If you’re trying to sell or buy a home in today’s real estate market, the Chinese proverb, “May you live in interesting times,” may come off as a curse.
The bidding wars and over-asking-price sales of just a few months ago are gone. With inflation on the rise, the Fed raised rates. The average 30-year fixed mortgage today is over 7 percent, from under 4 percent in February.
Except for homes over $1 million, the market stopped cold. Listings are at historic lows, and offers have dwindled. Yet, prices continue to increase, albeit more slowly. Whether you’re selling or buying, don’t let “interesting” translate to panic. How can you turn chaos to your advantage? Turn information into knowledge.
This is the first in a series looking at the changing Fort Lauderdale real estate market, how rising interest rates are affecting buyers, how sellers can go “back to basics” to attract buyers, and how knowledge and patience will help maintain your sanity.
Truth is, statistics point to continued traffic. While inventory is low by recent standards, homes – and buyers – are still out there. Our low taxes and high quality of life continue to attract new residents and businesses. We’re still the strongest market in the country. Buyers are simply unwilling to engage and overpay in any bidding war.
Deals are happening. As of early September, there were 959 active listings in the combined markets of Wilton Manors, Oakland Park, Pompano Beach and Lauderdale-By-The Sea; 210 of these listings were “Active Under Contract.” Another 274 pending listings were likely to close. Another 250 listings had closed in the last 30 days.
But 93 of these listings were on the market for more than 30 days; 38 were on the market for more than 60 days. Days on the market were rising. But closings were happening.
Maybe the problem isn’t with nervous sellers or cautious buyers. Maybe the problem lies in an agent’s inability to glean knowledge from figures and see cautious optimism and a chance to capitalize on the market. We’re in that historically soft, “shoulder” period between summer and the winter season. If you’re a buyer, sellers spooked by rising interest rates and the threat of inflation and potential recession may be eager to negotiate.
If you’re a seller whose home has been on the market for more than 90 days, consider pulling it. Spend 30 days sprucing up the exterior, painting the interior, staging the space, and maybe shooting new photography and videography. Be sure to have it back on the market by Thanksgiving so snowbird buyers can find it.
Empirical data is more important than ever. It shows where our buyers are coming from. So advertising videos should be dropped in those areas using social media. This might also be an opportunity to research a real estate team with the expertise to review the latest statistics and determine how market trends in your neighborhood are affecting your chances for a timely, high-value sale.
The top-producing, economist-trained brokers with Coldwell Banker are telling some of those who bought in the past few years and who fear falling home values to stay patient. Many see the possibility of a “V-shaped” market slowdown, where recovery could be relatively quick and solid, given Florida’s underlying market strengths.
More than a quarter of recent home and condominium buyers were investors hoping to rent these out as vacation properties. Those who weren’t institutional buyers could panic and sell; we already see a rise in those properties hitting the market, creating more competition. Sellers who improve their property and relist later this fall could be in a good position to outshine the competition.
Most of all, don’t panic. Talk to your realtor and together, weigh your options in the current climate and prepare for that deal you know is out there.
Click here for Part II.
As team leader for the Gary Lanham Group at Coldwell Banker Real Estate Fort Lauderdale Beach Office, Gary is a veteran listing agent skilled in the most complex transactions. He knows how to get sellers the most money in the shortest amount of time, even in this changing market. Contact him at instagram.com/garylanhamgroup or call 954-695-6518. Gary Lanham is a New Pelican advertiser.
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