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The $40,000 Washer/Dryer
Not giving an inch may cost you a mint in a real estate transaction
Back in the
1960's, Tarryton Cigarettes had the saying "I'd Rather Fight Than
Switch". Personally, I think I would give up my specific brand of
cigarettes than take a solid punch in the face. But fighting is what
some folks like to do, at least verbally, and this characteristic is
often played out during the back and forth volleying of buying or
selling a home. Especially when Mr. Buyer or Mr. Seller don't have
to face the opposition directly, and are allowed to vent their
frustrations through a third party- Their trusty realtor.
In a weakened real estate market, almost all transactions involve
some kind of fighting between buyer and seller. Rare are the times
that everyone agrees upon value and terms. The seller always
believes his home is worth more than it actually is, and buyers
always believe that they are overpaying for any given piece of
Philly
real estate they may be eyeing. Evidently sellers don't watch
the evening news, and buyers swallow everything that comes out of a
news anchors mouth as gospel. Sure the market is soft in Detroit and
St. Louis, and of course Miami and Las Vegas are struggling, but
since all real estate is local, the true depth of our economic
issues in any given part of the country cannot be summed up by some
Gloom and Doom story on the nightly news. To sellers, the effects of
the economy on their home value is slight, and to buyers, this
downturn is the similar to Chicken Little's forecast that the sky is
falling. Somewhere between the two lies the truth. Hence, the
initial conflict in getting both parties to agree on value.
The real problem comes when the negotiating for the smaller issue
arise. How much of a credit for issues discovered during a home
inspection is fair? Since both buyer and seller are now at their
breaking point- who is going to be the one to give the nearly
nominal concession to allow the transaction to continue? This
scenario once played itself out, much to the detriment of one of my
sellers. As a veteran
Philadelphia real estate agent, trying desperately to bring two
parties together, the sticking point after a few weeks of
negotiating was a washer and dryer. A used washer and dryer...a
Kenmore I believe. The buyers wanted them, and so did the seller.
The seller decided that although the cost of moving the appliances
out of his basement, and across the country to his new home was
going to be borderline worthwhile, it was just the knife he was
going to stick into the buyers back. To hell with them, was his
motto. Take it or Leave it, I recall him saying.
The buyers took option two, and walked away from the deal. The
seller kept the home, along with his used white Kenmore washer and
dryer. His life was on hold for just over four months, as we found a
new buyer. And this new buyer was smart- he let the seller keep his
washer and dryer, and he paid $40,000 less than the first buyers who
walked away from the deal four months earlier.
Fighting, for the sake of fighting, is sometimes a costly event.
Even if you love your washer and dryer a lot, it is sometimes better
to cut your losses and head for the hills, even if it means having
to fork over a few dollars for a new washer and dryer. Pinching a
dime for a dollar is never a good idea, and usually an awful idea in
a softening real estate market.
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