The Perils of Overpricing

Overprice at your own peril

Overprice at your own perilSeller Beware…  overpricing is dangerous for your health. And ours.

We like to think that we offer great advice when it comes to pricing homes.  We scrutinize the comps ad nauseam. And to play it safe, we usually have our office mates over for a look to let us know if we’re overenthusiastic, or even stingy in our assessment of our upcoming listings.  The reality check has come in handy on more than one occasion.

Still, it’s the seller who sets the price.  So what to do if a seller wants too much? Sellers often have an inflated view of what their house is worth.  And with good reason. They’ve generally put a lot of money and time into improving their investment, and damn it, there should be a 400% return on that bathroom remodel.  Right?  Ummmm… not so fast.

Just about every agent in our office has a tale about a listing that starts off too high whereby the seller rejects solid offers left and right because they are just “insulting”, or “too low”.  Ultimately, after much (much, much) time has passed, these same listings sell for considerably less than the first offer that was made.  We call this “chasing down the market.”

Not only is it frustrating for sellers, but for agents, too.  Ultimately, we’re the ones who get blamed… for bad marketing, unflattering pictures, strange wording on the brochure, not enough open houses, lack of advertising…. just about everything BUT the true reason for failure… overpricing. Sellers get frustrated, part ways with realtor #1, get a stern talking to from realtor #2 (if they are lucky), list it at a reasonable price, and voila, house sells.

“We want to be your second realtor” is a line we’ve been practicing lately (when faced with an over-zealous listing price).  Sometimes it makes sense to walk away.  Overpriced listings make for lots of work, and no one is ever happy.

Hey- occasionally we realtors are to blame.  Sometimes good comps are lacking, and it’s an honest mistake. Or, we take a listing at an inflated price (enabling our sellers to “test the waters”) because we’re hungry for business.  Or we’ve agreed to list it at the ambitious seller price, believing in the promised price drop if it doesn’t work out.  When a price reduction doesn’t come fast enough, the initial shine of the new listing wanes. So the listing lingers.  Thus begins the long spiral downward, with the house selling for less than what it might have received had it been put on at the right price to begin with.  Overpricing can really backfire.

We generally find that the first offer is the strongest.  A listing can lose momentum as time goes on.  The best way to combat market ennui is with well-timed, aggressive price reductions. With any luck, the proper pricing will result in a flurry of activity.  On more than one occasion we’ve seen these situations reverse course, sometimes producing multiple bids and better than expected results.

Sellers – about the worst thing you can do is “test” the market and list your home for too much money.  Take a realistic look at the recent comparable sales. It’s a fools errand to price your home where you hope it will sell.  If it’s too low, we’re solidly in a sellers marketplace… it will get to where it needs to be. Price it too high, buyers count up the deficiencies. Price it ever so slightly low, and they’ll be raving about all of the positives.

Which side do you want to be on?

5 Things Every Homebuyer should Know…

5 things a homebuyer should know

5 things a homebuyer should knowJohn Maxfield of the Motley Fool has written an interesting article highlighting stuff that homebuyers should know… but don’t always. In a nutshell, they include:

  1. When you buy a home, you’re making two purchases (this is one of my favorites)
  2. Homes are like people — they all have problems
  3. Your real estate agent is a partner, not a salesman (Amen!)
  4. HGTV does not resemble reality, and…
  5. Always think about resale (Always!)

To read the full article (Source: Wikimedia Commons), click here.  It’s an insightful and informative read.

Bethesda Big Dig Update

Bethesda Construction

This is a photo of the Big Dig in downtown Bethesda at the intersection of Woodmont and Bethesda.  I’m told that the first phase, abutting Ourisman Honda, will be complete by late 2014.  Not so sure about the second phase. Regardless, the view is pretty spectacular. Takes a lot of bodies to coordinate this effort… For more details on lots 29 & 31, click here.

