Realtors, Be Prepared For What Is Happening Next | Realtor Coaching
This is one of those posts that I Know will generate negative comments from our readers.
And I am OK with that.
We are criticized all the time for sharing info like this with our students..here is an example.
True Story: I received an email over the weekend from a Real Estate Coaching company whom many of you would consider a competitor of ours. The coach (who is a friend of mine so I wont use his name) was very critical of our blog…and the fact that we don’t pump the usual ‘Its a great time to buy a house’ propaganda.
“Tim, why do you post so much doom and gloom?”
He didn’t understand why we post articles like this one….
SO, for our competitors, our students and our future students…here is why we share info with you that may cause some of you to be alarmed and even angered with us.
We do it because no one else seems to have the courage to tell agents the truth about what may happen next in our respective real estate markets.
YOU SIMPLY MUST BE PREPARED FOR WHAT MAY BE COMING NEXT.
It would be vastly easier for us to tell you to ‘get back to the basics’ or ‘its all about how you think’. But, that would be a lie.
Selling homes, being a Realtor is an honorable profession. You are helping people solve a problem and accomplish an emotional and financial goal. Your job (as a Realtor) is to become a great sales person and an even better business person. When you are prepared for the worst but, hopeful for the best..you have an advantage. Once you have that mindset you will do a better job serving your real estate clients.
Here is the question we ask all of our Graduate Coaching students that I want you to ask yourself now: (Warning: reading what comes next may cause anxiety and doubt….but, if you read the whole thing you will find inspiration and strength).
Ask yourself…..
“What if I knew with 100% certainty that the real estate markets were going to get worse…far worse….in the next 6 months…what 3 things would I be doing differently NOW?”
Don’t be afraid of that question…take it seriously. If you KNEW that housing sales were going to plummet what 3 things would you be doing NOW…
If you knew for sure that the darkest days for real estate were still ahead of us…what would you be doing now?
IDEAS: Price reductions, taking FAR more listings, stronger focus on pre-qualifying, master Short Sale listings (finally), become a REO listing agent, follow a schedule?….what would you do if you knew FOR SURE real estate sales were going to decline further? Heres a thought, how about getting the education that you know you must have to learn the skills that this market demands. Make you own list. That is your plan of action for NOW.
Bottom line, Realtors are the only true hope for homeowners….this market is about agents with the skill set to serve and the mindset to be of service.
Next super tough revealing question….
“What are you doing now that you would stop doing if you knew that home sales were going to become far more challenging”
IDEAS: Maybe you would stop waiting for the phone to ring (and make it ring), you would stop waiting for the sellers to ask for a price reduction and start listing homes with pre-planned and agreed upon price changes, maybe you would stop mailing stuff to homeowners in hope that some day…they will call. What 3 things would you STOP doing now if you knew for sure that the real estate markets were going to become much worse?
Maybe now you get it.
If you are prepared for the worst…and the worst never happens…you are in better position.
We don’t want the real estate markets to slide any further. Its truly horrible what is happening to our country. Nothing would make us happier than telling all of you that the worst days for the real estate markets are behind us. Until that day happens we promise to tell you the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. If that offends some of you (and we know it does) we sincerely apologize.
Please don’t be afraid of whats next.
The fact is that if you are still in the real estate business (especially after the epic national washout of thousands of Realtors that took place over the last 2 years) you have already proven that you have the chops to make it through the end of this historic ‘correction’. Be mentally, emotionally and financially prepared for this correction to take another 3-5 years.
HREU Students (and future students) if you need any help…request a Free Coaching Call.
Here is the article from The New York Times.
As job losses rise, growing numbers of American homeowners with once solid credit are falling behind on their mortgages, amplifying a wave of foreclosures.
In the latest phase of the nation’s real estate disaster, the locus of trouble has shifted from subprime loans — those extended to home buyers with troubled credit — to the far more numerous prime loans issued to those with decent financial histories.
