What the heck are we doing here?
Yep. That much. Really.
But like any market, the housing market is fluid. It changes all the time. What is true today may not be true next week. What you want to know about may be different next month from right now.
In other words, it's perfect for a blog. Think of this as a snapshot of a small part of the Spokane real estate market. And I'm the guy holding the camera. If I think it's interesting and I think you might think it's interesting, I'll blog about it.
Want to know what's been going on lately? Come by and take a look at some of my snapshots. Even share a few comments of your own.
Because the other thing I've learned is that when it comes to real estate and home ownership, we are all in this together.
Doug
Blog Archive
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
This is a test for those of you who live on the South Hill or in the Valley. Quick: if you had to buy a home on the north side, no farther out than Francis, where would it be?
How many of you said, "Audubon Park?"
I thought so. All of you.
You both get an A.
But it is true: of all the places on the north side, Audubon park has a special cache. If you are a valley or South Hill person, Audubon park is generally the one place on the north side you can see yourself living. It is an area that feels comfortable just to look at. The homes are cute and generally well kept. And with downtown just a few minutes away and Downriver Golf Course and state park just a few minutes the other way, the location could hardly be more convenient.
The reason I had you take this little test is because I have a listing in the Audubon Park area. It is actually 1 1/2 blocks from the park itself and it is loaded with charm.
This house is so adorable, I'd even consider living here.
Note the breakfast nook. How cute is that?
It has 2 bedrooms and 2 baths, with a new, detached one car garage. It is new because a branch came down and totalled the last one. Fenced yard, newer roof,
The house has two fireplaces, hardwood floors, an updated kitchen, a cozy little breakfast nook, a family room in the basement along with a storage room, either of which might be turned into another bedroom.
If I were a decorator I'd call it adorable.
Since I'm a real estate agent, I'll call it a great buy.
I'll also call it open on Sunday, 7/20 from 1:00 to 4:00
The address is 3111 West Glass. $204,900
To take a virtual tour, go to http://www.tourfactory.com/437807
One final note: This house has drawn a higher than normal interest from people looking for others - parents looking for kids that are moving back to Spokane - that sort of thing. I think it is because it just feels so homey. So, it's okay with me if you send your mother.
See you Sunday.
Doug
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Will Your House Go to the Prom?
I suspect that people think the market will drop (or drop more, depending upon their Gloom Quotient) and are hesitant to buy.
The way I read the stats from our local MLS is that the market hasn't trended down since January of '06 when the average sale price was $196,059. Because in January of '07 the average price was $194,251 and as recently as March of '08 it was $197,110. There have been monthly ups and downs since then, but that picture is mostly flat. So why not buy now and be reaping the benefits of building equity and taking advantage of the tax benefits of owning? Beats me. Then when and if the market does go up, you are already in place to take advantage of every bit of appreciation.
Just a thought.
So how does one sell a house in this market? It is kind of like watching a house version of The Bachelor. Fifty houses competing for one guy. Or going to the prom. There are 441 guys going to the prom, and 3,218 girls who have bought their prom dresses. For every house that gets asked, six don't. And there are always more houses in those dang prom dresses coming on the market!
So how do you compete? You've got to be the best value - best looking, coziest, most perfect, well, you get the idea, on the block.
This may take spending some money. New carpet, new paint, trimmed and beautified exterior. (It really is like The Bachelor, isn't it?) And this isn't money that you get to tack onto the price and get back; this is money you spend just to let you compete to be that first choice out of seven. It's like money spent on prom dresses (think paint), make up (think more paint) getting your hair done (think new roof) and losing weight (think maximizing curb appeal).
Do you hold out for the best looking date? Nope.
Do you expect top dollar? I don't think so.
Might you have to settle for less than you hoped? (Gee, isn't that what happened at your real prom? Funny how life repeats itself.) Yeah, probably.
Like The Bachelor, you get a single 10 minute date to prove you are the one he should pick.
If you don't make the right impression? You don't get to go to the dance, at least, not with him.
You get to sit home. And watch The Bachelor.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Bloomsday and House Buying
It is the age-old question: After you have run Bloomsday, after you have made it across the finish line, collected your T-shirt and had a conversation with your heart promising it that if it would just keep beating for a little bit longer you would never put it through anything like that again, after you have run Bloomsday and survived, what do you do?
What is the perfect icing for the cake we call Bloomsday?
More carbo loading? Downing a dozen Mimosas? Convincing your legs to move again? Buying a new set of knees? All good ideas but no. Bloomsday requires a larger gesture.
I've always felt that buying a house strikes just the right note.
And not just any house. It has to be the right house. It has to be a house that, like all Bloomsday runners, has been gotten in shape through dint of hard work and dedication to purpose.
It needs to be this house: From the front deck you can sip mimosas and recover from Bloomsday.
Now, if you already have a house, or you didn't actually run Bloomsday (like me), so buying a house for yourself is out, please feel free to forward this email (or blog, depending upon where you are reading this) to someone who wants a house that is move-in ready.
Doug
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Pay Now or Pay Later
Cute.
I don't know if it is true or not (although I religiously bought Fram oil filters for the next 30 years after I saw the commercial), but I do know there is a corollary in real estate: It has to do with updating your house and it goes, "You can buy it now or you can buy it for someone else, later."
Here is how it works. You are not planning on moving any time soon. Your kitchen is dated. Should you spend the money to update it?
Quick answer: Yes. If you would like the new kitchen and if you can afford it. (And you should really try to afford it.)
If you do not update your kitchen, when you do sell - off in the future somewhere, - the market will discount the value of your home for the out of date kitchen. The long term reality is you are going to buy a new kitchen for somebody, someday. It probably ought to be you, don't you think?