Bethesda Construction

Fun Fix For The Floor

Floor fixes on a budget

It’s getting harder to surprise us. We’re getting to see a lot of houses each week, and much of what we see repeats itself. Design trends, fashionable features, architectural styles. We can date the kitchen cabinets after just a glance, and we can tell you in what decade those kinds of windows were used. It doesn’t help that the DC market and home owners have been incredibly traditional in their choices. (Yes, we do have some eccentric outliers, but let’s leave those out for now.)

So, it’s always fun to discover something that’s whimsical but not weird, that’s economical and not too hard to replicate. Painted floors as a design feature have not been widely used in the past hundred years, but they can be a really great idea. I took these pictures in a couple of houses that were recently for sale. It might not show too well in the photos, but in each of these cases, the paint made a huge difference in cleaning and cheering the place up.

In fact, we’re often asked by our sellers about their floors – brittle old linoleum in the laundry room, cracks and oil stains in the garage floor, stairs covered in un-revivable carpet, or even the bare floor in an attic playroom that was originally only intended for storage. The owners have long gotten used to overlooking the sore spot. When getting the house ready for the market and trying to look at it with the eyes of potential buyers, they suddenly find it embarrassing.

If you want to paint a floor, why not turning it into an opportunity? It’s certainly a way to make the house look pretty on a budget. whether time- or money-wise. Companies such as StencilEase.com or Cutting Edge Stencils

And you don’t even have to wait — you can reap the benefits of your beautification while you’re still in the house. If the fix was inexpensive enough, you can always repeat it later on. You might surprise yourself (and us!) with some great new ideas.

New Listing: East Bethesda Beauty with 94 WalkScore®

Screen Shot 2013-07-18 at 7.50.43 PMFirst Open House:  Sunday, July 21, 2013 from 1-4pm.

4523 Sleaford Road, Bethesda, MD 20814

Don’t miss this fabulous new listing, within short walking distance to downtown Bethesda, Metro, BCC High School, the Capital Crescent Trail, shops, Round House Theatre, tennis courts, and more!  A sturdy house in a truly convenient location.  With 3 bedrooms and 1.75 baths, the house has been Read more

How ’bout those Rising Interest Rates…

doom and gloom

doom and gloomThe talk of the town these days is rising interest rates, and what it all means for home buyers and sellers.  In the last month or so interest rates on a 30-year fixed mortgage rose 3/4 – 1% within a 9 day period.  That’s a pretty astonishing hike, not to mention fast.

In the simplest terms, for those purchasing a $500,000 home with a 20% down payment, you will now pay @$4,000 more per year on your mortgage than you would had you settled on your home in May.  That’s $333 extra a month.

While a lot of folks are screaming doom and gloom, I’m not so sure it’s a bad thing.  Historically, rates haven’t dipped below 5% in the last 40 years until about 2008- the start of our latest recession.  The housing crisis along with low rates created opportunities for many buyers previously shut out of the market.  With the housing market (especially in our local market) decidedly in recovery mode, the feds are raising rates.  They can’t prop up the housing industry forever.

Freddie Mac Chart

Anyone familiar with the close-in DC marketplace knows that we’ve seen the return of “irrational exuberance”.  Those wishing to purchase property in the “under-$1-million” range are seeing an abundance of competition and multiple bids.  If the rising interest rates tamp down the degree to which homes are being overbid, then this is a good thing for buyers.

It may not happen all at once.  We continue to suffer from a lack of inventory, with absorption rates under a 2-months supply (a 5-6 month supply is considered healthy and balanced). But over time I would expect things to even out a bit more, making it a friendlier place for buyers.

Sellers, have fun while it lasts! Buyers, too!

And Yet Another NEW: Bethesda MCM House Designed By Ken Freeman – Sunday 1-4 pm

What an exciting weekend! Marcie is going to hold our second new listing open. It’s a cool mid-century modern house with tons of space (5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, huge family room and screened porch) in Bradley Park. Come see – we just prepared some pretty cool handouts… If this is your style, you will just love it!  Listed for $799,000.