With many economists anticipating that the unemployment rate will rise into the double digits from its current 8.9 percent, foreclosures are expected to accelerate. That could exacerbate bank losses, adding pressure to the financial system and the broader economy.
“We’re about to have a big problem,” said Morris A. Davis, a real estate expert at the University of Wisconsin. “Foreclosures were bad last year? It’s going to get worse.”
Economists refer to the current surge of foreclosures as the third wave, distinct from the initial spike when speculators gave up property because of plunging real estate prices, and the secondary shock, when borrowers’ introductory interest rates expired and were reset higher.
“We’re right in the middle of this third wave, and it’s intensifying,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com. “That loss of jobs and loss of overtime hours and being forced from a full-time to part-time job is resulting in defaults. They’re coast to coast.”
Those sliding into foreclosure today are more likely to be modest borrowers whose loans fit their income than the consumers of exotically lenient mortgages that formerly typified the crisis.
Economy.com expects that 60 percent of the mortgage defaults this year will be set off primarily by unemployment, up from 29 percent last year.
Robert and Kay Richards live in the center of this trend. In 2006, they took a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage — a prime loan — borrowing $172,000 to buy a prefabricated house. They erected the building on land they owned in the northern Minnesota town of Babbitt, clearing the terrain of pine trees with their own hands.
Mr. Richards worked as a truck driver, hauling timber from a nearby mill. His wife oversaw the books. Together, they brought in about $70,000 a year — enough to make their monthly mortgage payments of $1,300 while raising their two boys, now 11 and 16.
But their truck driving business collapsed last year when the mill closed. Mr. Richards has since worked occasional stints for local trucking companies. His wife has failed to find clerical work.
“Every month that goes by, you get a little further behind,” Mr. Richards said.
Last June, they missed their first payment, and they have since slipped $10,000 into arrears. They are trying to persuade their bank to cut their payments ahead of a foreclosure sale.
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From November to February, the number of prime mortgages that were delinquent at least 90 days, were in foreclosure or had deteriorated to the point that the lender took possession of the home increased more than 473,000, exceeding 1.5 million, according to a New York Times analysis of data provided by First American CoreLogic, a real estate research group. Those loans totaled more than $224 billion.
During the same period, subprime mortgages in those three categories increased by fewer than 14,000, reaching 1.65 million. The number of similarly troubled Alt-A loans — those given to people with slightly tainted credit — rose 159,000, to 836,000.
Over all, more than four million loans worth $717 billion were in the three distressed categories in February, a jump of more than 60 percent in dollar terms compared with a year earlier.
Under a program announced in February by the Obama administration, the government is to spend $75 billion on incentives for mortgage servicing companies that reduce payments for troubled homeowners. The Treasury Department says the program will spare as many as four million homeowners from foreclosure.
But three months after the program was announced, a Treasury spokeswoman, Jenni Engebretsen, estimated the number of loans that have been modified at “more than 10,000 but fewer than 55,000.”
Learn how to mod your own home loan now. Watch the FREE Agent Loan Mod Secrets video now. Lower your own house payment now..save yourself $100s per month and $1000s per year. Next, start your own Loan Mod Business. Make money helping others save money! Watch the FREE Agent Loan Mod Secrets video NOW.
In the first two months of the year alone, another 313,000 mortgages landed in foreclosure or became delinquent at least 90 days, according to First American CoreLogic.
“I don’t think there’s any chance of government measures making more than a small dent,” said Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at RBS Greenwich Capital.
Last year, foreclosures expanded sharply as the economy shed an average of 256,000 jobs each month. Since then, the job market has deteriorated further, with an average of 665,000 jobs vanishing each month.
Each foreclosure costs lenders $50,000, according to data cited in a 2006 study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, so an additional two million foreclosures could mean $100 billion in lender losses.
The government’s recent stress tests of banks concluded that the nation’s 19 largest could be forced to write off as much as a fresh $600 billion by the end of 2010, bringing their total losses to $1 trillion. The Federal Reserve concluded that these banks needed to raise another $75 billion.
