I found this article courtesy of the excellent industry publication put forth by MAR (Minnesota Association of Realtors). It is a reality check and wake up call for all of us in this business…buyers, sellers and their agents.
Austan Goolsbee is a professor of economics at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business and a research fellow at the American Bar Foundation. His article, “Reality Check for Home Sellers” was published September 27, 2007 in the New York Times. He has some great quotes in his article, including:
“Economists tend to think people are crazy because they won’t sell their houses for less than they paid for them — and people think economists are crazy for thinking things exactly like that,†said Professor Christopher Mayer, director of the Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate at Columbia Business School and an authority on real estate economics.
Professor Mayer goes on to say what he tells his own family members:
“If you want to sell your house then you list it at the market price and you sell it,†he said. “If you don’t really want to sell then don’t put it on the market. But don’t say you want to sell and then set the price so high that you spend the year cleaning up every morning, having people walk through your living room and look in your medicine cabinets and reject you. That’s just painful — and expensive.â€
And if this quote isn’t true about this market, I don’t know what is…
One source of difficulty arises from a basic fact of real estate economics: about half of home purchases are by people moving within a metropolitan area. If sellers can’t sell their houses because they want too much for them, they also can’t become buyers of new homes.
This is especially true with “move up” buyers where they have a tremendous opportunity in front of them right now, but they are unwilling to lower the price of their home they are selling by $20,000 – $30,000 in order to take advantage of the current discount on higher end homes where they will likely be able to save $50,000 – $100,000 by buying now.
People can’t stand to lose money even if there’s big opportunity in front of them. Something has to give to get the market moving.
