Tag: Home Sales

  • Recent Home Sales Prices Tell Small Part Of Success Story

    recent home sales prices tell small part success story
    Getting To Sold Is Often Journey

    Recent home sales prices tell small part of success story. The tale of a home sale can be one with adversity. The challenge is often finding the correct marketing price. Sometimes the story includes marketing, sometimes staging or perhaps condition. For the purpose of this article we will focus on pricing. List price or “asking price” is a large part of a good Realtor’s job. Like the experts on Antiques Roadshow a good real estate agent knows the latest “sold” prices, and has seen a good bit of competition. Unlike the Roadshow, your agent most likely has a relationship with you. This is good but it also can cloud judgement a bit.

    I was surprised when I looked at 12 sold listings that recently sold in an upscale neighborhood for Chattanooga, TN. What I found was that 50% of the sold homes had been listed with at least 2 different companies at consecutive time periods. My focus is most always on the final sales price and the days on market for that listing period. I had never considered the marketing period prior to the one that was successful. Many of the “first time” efforts lasted longer than the second time.

    This finding does play a part in the article I wrote about many homes not selling. So that means that some of the homes that scored in the did not sell category eventually do.

    What is interesting is what this means for traditional reported numbers. Realtor organizations like to promote all the good things about the housing market. One statistic mentioned is the List Price to Sales Price ratio. Generally this is calculated on the list price last quoted and the sales price as a percentage. So if a house is originally listed for $120,000 and reduced to $100,000 and sells for $97,000 then the List Price to Sales Price ratio is 97%.

    In my study what I found was that the last listing price to sales price ratio was 95%. The original list price to sales price ratio was 91%. But the surprising fact was that HALF of all the sold listings started out with a previous listing and a marketing price of 82% of the final sales price!

    That is a story you will not hear published in Realtor trade publications. Of course you do have to dig a bit because Realtors will leave the second listing off the market until the Days on Market counter resets.

    The moral of this story depends on if you are a buyer or seller.

    If you are a buyer, make an offer on that home that seems priced too high! Especially if the listing has some time on it. There are investors that make a good living on this strategy with bank foreclosures.

    If you are a seller. Then consider market feedback. If you are getting showings consistently but no offers, your price is most likely too high. (Perhaps condition, staging, etc will make a difference). If you are not getting any showings at all then your price may be really high and also you need to check the marketing.

    Happy Home Selling and Buying! and remember that Recent Home Sales Prices Tell Small Part Of Success Story.

  • 2013 Top Home Selling Neighborhoods on Signal Mountain TN 37377

    The 2013 top home selling neighborhoods on Signal Mountain TN 37377 so far in mid August are as follows:

    37377 TN
    Welcome to Signal Mountain, Tennessee 37377

    1.) Hidden Brook (13)
    2.) Birnam Woods (9)
    3.) Old Town (7)
    4.) Boulder Point (5)
    5. Fox Run (5)
    6.) Carriage Hill (3)
    7.) Holly Meadows (3)
    8.) Holly Springs (3)
    9.) Westfield (3)

    **Note: these are the ones with at least 3 sales.

    So far 165 homes have sold on Signal Mountain, TN. That is up from 135 same period in 2012. The low price so far this year is $38,699 on Oak Street. The high was $943,500 on East Brow Road. The average $/sqft overall is $108. The days on market is 122 for the ones that sold. Something that is fairly meaningless but interesting is the average age home was built in 1978 and is 2,800 sqft. That is interesting to me because I was built in 1963 and spent most of my childhood on Signal Mountain, and almost another decade in the 90s there. The dynamic of development on Signal Mountain has been interesting to observe.

    Signal Mountain is a wonderful community. Check out the basic facts at this wikipedia site. There are about 3,000 households and 7,600 people living there.

    I grew up at 1615 James Blvd. It was close enough to walk or bike to Thrasher Elementary school. I remember always wanting to get a head start before Mrs. Keith (second grade teacher) left the parking lot in her Dodge Charger. She was fairly small in stature and I could just she the top of her head behind the steering wheel.

    I grew up on the corner of James Blvd and Skyline Drive. We enjoyed a few great sled runs down two hills at Skyline Drive subdivision. Especially when conditions got icy on top of snow.

    When I was 6 years old we had a large snow on Christmas day. This is a video (on location) about the day.

    Signal Mountain, TN 37377 Home Sales
    37377 TN – Neighborhood Home Sales
  • Chattanooga Home Sales Up 16% Over 2011

    The Chattanooga residential market is up in 2012 over 2011. The number of home sales reflects a 16% increase so far this year to date compared to same period last year. What is interesting is that lower priced homes did not increase in sales as much as the higher priced homes. The number of homes that sold between $250,000 and $1M increased from 807 last year to 1,066 in 2012, or a 32% increase! The number of homes sold between $100,000 and $250,000 increased 19%. The number of homes under $100,000 increased only 6%. That probably means that first time home buyers are still struggling to get on their feet. The good news is that there are good jobs for the middle class in Chattanooga and the borrowers are strong enough to pick up great deals in a very affordable market!