Many economists pronounce that assessment reasonable, while cautioning that it could become inadequate if foreclosures continue to accelerate.
“The margin for error is not that big,” said Brian Bethune, chief United States financial economist for HIS Global Insight. “It’s kind of like, ‘Let’s keep our fingers crossed that we’ve seen the worst.’ ”
Among prime borrowers, foreclosure rates have been growing fastest in states with particularly high unemployment. In California, for example, the unemployment rate rose to 11.2 percent from 6.4 percent for the year that ended in March, while the foreclosure rate for prime mortgages nearly tripled, reaching 1.81 percent.
Even states seemingly removed from the real estate bubble are seeing foreclosures accelerate as the recession grinds on.
In Minnesota, three of every five people seeking foreclosure counseling now have a prime loan, according to the nonprofit Minnesota Home Ownership Center.
In Woodbury, Minn., Rick and Christine Sellman are struggling to persuade their bank to reduce their $2,200 monthly mortgage on their five-bedroom home.
Mr. Sellman, a construction worker, found some work putting in asphalt driveways last summer, but he is now receiving unemployment. Ms. Sellman’s scrapbooking businesses shut down last summer. Since then, they have slipped $19,000 behind on their mortgage.
“We were always up on our house payments,” Ms. Sellman said. “You work so hard to keep what you have, and because of circumstances beyond our control now, there’s nothing we can do about it.”
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Dear Tim and Julie,
You could not be MORE RIGHT in your on-going assessments of the real estate facts in America right now.
Everyone else is just trying to sugar coat the reality.
Don’t let the folks who has a vested interest in not telling the truth get to you!!!!
Keep up the great work!!!
Lyn
Thank you for bringing this point up.
I could not agree with you more.
Being in business (self employed) on your own requires alertness, and knowing that going
broke is a possibility in every business cycle.
Hopefully So it never happens.
But when it does, learning a lesson is benefitial.
Being prepared never hurts. Finding multiple sources of income is a must.
You are right.
Thanks for the eye opener.
Rob.
( I am on your side ).
Real estate will tumble at least another 50% in price before the bottom is hit.
Of course none of this had to happen if the US government would have given money to the people instead of the banks and corporations.
Take GM as an example. Why give them billions? Instead give the consumer the incentives to buy the cars. Give the consumers the money they gave to GM so they can buy GM cars.
Or is that too simple of an idea for the smart people to get?
Thanks!
Spread the word.
If you are not on twitter yet…get signed up…and retweet this post.
It honestly sickens me that so many agents seem so willing to march of the cliff without knowing they have the option to not fail.
Tim
Hey David,
Since you brought up GM…..get this….GM has a ‘market value’ of 1 billion. (To put that into perspective Mel Gibson (before his divorce) had 1 billion dollars)
THUS FAR, we via the government have ‘loaned/ invested’ 50 BILLION to GM. Did you read that….its friggen worth 1 billion yet the government (US) has given them
50. That is insane. Can’t blame the current President for this one….the first bail out came from President Bush!
Tim
Tim, you have not been in the business long enough to have been ‘conditioned’ by the old schoolers who breath ‘EVERYTHING IS ROSY—NOW IS THE BEST TIME TO BUY’ I got my first license in 1980 and have been through the waves. I’ll do you one further about us: The only reason we got to where we are now is because lawyers dont play taxi. Its been too easy.
We are in the worst shape in memorable history and it WILL be worse. I have contacts deep in some very large institutions who tell me that they are preparing to deal with ghastly foreclosure rates.
Anyone who gives you a hard time for not being upbeat is a fool. You can only keep your head in the sand for so long before you choke and die. Our profession is being assaulted from all corners. The proliferation of web based real estate advertising, FSBO sites and stores, strange rules cast upon us by government officials who dont have a clue, and now the PERFECT STORM of a market being dashed to pieces on the rocks. You MUST specialize or fail. I dont even try to convert fsbos any more. They are holding on to ridiculous pricing and the expired numbers in the MLS are very large. We need to do shorts, REO, even more specialized roles such as property management, REO cleanup and repair, etc.
