I'm waiting on her to provide me some information so I'm on hold but it'll come.Octavious wrote:BCC me on the email!!! Hell post it here!
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I'm waiting on her to provide me some information so I'm on hold but it'll come.Octavious wrote:BCC me on the email!!! Hell post it here!
Exodor wrote:Are real estate agents licensed? Can you complain to some sort of agency?
The National Association of Realtors (NAR), whose members are known as Realtors, is North America's largest trade association. It represents over 1.2 million members (as reported November 2008), including NAR's institutes, societies, and councils, involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries. NAR also functions as a self-regulatory organization for real estate brokerage.
My honest belief is it is poor time management. I think she knows the business. I went to open houses and everyone knew who she was. She has a good reputation. My belief is that she simply is too busy to give me good service. She is doing wrong in the sense that she should realize she is too busy and refer us to someone else. From my POV incompetence or simply too busy is all the same to me and I don't have time for it any more.Octavious wrote:Honestly it almost seems like she doesn't think she will make enough money off the deal so she's trying to tank it on purpose. My agent certainly pushed me to find a house at the top of our limit without me really understanding at the time.
Kelric wrote:Sat down with an agent today to talk about looking for a home. The area I'm looking in would cost less for mortgage + PMI + taxes + condo fee than what the fiancee and I are going to have to pay to rent a similar sized place in other towns. The downside to looking right now is that I don't really have a lot of money saved up for a down payment plus closing costs plus three months emergency fund.
Zaxxon wrote:Kelric wrote:Sat down with an agent today to talk about looking for a home. The area I'm looking in would cost less for mortgage + PMI + taxes + condo fee than what the fiancee and I are going to have to pay to rent a similar sized place in other towns. The downside to looking right now is that I don't really have a lot of money saved up for a down payment plus closing costs plus three months emergency fund.
Not to discourage you, but the formula you need to use is mortgage + PMI + taxes + condo fee + 5%-10% of the cost of the place in annual maintenance/upkeep. For a condo you're probably looking at more like 5% since you generally don't have to maintain the exterior.
Hail mary falls short.malchior wrote:It also could be a bit of not a big enough cash in the transaction for her at the end of the day but either way I am done with it. If my end around works, cool. If not, my relationship with her was over anyway. I didn't lose any time with a hail mary.
There are multiple factors that scream crazy. She insisted on moving the closing date up. Her husband died in the house (cancer) and she wanted to close prior to the anniversary. I was good with that. But then she took three days to sign the contract which was a signal something weird was going on. I'm guessing that is when my agent applied pressure. Still she did indicate an urgency to sell. It doesn't square up with the reality of it.Smoove_B wrote:She clearly doesn't want to sell. And it makes zero sense that she's concerned about how you're paying UNLESS you don't have a pre-approved mortgage agreement. In that case she might be rightfully concerned as it's entirely possible the bank might not want to extend you a mortgage for 5% down after you start the review process. At one point it was possible to buy a home without securing pre-approval, but in the year 2012 I can't imagine that's possible when extending an offer to buy a house.
LordMortis wrote:Zaxxon wrote:Kelric wrote:Sat down with an agent today to talk about looking for a home. The area I'm looking in would cost less for mortgage + PMI + taxes + condo fee than what the fiancee and I are going to have to pay to rent a similar sized place in other towns. The downside to looking right now is that I don't really have a lot of money saved up for a down payment plus closing costs plus three months emergency fund.
Not to discourage you, but the formula you need to use is mortgage + PMI + taxes + condo fee + 5%-10% of the cost of the place in annual maintenance/upkeep. For a condo you're probably looking at more like 5% since you generally don't have to maintain the exterior.
Yepper. Maintenance and time to maintain. Historically (within my not living with parents lifetime), people haven't cared about that because we bought into the idea that your home is an investment that should return you 5% or more a year.
malchior wrote:This tale has taken a real turn for the crazy. When I last posted, I had found my latest seller was a bit wacky and was meeting with a new realtor on Sunday (today). That went pretty well and I think this one is a completely better fit. She explained a lot of things about the process I wasn't aware of and we talked over communications and basically walked through all the mistakes that happened with the previous offers. She was flabbergasted that I was getting no pricing assistance at all. I had a very good feeling from the meeting.
Now to the old realtor. My wife and I took a trip out of state on Thursday/Friday which I had told her about and I said I would talk to her in a few days about how we would go forward. I came back to find she had attempted to call me several times and then emailed me increasingly angry emails about not getting back to her. Pause for a moment to savor the irony and then move on to this morning where she pretty much demanded that she at least get a referral out of the whole mess. I haven't responded because I was trying to formulate how to respond; the email was completely unprofessional and I really was deciding whether just going to her broker and cutting off communication entirely is the best course or not.
