Real Estate Guide

New Hampshire Real Estate Section


 

New Hampshire Real Estate Navigation


New Hampshire Real Estate
|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Real Estate Schools |
Hollister California Real Estate Ray And Peggy Pierce |
Commercial Real Estate Marketing |
Phoenix Real Estate |
Laguna Niguel Real Estate |
Ohio Real Estate Listings |
Arkansas Real Estate |
Real Estate Agent Commission |
Las Vegas Real Estate Mls |
Real Estate Investment Banking |
Real Estate Investment Seminars |
Real Estate Marketing Strategy |
Scottsdale Real Estate |
Real Estate Investment Companies |
Real Estate Marketing Letter |

List of Real-Estate-Help Articles

New Hampshire Real Estate Best Seller



Best New Hampshire Real Estate Products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Real-Estate-Help
Email:
First Name:



Main New Hampshire Real Estate Sponsors


New Hampshire Real Estate

 

Latest New Hampshire Real Estate Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on New Hampshire Real Estate!



Welcome to Real Estate Guide

 
 

New Hampshire Real Estate Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on New Hampshire Real Estate. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

San Francisco Real Estate: Buyer's Market? Seller's Market? Both?

from: Joel Walsh




San Francisco real estate, one of the USA's supposedly "frothiest" real estate markets, is no longer an instant jackpot for sellers-now it's just a jackpot. Buyers, though still facing high prices, now have enough time to actually think an offer over before making it.


Back in 2004 a piece of San Francisco real estate might spark a bidding war among prospective buyers as soon as it hit the market. Today, a property might actually-gasp!-sit on the market long enough for buyers and sellers to negotiate.
San Francisco Real Estate: Good Time to Buy, Sell, or Both?


To recap the San Francisco real estate market 2004-2005


* 2004: prices high, seller's market;


* 2005, spring: prices even higher, all-out seller's market; 10 offers on a new listing common


* 2005, fall: prices only slightly higher or same; 1-2 offers on a new listing more common


In short, while average selling prices haven't dropped, now might still be a better time for prospective buyers-and even sellers-who prefer a calmer market.


True, there are those who have been saying for five years now that you should sell as fast possible and not even think of buying. Now that the market for real estate in San Francisco more closely resembles a real estate market than an art auction, those same people are talking of a "slow-down" and even the bursting of the often-alleged Bay Area real estate bubble.


But after accelerating head-long for years, it was hard for the market to do anything but slow down. Meanwhile, with multi-million-dollar houses, apartments, and offices selling for no less than before, it's hard to feel like anything is bursting except sellers' bank accounts. Of course, there's never any telling what the future might bring.


Tom Hageman, a licensed California realtor with a blog at ziprealty.typepad.com, notes that the market is still strong, but properties will sit on the market longer starting in fall 2005, for a variety of reasons:


1. More properties entering the market, since realtors traditionally advise clients to list properties after Labor Day, when everyone's back from vacation and the Bay Area's radiant autumn casts an attractive glow over properties.


2. Buyers getting nervous at the media talk of a real estate bubble.


3. Some sellers have overpriced their properties significantly.


Ideas for Buyers and Sellers of Real Estate in San Francisco


"When prices fall or rise is very hard to predict," notes Tom Hageman. "If anyone truly knew what was going to happen next, they would be a very rich person."


Still, Hageman's blog offers some advice that seems to make a lot of sense.


For buyers, Hageman thinks that now is a relatively good time to buy, with fewer sellers setting unrealistic prices, the bidding war of Spring 2005 long over with, and interest rates still relatively low.


For sellers, Hageman thinks that except for properties in high-demand areas, "it will be unlikely that you will receive record breaking multiple offers. I believe that the old saying of 'your first offer is usually the best' is often true."


Important disclaimer: the above article is provided for your reading pleasure only and is not intended to provide investment advice. All examples are hypothetical and intended as illustrations, not guidelines. Opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those of the owners.
About the Author

Joel Walsh is a freelance writer who advises that none of the preceding should be taken as investment or real estate advice, and hopes you get real estate advice from qualified professionals. You can go here for more news on San Francisco real estate: http://www.bayarearealestateadvisor.com?%20real%20estate









Warning: file(http://www.searchfeed.com/rd/feed/TextFeed.jsp?trackID=&pID=60557&cat=new+hampshire+real+estate&nl=5&page=1&excID=) [function.file]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found in /home/jts066s/public_html/online-real-estate-guide/datas/searchfeed.php on line 8

New Hampshire Real Estate Specific links

New Hampshire Real Estate News

Past trends and future prospects for N.H. real estate

Having the first presidential primary and the associated worldwide press coverage might be good for New Hampshire real estate. Most press commentary on our state appeared to be quite positive, which has not been the case in some other states.

Read more...


Gov hails construction of 1,300-worker Realogy headquarters in Madison

From left: Madison Mayor Robert H. Conley; Realogy CEO Richard A. Smith; James E Hanson II, president of Hampshire Real Estate Cos.; Gov. Chris Christie; Jon Hanson, chairman, Hampshire Real Estate Cos. and Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno.

Read more...


Realtor Q and A What types of deeds are there?

What are the different types of deeds that are used in New Hampshire and how they are used?

Read more...


US White House hopeful Romney leads big in Nevada

Republican Mitt Romney was riding high Friday, the eve of Nevada's presidential caucuses, after a new poll gave him a 20-point lead and real estate mogul Donald Trump endorsed his candidacy.

Read more...


Christie visits Madison to tout major firm’s in-state relocation

MADISON – Gov. Chris Christie came to town Wednesday morning to trumpet a major real estate firm’s decision to relocate within New Jersey instead of moving out-of-state.

Read more...


Disclosing the many homes in the life of Mitt Romney

GOP presidential contender Mitt Romney has been no stranger to high-end real estate, having owned properties in Massachusetts, Utah, New Hampshire and California.

Read more...


Home sales in state offer up mixed signals

More real estate sold; prices down Embed multimedia (photos, galleries, audio, map):  012012 Real Estate Sales in 2011 Home sales in the state were up 1.8 percent last year from 2010, but median sale prices dropped 6.2 percent to their lowest level in a decade, the New Hampshire Association of Realtors announced yesterday. The increase in sales volume is something of a good sign and "indicative ...

Read more...