Fullerland Or Wooderton? A Case Of Hybrid Sears House

 

Customized Sears Woodland-IMG_3066
This 1927 Sears “Woodland” Kit House in Silver Spring, MD, was customized to incorporate features and design elements of the smaller but popular “Fullerton”

There’s a lot of discussion in the historic kit house community about custom built kit houses, and the difficulty they pose when it comes to authenticating a mail-order home. “Custom kit” sounds like a misnomer, but it actually isn’t. The customization was done not on site by the builder but before shipment by a Sears (or Lewis or Wardway, etc.) staff architect, and the kit was then cut, sorted and packaged according to those changed specifications.

All the major mail-order house companies, including Sears and Lewis, the  most popular brands in the DC area, offered such options to the consumer. In fact, national kit house expert and historian Rosemary Thornton (“The Houses That Sears Built”) believes that 30 percent all all ordered kit houses came with some kind of customization.

Some of those customizations were upgrades (like brick veneer instead of wood siding), others had to do with lot restrictions or a family’s size requirements (making a house a couple of feet wider or narrower, or working extra additions like sunrooms or pantries into the  floor plan).

Woodland - 1925 Sears Honor Bilt HomesAnd then there were the ones for the more picky kit house buyer, who just couldn’t find the perfect model in the 135 or so page catalog. The ones that wanted a “Martha Washington” portico on their “Rembrandt”  or different windows, or liked one model but preferred the staircase location of another.

In some cases, the result was a hybrid of different models of the same mail-order catalog. One of those just came on the market in close-in Silver Spring, MD. It’s a 1927 Sears “Woodland” (by dimension, structure, footprint and architectural detail), but received the facade, smaller entry area and stairs of the  (overall much smaller) “Fullerton” model. Obviously, someone did not want to waste space on a useless, if stately, reception hall!

It’s a pretty house, and many other modifications have been made since (such as a powder room in the former first-floor closet or the transformation of one bedroom into a master bathroom). Some of the origins can still be traced nicely–as in the sturdy kit house window trim or the original built-in “medicine case”–, other elements–such as all the door hardware–have been obliterated. You can see excellent pictures of the listing here. The 4-bedroom, 3 1/2-bath house is offered by Re/Max Plus for $699,900.

Fullerton - 1925 Sears Honor Bilt HomesAs always, if you’d like to tour this “Woodland” or any other DC/MD home on the market — kit or contemporary — just let us know!

If you’d like to learn more about the historic 20th century mail-order homes, or if you think you live in one and would like help authenticating it, check out some of our other kit house blogs and posts.

And if you’re thinking you would like to live in an original Sears catalog home… maybe even a Woodland, please get in touch with us.  We are constantly scouring the marketplace for authentic catalog homes, and would be delighted to help you find one of your own.  Fill out the form below, or simply pick up the phone and give us a call.

A Pretty and (Almost) Pure Sears “Puritan”

Sears "Puritan" catalog house in Washington DC
Sears "Puritan" catalog house in Washington DC
For Rent in Shepherd Park: 1924 Sears Kit House with open kitchen and fenced-in backyard

Cute rental houses with a little yard, on a sweet block and in walking distance to the Red Line metro are hard to come by in Northwest Washington DC these days, let alone at a reasonable price. Thus, we have no doubt that this charming 3-bedroom, 2-bath Sears “Puritan” will be snatched away quickly. It was built in 1924 and just hit the market for rent in Shepherd Park for $2,500 per month.

Pages from 1925 Sears "Honor Bilt" Modern Homes catalog

It’s a smaller model, though perhaps not as small as it seems, but it seems to have been extremely popular. We’ve come across nearly a dozen of them between Takoma Park and Bethesda.

