Sunday, January 08, 2006

Buyers Drop The Ball Before New Years! - Lowball! 12/22-01/08

Welcome to the first edition of Lowball! for the New Year!

Lowball! takes a look at home sales over the past week from a very different perspective. For those new to Lowball!, a lowball offer is when a buyer offers a significantly lower bid than asking in hopes that the seller accepts the offer. We take a list of home sales over the past week and pick out the sales that have the highest percentage difference between asking price and selling price.

The reason for Lowball! is to show buyers that the market has changed and buyers now have considerably more leverage than sellers. Just a short time ago, lowball offers would have been laughed at and discarded, however, not any more. The fact that so many under-asking offers are being accepted is clear proof that the market is changing.The list does not contain all sales, I hand-pick the most interesting sales from the list. These listings might be the highest dollar drops, biggest percentage reductions, or sales in towns that are thought to still be 'hot'. Please note, even with double digit percentage reductions, these homes are still incredibly overpriced. This week I tried to grab listings that were more affordable than many I've posted in the past.

The first in our list this week is rather special. I'd like for readers to pause and really take note of what I'm about to say here.

MLS# 2107491 - Union, NJ
Listing Price $395,000 (Reduced from $429,900)
Sales Price $285,000 (27.9% Lowball!, 33.7% from OLP)

Not only has the price reduction of this listing been an incredibly significant 33.7%, but something even more important, this listing sold below the original purchase price. This townhome was purchased by the recent seller in April of 2003 for $305,000. This home has just sold, two and a half years later for $285,000, a loss to the seller. Special congratulations go out to the lowballer that bid almost 30% under asking. Not only did you get a great deal for yourself, but you provided me with proof for me readers that real estate isn't always 'the best investment you'll ever make'.

On to the list:

MLS# 2086128 - Washington Township (Warren), NJ
Listing Price $599,990
Sales Price $432,990 (27.8% Lowball!)

MLS# 2109897 - Phillipsburg, NJ
Listing Price $189,000
Sales Price $145,000 (23.3% Lowball!)

MLS# 2073216 - Washington Township (Morris), NJ
Listing Price $850,000
Sales Price $665,000 (21.8% Lowball)

MLS# 2218354 - Livingston, NJ
Listing Price $2,395,000
Sales Price $1,925,000 (19.6% Lowball!)

MLS# 2112371 - Ringwood, NJ
Listing Price $1,200,000
Sales Price $990,000 (17.5% Lowball!)

MLS# 2203103 - Green Brook, NJ
Listing Price $1,176,130
Selling Price $975,000 (17.1% Lowball!)

MLS# 1637848 - Mount Olive, NJ
Listing Price $469,900 (Reduced from $525,000)
Sales Price $390,000 (17% Lowball!, 25.7% off of OLP)

MLS# 2085209 - East Side Historic, Paterson, NJ
Listing Price $599,000 (Reduced from $659,000)
Sales Price $500,000 (16.5% Lowball, 24.% off OLP)

Note: For those looking to purchase in the very expensive 'prestige towns'. Take a ride through the East Side historic district in Paterson. Incredibly beautiful homes that would be in the millions if they were in another town. What happened here? The deterioration of a once beautiful area. There are other such beautiful areas in Newark and Irvington as well. These communities were once prestige towns as well. Don't be fooled into thinking upscale communities are immune from the process of disinvestment and decay.

MLS# 2067772 - Watchung, NJ
Listing Price $2,390,000 (Reduced from $2,690,000)
Sales Price $2,000,000 (16.3% Lowball!, 25.7% off OLP)

MLS# 2099509 - Oakland, NJ
Listing Price $799,900
Sales Price $680,000 (15% Lowball!)

MLS# 2066486 - Chester, NJ
Listing Price $3,500,000 (Reduced from $4,950,000)
Sales Price $3,000,000 (14.3% Lowball!, 39% off OLP)

MLS# 2093612 - Little Falls, NJ
Listing Price $279,900 (Reduced from $299,900)
Sales Price $240,000 (14.3% Lowball!, 20% off OLP)

Caveat Emptor!
Grim

20 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Nicely done.

It may not be the first, but documenting a sale at loss already should scare the crap out of the speculators. This could get uglier even earlier than I expected, and I expected pretty ugly pretty early.

FYI I also comment as lindsey.

1/08/2006 09:36:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Want to really scare people who believe that high end towns can't fall apart? Take a look at North Plainfield, slum and crime capital of Somerset County - lots of decaying old Victorian mansions.

1/08/2006 10:19:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Grim thank you for the updates. Recently married my wife and I have been searching for a house for two years. There was a brief stop for several months due to planning the wedding. I know this web site deals with mostly northern New Jersey, but I recently saw that A.C.(We live in Brigantine were prices have gone way out of control) was rated 49% over valued. What do you think. I have since told my wife we are going to sit this one out and wait.

1/08/2006 10:42:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Keep up the work Mr. Truthseeker.

However to put things in relative terms to past prices can you please post what the house sold for 3-5-7 years ago to compare the insane price appreciation.

