Just Sold, 393 Raven Way – 4 bedroom in Turtle Creek: $575,000

Turtle Creek … in my opinion perhaps the most desired neighborhood in East Petaluma.  Newer homes, good school district, convenient location and downright beautiful architecture for a subdivision.  I don’t think any other neighborhood gives you as much for your money.  In fact, as far as price per square foot for newer homes is concerned, it’s not that cheap!  3 and 4 bedroom homes from 1900 to 2400 SqFt are selling for $50,000 to $100,000 more than the Chelsea Square and Southgate subdivisions built in 2005 and 2007.

Without further ado…introducing our latest buyer-represenation sale, 393 Raven Way:

393 Raven Way – Fantastic Spanish/Deco Architecture.  This is definitely one of my favorite subdivisions. 

Quick Stats:

Sale Price: $575,000
4 Bedrooms
2.5 Bathrooms
2407 interior SqFt
3-Car Garage
Built 2000
Last Market sale: 3/15/05 – $759,000

That’s right, a $184,000 discount from 2005, roughly a 24.2% drop in value.  Believe it or not, that 24% drop is actually a testament to the solvency of this neighborhood.  Go shopping on Maria Drive or Lauren Avenue in Petaluma, or W 8th in Santa Rosa and you’re likely to see homes that sold for $499,000 in 2006 go for $225,000 – more than a 50% drop!  Just goes to show that the sub-prime mess really was a socio-economic problem: by and large, there were far fewer option-ARM or “NINJA” loans (No Income, No Job, No Assets) done in neighborhoods like Turtle Creek than in “affordable” areas like the A-Section of Rohnert Park.

Brand new flooring, hardwood, tile, and carpet – nice!  Soaring 20′ ceilings!

What’s interesting to note, however, is that the “affordable” neighborhoods (the ones in the $200,000 range) are roughly at their 1999-2001 prices, right when the No doc, funny money loans were created.  These places on the other hand, the $550,000 – $800,000 range, are still holding fairly strong.


Huge picture windows and push-button gas fireplace.

Those stats definitely make you wonder where we’re headed.  On one hand, they’re certainly foreboding – will this house eventually sell at it’s year 2000 price?  Turtle Creek, by the way, hot off the press in 2000 sold in the mid $300,000s to mid $400,000s.  This particular home sold for $386,245 brand-new in 1999.

Do I think we’re headed back to those prices for Turtle Creek?  Probably not.  As I said before, the affordable neighborhoods have already dropped to their 1999 prices.  A home on Alta Avenue in East Petaluma would probably cost just about the same now as then – about $225,000 to $250,000.

Take this home, for example:


13 Alta – $249,000, in escrow with Multiple Offers. Listed by CPS Petaluma.

Numbers like these actually give me some hope.  Starter homes like these are at their pre- “funny money” sales prices, and they’re flying off the shelves to boot.

I hope this gives you a little insight into the marketplace.  And yes, 393 Raven had four offers.  Our buyers won the bidding war by writing $16,000 over the asking price.  Did 393 Raven sell for too low? In all honestly, probably.  Not to belittle the marketing done by this listing agent (but rather to showboat my own, I’ll be honest), Jennifer and I sold the exact same floor plan for $100,000 more just 5 months ago!

Here she is:

1824 Linnet, Petaluma.  Sold $680,000 10/29/08
Listed by Jennifer Aument and Armand Ramirez

Let me reiterate, this was the exact same floor-plan except for the wood-siding! Take a look for yourself, this was definitely a beautiful home. Virtual Tour
Was it $100,000 nicer?  Hey, marketing DOES matter!

Hope this was informative.  Feel free to give us a ring if you’re in the market for a Turtle Creek home … or if you feel like picking up something on Alta Avenue!  Click here to Search Petaluma MLS listings for sale.


393 Raven, listed by Home Front Lending.
Buyer representation by Century 21 Bundesen.

It’s not you, it’s them!
Still getting “dumped” by REO properties?  What you can do to win in your next multiple offer situation.

Taken from the Petaluma Argus Courier, written by Armand Ramirez

 

If you’ve ever heard the words “it’s not you, it’s me”, it probably wasn’t a particularly fond memory.  Both Men’s Health and Cosmo would probably agree that it’s the most cliché way to soften the blow of a failed relationship, but putting that subject aside, it’s actually a good analogy for why your offer on that REO didn’t get it accepted. You were probably well qualified, highly motivated, and maybe even willing to pay the most money – the reason why someone else got the property probably had more to do with a rather strange lender requirement than you being the best buyer.  So, here are a few steps you can take to make sure that you don’t get dumped in an REO multiple offer situation again.