No, they all fell through. I stopped looking at houses with her to firewall off anything else we would be interested in. She is basically complaining about not getting anything out of any work she did for us. My step-father (who is a realtor) and the new agent both seem to tell me that it is a risk of the business and we don't owe her anything. Until she went berserk on me I was considering a flat payout but everyone seems to think that is a bad idea now.RuperT wrote:Are you buying a house she showed you?
I get different opinions on this. Almost everyone says have one for the buy since it comes out of the seller's commission but an ineffective one does really seem to get in the way.I have to say, selling my last house and then buying this one just seemed so much simpler the fewer realtors were involved. My buyer had an agent, but my seller did not; I never had one, and only advertised in the city paper IIRC. Then again, I was not a particularly motivated actor, and had no availability problems showing my house. I was also relocating fairly close nearby.
KKBlue wrote:so different and unique ... it really is unlike any other house

KKBlue wrote:Our realtor just came over with a co-worker to help with selling this home...
If your home was built before 1930, it is likely to contain lead piping. If it was built before 1988, it is likely to contain copper piping joined by lead-based solder.

Kelric wrote:#5) We did not get to see this as the realtor wasn't available. We both love this one from the pictures online and it is one bedroom with an office that we can use as a kid room / guest room. Washer / dryer in the unit, nice big french doors leading to the master bedroom off the living room. The biggest plus: It is $30K cheaper than #4.
#4 and #5 do have a big disadvantage.... #4 is bank owned, #5 is a short sale and has been dropping in price for about six months. Not sure why on the second, but the bank listed it at $143,900 on 10/11 and now it is down to $109,900. The exterior of the building looked nice, so why the hell has it gotten so cheap without the bank getting rid of it?
Two in a row now. It revolves around the appraisal. There isn't any wiggle room at 5% for me to accept a sub-par appraisal by stepping down into a different LTV range. But it is still a stupid argument. No one is going to see a sub-par appraisal and decide to just eat it anyway. My agent said as much to me. More deals fall apart now because of the appraisals than anything else now.Zaxxon wrote:I don't understand these seller-doesn't-like-my-finances issues you're having at all. The seller should have no concern beyond 'Bank X has given a statement assuring us that they plan to close on the loan'. I've never run into that before.
$iljanus wrote:Our Kelric is buying a home? My how time has passed sniff sniff
Smoove_B wrote:Do not underestimate the importance of being able to save money while you're living somewhere. There's always (SEE: always) insane random things that end up happening and if you're just barely making your monthly bills and not developing any type of financial cushion you might end up spiraling into (short or long term) debt rather quick over what amounts to normal home ownership.
Smoove_B wrote:Do not underestimate the importance of being able to save money while you're living somewhere. There's always (SEE: always) insane random things that end up happening and if you're just barely making your monthly bills and not developing any type of financial cushion you might end up spiraling into (short or long term) debt rather quick over what amounts to normal home ownership.
Zaxxon wrote:$iljanus wrote:Our Kelric is buying a home? My how time has passed sniff sniff
He's all growed-up!Smoove_B wrote:Do not underestimate the importance of being able to save money while you're living somewhere. There's always (SEE: always) insane random things that end up happening and if you're just barely making your monthly bills and not developing any type of financial cushion you might end up spiraling into (short or long term) debt rather quick over what amounts to normal home ownership.
Yeah, definitely wise to be buying below your max-approved price.
I think it is more around the ability to complete the transaction which is fair but IMO they are factoring everything wrong. I provided them detailed financial information and that seemed to settle them down. Now they want to move into August which is great for me cash flow-wise. We may be getting somewhere yet. They are dragging their feet a little on signing because I'm sure they are hoping someone else comes in but this is a pretty odd market still. They are claiming a lot of interest which is plausible considering it is in a desirable neighborhood but there are 4 houses within a couple of hundred feet of each other for sale right now that have been on the market for months each including the second one I put an offer on. I like my chances of not having another buyer come in. My concerns currently center about the seller's deciding not to move their kids after all and the appraisal.Roman wrote:this whole X% down is baffling.
Why would the seller care what percentage is offered as a desposit? They don't physically get the deposit and get to to on a shopping spree. The deposit is held in trust by the agent/broker. WTF?
Unless things are done differently down there- the funds are not theirs! The deposit simply acts as a gesture of good faith.
Perhaps - the sellers plan to factor in your deposit against their financing for the house to be purchased down the road? Don't think that is legal.. but?
Unbelievable.
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