There are currently no MLS pictures online of the Dutch Colonial-style frame home, but when I saw the house last year, it pretty much still looked like in this 2006 photo tour.

Click on the thumb print of the mail-order catalog pages above to see a larger PDF version.

Sears Kit house garages No. 13043 found in aleey in Shepherd park, Washington DC

While the house has been adapted to a more contemporary life style (the kitchen has been opened up at some point, and sliding doors off the dining room now give access to a deck), many details have been preserved. Most doors still have the original “Strathmore” hardware; the front door and many windows as well as much of the trim are intact as well.

Sears kit house garages
“Star Garage” No. 13043 as seen in the 1922 Sears catalog

A charming touch, at least for those of us in the know, is the garage — accessed from the alley — that comes with the house. It was also ordered from the Sears catalog — check out the characteristic 5-piece Sears eaves brackets and the little window above the door. It was offered in several different sizes and with then-high tech tri-fold doors (which didn’t survive).

Wondering why there are two of those garages? Well, the house right next door is a Sears “Fullerton” built at the same time, but in rather sad shape today. Surely, they either had the same builder, or the owners coordinated their efforts.)

As always, if you’d like to tour the “Puritan” or any other DC/MD home on the market — kit or contemporary — just let us know!

If you’d like to learn more about the historic 20th century mail-order homes, or if you think you live in one and would like help authenticating it, check our some of our other kit house blogs and posts.

And if you’re thinking you would like to live in an original Sears catalog home… maybe even a Puritan, please get in touch with us.  We are constantly scouring the marketplace for authentic catalog homes, and would be delighted to help you find one of your own.  Fill out the form below, or simply pick up the phone and give us a call.

 

 

Winsome & Walkable Winthrop

1928 Beauty- an authentic Sears Winthrop

Painted bright yellow with sky blue shutters, you won’t want to miss this little time capsule of a home, located in the Crestwood section of Bethesda… within walking distance of downtown Friendship Heights. .

The exterior of this particular Winthrop could be lifted directly off of the Sears Kit House catalog page.  The shutters look to be original.  The porch is pristine and still sports the same thin beams.  The front door looks like it might have changed, but the arc of the entryway is spot on, as are the dormers and the chimney.  Inside are a bunch of markers of Sears homes… such as the famous junction blocks at the  stairway trim, the plain-bottom, back band window moldings, the “Narcissus” door knobs or the “Colonial fireplace” the home was endowed with –check out the catalog and real-life pictures below. (Also, you can see the MLS pictures here.)

What really caught my eye, however, were the markings under the basement stairway.  It’s a good thing that I’ve been dieting lately, because I had to squeeze behind the furnace to get a good look.  Why I didn’t think to send my elfin partner Cati in for the task speaks to my reckless enthusiasm upon discovering the markings!  This is the first house where I’ve seen an actual catalog number written in grease pencil on one of the beams.  So, hey- this is an authentic Sears catalog home!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Built in 1928, the original house offered up 2 bedrooms and one full bath. Today it has 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths, thanks to an addition in the back.

On our way out of the house we ran into the owners.  They bought it from the son of the fellow who originally built the house. They actually had heard it was a Sears house, and had even tried to find images, but were unable to identify the house. (Well, actually, if all the kit houses we have here were as easily identified as this one…) The owners told us the house hadn’t been in the best of shape when they purchased it. They tried to preserve as much as they could but the siding unfortunately was beyond repair.

The “Winthrop” is available for $699,500, or you can rent it for $3,125 per month.

Door handle from a Sears Winthrop house in Bethesda
Bedroom door knob (upper left) from the house, and pictures from the1928 Sears catalog

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you’re thinking you would like to live in an original Sears catalog home… maybe even a Winthrop, please get in touch with us.  We are constantly scouring the marketplace for authentic catalog homes, and would be delighted to help you find one of your own.  Fill out the form below, or simply pick up the phone and give us a call.