Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bidding wars ignite appealing outlook for sellers

- By Donna Fuscaldo By Polyana da Costa • Bankrate. com

The bidding war for a home is not extinct. Bidding wars are cropping up in some parts of the country. While it’s a far cry from the heady days of the real estate bubble, the revival of the bidding war spells opportunit­y for sellers.

“The housing market has been skipping along the bottom since 2007,” said Doug Breaker, president and CEO of HomeFinder. com in Chicago. “There’s pent- up demand now as people are finally realizing prices won’t go too much lower.”

With more buyers in the market, sellers have greater control over the price for which they can sell and may see multiple offers come in if they play their cards right. There is one caveat: location.

“To get a bidding war, you have to have a good location,” said Brendon DeSimone, a real estate specialist in San Francisco. “If you are in front of a bus stop or across the street from a school, it’s not going to happen.”

If you overprice your home, you won’t draw much buyer interest, and the house will languish on the market. To drive demand, attract multiple offers and start a bidding war, you have to price your home just right.

You must analyze the comparable­s and then price the home slightly below what it’s worth, said Michael Corbett, author of the book “Ready, Set, SOLD!”

“You don’t want to go much lower than what the house is really worth because when you underprice, people will think something is wrong and start lowballing you,” Corbett said.

Corbett recommends using comparable­s that are no more than 60 days old and to include comparable­s for homes that were sold in foreclosur­es and short sales.

The tactic of setting a low- asking price is more likely to spark a bidding war where the local housing market is hot, Breaker said. In a soft market, setting a low- asking price might result in a quick sale but at a disappoint­ing price.

The more real estate agents who know your house is on the market, the more potential offers you can draw, potentiall­y beginning a bidding war.

“A lot of times, brokers have a buyer in mind and see your property and think, ‘ Oh wow, this property is perfect for this buyer,’ ” Breaker said. “Hosting a broker open ( house) gets the word out among brokers.”

Hosting a broker open house is your agent’s job. Your agent will know all the local players and how to lure them to the showing. “You want to get as many Realtors through the house in the first week as possible,” Corbett said.

Many areas of the country have a “brokers caravan” in which real estate agents tour a handful of houses that are about to be listed for sale. If you live in an area where brokers caravans are held, DeSimone said to make sure your house is part of the tour.

The Internet and social networks can be leveraged to create buzz about your house, making a bidding war more likely.

Creating a website for your home lets you post pictures of the house and gives you the ability to share the link on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and anywhere else potential buyers may be hanging out.

“Now 80 percent of all home buyers first preview houses online. The more elaborate the online presence, the better,” Corbett said.

A house’s website should contain a lot of pictures and a diagram of the floor plan, Breaker said, so buyers can envision how their furniture would fit.

“Having a website just for your house is a powerful tool,” Breaker said. “It helps drive interest.”

When a house gets multiple offers, they typically arrive shortly after the house is put on the market.

A way to maximize exposure is to have an open house for potential buyers shortly after the home is listed.

If you have an open house full of potential buyers, there’s a chance for a bidding war because buyers don’t like feeling they are missing out, DeSimone said.

One way to stack an open house is to have your real estate agent schedule showings back to back, so potential buyers will bump into each other on the way in and out.

Your home is more likely to garner interest and be the subject of a bidding war if it is staged: free of clutter,

Bankrate mortgage update scrubbed of pictures and personal items, and with neutral decor.

“It has to look like it’s out of the Pottery Barn magazine,” DeSimone said. “Buyers fall in love with how it looks.”

Corbett said the biggest mistake a homeowner can make is not getting rid of the clutter.

Equally important is making sure the house has curb appeal because some buyers won’t get out of the car when scouting prospectiv­e homes.

Mortgage tip:

“You want the home to read like a five- star hotel. You want the space to speak for itself,” Corbett said. The idea is to make it as inviting as possible, so buyers could see themselves living there, he added.

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