There’s always something to howl about.

Author: Greg Swann (page 181 of 209)

Suburban Phoenix Real Estate Broker

September 2006 BloodhoundRealty.com Market-Basket of Homes: Values down 0.15% on normal sales . . .

The Phoenix-area’s real estate market seems to be continuing its slow trek back to normalcy. Home prices were essentially unchanged on a fairly strong volume of sales in the September edition of the BloodhoundRealty.com Market-Basket of Homes.

Average prices for Market Basket homes in September were down 0.15%, compared to August, a difference of $372. Year-over-year, prices are down 3.15%, and down 6.05% from the December 2005 high.

A total of 183 sales were recorded, down from August’s total of 199. Market-Basket homes spent an average of 100 days on market, 22 days more than in August. For comparison purposes, 192 Market Basket homes sold in September of 2003, the last relatively normal year, in an average of 58 days.

As has been the case in recent months, most Market-Basket homes are selling at or above list price. A few deeply-discounted properties pulled down the average — most notably builder’s spec homes deeply discounted to close before the end of the third fiscal quarter. Average discounting netted out to 2.03%, up from 1.43% in August.

Inventories of available Market Basket homes continue their decline. There are now 1,337 homes available for sale in the Market-Basket, where there were 1,406 in August and 1,506 in July. With sales of 183 homes, the implied absorption rate is 7.31 months, up from slightly over 7 months in August, but down significantly from almost 10 months in July. A six-month absorption rate is considered normal. The number of homes listed as “Sale Pending” is 165, down from 179 in August.

Based on the idea of the Consumer Price Index market-basket of goods and services, the Market-Basket of Homes uses average sales prices for a small subset of all Valley home sales to get a clearer idea of what is happening in the middle of the bell curve. The alternative method, striking a median among all closed transactions, introduces too many extraneous factors to provide a reliable indicator of what is happening to prices for those homes that are most avidly desired by the greatest number of people. To that end, the Market-Basket of Homes looks at sales prices for MLS-listed Read more

If you want to play, you can’t delay . . .

First, if you want to take a shot at The BloodhoundBlog Valuation Challenge, get your entry in soon. Judging will be tonight.

Second, don’t forget to get your Carnival of Real Estate entry in. We don’t control the deadline, so, if you’re late, your post gets shunted off to next week…

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Business is slow at the Arizona Business Blogs . . .

In the “Don’t Hate Me Just Because I’m Pitiful” sweepstakes, The Arizona Republic invites us to visit their brand new “Arizona Business Blogs”. They’re not new, but that hardly matters. First, there is no link to the not-new “Arizona Business Blogs” in the on-line article. Second, although there is a text representation of a link, it’s broken. Third, even if you fix the broken non-link, the “Arizona Business Blogs” aren’t there. (Seek elsewhere, intrepid info-seeker.) And fourth, these dingleberries know nothing about weblogging. For example, Senior Real Estate Reporter Catherine Reagor’s real estate weblog was last updated on September 19th. Of six posts visible on the first page (I didn’t dig deeper), there are zero links and three comments. That’s not a weblog. That’s a long-winded tombstone…

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Ask the Broker: Is a Buyer’s Agent like a bad penny . . . ?

When is a Buyer Broker Agreement abrogated, anyway?

Is there a law stating that once your contract with your realtor is up that you must include them on the deal of the purchase of a home that they showed you?

No such law.

Feeling relieved? You can stop that right now.

For, while there is no law binding you to your someday-to-be-former Buyer’s Agent, you may well have signed a contract that says that someday never comes. Or at least not soon.

Consider this, from the Arizona Association of Realtors Buyer Broker Agreement:

e. Buyer agrees to pay such compensation if Buyer, within ____ calendar days after the termination of this Agreement, enters into an agreement to purchase, exchange, option or lease any Property shown to or negotiated on behalf of the Buyer by Broker during the term of this Agreement, unless Buyer enters into a subsequent buyer-broker exclusive employment agreement with another broker.

