Is now a good time to sell your home?

By: Jane Stevens
 

With the current political mess regarding the finance industry and  home prices dropping to record lows today is a very bad time to try to sell your house.  President Bush is trying to have a rescue package pushed quickly though congress with it currently being in a political nightmare.
While there is no way to tell
when the housing market is at its top, the housing mania we
have seen three years ago does have some troubling similarities to the dot.com
boom that typified the late nineties.  Today hindsight is 20/20.

No doubt the housing boom has some viability to it, and unlike
a stock a house represents a real item, of real value. In
addition, the boom in housing has been fueled by record low
interest rates, and by many new mortgage products, including
interest only mortgages and negative amortization loans.

These new mortgage products are part of what many people
perceive as the inherent danger of the current housing market.
In many hot parts of the country, like California, so-called
interest only mortgages in which homebuyers pay only the
interest due on the loans for a number of years, represent up
to half of all new mortgage loans. The downside of these loans
happens, of course, after the initial interest only period has
ended. For many such loans, that day of reckoning is fast
approaching, and we have seen what kind of effect this
has had on the market.

Over the past few years, there has not really been a bad time
to sell a house. The overall trend has been, and continues to
be, up. What seems to be changing is the rate of price
appreciation. While up until recently waiting only a couple of
months could mean getting an extra 10% or 20% for the home, the
rate of appreciation seems to have slowed for some of the hotter
markets around the country.

The Housing marketing is extremely slow with no idea when it will improve.



At the beginning of the year, the National Association of
Realtors issued a forecast predicting that the market will
normalize during 2006. While in 2005 the average appreciation
rate for existing homes came in at 13%, with large segments of
the market seeing far greater gains, that trend is not expected
to continue. While the National Association of Realtors expects
the market for new and existing homes to remain strong, it also
foresees a price appreciation of a more modest 5%.

What this means is that while the long predicted bursting of
the housing bubble has not happened (and many experts believe
it will not occur), there are definitely indications that the
easy money has already been made.

Harder to sell now

Other sign that the optimum time to sell a home may be past is
the fact that inventories of unsold homes are on the rise, with
the fastest rise seen in some of the hottest real estate
markets. For instance, the inventory of unsold homes in the
suburbs of Boston has raised by more than 50% since January
2005, according to the MLS Property Information Network,
Massachusetts.

In past few years, sellers of even marginal properties were
often able to realize more than the asking price, due to the
frequent bidding wars that often broke out in the hot market.
These days buyers will have greater room to negotiate, and to
ask sellers for concessions such as help with closing costs.
While the market is in no way dead or even in serious decline,
it does seem to be becoming more of a buyer's market.

Moreover, many home owners may realize they can't even afford
to sell after they do the math. There are costs involved in
selling a house, this including loan payoff, real estate
commission, closing cost, property tax, attorney cost and all
these costs add up. Nevertheless, the common reason that home
owners can't afford to sell is because they borrowed too much.

So, is this a good time to sell your home?

The run up in home prices over the past few years have left
many homeowners, especially those living in hot markets, with
tens of thousands, or even hundreds of thousands of dollars in
potential profits. The idea to cash in the house and make a
tidy profit while hoping the market to cool with the intention
to find some bargains later is a high stakes bet. Unless you're
' house flipping', otherwise it probably makes more sense for
current homeowner, who is benefiting from a low mortgage rate,
to stay where they are.

Real estate market has a cyclical trend with ups and downs. To
cash out now so you can buy again in twelve or eighteen months
later is similar to stock day trading. It is not an excellent
idea to speculate for most people as they're not dealing with
just money but with a real asset with real value. Most
importantly, it is where the family is living in. And if home
owner sells their house now, they just have to buy another
house that's just as equally expensive if not more!

However, the move to sell now and make a profit is perhaps less
risky proposition for those homeowners who are seeking to
downsize their lifestyle or who are near their retirement, to
move to a less expensive area. For example from New York City,
to a less pricey market, such as Atlanta.

The key challenge in a hot market, even for homeowners with
substantial gains, is finding a suitable property at an
affordable price. Many homeowners have found that buying a
smaller home is a good way to lock in the gain on an
appreciated home, as is moving to a less expensive housing
market. There are plenty of affordable housing markets left
around the country. And those people moving to these areas are
often quite surprised at how far their housing dollars can go.

Furthermore, there is always the rental market. In most of the
hottest housing markets around the country, rental price
appreciation has not kept pace with the rise in housing prices,
meaning that many former homeowners are opting to rent for a
year or two while they wait for home prices to stabilize. This
can certainly be a good strategy, and it can leave smart
homeowners with a great deal more home for their money in the
long run.


About The Author: Andrew is the web owner of "Home Selling
Tips: How to sell house fast", a website that provides
informational guide on home buying, home selling, home mortgage
loan, real estate investment and more. You can visit his website
at:
http://www.buy-and-sell-house-fast.com/home-selling-guide.shtml

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