J Grant
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2003
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
Soon as marekt cools this thread will be irrelevant. But we are not there yet ( though I see a bit of thawing )
Does a bidding war produce a price affected by undue stimulus ? What is that price compared to - what the price would be without that undue stimulus. Just as in trying to analyze if a concession or creative financing affected price, ask what would the price be without it.
A bidding war produces a highest price as winner . After we develop the appraisal, we can know if that highest price is credibly supported or not. In cases where there is lack of credible appraisal support for a price, we are not telling a borrower not to pay that price. We are telling a lender client our OMV so they can set a LTV % based on the OMV.
What happens in the deal is not our concern ( though clients and parties try to make it so ). The savvy RE agents are using contract clauses to handle it . But I see only 40-50% ( aprox) contracts with an appraisal clause of buyer will pay X above the OMV, the rest of the contracts, seems the RE agent can not find a buyer to sign such a clause. And of course not every sale is a bidding war sale, some are just normal offers, though in a short days on market.
We have a severe supply and demand at work in some areas creating the market conditions which can end up in an individual sale as a price affected by undue stimulus. Or, just a high price that is not affected by undue stimulus. It becomes high price compared to what, ( the appraisal ).
In a declining price market with over supply of inventory, sellers will accept low sale prices they would not otherwise accept. I a low supply market, due to pressure to out bid or out pay the competition, buyers will make high price offers they would not otherwise make.
Does a bidding war produce a price affected by undue stimulus ? What is that price compared to - what the price would be without that undue stimulus. Just as in trying to analyze if a concession or creative financing affected price, ask what would the price be without it.
A bidding war produces a highest price as winner . After we develop the appraisal, we can know if that highest price is credibly supported or not. In cases where there is lack of credible appraisal support for a price, we are not telling a borrower not to pay that price. We are telling a lender client our OMV so they can set a LTV % based on the OMV.
What happens in the deal is not our concern ( though clients and parties try to make it so ). The savvy RE agents are using contract clauses to handle it . But I see only 40-50% ( aprox) contracts with an appraisal clause of buyer will pay X above the OMV, the rest of the contracts, seems the RE agent can not find a buyer to sign such a clause. And of course not every sale is a bidding war sale, some are just normal offers, though in a short days on market.
We have a severe supply and demand at work in some areas creating the market conditions which can end up in an individual sale as a price affected by undue stimulus. Or, just a high price that is not affected by undue stimulus. It becomes high price compared to what, ( the appraisal ).
In a declining price market with over supply of inventory, sellers will accept low sale prices they would not otherwise accept. I a low supply market, due to pressure to out bid or out pay the competition, buyers will make high price offers they would not otherwise make.