The blank is filled in with a number, often 30, sometimes 90 — although it could be anything, so long as it is something. If the you and your agent mutually agreed to 1,001 days, it will be two-and-three-quarters years before you are divorced.

Unless… You sign another Buyer Broker Agreement.

This kind of hold-over language is common in real estate employment agreements. On the one hand, you can say, “Well, jeepers, why shouldn’t the poor goofball get paid, even if he didn’t get the job done by the deadline?” But on the other hand: “Exactly how much time do you need, you poor goofball?”

The real reason for that kind of language is to frustrate betrayal. If you make a whispering deal with the Listing Agent to cut your Buyer’s Agent out of the deal, that language cuts him right back in.

So how long is long enough to protect the Buyer’s Agent without unduly ham-stringing the Buyer? How about 15 days?

Or how about zero? My attitude is, if you’re done with me, I’m done with you. Whatever you do after we’ve divorced each other is your business.

But different agents will see this issue differently, and this is why buyers and sellers need to read, mark, learn Read more

HotPads.com: A for-rent-by-owner site based on a whimsical map mash-up . . .

This is the map search screen from HotPads.com, a for-rent-by-owner site launching tonight:

This is the most whimsical map mash-up I’ve seen yet, and the site is a treat if only for the cartoony graphics.

In Phoenix, at least, they’re aggregating listings from local property management companies, although landlords can register to list their homes on-line. The site provides a lot of details on the listings, along with neighborhood information.

The site seems to be reliably alive right now, but tomorrow is their real launch date, so, if something flakes on you, cut ’em a break and come back later. There’s a weblog if you want to track their progress.

We rarely do leases now, but I used to do a ton. The MLS is a poor solution, since agents don’t love to list rentals, and they really, really don’t love servicing the listings. I sell a bunch of rental homes, though, so I’m always watching for better ways to market availability. HotPads.com is a sweet solution…

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Arizona economy: “Get over housing bubble, economists say, growth remains strong”

I won’t have September’s numbers until tomorrow, but the news is not good for bubbleheads — which is to say that the news is not bad for everyone else. Meanwhile, there’s this from The Business Journal of Phoenix:

Some of Arizona’s leading economists believe the housing slowdown is a short-lived bump in the road that too many people spend too much time thinking about.

Instead, Arizonans should be looking at statistics that show the state created 161,000 jobs through August of this year, more than 340,000 jobs since the end of the 2002 recession and had a whopping 8.7 percent gain in gross state product for 2005.

“It’s hard to imagine a state with more economic momentum,” said Kent Ennis, an economist and the director of research at the Arizona Department of Commerce.

I most sincerely do not hate to say I told you so

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Don’t shoot the messenger — shoot the editor instead . . .

I had a call from my editor at The Arizona Republic earlier today. To be honest, I thought it was The Goodbye Look. I’m utterly amazed that they’ve let me carry on like this for a year, and lately I’m pushing even more than my normal share of buttons.

And that really was the gist of the call, not to fire me but to ask if I would mind plugging in less contentious columns between the columns in the series I have cooking right now on buyer’s agent’s commissions.

The editor said he loves the content, he just wants a break from the angry Realtor phone calls!

Fair enough. So I wrote a new column today on why overpriced homes won’t sell, and I’ll hit him with others later in the week. He can space them out however he likes.

It’s funny, though, isn’t it? That urge to censorship — call the ADRE, call the AAR, call the editor, try to brow-beat me — is so common. God help us, I hope it’s isolated to the real estate business…

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Linking my way out of the trials of tabulation . . .

Sellsius° wrote this morning about tabbed browsing, but they have no idea. I live my normal life with over 100 tabs open at any time, and right now I have many more than that. I’m going to do a bunch of links, because I want to close tabs I’ve been opening since last week.

(What about crashes? I use Saft for Safari. My Mac never crashes anyway, but if Safari starts to get cranky, I Force Quit then relaunch. Saft reopens all my previously-opened tabs.)