Thanks for doing for the Condo in Union. WOW real Estate prices can go down and you can lose money?

How would the pumping realtors spin this?

1/08/2006 10:44:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Can someone help me?? I have looked at a 2br 2.5 bath duplex in Rahway in which is bank owned. The orginal LP was $255k, then it went to $230k and now is $215.6k. I am about to put in a bid for $180k. The comps show the FMV at $200k (approx). I would like to know is $180 too much?? I really want to bid lower but I was advise not to. Help! All comments and suggestions are welcomed.

1/08/2006 12:51:00 PM  
Blogger chicagofinance said...

Grim:

You are really hitting the cover off the ball.

When dealing with Internet sites, providing something unique and providing it first is what matters.

As you can see with the Ben Jones site, much of the content is derived not just from his effort, but from his visitors.

Clearly the velocity of the increase in traffic and postings here has been due to your work. I would say that in 4-8 weeks, this site is going to be a must visit for even the casually interested.

Good luck in taking advantge of the "eyeballs" that you deserve to have.

N.B. You may wish to adopt the Ben Jones "call for topics" posts, so you have a forum for brainstorming and gossip.

1/08/2006 01:06:00 PM  
Blogger Metroplexual said...

Grim,

Thanks for the county tags. Love that lowball. Interesting article on foreclosures and how FannieMae is handling foreclosure sales. 50 % off!


Lenders lost on Laurel Woods, Mortgage woes seen nationally.

1/08/2006 04:49:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lordy, I wish every community in the US had a site like this. Do you think, in your spare time, you could put one together for Seattle?!?!
Thankyou for giving us all hope, no matter where we live- if it's hapening there, we know it is or will be happening here.
If property in Teaneck can tank (beautiful little town, 45 min. bus to Manhattan,etc.), then places like Seattle have a LONG way o go downward.

1/08/2006 06:47:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Make sure you are compensated for your patience, time and grief. Say grief because anyone who has not accepted the mania by not buying in last year or 2 has been lectured by others that own a house with their "buy now" attitude. Only problem it is your money and your risk.

Do not rush in at the first sign of drop.

Remember house and codos are up about 100% in last 5 years. a 10-15% drop is a pittance of a drop to where they should fal.

MAKE SURE YOU ARE COMPENSATED!

1/08/2006 06:52:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ditto to the above!! And remember folks, the cardinal rule of this time's go-around with RE:
!!!!NO BIDDING WARS!!!
Let's all work together for the greater good this time- only extreme low-balling allowed. There will be plenty of great houses out there to choose from so just say no and walk away if your low-ball offers are not accepted- God will reward you with a beautiful CHEAP house that you can pay off and own free and clear in no time.
YAY!!!! GO TIGHTWADS GO!!!!

1/08/2006 07:30:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

When go down to where they should Houses in NJ are still not cheap.
Theyn have always been high priced compared to other areas of country and I believe this will continue, but 30-35% drops are required to "so call "normalize" the market. The spin the realors call for "Normalized" what BS!
MAKE SURE YOU ARE COMPENSATED FOR ALL YOUR TIME PATIENCE AND GRIEF.

IT'S PAYBAC TIME!

1/08/2006 07:52:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

MLS# 2107491 - Union, NJ
Could it be a typo?

1/08/2006 09:45:00 PM  
Blogger grim said...

Thanks for all the support, I really do appreciate the comments.

If you really want to support what I'm doing, please tell a friend about the site.

Thanks!
Grim

Anon,

The last similar unit on that street sold in 2005 for $290,000. They were really stretching with their asking price. The listing carried the usual "SELLER MOTIVATED" tag.

1/08/2006 10:11:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

We bid $900k on a $1.1m listing in Northern CA today. Seller has until tomorrow to respond.

Will post the result here...

1/09/2006 01:17:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Seller Motivated" What utter BS!

Okay a similar house sold in the neighborhood 6 months ago at $800k and my asking price is $875K so lower it to $825K and say I'm motivated
Game Over!

1/09/2006 09:29:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Glad to see our first discussed "LOSS"

Wonder if this will be a trend sooner than later in greater numbers..

Would be nice to see a weekly feature: "Sold at a loss!!" Or to give the other mortgage view blog "Another f'd borrower" a nod, maybe a "Another f'd buyer turned seller" feature :)

1/09/2006 11:16:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

regarding our $900k lowball, the seller bascially told us to get screwed and that they were happy to leave it on the market until Spring if they had to.

We'll keep looking for lowball targets.

1/09/2006 02:55:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Go back in the spring and offer them $700,000. Spring's right around the corner- you can wait, right?

1/10/2006 12:19:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

For Rahway buyer:

Why dont you go to Domania.com and find out prices in that apartment complex for the past 5 years ? You will get an idea of how 180K compares with prices of previous years, that is, how much the run-up is at 180K. And then you may decide if you mind/ dont mind supporting such a run-up. Again, the market has not gone down so much yet, so you might not get the condo if you bid less than 180K. I guess it is about how badly you want that place.

1/10/2006 11:02:00 AM  
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5/18/2006 06:04:00 PM  

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