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All Forum Posts by: Kate J.

Kate J. has started 42 posts and replied 278 times.

Post: Raise or drop the price - expierenced agents please chip in!

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104
Quote from @Ryan Kelly:

@Kate J. Buyers generally don’t react well to private owners raising prices. That only works with new development when there is tons of demand and limited inventory. No showings means you are likely priced high. Also, interest rates are spiking hard making your pricing even harder to swallow for buyers.


I am not a private owner. I am a licensed agent, the unit is at MLS. The buyers will know probably when they will be submitting an offer, probably not earlier than that.

Post: Raise or drop the price - expierenced agents please chip in!

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

Folks,

investor/flipper/builder/licensed RE agent is here.

I have a downtown condo in a beautiful new construction built in Austin. I believe it's flawless!

Now, the building is priced depending on the elevation of condo. Naturally, one would want to live on the 40th floor with views instead of on the 10th floor smelling nearby roads.

Since I was literally the first to place the unite on market (since I licensed and make direct decisions on my properties), the prices distributed as follows (for the same layout): 850k (20th floor), 799k (30th floor MINE), 950k (38th floor) and 980 (39th). Now I had about 10 showings then a storm hit Austin and no showings after that.

So instead of lowering price I decided to bump it to 830k, thinking that potential buyer would get scared and will jump on it until we bump even higher.

didn't work as planned, still no showings.

the agent that lives in the building in same layout says the unit is gorgeous and will find its buyer. I can't disagree with the first statement, finding a buyer is more challenging.

Judging by currently listed units, the price for this one should be between 850k and 950k and probably closer to 950k. On the other hand I don't want to sit on it forever!

What would be your advise? Lower the price or make it higher and wait with others? Or just keep as is and don't make many unnecessary moves?

Could it be that all the agents that listed those condos are delusional and overpromissed to their sellers which is reflected in price? One unit on the 38th floor gave 1150k, then dropped below 1mil in couple days after listing. My general rule: drop the price if it sits for more than 3 weeks. But on the other hand I could probably benefit if I stick with other agents and just wait.

Thoughts?

Post: Drywall finish inspection advise needed

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

I am doing gut rehab and I am at the drywall finish stage. The house is old and I need to know how do I test the mud guys for the quality. I've ordered level 5 finish. I took a leveler of about 5 ft long and when I place horizontally I can see bumps of about 1/4 inch in several places. I don't see these bumps otherwise. Should I ask to correct it or this is admissible?

Post: Is the Real Estate market really not going to take a hit?

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104
Originally posted by @Chris Gawlik:

@David Gonzalez I disagree. I think were likely to see much more inventory coming out when the moratoriums are lifted. There are also many private lenders and there loan servicing companies who are in a tight bind right now. The way I look at it is business' hold 2 books the one for the public eye to see and the real books. Business' don't want you to see the real books until is absolutely necessary. Thats the way it is for a large part of the economy right now. Private lenders don't want there clients to know about the forbearance there dealing with. There going to asking for all that money up front. There not going to add these missed payments to the back end of there loan. Your going to see a large wave of foreclosures and short sales. It may be even bigger than 2008.

Consumer confidence is at an all time low. That is not going to change for a long time even when a vaccine gets approved, Which by the way won't be for a very long time. maybe 7-8 months from now. Kids are not going to school across the US. There are so many things happening at once. Think about this. A historical global epidemic has put the world on hold for months now. Yet the stock market hit an all time high and real estate has gone up 10% and is so hot ATM. Sounds very much like 2006 to me. Everyone wanted in.

I strongly feel like there is going to be a big correction in the next year. I have posted my beliefs and have gotten belittled and laughed out of thread after thread about this, but I'm sticking to my gut on this one. Correction coming be ready. There are multi million dollar ( honest ) hedge fund managers that also agree with me. Start to look up letters written to clients. There warning them to get out of the market. Its not going to end well for those of you who keep up this bullish game. The RE market is going to feel the effects of all this as well.  

maybe you are right at some things, but forbearance lets you put all payments to the end of the loan 100%. I placed my all properties to hoard cash, now I have a button online to put the forbearance to the end of the loan. You are overly pessimistic, but surely noone knows what is going to happen

Post: Pricing of windows in a flip

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

@Dan Bryskin does the supplier have a showroom? I wonder how to order from them?

Post: Pricing of windows in a flip

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

Folks, what is your strategy for replacing window? Is it cheaper to buy them at homedepot and then have carpenters yo install it OR you shop in your local window stores?

Post: How did you get to where you are today ?

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

@Jordan Lucas my goal is to get to 2500 units by the end of the year. I got where I am with hard work and time.

Post: Framing new roof over and addition

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

Folks, please guide me through the following. I have a house with addition and the ceiling in this addition is too low. I am planning to vault it. I have a flat roof and I think that either gabled or elevated flat will be a solution. What should be my steps? I would like to hire subcontractors and not GC. Where do I start? Do I need to have plans or I should directly go to a framing company?

Post: 11k saved for an investment prop... NEED A CONFIDENCE BOOST

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

@Kyler Cook these numbers should be way off. 2/3ds of Americans have less that 1k insavings? Now way...

Post: Real Estate Attorney & Off Market Transaction Recommendations

Kate J.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 294
  • Votes 104

@Russ Odom

I can help for a flat fee. PM me.