Joel Burslem at the Future of Real Estate Marketing cites some stats from Redfin. Not to be contrary, but I think 131 total transactions ain’t bad for a new brokerage. It’s nothing for the head-count of 35, to be sure, but most of those heads are useless eaters. Divided by 12 agents, that’s almost 11 sides per agent over six months, just short of two sides a month. At full-commission, they could live on that. But at one-third commission, before the broker’s cut, its pretty lousy money, so I guess Joel is right in the end.

The Property Monger shows how to use inspections as a negotiating tool. The post is pretty Massachusettscentric, but the general principles travel.

Bonnie Erickson at Real Estate Snippets takes on buying real estate during a divorce. The specifics might be Land of a Thousand Lakes-local, but, again, the principles are ubiquitous.

My favorite math gods, Altos Research, take on the media’s flavor of the month: The unaffordability of housing. Alas, the last time math persuaded a reporter is when it persuaded him to major in Journalism.

Local to Arizona, Todd Tarson at moco real estate news details how Mohave County was able to hang onto it’s land use traditions. It turns out you can fight City Hall…

John Keith at The Boston Real Estate blog weighs in on the idea of flat-fee buyer representation.

Want to sell to wired prospects? Mike’s Corner has bad news and good news, with a review of Waiting for your cat to bark? (Mike’s feed is broken, so you’ll need to visit his blog to keep up with his thinking.)

Jeff Brown at Behind Read more

The BloodhoundBlog Valuation Challenge . . .

Here’s a cute little game for people who think they know a thing or two about real estate…

I’m looking at houses for an investor client who is also a close friend of the family. He picked out a house he was interested in, and, as a matter of course, I ran every comp listing in that subdivision — active, pending and sold — going back to May.

I found ten active listings in that exact floorplan in that same subdivision. Unzillowables be damned, this is as close as you can get to stone identical comps, like little plastic Monopoly houses, each one the twin brother of the next. All of them were built between 2002 and 2004, all by the same builder, of course, all upgraded to some degree, none to the ultimate degree. No premium lots, no view lots, no pools.

What would you expect the spread of prices to be?

You would be wrong, no matter what you said, wrong by a lot. There is actually $115,000 between the highest and lowest priced homes.

The nature of this insane market is that people are still seeking prices for their homes that would have been obscene a year ago, as we neared the end of our housing boom.

This is the range of prices sought for these ten homes:

  • $245,000
  • $257,900
  • $257,900
  • $265,000
  • $266,355
  • $272,000
  • $275,000
  • $283,900
  • $299,900
  • $360,000

Here is your challenge:

Go take a look at this particular house and tell me what price it’s selling for.

Anyone can enter. You cannot possibly guess worse than some of these listing agents! It’s like The Price Is Right, just enter your best guesstimate as a comment. We’ll send a great prize to everyone who guesses correctly…

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BloodhoundBlog’s WordPress plug-ins . . .

Daniel Rothamel is swapping over to WordPress, and other people have told me that they are, too, so here, for canonical purposes if for no other, are the WordPress plug-ins BloodhoundBlog is currently using:

Akismet
Akismet checks your comments against the Akismet web serivce to see if they look like spam or not. You need a WordPress.com API key to use this service. You can review the spam it catches under “Manage” and it automatically deletes old spam after 15 days. Hat tip: Michael Hampton and Chris J. Davis for help with the plugin.

Customizable Post Listings (I’m not doing anything with this yet)
Display Recent Posts, Recently Commented Posts, Recently Modified Posts, Random Posts, and other post listings using the post information of your choosing in an easily customizable manner. You can narrow post searches by specifying categories and/or authors, among other things. By Scott Reilly.

Filosofo Comments Preview
Filosofo Comments Preview lets you preview WordPress comments before you submit them. It’s highly configurable from the admin control panel, including optional captcha and JavaScript alert features. By Austin Matzko.