Marvin, extremely well spoken. I agree 100%.
Tim
I too subscribe to your way of thinking…I have been warning sellers for about 2 years…those who listen and sell thank me, those who don’t just keep watching their equity slip though their fingers.
BIG IMPORTANT QUESTION:
Since I too believe values will continue to slide and the real estate market will also get worse, tell me…how do I honestly and ethically convince a buyer to purchase a home in this market, knowing I am “selling tickets on the Titanic?”
I am one of your coaching students and thank you for your great coaching and infromation.
Thanks,
Larry
Tim,
The market “is what it is”. I agree completely that it is going to get much worse than it is now. Recently there have been signs of an improving market. BUT…..it’s the eye of the storm.
The folks I have been meeting with about listing their homes as short sales are no longer Investors. They are now regular working people that have lost income or need to move for job purposes. Fact is MOST people will need to move at some point oveer the next 5-10 years. When they do they will STILL be under water on their loans and will STILL need a short sale specialist to assist them.
My business is very difficult right now but it is booming. I plan to keep on expanding while continuing to cut costs.
Most realtors have no idea as to what is going on in the current market. Most are taking the sit and wait approuch and lets hope the market gets better. Thats a true sign of I don’t get it. On the other hand reo’s, short sales and pre-built in price reductions are a MUST or you don’t take the listing.Too many agents are too damm desparte for business and don’t care what they say or do to get the listing…. then they sit wait hope and pray it sells.
Tim and Julie are right on and you can only become a better professional using thier guidence. If realtors would start working on thier business and stop working in it things would look up fast. Times have changed and we must too. Recession or not, this is a fantastic time to mske your mark aas an agent qnd build a good real estate business.And I do beleive it is gonna get worse out vthere.
Ed Braciszewski
Hi,
Julie and I have presented on this very topic many times….go to
SuperStarInterview.com and listen to the presentations we did on working with buyers.
Here is the short answer:
1) Dont sell a home to anyone with the idea it will be an ‘investment’. People buy cars every day with the understanding they will lose 50% in 3-4 years.
2) People have (pre-bubble) bought homes traditionally for non-financial reasons. Place to call home, place to live, raise kids etc.
3) In some markets owning is cheaper vs renting. Thats in terms of monthly payment vs PITI. (Not including the homes upkeep etc)
4) If someone will live in a house for 10+ years….they probably dont care.
5) Focus on listings and you dont have to think about the soundness of buying in this market.
Tim
you last line was great….’expanding while reducing costs’…..
Thank-you Ed!
Tim,
You’re preaching to the choir, keep it up!
We started doing short sales 2 summers back, now with our local agent population at 60% of what it was there are STILL local brokers who say “I don’t like short sales” and “loan mods are mostly ripoffs”…
I expect the competition to be down another 25% by next year. I started in 1983, and thought I had seen all kinds of markets…This is going to be worse than the 18% interest rates of the early 80’s. Batten down the hatches and get creative, people. There’s a REAL storm brewing out there and it has not hit yet! If your business does not incorporate short sales, REO’s, investor buyers, asset management, loan mod referrals or first time buyers(tax credit for this year) then you will probably be looking at a different line of work soon!
Hi Michael,
What REALLY amazes me is this attitude of ‘I dont want to do X….its too hard….or I heard it doesnt work….etc’……vs the approach that you have of learning whatever the market requires, to service your community.
Frankly, the agent that have the old, our dated, what in it for me approach to our industry need to quit.
The market is about agents with the mindset to serve and the skillset to be of service.
Tim
Tim,
Sign me up for the REO class. I’m already a short sale expert. I learn faster than most people can state the problem. I can’t do credit cards. Is there some other way for me to pay for the lists and training?
Scott Barr (Keller Williams) 909-261-2497.
P.S
I’m ready for the storm.