The same goes for outdated carpets, beat up trim, unfinished basements, bathrooms that need fixing - the list goes on and on.
Now, it is possible that the discounting won't be dollar for dollar what you would spend, and certainly, you can't expect a dollar for dollar return in increased value when you update, but in general, updating is worth it - especially if you will enjoy your house more between when you upgrade and when you sell. And when you take into account inflation and the increasing cost of doing anything, it is really worth it. Anything done today will cost less than the same thing done several years from now.
So when people ask me if they should update the kitchen or finish the basement my answer is always yes - because you're going to pay for it in the long run anyway. So you might as well enjoy it yourself.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
How I was Showing Homes to One Guy and Almost got to Fly in Another Guy's Homebuilt Airplane
So. Friday night I am showing a couple of houses in the valley to a client. On the way home, I am passing a residential area that has a private airstrip for the people who live there. I almost sold a house on that airstrip once, and since it is similar to the houses I am showing my client, we take a short detour.
We putter on down to the end of the airstrip looking at the houses (none of which are for sale) and next to the runway is a plane with a 70-ish guy just sitting in it. He looks like he is just about to start or finish a flight. His plane is clearly not your garden variety Cessna or Piper, and looks like a homebuilt or two I have seen in Kitplanes magazine which I read sometimes when my wife isn't looking. His plane is very sexy.
So I stop and ask him what kind of plane it is, and if it a home built. It is. He asks if I fly. I tell him I used to. We pass the time like that for about a minute. Then he asks if I want to go up with him.
Yikes! Really?
Really.
I tell him no, I really can't. I am, after all, with a client. He says ten minutes, max. My client then says he doesn't care, and that I should go for it. He'll even take pictures of me in the plane if I have my camera with me. Which, as a good real estate agent, I do.
What the heck, I say.
So we get the plane aimed the right way, and the pilot shows me how to get in. Getting in is a lot like getting into a kayak - you kind of shift your weight up and over and slip down in. You don't get into this plane quite so much as strap it on.
The pilot helps me hook up my four point seatbelt, get the headphones on and we taxi off to the other end of the runway for take off.
At this point, I am thinking this is very cool. We're going flying! I am also looking at the instrument panel and thinking how unfamiliar it all looks. There are some new gizmos that weren't around the last time I flew - GPS for instance - but mostly I've just forgotten what all that stuff is for.
We do the pre-flight run up and routine which is all terribly familiar and I am ready go, and getting pumped when there is some hitch in the smooth working of the horizontal elevator - that thing on the tail that makes the plane go up or down.
He fiddles with it for a while, and then says well, back to the barn. Something in there isn't right, and if it ain't right, we don't go, he says. He says one of the reasons he's flown for so long and lived to tell about it is he never takes a plane into the air when there is a problem on the ground.
Thinking of the consequences I couldn't agree more.
So we taxi back. He says he owes me a flight and he'll call me one day. I give him my card.
I am disappointed, but glad that if there is a problem we found it before going up. And glad I've got a pilot who doesn't take risks. This day, it will have to be enough to sit in the cockpit and taxi.
And if he ever calls me for that flight? I'll let you know.
Friday, April 11, 2008
To Fix or Not to Fix
You can't be in real estate too long before someone asks you Standard Real Estate Question #3: Should I fix up and update my home before I list it, or let the new owner do that?
To which I would generally give standard Real Estate Answer # 36A which is, "Gee, that's a tuffy."
That's a joke.
I would say paint, clean up, don't spend a lot of money. And don't believe the TV shows that purport to show someone spending $2,000 on fix ups that net $40,000 more in home sale price. Not in this market, anyway. (Any house that can be flipped like that was being flipped like that.)
What's not a joke is this: in a hot market where people are bidding up homes, or at least feeling like if they don't act right away they will lose out, whether you paint or not, or replace the deck or not, or replace that 1970's orange shag carpet or not usually didn't make a whole lot of difference. The house was going to sell anyway.
Think of it this way: in a rising market buyers are competing with other buyers. But now we are in a buyer's market. Now, with nine or ten months of inventory sitting on the market, the game has changed. In a buyers market, the houses compete.
And if you are going to try to sell a home, you need to understand this change and it all has to do with time on the market.
In June of 2006, we had about 2100 homes for sale. That month we had about 800 closings. By dividing the total inventory by the closings (2100 / 800 = 2.6) we get how many months of inventory we have. (If no more homes came on the market, and we continued to sell at the rate of 800 per month, in 2.6 months we would sell the last available house.)
Now jump to today. We have 2778 homes for sale. We have 293 closings. That equals 9.4 months of inventory.
With nine months worth of homes on the market, the fix up answer changes dramatically.
We have a new goal: get to the front of the long line of houses (about 2500 at this count) waiting to be sold.
We do that by being fixed up completely. If a buyer has lots and lots of choices, they don't have to accept a house that needs new paint or gutters repaired. They don't have to put up with a kitchen that needs new cabinets because there is probably one out there. And the money you spend isn't about how much you'll get back, but about what it takes to be the best house in a very competitive market, and get it sold at all. And pricing is about value: it is no longer about being priced fairly, but about being the best value for the buck - which might mean being lower than other comparables in the area.
So when someone asks me if they should replace the deck I say yes. Put in new carpet? You bet. Have a landscaper trim the plants ...yes.
Think of it this way, it is deal or no deal and your house is what they are looking at and comparing their first impression with all the other houses on the market in that price range. You don't want anything to get in the way of their saying "Deal!"