Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › A good deal in Poway?
- This topic has 60 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 7 months ago by Raybyrnes.
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May 7, 2009 at 2:58 AM #15620May 7, 2009 at 8:08 AM #394279DataAgentParticipant
Yep… looks like a damn good deal. They are out there.
May 7, 2009 at 8:08 AM #394536DataAgentParticipantYep… looks like a damn good deal. They are out there.
May 7, 2009 at 8:08 AM #394947DataAgentParticipantYep… looks like a damn good deal. They are out there.
May 7, 2009 at 8:08 AM #394753DataAgentParticipantYep… looks like a damn good deal. They are out there.
May 7, 2009 at 8:08 AM #394806DataAgentParticipantYep… looks like a damn good deal. They are out there.
May 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM #394420urbanrealtorParticipantFull disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.
May 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM #395089urbanrealtorParticipantFull disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.
May 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM #394676urbanrealtorParticipantFull disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.
May 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM #394946urbanrealtorParticipantFull disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.
May 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM #394894urbanrealtorParticipantFull disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.
May 7, 2009 at 12:22 PM #3951585yearwaiterParticipant[quote=urbanrealtor]Full disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.[/quote]
How you get listing agent when you find property?
May 7, 2009 at 12:22 PM #3950165yearwaiterParticipant[quote=urbanrealtor]Full disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.[/quote]
How you get listing agent when you find property?
May 7, 2009 at 12:22 PM #3949635yearwaiterParticipant[quote=urbanrealtor]Full disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.[/quote]
How you get listing agent when you find property?
May 7, 2009 at 12:22 PM #3944905yearwaiterParticipant[quote=urbanrealtor]Full disclosure: I don’t actually have inside info here.
It looks to me like the list price was perpetually too high.
This deal was double ended which means the listing agent brought their own buyer.
It was also a short sale.
My guess is that the agent knew what the bank would likely accept and convinced his buyer to make a lowball knowing that he could slam it through the bank.
Then he left the price high while his patient buyer waited for the bank negotiations to play out.
There are no victims here but I think its a little unfair to leave a price noticeably above what you know the bank will accept.My 2 bits.[/quote]
How you get listing agent when you find property?
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