Daily News (Los Angeles)

Market shift lets buyers make demands of sellers

- Jeff Lazerson is a mortgage broker. He can be reached at 949334-2424 or jlazerson@ mortgagegr­ader.com. His website is mortgagegr­ader. com.

House payment affordabil­ity is a daunting challenge for many more home shoppers. Fixed-rate mortgages increased more than 2 full percentage points since the beginning of the year, hitting 5.81% last week, according to Freddie Mac data.

Bidding wars are largely over. Buyers have stopped begging to be the chosen ones. More homes are lingering on the market for several weeks, instead of selling in hours, minutes or seconds.

Broker associate Doug Ward of Regency Real Estate thought he had a deal for his Mission Viejo buyers at $1.25 million. Sellers countered at $1.265 million, trying to squeeze $15,000 from the buyers.

“We refused,” Ward said. Several days later, the sellers agreed to the $1.25 million asking price.

“There aren't a lot of sellers willing to pull the plug. They are afraid to go back to market with rates higher,” said Tish Arciniega, broker owner of San Jacinto-based Main Street Realty.

Full disclosure: I do business with Ward and Arciniega.

Jordan Levine, chief economist at the California Associatio­n of Realtors, sees a shifting market.

“Statewide homes are on the market twice as long at 26 days as they were last month,” he said. “We expect prices to soften. We are leaning toward a modest recession in 2023.”

And good riddance to nightmare seller demands for buyers, such as waiving their appraisal and mortgage contingenc­ies as a condition of offer acceptance.

“Buyers have more choices. They are not having to waive the loan approval contingenc­ies,” Ward said.

Something else. If the appraisal comes in lower than the sales price, buyers now should consider renegotiat­ing the price. Why overpay in a softening market? There's more pressure on the seller now to say yes.

Two weeks ago, I had a buyer offer to split the difference with the seller when the appraisal came in low. The

seller agreed. The deal stayed together. It closes this week.

Unreasonab­ly short timelines for loan approval and appraisal had been another sometimes-untenable obstacle. Get it down in X days to avoid risking the ugly notice to perform demand.

The residentia­l purchase agreement commonly used by California real estate profession­als doesn't contain boilerplat­e language for unforeseen issues like appraisal delays, late answers to homeowners associatio­n questionna­ires (called seller's HOA) or even delays in getting loan approvals. (The best-priced lenders always have the longest turn times.)

The contract requires loan and appraisal contingenc­ies to be removed within 17 days, shortened from 21 days in earlier versions, Arciniega said.

Sellers' agents and their transactio­n coordinato­rs pepper loan originator­s and their processors with calls, texts and emails demanding the buyers remove their contingenc­ies or else. Or else it means release the contingenc­ies or we'll cancel escrow.

But if contingenc­ies are released and the loan doesn't get approved, the earnest money deposit is potentiall­y at risk.

A 3% deposit on a $1 million sales price is $30,000.

Fullerton real estate attorney Jim Stearman says the seller isn't entitled to the deposit unless the following conditions are met:

• Buyers and sellers failed to resolve the matter through mediation.

• Sellers are awarded the deposit either from arbitratio­n or a civil court judge.

“It's not uncommon to end up in a fight, (although) it is uncommon to go to mediation,” Stearman said. “Waiving contingenc­ies upfront is dangerous.”

If you are a buyer, especially with a complicate­d loan file, or you are buying in a rural area with hardto-find appraisers, consider asking your agent to add “seller will allow additional time so long as buyer is making best efforts” language to the appraisal and financing timelines.

Or remove the seller's ability to keep the earnest money deposit based on deadlines.

The best thing any buyer can do is find a level-headed, mature real estate profession­al who can properly negotiate the terms and conditions upfront that are in your best interest now that the shoe is on the other foot.

Freddie Mac rate news: The 30-year fixed rate averaged 5.81%, 3 basis points higher than the previous week and the highest rate since November 2008. The 15-year fixed rate averaged 4.92%, 11 basis points higher.

The Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n reported a 4.2% increase in mortgage applicatio­n volume from the previous week.

Bottom line: Assuming a borrower gets the average 30-year fixed rate on a conforming $647,200 loan, last year's payment was $1,066 less than last week's payment of $3,802.

What I see: Locally, wellqualif­ied borrowers can get the following fixed-rate mortgages without points: a 30-year FHA at 4.875%, a 15-year convention­al at 4.625%, a 30-year convention­al at 5.375%, a 15-year convention­al high-balance ($647,201 to $970,800) at 5.25%, a 30-year convention­al high-balance at 5.625% and a 30-year jumbo purchase loan at 5.375%.

Eye-catcher loan of the week: a 30-year jumbo purchase mortgage, locked for the first 10 years at 4.375%, with 0.75-point cost.

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