Cheap Real Estate - A Simple TechniqueBy DANIEL of Cashvally.com
Do you want a simple way to get cheap real estate? Offer less. This is the oldest
and simplest negotiating ploy of investing. Everybody knows this technique, at least
in it's crudest versions, but most are afraid to use it. Why? Well, it can be embarrassing, and
it can be a waste of time if you don't do it right. On the other hand, do you really mind being
a bit embarrassed if it saves you $20,000?
The very first piece of I bought was a small lot for which the seller was asking
$4,500 (now that's
cheap real estate). Fortunately for me, in my ignorance, I didn't know then
that offering 22% less than the asking price was considered insulting. Looking back on it, I now
understand why the realtor didn't want to present the offer. In any case, the seller accepted my
offer of $3,500, because he was anxious to sell his last property before moving.
A friend of mine bought a home on a lake for perhaps $40,000 less than it was worth. How? He made
the offer. He was always making low offers as he shopped for a home, and of course this meant he
had most of his offers rejected. I might have even hinted to him that he was wasting his time. Good
thing he didn't listen. Would you be willing to have a dozen offers rejected if it meant buying a home for a savings of $40,000?
Then there was the investor in California who routinely made dozens of offers at a time on houses -
without even look at them.
He wrote the offers for 25% less than the asking price, and included an
inspection contingency and other clauses to protect himself. Most sellers said no, of course. Most did, but not all.
He occasionally got some very cheap real estate this way.
Cheap Real Estate - Lowering Expectations
At a seminar, a investor once told me,"If you aren't embarrassed by your offer, it isn't
low enough." Considering that he's made millions in real estate, he may be worth listening to. You need
to understand, however, that a truly low offer will almost never be accepted. Is it a waste of time then?
Not at all, because there will often be counter-offers, and a low initial offer is just a way to alter expectations.
Suppose you think your home is worth $300,000. You mention to a friend that you are considering selling it, and
he says, "You should be able to get $250,000, right?" You ask another friend what he thinks the home is worth,
and he tells you $260,000. How confident would you be about your $200,000 estimate of value now? You might lower
your expectations, right?
That is one of the primary functions of a low offer; to alter expectations. When a seller is asking $300,000,
and you offer $250,000, will he accept your offer? Probably not. He'll almost certainly reject it. Getting
cheap
real estate isn't going to be that easy. He may counter-offer, however. Suppose you go back and forth, and finally
agree to $182,000. He might not have considered selling this low before, but maybe now it even seems like victory
to him after starting at $160,000.
Of course you'll lose a lot of potential properties this way. Sellers sometimes won't even take subsequent offers
seriously once you have offended them with your extreme offer. You might avoid this by assuring the seller that
his property may indeed be worth what he is asking, but that it only works for your purposes at a lower price.
On the other hand, so what if you have a lot of rejected offers. Isn't a bit of rejection worth it to get really cheap real estate?
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