against each other.

But buyers don't do this. Instead, they look at dozens of sub-standard offerings, and then focus all of their attention on the one house they can find that is priced right, repaired and staged right, marketed right.

And guess what? Of all the houses these buyers will have seen, this is the one for which there is competition. The factors that appeal to them also appeal to the other folks out there looking for homes right now. The dirty or neglected or over-priced houses attract no offers, where the few that are truly market-ready can draw multiple contracts within a few days of being listed.

The lesson to take away: If you really love the home, don't dawdle. Chances are, someone else loves it, too.


Greg Swann is the designated broker for BloodhoundRealty.com, a full-service Metropolitan Phoenix real estate brokerage. This article originally appeared in the West Valley regional sections of the Arizona Republic.

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