Popularity Contest
This will enable ranking of your posts by popularity; using the behavior of your visitors to determine each post’s popularity. You set a value (or use the default value) for every post view, comment, etc. and the popularity of your posts is calculated based on those values. Once you have activated the plugin, you can configure the Popularity Values and View Reports. You can also use the included Template Tags to display post popularity and lists of popular posts on your blog. By Alex King.

Related Posts
Returns a list of the related entries based on active/passive keyword matches. By Alexander Malov & Mike Lu.

Subscribe To Comments
Allows readers to recieve notifications of new comments that are posted to an entry By Mark Jaquith and Jennifer (ScriptyGoddess).

Search Meter
Keeps track of what your visitors are searching for. After you have activated this plugin, you can check the Search Meter Statistics page to see what your visitors are searching for on your blog. By Bennett McElwee.

Google Sitemaps
This generator will create a Google compliant sitemap of your WordPress blog. By Arne Brachhold.

WordPress Read more

Zillowing the convergence: ‘Close enough is good enough’ will eventually eat every anti-Zillow argument except the ethical complaint . . .

When I was young, I was convinced I was going to work in either editorial or advertising. I was a teenage photo geek, a Junior Jimmy Olson with thousands of dollars worth of professional photo gear slung over my shoulder. In college, I was publisher of the student newspaper. From the time I was very young, single digits, I was producing all sorts of printed material. And because I often didn’t have a budget, I learned how to do a lot of it by myself.

The net consequence of all this is that, by the time I had to get a real job, I knew how to write, I knew how to create images — and I knew how to do many of the back-end jobs associated with producing printed words and images. I looked at my job opportunities and saw that print production paid a helluva lot better than content creation. So I went to work in Wall Street (where the very best money was found) producing 10-Ks and Blue Sky Reports and Annual Reports. I worked a boatload of IPOs, and 102 weblog posts overnight is not a very big job compared to the 100+ hours of the revision cycle on an Initial Public Offering.

All of this was happening at an epoch we might name The Dawn of the Age of Connectivity. The law firms we worked for had high-end dedicated word processing systems, and they wanted to know why they couldn’t do everything “on disk” — in the dewy-eyed lingo of the day.

It fell to me to do this, mostly because I was interested and no one else was. The “disk” problem was a bear, and there were dozens of kludgey “solutions” to this dilemma over the years. But, understood as a telecommunications problem, mere capture of keystrokes was not that big a problem.

The big problem was expressing word-processed coding as typography — and if you are not fairly well-versed in typography, you are probably already saying, “What’s the difference?” And, indeed, the difference today is much smaller than it was when I was doing this work. Typography once Read more

Where the babies are — and where they aren’t . . .

There’s a decently if not very deftly balanced comparison of Gilbert, Arizona, to Portland, Oregon, in the Christian Science Monitor today. The star of the piece is urbanologist Joel Kotkin, so Gilbert doesn’t suffer the usual big-city-dweller’s I-just-don’t-get-it sliming. The issue of fecundity is touched upon without any mention of the fact that Gilbert is fecundity made flesh — that cities like Gilbert are where U.S. population growth occurs. Portland’s New Urbanism is detailed, although neither Richard Florida nor the much lower fecundity rates — or even net population decline — associated with the New Urbanist movement are mentioned.

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The Fountainhead rises early in the West, but how many works of art are so thoroughly about the real estate business?

How’s this for a synopsis of the best real estate movie ever made:

An idealistic architect battles corrupt business interests and his love for a married woman.

So little argue against, so much to dispute…

Nevermind. The Fountainhead is on Turner Classic Movies tomorrow night at 5 pm MST (YTZMV (your time-zone may vary)). That’s a poor time of day for watching TV, so you might wait for the DVD version, to be released November 7th.

Or just forget the whole movie, which is flawed by creepy performances and even creepier architecture, a huge betrayal of the Sullivan/Wright modernism the film intends to celebrate. Snag the bookinstead, which, for my money, is in the running with Huckleberry Finn and Moby Dick as The Great American Novel — the work of literature that best explicates the American Experience.

Plus which, movie or book, how many works of art are so thoroughly about the real estate business?

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