127 Alden, Rohnert Park. $219,900 – over 20 offers received!

Cash is king, not purchase price.

If you were selling a house, would you wait an extra ten days for an extra $10,000 dollars?  Sure you would, that’s an extra $125.00 per working hour!   But then again, you aren’t Fannie Mae, and you don’t own an estimated $100 billion or more in risky loans.  That being said, an all-cash offer with a 20 day escrow at $250,000 is much more attractive to a large bank than an offer at $260,000 with 10% down and a standard 30 day escrow.  With competing buyers (in multiple offer situations) banks want the surest deal, not necessarily the most money.  In fact, banks don’t even don’t even calculate their P&L in the same manner as you might – they write off their losses in advance, estimating the loss in equity on a property before putting it on the market.  Sound odd?  Write-off enough losses and shed enough toxic assets (i.e. defaulted mortgages) and you become a superb candidate for bailout funds…or so the rumors in the ‘blogosphere’ go!  Lesson to be learned, streamline your financing and make it a quick deal for the bank.  If it’s your first home, ask for a family down payment loan or lower your purchase price to make your down payment as large as possible.  If it’s an investment, pull out equity on your primary residence to forego secondary financing or mortgage insurance – two words that send chills down any bank’s spine.  If you simply don’t have a large downpayment, get all of your loan paperwork in order an write as short a loan approval contingency as possible, cut it to 12 or 10 days from the standard 17 – just make sure that your lender can perform.  Remember, the sellers of REO properties are the sellers of mortgages; they know how volatile the loan approval process is.  Make your loan as attractive as possible and your offering price will look more attractive in return. 

 

22 Payran, Petaluma. $162,000 - all REO properties are somewhat of a gamble

22 Payran, Petaluma. $162,000 - all REO properties are somewhat of a gamble

“As-is”

REO properties are a roll of the dice, period.  Many of the homes have had disgruntled owners or tenants (as you can imagine), little or no information on the permit status of improvements or repairs, and some have sat vacant for months.  Like any property, a lot can come up on inspections – banks know this well, and make every property an “as-is” sale.  “As-is” sales still come with inspection rights and rights of rescission, but if anything scares off a bank, it’s a buyer who demands their standard 17 day inspection period.  This issue goes to the heart of the ten day question, if you write a 10 day inspection period and another buyer asks for 15, all other things being equal, you will get the property.  Lesson to be learned, line up your inspectors ahead of time before your offer is submitted and ask for a shorter inspection contingency.  You can always cancel an inspection if your offer doesn’t get accepted, but scrambling for inspectors at the last minute or demanding too long an inspection period could cost you the deal.

  

REO stands for “Real Estate Owned” not “REaltor Optional!”

Question: “Can I just make an offer directly to the bank before it his the market?” Answer: “no.”  1) No bank will ever look at an offer before it is assigned to a listing agent and has decided a price. 2) No bank will ever look at an offer from a buyer without an agent (buyer acting as principal).  That’s just how it’s done.  Put yourself in the shoes of a Chase Manhattan.  You own a few thousand properties that you’d like to sell, only problem being that you have no idea what they’re actually worth.  They’re being sold in 50 different states, from $5,000 or less in Detroit to over $1 Million in our backyard in Sonoma County.  Sure, that all-cash offer for $300,000 a property in East Petaluma sounds great, but what if the home’s actually worth $350,000, or $400,000?  Only thing to do is to make a standard of practice in selling all of these thousands of homes, a practice that begins with a Realtor and ends with one – at least that’s what the vast majority of banks have decided.  In every bank that I have dealt with in the past two years: a) the property must be listed on the MLS before taking offers, b) all buyers must submit an offer through a Real Estate Agent.  Regardless of what the latest talk-radio advertisement or realtygimmick.com website may claim, you will not steal properties for pennies on the dollar and flip them to your early retirement (this isn’t 2005), however, you will see prices that in some areas haven’t been as low since the late ‘90s.

 

So if you’ve missed out on an REO property in the past, don’t worry because it really wasn’t your fault, it was probably theirs!  Now that you know a little more about what qualities banks are wanting in a buyer, get your ducks in a row and get back in the game.  Getting preapproved, lining up inspections, determining how much to offer…looking for a place to get started?  Of course, look no further than your local Realtor.