Many sellers want to wait until the spring before putting their home on the market. This might be for any of several reasons:
In a normal real estate market, this may make sense. However, this market has been anything but normal. This spring will also see some abnormalities. The biggest difference will be the direction prices will take. In years past, the spring market would favor the seller because increased demand would outpace any increase in supply: the number of houses coming onto the market would not be as great as the number of buyers newly entering the market. In most situations, when demand is greater than supply, prices increase. The reason this spring will be different is that the supply of homes coming to the market will be dramatically impacted by foreclosure properties being released by the banks. Many believe this increase in inventory will far outweigh buyer demand. In situations where supply is greater than demand, prices decrease. Will This Actually Happen?RealtyTrac, in their latest foreclosure report, explained: “U.S. foreclosure activity has been mired down since October of last year, when the robo-signing controversy sparked a flurry of investigations into lender foreclosure procedures and paperwork. While foreclosure activity in September and the third quarter continued to register well below levels from a year ago, there is evidence that this temporary downward trend is about to change direction, with foreclosure activity slowly beginning to ramp back up. This will impact prices. What Do Experts Believe the Impact Will Be?Here are the pricing projections by several major entities:
Bottom LineYou may pay a hefty price for the convenience of not having your property on the market right now. |
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
What will Idaho Home Prices Be in the Spring?
The following article by KCM Blog talks about the national real estate market. It is hard to know how much our local market will affected. Idaho is a Statutory Foreclosure state, which I have spoken of before in this blog, and did not experence the level of issues that Judicial Foreclosure states did. However, what we do not know is, if the major banks put a hold on foreclosures in all states. Hopefully not, but we may very well receive an increase in bank owned properties on our market.
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